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Huge China art gift boosts Hong Kong culture district
by Staff Writers
Hong Kong (AFP) July 4, 2012

China last emperor jewellery gets first Taiwan show
Taipei (AFP) July 4, 2012 - Priceless jewellery belonging to China's last emperor Puyi and his wife Wanrong on loan from China are on display in Taiwan for the first time, a Taiwanese museum said Wednesday.

The National Palace Museum in Taipei is showcasing nearly 70 pieces of the imperial couple's jewellery as part of a special exhibition titled "Royal Style" that runs till September, it said.

The jewels are on loan from northeast China's Shenyang Palace Museum, in a sign of improving ties between Taiwan and China since the island's Beijing-friendly government came to power in 2008.

They are the first objects the Taipei museum will exhibit belonging to the couple, who took valuables with them when they left The Forbidden City in Beijing in the 1920s after the Qing Dynasty was overthrown.

Noted items include an emerald pendant Wanrong wore at her wedding and a pearl hair pin in the shape of a phoenix, symbol of an empress, and a pocket watch Puyi had when he was taken to the Soviet Union as a prisoner in 1945.

The Forbidden City served as the imperial palace of the Qing Dynasty and provided the setting for the 1987 Oscar-winning film "The Last Emperor" based on the turbulent lives of Puyi and Wanrong.


The donation of a major collection of Chinese art has breathed new life into plans for a cultural development on Hong Kong's waterfront that more than once appeared to be on the brink of collapse.

Leaders of the almost $3 billion integrated development known as the West Kowloon Cultural District are now more confident than ever that the project, already 14 years in the planning, will become a reality from 2017.

As a master plan by British architect Norman Foster for the harbour district edges forward, the artistic foundation stone was laid in June in the form of a donation of 1,463 works of contemporary Chinese art valued at $163 million by former Swiss diplomat Uli Sigg.

The collection, consisting of works by more than 300 artists including Ai Weiwei, Ding Yi, Fang Lijun and Geng Jianyi, is considered by many to be the largest and most important collection of Chinese contemporary art in the world.

"It's a phenomenal donation because in one go it defines this museum," said Lars Nittve, executive director of the yet-to-be-built M+ museum where the Sigg collection will be displayed from 2017.

"You can build big buildings, that's not so difficult, but to have a collection ... that's a major step," added the Swedish former director of the Tate Modern gallery in London.

--'A major impetus to get the thing done'--

The beauty of the Sigg collection is that unlike most private collectors, who generally buy what appeals to their personal tastes, Sigg set out to create a historical record of Chinese art, in all its forms, over the past 30 years.

"In the early 1990s I realised that nobody was collecting Chinese contemporary art even remotely systematically -- neither individuals nor institutions in China or abroad," the former Swiss ambassador to China said in a statement.

"That seemed odd for the biggest cultural space in the world, and for what will be in hindsight a very important period.

"So I decided to change my approach and collect like an institution would...I set out to create that 'document' about Chinese contemporary art that is missing in China, and missing outside as well."

West Kowloon Cultural District Authority chief executive Michael Lynch, the Australian former director of the Sydney Opera House who is in charge of the whole Kowloon development, said the Sigg donation was a breakthrough.

"It will serve as a major impetus for us to get the thing done," he told AFP at his office overlooking the site for the proposed development, which will include theatres, parks, residential apartments and an exhibition centre.

Conceived in 1998 just after Britain handed Hong Kong back to China, the West Kowloon development was intended to give the southern city -- better known as a glitzy financial and shopping hub -- a world-class cultural space.

But the government's initial plan to develop the 40-hectare (100-acre) project in partnership with one of the city's property tycoons met a firestorm of public opposition and had to be scrapped.

Lynch's British predecessor lasted only a few months in the post before returning to London to join the British Council.

-- 'Uncertainty over'--

When Lynch -- who was chief executive of the South Bank Centre in London from 2002 to 2009 -- took over a year ago, the job was regarded by many as a poisoned chalice.

But the veteran arts administrator said the days of uncertainty are now over and the project is on budget and ahead of schedule, with the "digging" to start next year and the centrepiece M+ museum on course for a 2017 opening.

That is when Hong Kong's new leader, Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying, has promised full suffrage instead of the "small circle" vote by a pro-Beijing electoral committee that appointed him in March.

It's a timetable that is not lost on 61-year-old Lynch, who talks about the Kowloon cultural district as a "democratic space" where art, commerce and the outdoors will come together in an environmentally sustainable development.

"The next five years for us are going to be absolutely critical, as they will for the government that faces an election in 2017. I would have thought our interests are quite shared in that way," he said.

He hoped the development would "make Hong Kong a great world city" and "embody the best of cultural districts from other parts of the world".

The Sigg donation was proof that "this is a project to be taken seriously".

"I guess we've now solved a major part of the problem -- of what goes in the museum," he said.

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Hong Kong lifestyle 'off-limits to China army'
Hong Kong (AFP) July 4, 2012 - China's secretive troops stationed in Hong Kong face a slew of restrictions to prevent them from indulging in the city's "capitalist lifestyle", a report said Wednesday, in a rare glimpse of their military life.

The People's Liberation Army (PLA) took over defence duties in Hong Kong after Britain handed the southern Chinese city over in 1997, with operations long-shrouded in secrecy.

But after a rare visit granted to the South China Morning Post recently, the paper said the 6,000 troops led a life that was "cut off almost completely from a city that they train so rigorously to defend".

The soldiers, sailors and airmen are strictly confined to their 18 barracks across the semi-autonomous city, and have to spend even their weekly day off in their dormitories, prevented from engaging with the Hong Kong public.

"We are not allowed to go out during days off or public holidays," Lieutenant Commander Shi Liqing told the widely-read English newspaper.

"But we encourage the sailors to cultivate healthy personal hobbies," added Shi, who oversees cultural activity at the PLA Hong Kong's naval base.

The Post quoted the PLA as saying the isolated lifestyle was to "prevent their military spirit from becoming contaminated by Hong Kong's capitalist lifestyle", in a city known for its free speech and luxury shopping stores.

The troops, whose recruitment requirements are higher than on the mainland and must be at least high school educated, go through a 16-hour daily routine of work or training starting at 6am, according to the report.

They take an obligatory two-hour nap at 2pm, the report said, adding that they pass their spare time in the barracks playing chess, cards and singing karaoke.

The Hong Kong garrison staged a startling show of military might with helicopters, tanks and missile launchers last Friday for Chinese President Hu Jintao, who was in the city to mark the 15th handover anniversary from Britain.

But with anti-Beijing sentiment soaring to a post-handover high, the parade drew ridicule from Hong Kongers, with one social networker saying "it feels like we are in North Korea".



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