10 Chancery Lane Gallery is pleased to present Remembering Days, Forgetting Time,
by prominent Hong Kong artist Carol Lee Mei-kuen. Lee will include works from her
recent exhibition at the Xi’an OCAT Museum curated by Karen Smith. The exhibition will
also open with the launch of the book Light Years in Letters: A Postcard Project. The
book is a selection of postcards created by Lee in the past five years as part of her
postcard project, which began in 2008.
Since 2005, Lee has employed time as both the material and means of her art making.
Harnessing the changes in light and its reaction with paper, she has made time and
space two-dimensional and visible, presenting the relationship between time and
history/memories in pictorial form. Lee’s works cross the boundaries of various
traditional media—photography, printmaking, painting—and her works have gradually
become her own language for art expression, which she names “time writing” or “time
drawing”. In Lee’s Origin series, circular works on paper are displayed with a selection
of dried flowers, plants and insects. An exploration of the origins of humanity and the
preservation of animal and plant life through fossilization, Origin progresses the artist’s
“time drawing” to a new level of meaning, linking her artistic process to larger and more
profound concepts. The works are both delicate and intricate, blossoms of flora and
fauna fill the circular spaces after time and sunlight have left their marks.
Carol Lee Mei-kuen states, “It is because only when time passes that we can perceive
everything around us. Time is no longer linear. We travel through days and years, going
back to the past to tie it with the present. By so doing, we can again read in detail
those stories we considered lost in the threads of time. Time, in the past and at
present, starts a new form of life. The lightness of its being translates into thousands of
words.”
10 Chancery Lane Gallery director Katie de Tilly comments, “Carol Lee Mei-kuen has
been an active artist in Hong Kong since the late 1990s, her pursuit of linking history,
memory and the escapable aspect of time has led her into a unique art practice of
burning light onto paper with the sun. A practice she has been following for several
years now. Carol Lee’s works on paper become photograms of humanity, carrying a
unique voice of Hong Kong’s past and encompassing a shared experience that all can
relate.”
Lee’s postcard project is an interactive and ongoing series, in which she explores
communication, writing and time. A new set of postcards will be included in the
Setouchi Triennale 2016 in Japan in the summer session (from July 18 to September 4)
and autumn session (from October 8 to 6 November).
About the artist
Carol Lee Mei-kuen received a Bachelor of Arts (Fine Art) with distinction from RMIT
University (co-presented with Hong Kong Art School) in 2001, and a Master of Fine Art
in 2008 with Outstanding MFA Achievement Award. She was elected a member of the
Golden Key International Honour Society in 2001, and was one of founding members of
the MIA (Mere Independent Artist). Her painting and installation works were selected for
the Hong Kong Art Biennial Exhibition and awarded in the Philippe Charriol Foundation
Art Competition. Her glass works were also selected for the Corning Museum of Glass
Review in New York for three years. In 2002, Lee organised the open studio activities
and talks titled “Kai Zha” in Chai Wan. In 2004, she opened “Too Art”, a private gallery
in the Hong Kong Arts Centre, to promote art and collection culture in Hong Kong. She
was the Vice-Convener of the Art Container Project in 2008. Lee has participated in
many overseas and local exhibitions, and her works are collected by museums, art
foundation and private collectors.