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Update | Dust cubes from 9/11, bricks made of dead ants, giant insect projections – Hong Kong artist’s odd exhibition

  • Artist Leung Mee-ping’s exhibition at Hong Kong’s Osage Gallery highlights her use of materials collected in daily life that examine time and existence
  • There is a strong focus on insects, which reflect humans, the exhibition’s co-curator says

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Leung Mee-ping’s “Underneath the Feet, is Ground” (2009), made of compressed ant corpses, is currently on show at an exhibition at Hong Kong’s Osage Gallery. Photo: Joel Lam via Osage Gallery
Mabel Lui

As you walk into Osage Gallery in Kwun Tong, Hong Kong, you might notice a faint foul smell waft slowly up your nose. What is that, you think?

It is the smell of three bricks. All of which have been made entirely from compressed dead ants.

Titled Underneath the Feet, is Ground (2009), the bricks make up just one of many intriguing artworks in “Souvenirs de Choses” (“memories of things”), a solo exhibition at the East Kowloon gallery that features works by Hong Kong artist Leung Mee-ping.

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Born in 1961, Leung is one of the most influential artists and art educators in Hong Kong, having taught for over 15 years at Hong Kong Baptist University’s art school and co-founded the non-profit art space Para Site.

(From left) Hong Kong artist Leung Mee-ping with “Souvenirs de Choses” curators Vivian Ting and Jeff Leung, and Osage Gallery founder Agnes Lin. Photo: Osage Gallery
(From left) Hong Kong artist Leung Mee-ping with “Souvenirs de Choses” curators Vivian Ting and Jeff Leung, and Osage Gallery founder Agnes Lin. Photo: Osage Gallery

Formerly arts editor of the Hong Kong Economic Times newspaper, Leung studied art in France and the United States, and later completed a PhD in cultural studies at Chinese University of Hong Kong.

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