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  • By Artist: Amy Cheung
  • By Artist: Lulu Ngie
  • By Artist: Simon Birch

Amy Cheung Lightbox - Indefinite Portrait

HK$9,000.00

Faux is delighted to present a unique collection of limited edition Lightboxes by Amy Cheung

Amy Wan Man Cheung is a conceptual artist and has produced large-scale works. Born and raised in Hong Kong, she received a B.A. in art history and fine art from Goldsmiths College in London and an M.F.A. from the Slade School of Fine Art of the University of London. She represented Hong Kong in the 2007 Venice Biennale, and in the same year she received the "Outstanding Young Artist Award" from the Hong Kong Arts Development Council. She was awarded a grant in 2010 from the Asian Cultural Council to participate in an international residency program in New York and to meet artists and curators around the United States.

Simon Birch Dinner Plates (Set of 4)

HK$4,400.00

Born in 1974 in Brighton, England, Birch has lived and worked in Hong Kong for over twenty years. He has had solo exhibitions in Beijing, Los Angeles, Miami, and Singapore and has participated in group shows at the Hong Kong Museum of Art and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Tokyo. Birch has been awarded the prestigious Louis Vuitton Asian Art Prize and the Sovereign Asian Art Prize. He has organized manylarge-scale multimedia installation projects in Hong Kong, most notably: HOPE & GLORY: A Conceptual Circus (2010) and Daydreaming WithThe Hong Kong Edition(2012) and has recently opened his show, The 14th Factory in Los Angeles.

Lulu Ngie Dinner Plates (Set of 4)

HK$4,400.00

A boxed set of 4 fine bone china sinner plates by Lulu Ngie (edition of 30 )

Lulu Ngie focuses on Chinese ink painting and prefers to use simple lines and forms in her figurative works. She also works in oil and watercolour. Today, her ink work is gaining much interest both at home and overseas and is perceived as a potent tool that raises questions about the role of Chinese and East Asian traditions in contemporary art, especially when global events such as art fairs are pushing this medium towards a more homogeneous aesthetic. Majoring in painting, Lulu Ngie, graduated from Hong Kong Art School in 2006.

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