By Ahmad Eduardo A. Coo SAN FRANCISCO Although she wanted to be an artist from a young age, Hong Kong native Phoebe Man knew it would be a precarious existence. It took the frustration of three years of writing about art as a journalist before she finally got up the nerve and took the plunge. "I wasn't happy as a journalist," Man recalls, "I began to lose focus, and eventually I felt very lost. I wanted to find myself so I decided to do art full-time. Today, she knows she made the right choice. Although Hong Kong's environment is far from nurturing for an artist, Man's career has flourished. But her success is more the exception than the rule. Hong Kong, like many places, often seems to put a higher premium on material wealth and good business sense than on creativity, Man complains. An added difficulty is that most art patrons in Hong Kong prefer works which contain classical Chinese motifs and styles. Life for artists in Hong Kong like Man who prefer to experiment with new forms and modes of expression is a constant struggle. Becoming a full-time artist in Hong Kong, she says, can be "financial suicide." "Most artists in Hong Kong are not grounded in classical Chinese techniques," Man says, "that's why most of their artwork is not popular with Hong Kong people." From condoms filled with uncooked rice to walls made out of bricks of margarine with words like Love and Truth carved into them, Man has READ ON: Man's provacative works are on exhibit at the SFMOMA |
Pius
Lee Peter
Louis Martin
Yan
Coming soon In
late May, journalism students from |
|
The
Pacific is produced by students at the UC
Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism
|