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The Seven Year Itch at Boogie Woogie Photography


  • Hong Kong Hong Kong (map)

To mark the seventh year of Boogie Woogie Photography, we present a group show of our beloved artists who have followed us since we started in 2016.

This year, the gallery has opened its passion for photography to other mediums. We are proud to present in the Loft in Wong Chuk Hang paintings, sculptures, collages, etchings and – with the Kraemer gallery from Paris – exceptional 18th century French furniture and decorative arts.

Hong Kong is a welcoming hub for talents and we are grateful to host this milestone exhibition with artists from many different countries. Six of our seventeen artists exhibited will be in Hong Kong with us:

Lean Lui’s images explore themes of sensuality, innocence and personal connection. The ideas of seduction, intimacy and lust undergo a slow process of contamination from the outside, transforming innocent fantasies, paradigms of perfection and purity into the disconcerting experiences of fear, desire, pain and isolation that we, as humans, inevitably encounter in an imperfect world.

Patrice Bodenand’s black and white photographs taken over two decades in Hong Kong open our eyes to the hidden scratches of our city and refer with humour to the graffiti series taken by the famous surrealist artist Brassaï in Paris in the thirties.

The “Monochrome Collection” is an exquisite assemblage of textured art pieces crafted by Elsa Jeandedieu. Rooted in Elsa’s observation of nature, the white tondo we selected to showcase is the latest chapter of her artistic evolution.

Felix Sze Chung Wong is observing Singapore city through its facades geometry series and distinctive tower-studded cityscape.

Dion Leung’s collages explore topics of rebellion and conflicts with a practice of realism. As a self-taught artist, Dion is constantly looking for the expression of art in human interactions.

Finally, Stephen King’s recent meticulously composed large format prints of Scotland give us comfort and a sense of calm, reflecting the magnificence and isolation of the Scottish landscape.