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Public Sculpture in Hong Kong
by John Batten
at 5:14pm on 12th October 2008

It has been awhile since I have visited Tsim Sha Tsui East and the recent renovations in the central plaza is a little better for the public: better seating, for example. In another section of TST East I saw a sculpture by Van Lau - it has been in this location for many years and it is, aesthetically, dated and out-of-place.

There is much bad public sculpture in Hong Kong - some is out-dated but much is, aesthetically, just bad art. Do you have examples of bad public sculpture that you can tell us about?

How do we re-assess sculpture? Can it be removed if there is a consensus that it should be removed? Can we request (to whom?) that it be removed? Who decides what is selected in the first place? Do we have a transparent system of assessment and selection? Can we trust government officials to make good aesthetic judgements when considering to commission sculpture?

Below are two examples of poor public sculpture.


Golden Dragon sculpture in Causeway Bay


Recently placed sculpture in Sheung Wan

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