Media
HKU weekly notice (from May 7 to May 14, 2016)
06 May 2016
HKUL Book Talk: Heroes & Gamblers - Tales of survival and good fortune of the Poy Family
Speaker: The Honourable Dr Vivienne Poy
Moderator: Professor C. F. Lee, GBS, SBS, JP, former Pro-Vice-Chancellor of HKU
Date: 7 May 2016 (Saturday)
Time: 4:00 - 6:00pm
Venue: Special Collections, 1/F, Main Library, The University of Hong Kong
Language: English
Registration: http://lib.hku.hk/friends/reading_club/bt2016_04.html
About the author:
The Honourable Dr Vivienne Poy is Chancellor Emerita of the University of Toronto, an author of non-fiction and a historian. In 1998, she was the first Canadian of Asian heritage to be appointed to the Senate of Canada where she focused on gender issues, multiculturalism, immigration, and human rights. She retired from the Senate in September 2012, and continues to be actively involved with communities across Canada. She travels extensively and has special interest in the study of Chinese diaspora.
About the book:
A panoramic account of Chinese diaspora in Australia and North America during the 19th and 20th centuries, from the perspectives of the Poy family.
Readers will experience life of the Chinese in the goldfields in Australia at the height of the White Australia Policy, the horrors of the Second World War and of heroism, the life of high society in Hong Kong and the Japanese invasion, filled with spies and infiltrators.
The turbulent events of the Chinese civil war, the establishment of the People's Republic of China, and the subsequent Cultural Revolution, are felt through the suffering of family members who remained in China.
As luck would have it, due to wartime diplomatic bungling, one member of the Poy clan entered Canada with his family during Chinese Exclusion, where they eventually remained and prospered.
This is the story of a family from the village of Shuizaikou, where the streams meet, in Taishan county in South China.
https://justinpoy.sharefile.com/d-s87cd72278904c918
About the Guest Speakers:
Madame Janaline Oh, Deputy Consul General of Australia in Hong Kong
Professor Henry Yu, Principal, St. John's College, University of British Columbia
Mr Frank Ching, Author and Renowned Journalist
Media Contact: Mr. Gary Chin, Tel: 2859 2211 / Ms. Marina Yeung, Tel: 2859 8903
HKU Faculty of Education Distinguished Lecture “Neoliberal Education and Neoliberal Education Policy: Are We All Neoliberals Now?”
By Professor Stephen J Ball
Institute of Education, University College London
In almost all countries around the world education is now seen, often to the exclusion of other purposes, as an extension of economic policy. Education reform from pre-school to university is driven by the application of market principles – the logics of investment, choice and competition. In all of this ‘what it means to teach and learn’ and ‘what it means to research’ in education are being reconstituted – we are as educators being re-made as neoliberal subjects.
Being sponsored by Tin Ka Ping Education Fund of Tin Ka Ping Foundation, the Faculty of Education of The University of Hong Kong (HKU) proudly presents the Distinguished Lecture on “Neoliberal Education and Neoliberal Education Policy: Are We All Neoliberals Now?” to be delivered by Professor Stephen J Ball, Distinguished Service Professor of Sociology of Education, Institute of Education, University College London.
In the Distinguished Lecture, Professor Stephen J Ball will explore the global flow of neoliberal education policies and some of their consequences for what we have become as educators and learners in the 21st century.
Members of the media are welcome to cover the event and the schedule is as follows:
Date: May 10, 2016 (Tuesday)
Time: 5:00 pm – 6:30 pm
Venue: Rayson Huang Theatre, The University of Hong Kong
Language: English
Stephen J Ball is Distinguished Service Professor of Sociology of Education at the University College London, Institute of Education. He was elected Fellow of the British Academy in 2006; and is also Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences; and Society of Educational Studies, and a Laureate of Kappa Delta Phi; he has honorary doctorates from the Universities of Turku (Finland), and Leicester. He is co-founder and Managing Editor of the Journal of Education Policy.
His main areas of interest are in sociologically informed education policy analysis and the relationships between education, education policy and social class. He has written 20 books and had published over 140 journal articles. Recent books: How Schools do Policy (2012), Global Education Inc. (2012), Networks, New Governance and Education (with Carolina Junemann) (2012), and Foucault, Power and Education (2013).
For media enquiries, please contact Ms Emily Cheung, Senior Manager (Development and Communications) (Tel.: 2219 4270 / E-mail: emchy@hku.hk).
British Airways’ HK80 Heritage Exhibition at MC3@702 Creative Space
The Department of Sociology has worked with British Airways to launch a heritage exhibition at The University of Hong Kong (HKU) to showcase its 80 years of history of flying to Hong Kong. The public in Hong Kong are invited to visit the exhibition for free and to stand a chance to win two return tickets to London on British Airways’ award-winning Club World business class.
The exhibition will take visitors through the history of British Airways’ service in Hong Kong. Visitors can get a close-up look at the historical artefacts, including vintage cabin crew uniforms, inflight menu and promotional posters used on the route decades ago. Customers and cabin crew also shared their precious memories of flying British Airways and the old Kai Tak Airport.
British Airways has also collaborated with postgraduate students from the Department of Sociology. Working together with the British Airways’ Heritage Centre curators in the UK, the students helped with the research and interviewed the airline’s loyal customers and long serving staff members about their experiences and memories of the airline over the years.
UK-based British Chinese Heritage Centre of Ming-Ai Institute worked as the curator for the exhibition with materials provided by the British Airways’ Heritage Museum.
British Airways also invites visitors to join a competition by simply sharing a photo of their favourite part of the HK80 exhibition with a description within 80 words on their personal Facebook or Instagram account with a hashtag #BAHK80 (photo sets to be public). The winner with the best entry, as determined by British Airways, will receive two free return tickets to London flying in British Airways’ award-wining Club World business class.
About the Exhibition
Exhibition Period: May 6, 2016 (Fri) to June 30, 2016 (Thu)
Venue: MC³@702 Creative Space, 7/F of the Jockey Club Tower, HKU
Opening Hours: Monday to Friday 10:00-18:00, Saturday 11:00-18:00, closed on Sunday and open on 14 May and 9 June
Language: English
Admission: Free
For more information on the exhibition and the competition, please visit ba.com/bahk80
Should you have any enquiries, please feel free to contact Executive Assistant Connie Ko by email at connieko@hku.hk or by phone at 3917 2309.
An HKU Stephen Hui Geological Museum exhibition launches on Earth Day: Snapshots of a Vanished Environment – Exceptional Fossils from the world famous Jurassic Solnhofen Limestone in Germany
The Stephen Hui Geological Museum of the University of Hong Kong (HKU) launches a two-month exhibition on “Snapshots of a Vanished Environment - Exceptional Fossils from the world famous Jurassic Solnhofen Limestone in Germany” on Earth Day, and will run until June 23, 2016.
The earth’s fossil record is incomplete and only an estimate of around 15% of organisms that ever lived on earth are preserved as fossils. Occasionally, the fossil record presents us with surprises when very rare and specific environmental conditions allow extraordinary preservation of a high concentration and diversity of fossils in so called Fossil Lagerstaetten that represent an ancient in-situ ecological community. Such fossil sites comprise the most important portions of the fossil record for our understanding of the evolution of life and environmental changes throughout the Earth’s history.
One of the world’s most famous fossil Lagerstaette is the Jurassic Solnhofen Limestone in Germany which came to fame with the discovery of a number of complete Archaeopteryx fossils. This exhibition presents 11 rare and exceptionally preserved fossil animals from the 150 million-year-old Solnhofen Limestone, some up to 90 centimetres in diameter. It gives us a glimpse into the environmental challenges these organisms faced 150 million years ago.
The fossils on display in this exhibition are ancestors of today’s fishes, shrimp, crabs, squid and lobster -- all organisms people can relate to as the modern forms of these prehistoric animals are today part of our daily lifestyles. A horseshoe crab with its preserved death trail is also one of the highlights in this exhibition.
The area where we find the Solnhofen Limestone today was an archipelago at the edge of the Tethys Ocean with lagoons that had limited access to the open sea. Fine grained Solnhofen limestone was deposited in the quiet and stagnant waters of a protected lagoon, cut off from the open turbulent Tethys Ocean by barrier reefs of corals and sponges. The constant evaporation under the tropical warm climate precipitated very fine limy particles from the lagoon water and concentrated the salt, producing a poisonous water layer devoid of oxygen near the bottom of the lagoon that killed anything that entered it. Any organism that fell, drifted or was washed into the lagoon either from the ocean or from the land died and sank to the anoxic bottom water where the usual scavengers and microbial decay were absent. In this environment a diverse fossil assemblage became buried and preserved in soft and fine carbonate mud. Today these fossils give us an unprecedented view of a complete Jurassic ecosystem, including both marine and terrestrial animals and plants.
The exhibition reminds us about the new environmental challenges the modern descendants of these ancient ancestors face in today’s world where their survival is now threatened by human activities after millions of years of successful adaptation to natural environmental changes.
The Stephen Hui Geological Museum acknowledges Dr. Martin Goerlich who kindly provided the fossils for this special exhibition.
Visitors may also visit parts of the museum’s permanent Earth Evolution gallery where fossils from three Fossil Lagerstaettens in China are on display: the Cambrian Chengjiang Biota, the Cretaceous Jehol Biota and the Tertiary Shanwang Biota.
Details of the exhibition:
Venue: The Stephen Hui Geological Museum, Main Campus, HKU, Pokfulam, Hong Kong (Map)
Date: April 22, 2016 (Friday) to June 23, 2016 (Tuesday)
Regular Opening Hours: Monday to Friday from 1pm to 6pm
Special Weekend Openings:
May 7 (Saturdays), from 11a.m. to 6p.m.
May 14 (Saturday) and May 15 (Sunday) (the weekend before the International Museum Day on May 18), from 11a.m. to 6p.m.
Guided Tours:
Venue: The Stephen Hui Geological Museum, Main Campus, HKU, Pokfulam, Hong Kong (Map)
Free guided tours will be arranged at 2p.m.during the weekends. Free of charge. No registration required.
Language: Cantonese (May 7, 14, 15); Speaker: Dr Haz Cheung
Enquiry: Tel: +852 2241 5472
Media enquiries:
HKU Communications & Public Affairs Office Ms Rhea Leung (Tel: +852 2857 8555 / +852 9022 7446/ Email: rhea.leung@hku.hk ) or
HKU Stephen Hui Geological Museum Dr Petra Bach (Tel: +852 2241 5472/ Email: pabach@hku.hk)
UMAG exhibitions
1. When classic meets modern The Art of Takashi Wakamiya: Contemporary Japanese Lacquer Showcasing the meticulous process of craftsmanship
Period: March 18, 2016 (Friday) to June 19, 2016 (Sunday)
The Art of Takashi Wakamiya: Contemporary Japanese Lacquer exhibition is held in collaboration with Takashi Wakamiya’s studio Hikoju Makie, and with the support of the Japanese Consulate in Hong Kong and Macau. A selection of finely executed contemporary objects in Japanese lacquer will be displayed at the exhibition. An acclaimed artist for 30 years, Wakamiya excels in the practice and teaching of traditional lacquer techniques with a high level of precision and has developed an interest in executing, in lacquer, East Asian objects historically made from unrelated materials, such as bronze or ceramic. His studio creates these imitations with such remarkable exactness that onlookers are fooled by the medium. The finely applied lacquer is, when held, much lighter than the metal or clay that it reproduces. A master of deception, Wakamiya and Hikoju Makie also specialise in the creation of life-like animals (beetles, grasshoppers), vegetables and fruits (corn, pumpkins).
Public guided tours
Cantonese: May 7, May 28 & June 18 (Saturday, 15:00)
English: May 7 (Saturday, 15:30); June 18 (Saturday, 16:00)
Putonghua: May 28 & June 18 (Saturday, 15:30)
2. Major global events retold through multimedia exhibition “Chen Xi: So We Remember” Renowned Chinese artist to exhibit for first time in Hong Kong
Period: March 2, 2016 (Wednesday) to May 15, 2016 (Sunday)
Artist Chen Xi created this series of contemporary images to commemorate, to document and to provoke thought. The paintings illustrate important events that have shaped our modern world. In the current show, we present her preliminary pen and watercolour drawings along with the finished oil paintings. Meticulous in her research and true to both the documented incident and the domestic details, Chen Xi creates historical paintings for our present and future generations. Her method directly relates to contemporary life and to a society that is informed and influenced by modern-day media. Interestingly, the artist does not simply depict a historic event, but frames within a TV screen each episode of her sequential and international narrative. By presenting the paintings within the TV's glass, they become screen shots linked to a specific moment in time and space, as well as to the living room setting where the news would have been seen. In addition, the exhibition includes four early paintings that relate to the TV series and Chen Xi's development as an artist.
All exhibition-related activities will be held at 1/F, T.T. Tsui Building, UMAG, HKU, 90 Bonham Road, Pokfulam.
Opening Hours:
09:30 – 18:00 (Monday to Saturday)
13:00 – 18:00 (Sunday)
Closed on University and Public Holidays
Venue: 1/F Fung Ping Shan Building, UMAG, 90 Bonham Road, Pokfulam
Tel/Email: (852) 2241 5500 (General Enquiry) / museum@hku.hk
Admission: Free
Website: www.hkumag.hku.hk
Connect with UMAG on social media:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/umag.hku
Twitter: https://twitter.com/UMAG_HKU
Instagram: #WakamiyaLacquer, #JapaneseLacquer
Weibo: http://www.weibo.com/5411839295/profile?topnav=1&wvr=6
Media enquiries:
UMAG Communication Officer Miss Elena Cheung, Tel: (852) 2241 5512, Email: elenac@hku.hk.