A museum of hybridity: The history of the display of art in the public museum of Hong Kong, and its implications for cultural identities

Eva Kit-Wah Man*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Chapter in book/report/conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

Abstract

This essay demonstrates the ways in which the official Museum of Art in Hong Kong realizes its strategies and influences of identity formation by using its resources and representative position in both colonial and postcolonial spaces. I argue that there are ever-changing “internal” battles of cultural identities, and the official museum has been playing a significant role in some of the cultural and political antagonisms involved. Through a historical survey and investigation of some displays of art there, the essay shows how the museum incorporates the concept of cultural identity, challenges its stability and hegemony, and reformulates its meaning and content. The essay also argues for a subtle form of cultural policy, other than the publicized version, manifested in the birth and evolution of the local public art museum as an institution. The study points out that the official museum offers a variety of perspectives on hybrid discourses and the politics of identity in material forms. it is a practice of hybridity that calls attention to disjunctions and conjunctions, in the form of its development, organization, design and art display. it points out that the museum’s permanent collection of Chinese traditional art, together with special exhibits of Western masterpieces, are demonstrating how hybridity, in Bakhtin’s sense of a mixture of social languages within the limits of a single utterance or an encounter between two different linguistic consciousnesses, is represented in the Museum. Recent

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationHybrid Hong Kong
EditorsKwok-bun Chan
Place of PublicationOxon; New York
PublisherRoutledge
Chapter8
Pages137-152
Number of pages16
Edition1st
ISBN (Electronic)9780203723296
ISBN (Print)9780415695541, 9780415754712
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 7 Mar 2012

Scopus Subject Areas

  • Social Sciences(all)

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'A museum of hybridity: The history of the display of art in the public museum of Hong Kong, and its implications for cultural identities'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this