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arbieroo

Arbie's Unoriginally Titled Book Blog

It's a blog! Mainly of book reviews.

Currently reading

Station Zero
Philip Reeve
Progress: 220/282 pages
The Books of Earthsea: The Complete Illustrated Edition
Ursula K. Le Guin, Charles Vess
Progress: 749/997 pages
The Penguin Book of Russian Poetry
Robert Chandler
The Uncertain Land and Other Poems
Patrick O'Brian
Progress: 8/160 pages
The Heptameron (Penguin Classics)
Marguerite de Navarre
Progress: 152/544 pages
The Poems and Plays of John Masefield
John Masefield
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Poems Selected
Emily Dickinson, Ted Hughes
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Selected Poems
U A Fanthorpe
Progress: 18/160 pages
The Penguin Book of Scottish Verse
Mick Imlah, Robert Crawford
Hainish Novels & Stories, Vol. 2
Ursula K. Le Guin
Progress: 133/789 pages

Hong Kong, the Changing Scene, Laurence Tam

Hong Kong, the changing scene: A record in art : Hong Kong Museum of Art, 8.2.80--9.3.80 - Art Museum,  Chinese Univeristy of Hong Kong Staf

The premise behind this exhibition was to show, through surviving artworks, how Hong Kong looked from roughly the founding of the colony up to World War I. Being completely unfamiliar with modern Hong Kong, the sense of developing history and contrast with modern times that I get looking at old photos and other art of Bath was completely absent. Hence I had little choice but to take the images at face value. The text is dual Chinese and English.

 

Most are prints, the originals not having survived. A couple of oil paintings from the more recent end of the time range show heavy craquelure. A small number of watercolours from the same time are also included.

 

There's a lot of stylistic variation within the limits of Western realism and I liked a high number of the images. I gained a sense of just how mountainous the island is and learned that significant areas of developed coastal Hong Kong are reclaimed land. This process of reclamation started well before the 20th Century.