Media
HKU weekly notice (from November 12 to November 19, 2016)
11 Nov 2016
Edward K Y Chen Distinguished Lecture 2016
East Asia Economic Stability at Bay: The Role of International Cooperation
The University of Hong Kong Faculty of Business and Economics presents the Edward K Y Chen Distinguished Lecture 2016 titled “East Asia Economic Stability at Bay: The Role of International Cooperation”.
You and/or your representatives are cordially invited to attend the Lecture:
Date: Monday, November 14, 2016
Time: 5:30pm – 7:15pm (Media Registration: 5pm)
Venue: Loke Yew Hall, The University of Hong Kong
Medium: English
Keynote Speaker:
Dr Chalongphob Sussangkarn
Distinguished Fellow
Thailand Development Research Institute
Panel Discussants:
Professor K C Chan
Secretary for Financial Services and the Treasury
The Government of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region
Mr. Benjamin Hung
Regional Chief Executive Officer, Greater China & North Asia
Standard Chartered Bank (Hong Kong) Limited
Moderator: Ms. Fion Li
Hong Kong Bureau Chief
Bloomberg News
For RSVP and/or media enquiries, please contact:
Helen Wong
Assistant Director of Communications
HKU Faculty of Business and Economics
Tel: +852 6199 6988 / +852 3917 4311
Email: hgewong@hku.hk
Anita Handayani
Communications Manager
HKU Faculty of Business and Economics
Tel: +852 3917 4488
Email: anitah@hku.hk
Asia Global Institute Launches Global Thinkers Series with After the Vote: Radical Change or Business as Usual?
On November 8 the United States will head to the polls following the most contentious campaign in its election history. What can the world expect? Join Asia Global Institute for its inaugural Global Thinkers event, After the Vote: Radical Change or Business as Usual?
The event will feature a keynote address by Nobel Laureate and AGI Academic Council Chairman Michael Spence. He will then join a distinguished panel composed of AGI Director Zhiwu Chen, Advisory Board Chairman Victor K Fung, and Advisory Board Member and SEB Chairman Marcus Wallenberg. The discussions will cover:
- Economic and trade priorities of a post-Obama administration
-Inequality in a globalizing economy
-U.S. policy for a post-Brexit EU
-The future of U.S.-China ties
Launched by the Asia Global Institute, Global Thinkers is a public outreach program that features a panel of internationally-renowned experts and thought leaders who will address pressing global issues of our time.
Members of the press are cordially invited to attend this event:
Date: November 17, 2016
Time: 1630-1800
Venue: Grand Hall, Lee Shau Kee Lecture Centre, Centennial Campus, The University of Hong Kong
Event page: http://www.asiaglobalinstitute.hku.hk/en/events/global-thinkers-vote-radical-change-business-usual/
For media enquiries, please contact:
Ms Beth Kwok, Asia Global Institute, Tel: +852 3917 1274, kgkbeth@hku.hk
Ms Hope Ngo, Asia Global Institute, Tel: +852 3917 1273, hopengo@hku.hk
ABOUT ASIA GLOBAL INSTITUTE
The Asia Global Institute at The University of Hong Kong was inaugurated on July 1, 2015. It seeks to generate and disseminate innovative thinking on global issues from Asian perspectives. It aims to inform global policy and actions towards a prosperous and sustainable future for all.
The Stephen Hui Geological Museum of HKU presents “Climate Change 360ᵒ” Exhibition
Period: Now till November 18, 2016
The Stephen Hui Geological Museum of HKU presents “Climate Change 360ᵒ” Exhibition, to coincide with the Climate Change Summit in Nantes, France (26-27 September 2016) and the upcoming United Nations Climate Change Conference COP22 in Marrakesh, Morocco (7-18 November 2016).
The exhibition is the collaboration between the Stephen Hui Geological Museum and the Consulate General of France in Hong Kong and Macau and part of a series of events during the “France – Hong Kong Month of Environment”.
Climate Change is a pressing and central issue in our conversations of our time as we seem to witness many changes in the environment such as the melting of artic sea ice and sea level changes. Our generation today faces the double challenge to be the first generation that is starting to witness and feel the impacts of climate change, and yet, may be the last one that can mitigate and fix it. This “Climate Change 360°“exhibition helps to raise public awareness of climate change issues.
It takes a closer look at the visible consequences of climate change we witness today and the issues raised by the increase in greenhouse gas emissions produced by human activities and illustrates important topics on scientific climate observations, causes of global warming, forecasts by climatologists and preventive measures.
This exhibition adds valuable information to the existing permanent exhibition on Cenozoic Climate Change of the Stephen Hui Geological Museum. Together the two displays complement each other to allow a better understanding on the Earth’s climate system through latest observations and scientific research on Climate Change in the geological past, at present and in the future.
Details of the Exhibition:
Venue: Stephen Hui Geological Museum, James Lee Science Building 1/F, The University of Hong Kong
Opening Hours: Monday – Friday, 1pm to 6pm
Closed on Saturdays and Sundays, University and Public Holidays
Free Admission
Tel/Email: (852) 2241 (General Enquiry / shmuseum@hku.hk
Webpage: http://www.earthsciences.hku.hk/
Media enquiries:
Communication and Public Affairs Office Ms Rhea Leung (Tel: 2857 8555 / 9022 7446; email: rhea.leung@hku.hk).
UMAG exhibitions
1. Nostalgia for Ancient Times: Contemporary Chinese Art to showcase contemporary techniques and styles in Chinese ink
Period: November 2 (Wednesday) to January 8, 2017 (Sunday)
The University Museum and Art Gallery (UMAG) of the University of Hong Kong (HKU) will collaborate once again with the Chinese Modern & Contemporary Art Document Research Centre and ZArt to present Nostalgia for Ancient Times: Contemporary Chinese Art. This innovative exhibition of contemporary Chinese ink paintings presents recent works by six young, established artists: Cheng Bao-zhong, Hao Liang, Kang Chun-hui, Liu Qi, Peng Jian and Qin Ai.
When viewed as a group, the exhibiting artists refer to a shared nostalgia that each expresses through ink on paper. Whether it is Cheng Bao-zhong’s finely rendered landscapes, Hao Liang’s depiction of a scholar or Peng Jian’s boldly coloured scholars’ books, the theme suggests a melancholic return to the past. Kang Chun-hui’s bird painting and Liu Qi’s “bamboo” further underline the contemplation of traditional painterly topics. In so doing, the painters appear to long for ancient times, as they depict some of the best-known and most celebrated motifs of bygone eras.
This development is no isolated phenomenon, but rather a more general trend as Chinese cultural practices are being re-explored more broadly. Artists — both nationally and internationally — have taken creative inspiration from China’s continuum of traditional arts. In the tradition of scholar artists, this young generation of highly skilled talent is steeping itself in the system of applied materials and techniques while moving forward through modes of self-cultivation and reflection.
Venue: 2/F, Fung Ping Shan Building, UMAG, 90 Bonham Road, Pokfulam
2. Pictures of the Past: Hungarian Photographer Dezső Bozóky in Hong Kong -- captured Hong Kong’s past through a foreign lens
Period: September 26 (Wednesday) to January 8, 2017 (Sunday)
Poised to learn more about Asia and to experience China firsthand, naval doctor Bozóky (1871–1957) travelled to the East during the first decade of the twentieth century, recorded his journey in a diary and photographed and self-developed hundreds of images that today present rare visual resources of the former colonial city and its busy and world-famous Victoria Harbour.
In an ever more developing Hong Kong, Bozóky’s beautiful black-and-white and hand-coloured pictures present historic documents that allow us to re-trace their master’s steps and offer insights into the bustling merchant town, culturally mixed society and lush natural landscape that he encountered. Bozóky’s images displayed a foreign world to his compatriots at home where they formed a treasure trove of information in the early 1900s Budapest, just as they do today.
Venue: 1/F, Fung Ping Shan Building, UMAG, 90 Bonham Road, Pokfulam
3. "Classical Chinese Huanghuali Furniture from the Haven Collection" presents the art and craft of Ming and Qing domestic living and furniture making
Period: September 7 (Wednesday) to November 20, 2016 (Sunday)
Chinese huanghuali furniture is world-famous and, for the longest time, has been collected in both East and West. In Ming dynasty, traditional wood architecture and Buddhist thrones inspired Chinese furniture makers and, as trade expanded, so did the amount of hardwood furniture in the form of sophisticated movable pieces and built-in interiors. Ming furniture is known for its elegant lines and carved details. During the reign of Emperor Longqing (1567–1572) China opened its borders, previously implemented import bans were lifted and a greater variety of building materials became available. Consequently, during the Ming and Qing dynasties the most celebrated types of domestic furniture were made from huanghuali and zitan woods. The elegant dark hardwood with natural shine is remarkable for the fact that Chinese furniture is typically made from solid timber, not an invisible sub-construction covered by a decorative veneer, as is so often the case in the West.
The strength of each individual furniture element and the consistent colour matters, as every detail is exposed and the precision of the joints, the size and position of the dowels, are all visual elements of an often very simple and graceful design. In some pieces the joints are detectible and accessible, sometimes demountable, or else expertly hidden in the more sophisticated pieces. Applied surface finishes were generally only a layer of wax; no stains or clear lacquer seals were added to the dense and inherently decorative woods.
Venue: 1/F, T.T. Tsui Building, UMAG, 90 Bonham Road, Pokfulam
Opening Hours:
09:30 – 18:00 (Monday to Saturday)
13:00 – 18:00 (Sunday)
Closed on University and Public Holidays
Tel/Email: (852) 2241 5500 (General Enquiry) / museum@hku.hk
Admission: Free
Website: www.umag.hku.hk/en/
Connect with UMAG on social media:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/umag.hku
Twitter: https://twitter.com/UMAG_HKU
Instagram: #SpanningTime, #HKUMAG
Weibo: @香港大學美術博物館UMAG
Media enquiries:
UMAG Communication Officer Miss Elena Cheung, Tel: (852) 2241 5512, Email: elenac@hku.hk.