BRIDGE PROJECT #4: SHORT DOC

THICKER THAN WATER — A Short Documentary

Proposal:

Thicker than Water is a five-minute short documentary about my family’s history and its correspondence to the Great Escape to Hong Kong. “The Great Escape to Hong Kong” is commonly used to refer to the massive influx of population from Mainland China to Hong Kong after 1949, when Mao Zedong’s Communist party took over China. My great-grandfather and grandfather were one of the few who managed to escape before the borders were closed without going through the fatal catastrophes that later occurred. This period of history remained unspoken of until recent years due to its implication to the downside of communism in China1. This documentary is not solely an exploration of personal history, but also the history of my home city — the history that makes up most of Hong Kong’s population today.

Prior to 1997, Hong Kong was governed by the British as a colony and had a distinctive political practice from that of China. China underwent a series of infamous communist reforms, including the Great Leap Forward and Cultural Revolution, causing famine, loss of education, jobs, and even millions of death2. Fear of the Communist party and possible threats, many, especially the youth from South China, left to Hong Kong through both legal and illegal means. The fortunate were able to apply for immigration, while those out of luck could only risk their lives to swim or hike across the borders, where more than ten million had died.

My great-grandfather from Guangzhou, China, departed to Canada in the 1940s and worked at construction sites to build to the railway. When he returned to China in 1949, all the family’s savings and businesses in the country were confiscated by the Communist government as part of the reform. To earn a living and support the family, he decided to temporarily move to Hong Kong with my grandfather. However, as soon as the Communist party began ruling the country, Mao started capturing “class enemies” who went against the premises of communism, including businessmen, the middle-class and right-wing activists, and put forward a set of programs to reform China’s social structure. As a result, China was isolated from the rest of the world, including Hong Kong. Neither my great-grandfather and grandfather were able to return to China without going through communist “reeducation”, nor my grandfather’s children could move to Hong Kong and reunite with him unless they escape illegally. Our family still remains separated today.

Born and raised in Hong Kong, my mother has the opportunities that her half-siblings in China never had. She went to an English convent school in Hong Kong, received university education and eventually went to the United States, where my sister and I were born. Growing up in Hong Kong, I have been exposed to a relatively liberal environment dominated by the Chinese culture with immense British influence. In Hong Kong, the people are entitled to the freedom of expression, which is one of the characteristics that distinguishes the city from Mainland China up

to this day. Protests and demonstrations take place every month or even week in Hong Kong, while it is almost impossible to show one’s dissenting thoughts in China without bearing critical political consequences.

The diversity and freedom in Hong Kong have helped me develop my interest in the arts. When creating my own visual art pieces in secondary school, I incorporated social and political issues of Hong Kong, such as the housing problem and economic disparity, into my works. A lot of my inspirations also came from the architecture and people of the city, the products of the peculiar heritage.

All these would not have been possible if my great-grandfather and grandfather could not leave Mainland China safely like many during the Great Escape to Hong Kong. During the Great Escape, millions of forgotten souls were drowned in the river that separates their haven from their nightmare but were never given the acknowledgement they deserved in both China and Hong Kong. Immigration and refugee issues are still prominent complications around the world, and the voices of those who are involved are often silenced and forgotten. Other than connecting my own identity with my family’s history, I aim to elucidate this previously veiled moment of history to my audience in this piece.

Treatment:

I plan to begin my documentary with a song, The Glorious Days , by the Hong Kong band Beyond. This song has been known as a piece that symbolizes the expectations of the people to a utopian Hong Kong since it was first broadcasted in 1991. The band, Beyond, is also one of my mother’s favorites. As the chorus of the song plays, the visual will be gradually zooming into a vintage radio that my mother owns, following by a hand that turns it to another station. The audio then shifts to a clip of me reading out an excerpt from South China Morning Post’s interview with Chen Bingan that discusses the Great Escape to Hong Kong. The screen then slowly dissolves into a black screen showing the title of my documentary to end the introduction.

From the black screen, I will start bringing forward an audio clip of a phone call from me to my mother casually interviewing her about our family history and her experience growing up in Hong Kong separated with some of her siblings. I am going to insert pictures of my great-grandfather, grandfather, my mother and her siblings from the past and display them like a photo-roman as my mother speaks (in black and white). When it is my turn to speak in the conversation, I will switch to colored photographs from my childhood of my sister, my cousins and I. I am aiming to keep the interview like an everyday conversation with my mother but I have also set a few guiding questions for her throughout the process:

  1. When did you know about your grandfather and his story moving to Hong Kong? How did you feel at that time?
  2. Have you ever wanted to visit where he lived and worked in Canada and the route he took to leave to Hong Kong?
  1. How do you think your life would be different from the present if your grandfather and father did not make the choice to depart Mainland China?
  2. How would you describe your relationship with your half-siblings in China?Following the conversation would be a shift to a bigger picture of the Great Escape to

Hong Kong. I am going to narrate the story of the event and include images from old news reports in the video with some of my home videos with my grandparents and extended family. I want to link my family history to this shared piece of history in my cultural heritage.

I will be recording the sound of water running and incorporate it into different parts of the documentary as an element that recurs throughout. It sheds light to the subject of the piece as it delineates the river that separates Mainland China and Hong Kong, where countless ancestors of the Hong Kong population had to pass through and sometimes swim through like my great-grandfather and grandfather. The flowing of water also adds significance to the tile, “Thicker than Water”. In both Chinese and English, people often use “blood is thicker than water” to describe the bonding between family members that runs in one’s veins. The presence of water would strengthen the communication of both imageries.

To end the documentary, I am devising a scene of me swimming in a pool, while switching back and forth to a recording of me doing a drawing of my great-grandfather, who I have never seen before, with my mother’s description of his appearance. This will tie the documentary back to its theme and visualize my gratefulness towards my great-grandfather. The

portrayal of me swimming would connect myself with those who struggled to escape to Hong Kong for a better life and also helped the city to blossom into the metropolis it is today. I am intending to show compassion and also gratitude to these people who went through the most devastating parts of the Great Escape to Hong Kong.

Narrative devices of documentary:

  • ●  VIDEO/AUDIO INTERVIEW with my mother and grandmother (if possible)
  • ●  FAMILY PHOTOS AND HOME VIDEOS of my great-grandfather and grandfatherand from my childhood with my sister and cousins
  • ●  NEWS ARCHIVAL MATERIAL of the Great Escape to Hong Kong
  • ●  FIELD VIDEO AND AUDIO RECORDING of the present to tie historical event to myown identity (shot by DSLR)

 

First week progress

I recorded myself reading an excerpt from an article about the Great Escape to Hong Kong. I added a radio filter on top to blend it into the visual. I also gathered images from my childhood that may be useful for the project.

 

Second week progress

I interviewed my mom on phone and recorded the conversation. I also asked my mom for photographs of my elder family members to include as visuals for the interview in my documentary.

 

Final 

BRIDGE PROJECT # 2 (STUDIO): “VISUAL & AUDITORY EXPERIMENT”

This installation piece visualizes me and my partner, Disha’s experience of losing the sense of sight and sound at and on our way to Washington Square Park. The piece is constructed as a large cube, directly portraying how I pictured the space around me to be during the experience. We chose to use pins and thread in different colors to outline or fill shapes of sounds we heard to evoke a chaotic and fidgety emotion that we both felt. However, when audiences try to focus on one single shape, it is easy to understand what is being depicted. This parallels with our experience in which certain sounds become more prominent when we begin paying more attention to solely that sound or object. The wired faces represents the overwhelming image and sounds we perceive when we walked with ear plugs in. Although most sounds were muted, we could both hear small parts of people’s conversations when they pass by on the street. The moving faces of these pedestrians dominates our memory of this experience and so we decided to to use a relatively thicker material, wire, and overlay them on top of everything else.

 

Audiences are brought into part of our experience as they have to enter the cube and be surrounded by all the different shapes we have created. Together with a sound clip we have recorded at the park, we try to create an all-rounded experience for audiences that resemble our experience at the park.

Shaping the wire to a face

One of the boards after a few shapes were pinned on

IMG_7653-24a0wo8

Final piece from the inside

 

BRIDGE PROJECT # 3: “COLOR & CONVERGENCE (DIVERGENCE)”

Color and Convergence: Red

I first created a 30-second audio for the color orange to recreate a scene of my childhood memory. When I was still a toddler, I would always eat the mashed carrots from Gerber. Growing up, my mother retells the story from time to time in which my skin turned into an reddish-orange tone from eating too much carrot baby food.

After listening to all the “orange” audio clips that our group created, we decided to switch to the color red as it holds a more prominent cultural significance in all our cultures. I chose to focus on Chinese New Year for my part. During Chinese New Year in Hong Kong, everything is red from the decorations to the food. Red symbolizes luck and all the good things in the Chinese culture. To me, Chinese New Year is the year in time when all my family members gather together and celebrate. For this reason, I tried to include more sound clips of families talking in Chinese and incorporate them with the rhythmic music of the lion dance during Chinese New Year.

After the short critique in class, however, we noticed the lack of authenticity in our clips since we have utilized a number of sound clips we found online. We decided to record our own audio clips and replace the old ones.

After refining our individual parts, we put together on iMovie our combined rough cut. We decided to have my part go first, as the sounds of people talking would be a good way to build up the festive atmosphere in the beginning. Instead of working on Chinese New Year, I changed to another Chinese festival, Dragonboat festival. Red is also a prominent color for this festival as it is the color of luck. The drums, dragonboats, whistles and decorations are all red.  Before going to college, I have always lived in places near the rivers or the South China Sea in Hong Kong. In May, during the Dragonboat festival, dragonboat races were held in my area and would attract huge crowds. People would come with their family and friends to watch the competition. Like my previous idea for Chinese New Year, I chose to focus more on the interaction between  human voices and the rhythmic sounds of the traditional Chinese festival. I incorporated audio clips of crowds talking in Chinese that I recorded in Chinatown with sounds of the festival that I recreated our extracted from old videos. For the final cut, I am planning to overlay a more dominant track of people talking in Chinese like a family gathering on Dragonboat festival on top of the reoccurring beat of the drums and whistle to create a more interesting texture.

For the transitions, we decided to add the sound of different bells in between each clip as in connects to all of the festivals we are trying to depict.

Link to final audio and visual piece: https://drive.google.com/file/d/11upUE_EcenL2F_TEjuscDnsGDtx4YNTx/view?usp=sharing

We kept most of our decisions for the rough cut and added more elements of the bells throughout the audio to link the whole piece together. We tried to introduce common sounds that run through the piece earlier to make the connection between each festivals stronger. For the visuals, we each illustrated an instrument, particularly bells, that are present in the festivals our individual audios are based on. We overlayed each shape to create a pattern that fills in the entire red screen. This shows how the festivals are tightly connected to each other by the color red and the presence of bells but also differ from each other.

 

Team members:

Breanna, Disha, Eneya

Mid-semester Self Evaluation

Drawing/Imaging: Places + Things

Throughout the first half of the semester, I have been feeling a little confused about the requirements of the professor regarding each assignment. Even though I paid attention to the instructions given each time, I noticed huge differences between my work and the others’ every time we have a critique. I believe that it is related to my lack of training in drawing in high school. Compared to my classmates, I am a lot less familiar with the terminology and formal techniques. I am planning to improve myself by reading more about related topics and trying to practise more frequently out of class. Despite the confusion that I have been having, I am happy about the quality of my work for this class.

 

Time: Frame

This is the class that I think that I have been most actively participating in. Since the professor covered a lot of topics of film and photography, also genres that I am very interested in, I am very intrigued by this class and I often try to share my thoughts. I am really happy with how I am able to engage with the class discussions and produce works that I feel confident about. To improve, I would like to try familiarizing myself with digital softwares for filmmaking and editing artworks by practising.

 

Integrative Studio 1: Memory

This class has been inspiring me a lot when I create my own works. Through group discussions and critiques, I am able to understand the creative progress of my classmates and give me ideas on how to expand on my own thoughts to effectively communicate through art. I am also able to try working with media that I was less familiar with, such as installation and audio. What I found quite challenging at first was working with other people. I started of being a little worried about working with others who have a very different artistic style from mine, or someone who works in a completely different pattern as me. However, after a lot of discussions, I feel that I am able to collaborate with people from distinctive backgrounds, and bring out incorporated ideas that are even more advanced.

 

Integrative Seminar 1: Memory

Like my studio class, my classmates also inspire me a lot in our seminar class. Although we shift from discussing visual arts to literature, the critical thinking and positive attitude of my classmates encourage me to also share my ideas, this developing a more sophisticated way of thinking when examining texts or even artworks. I am also really happy about the quality of work that I submit for this class, and I would like to keep up and also improve by reading more and thinking about different ways to express my own ideas.

 

Objects as History: Prehistory to Industrialization

This is a relatively challenging class for me. Even though I took history in high school, I am not familiar of the periods in history that the syllabus covers. Besides, since time is very limited for this class, I have to spend a lot of time doing readings before class to help myself prepare. I realized that reading ahead have been effectively helping me to understand the materials we go over in class, and I will try to keep it up through the semester to improve my performance in this class.

New York City Soundwalk

Max Neuhaus Permanent Installation

The moment I entered the triangular pedestrian island, I felt like all the sounds that lingered around the city center were isolated. The space within the triangle was encapsulated and all that I could hear were the indistinctive conversations between tourists in different languages. There were Mandarin Chinese, Korean, Spanish, English, and many more languages that I could not recognize.

Standing next to the grates located at the narrower side of the pedestrian island, I could hear soft, steady noises that resemble the sound of the subway trains moving underground. The noise faded and disappeared after a minute.

I began to focus again on the sounds within this tightly packed space surrounded by the busy streets. I realized that there was never any moment of silence — all of the conversations continued  — there was as though a symphony of varied languages. A Korean family came towards the statue next to where my partner and I were sitting and gazed. Although I could not understand the conversation, I knew that the father was trying to explain what he saw and interpreted to his children. His voice gradually became the dominating instrument of the orchestra of languages, and faded as they walked away to another statue.

 

Central Park Celebrity Audio Tour

We have chosen to visit the middle sector of Central Park following the Celebrity Audio Tour. The first point was the Shakespeare Garden. The recorded audio describes floral elements in Shakespeare’s literature, with romantic scenes in which characters are surrounded by roses during summer nights. It was ironic to the both of us that the Garden at Central Park was filled with green bushes and wilting yellow flowers, and how we were sweating from the humidity and heat. Contradictory to Shakespeare’s delineation, our experience at the Garden was relatively unpleasant.

Next was the Delacorte Theater. The first thing that came to mind was the emptiness of the space. I was expecting at least a small crowd touring around the theater. We were not allowed to enter the construction, so we kept wandering around the circular theater through the audio tour. Instead of explaining the architecture of the theater, the tour introduced plays that are performed there, including a few of Shakespeare’s pieces. It was interesting to me how the Park had meticulously connected the two neighboring points of interest in such a way, but the audio tour appeared to be slightly irrelevant for our experience visiting the theater. What stood out to me was the color composition within the theater’s area. It was dominated by green and tones of brown, resembling a clear image of trees and the nature, giving out a  peaceful sensation to me as a visitor.

BRIDGE PROJECT # I (STUDIO): “MEMOIR: SENSING YOUR PAST”

The fluctuating weather in New York City lately has reminded me of home, Hong Kong. Growing up, I am used to the humidity that sticks my pores to a stranger’s sweat, the heat and moisture encapsulated within the concrete jungle, and the haziness of the constantly gray sky. This short photo-roman displays this part of my memory through the sense of touch, also associating this piece of fond memory to New York City, where I consider myself a stranger.

Storyboard for “Sensing Your Past”

MEMORY storyboard-2fxtx6i

I have chosen touch out of the five senses as an approach to compare and contrast Hong Kong (where I grew up) and NYC. I am focusing on the differences in climate between the two and how I perceive or remember through touch. I am planning to divide the video into two parts, each portraying one city. Both parts begin with shots of the city to establish the setting, and then focusing on the interaction between me and the environment and how I “feel” and “touch” the city with my skin.

Visualize Your Senses

This piece visualizes how I remember my father now and as a child with reference to the senses of sight, smell, taste and touch. The white fabric on the left is wrapping gauze previously soaked in salt water. The roughness and salty taste and smell created by the solution portrays the intimacy I had with my dad when I was younger. The salt resembles skin and flesh, representing my fond memories together with the white color that symbolizes purity and light. On the left is a pair of socks that I have dipped into ashes to visualize dirty and smelly socks. These socks depicts my memory of moving away from my father’s house and seeing a pile of dirty laundry before I left. The unpleasant feeling given by the socks utters the change in how I view my father when my parents separated when I was sixteen. The paint in the background symbolizes mold, also the miserable and appalling feeling I have when I think about him today. Since I painted on the colors after the socks and the fabric were glued to the paper, some of the paint bleeds to the white fabric, capturing how the revolting feeling I have now contaminates the happy memories with my father in the past.

Closeups

Brainstorming notes and thumbnails

Reflection on Travelling by Grace Paley

Paley portrayed herself as a newcomer like her mother was fifty years before the article was written. Her mother was a Jewish immigrant, an “outsider” witnessing the segregation between the “whites” and “blacks” that had been occurring in the United States. To Paley, it was also an issue she perceived as she began travelling to new places identifying herself as a “stranger”. Rather than conforming to the existing prejudice, both her mother and Paley decided to take action to break through the norm that seemed to be customary to other people. Identified as “whites”, both women were able to utilize their “privilege” to speak up for the “colored people” and resist the segregation. The word “community” was redefined. To Paley, the basis of a community is not solely race and dividing people into different categories. Community is instead shared and should be hinged on compassion.