All images were taken with one camera on a single roll of film on the same day.
Fare well, Occupy Central.
At Causeway Bay.
Freedom under watch.
At Admiralty.
Camera: Contax TVS II
Film: Kodak UltraMax 400
A Thinking Street Photography Site
An early Christmas for Occupy Central at Causeway Bay.
Fare well.
People are packing.
Amidst Christmas sale.
Installation with steel resolve.
Imagine what might have been.
Freedom under the eye of the clock.
At Admiralty.
Unpoetic translation: even if there’s disappointment, one cannot lose hope.
There’s a time to pack up.
A time to plant fresh hope.
A time to remember.
Time to take stock.
Sacrifice.
Hope.
Restrain.
Hunger strike zone.
Merry Christmas Occupy Central.
The central government offices are overwritten with desire.
Home is Hong Kong.
A time to build up.
A time to let go.
A time for nostalgia.
Merry Christmas Occupy Central.
Fare well.
Fare well.
Photos in previous posts have been featured in the following literary journal articles:”Whither Hong Kong?“, Hong Kong’s Umbrella Movement: Four Poems” and “The Umbrellas and the Tear Gas“.
Camera: Canon 600D
Legacy Lens: SMC Takumar 35mm f 3.5
All images were taken with one camera, one lens, on the same roll of film and on the same day.
This is a visual meditation on Occupy Central.
Once upon a time, Occupy Central was an idea. It was an event that was yet to come.
It then became an event.
It will be an event that is always already present, even if it ends today or at some point in the future.
At Admiralty.
At Mong Kok.
At Causeway Bay.
Thanks for reading.
Camera: Leica M6
Lens: Voigtlander Nokton Classic 35mm f 1.4 SC
Film: Ilford XP2 400
There’s definitely a sense that things are winding down at two of the three Occupy sites.
There’re fewer tents now at Mong Kok.
I’m focusing more on the objects this time – how do you photograph tents and people that are not there?
At Admiralty, the tents are still holding forth, and the art works are still looking robust.
Causeway Bay is a bit quiet these days, though there’re still people who would pause to read the messages.
Thanks for reading.
Camera: Canon 600D
Legacy Lens: Meyer-Optik Gorlitz Lydith 30mm f 3.5
So – I managed to go to all three sites on the same afternoon.
At Mong Kok.
People are still smiling.
Mannequins are still standing.
Though there’s a sense that this might be over soon…
I’ll never look at umbrellas the same way again.
Umbrellas and street culture are now intertwined.
Lots of artists have emerged.
Every person an umbrella.
We are all umbrellas.
No violence, please.
The hope of a generation is here.
I’m ambivalent when it comes to the police.
The police stands for law and order.
I respect the police, but what happens when the law privileges a particular social order that is in question?
Over at Admiralty.
An umbrella community.
We’re all waiting and watching.
We see the organic growth of a community.
A community that stands for something.
An artful and thoughtful community is emerging.
Though it’s all eggs against a brick wall.
Vigilance.
Constant vigilance.
A poem by Gu Cheng entitled “A Generation”: Dark night has given me dark eyes, but I’m using them to look for brightness.
These are students of history and poetry.
I see students like this on campus every day.
I teach them poetry and creative writing.
They’re somewhat goofy, always respectful, and many do have a strange fondness for Doraemon soft toys.
They bring these soft toys along with them for pictures on graduation day.
Now they’re a force of social change, graduating with honours.
It’s not just the students, of course.
The carpenters show up to be carpenters.
It is already done.
Even if the barricades are cleared and all have gone home, Occupy Central would be that powerful idea that will be always ever present.
The rest is just documentation.
Occupy Central is already set in memory, in photographs, social media, in newspaper and government reports.
The skeleton of the umbrella is strong.
There are no wasted bodies on the streets.
They know what they want.
At Causeway Bay.
The Hong Kong people.
The small business owners.
The umbrella is looking somewhat tattered but the sentiment is strong.
Rough translation: the work is hard but keep going.
In the end, history will decide.
Camera: Canon 600D
Legacy Lenses: SMC Takumar 24mm f 3.5, Meyer-Optik Gorlitz Oreston 50mm f 1.8
The protesters at Causeway Bay are still there, waiting.
Hope expresses itself in so many ways.
There’s festivity in the colours.
Hope is in the air.
The students are doing their homework, taking up the work of creating a home.
The umbrellas will not let us forget.
The tents will not let us forget the future of Hong Kong.
So many messages are being sent.
Camera: Canon 600D
Legacy Lens: Meyer Optik Lydith 30mm f 3.5