Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
International

Hong Kong protests stood out for peace and art

Darpan News Desk IANS, 09 Oct, 2014 06:33 AM
    The recent pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong attracted global attention not only for their remarkably peaceful nature and the friendly spirit of its participants but also for their artistic component.
     
    The art of the "Umbrella Revolution" turned student-occupied areas into exhibition spaces where street artists give free rein to their creations that have democracy as a common denominator. Several students protected themselves with umbrellas from the tear gas used by Hong Kong police to disperse students during the second night of protests.
     
    The umbrella, used as a shield, became not only the symbol of an urban revolution, but also the canvas on which many artists have chosen to express their vision of the popular protest.
     
    The umbrella revolution is also a revolution of symbols, artistic expressions transmitted through photographs, sculptures, logos, posters, emblems, installations or music.
     
    It gives free rein to the creation of varied street art that takes citizens on a stroll through a gallery of living art, down the middle of streets occupied by the movement.
     
    The piece that gets most attention because of its size and symbolism is a three-metre high statue of a person holding an umbrella.
     
    It bears a resemblance to the "Goddess of Democracy" put up in Tinanamen Square 25 years ago during the student protests demanding democracy but which ended in a massacre.
     
    Its creator, an art student nicknamed "Milk", constructed it out of pieces of wood with the help of 10 friends, and since last Sunday, it has become one of the most photographed sights of the civil protest.
     
    Umbrellas with original works of art painted on them, messages, and even those used for protection from the sun or intermittent storms, also serve as a form of creative expression.
     
    Art students from Hong Kong Baptist University created a giant tent out of broken umbrellas, conveying the idea of "taking advantage of the resources we have to make a visual impact on people".
     
    The students proclaimed that "we have ideas and we want to be seen, and want them to know that even if we fall, we have resources to lift us up again", Anne Lan, a participant in this project told Spanish news agency Efe.
     
    Street art has taken advantage of every last inch of space of the occupied areas and at traffic signals. The blocked streets, which so far had been useful in getting around the city, now offer "democracy" among its destinations.
     
    Signs indicating street names, like Connaught Road, one of the urban arteries leading to northern Hong Kong, the city's financial and commercial centre, appears covered with signs giving the street its new name of "True Democracy".
     
    Music as another artistic expression of these protests likewise demonstrates the creativity of the protestors, with "revolutionary" hymns heard online with rhyming stanzas repeating the keywords of revolt: umbrella, democracy, freedom and people.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    In carnivore country, Uruguay's vegetarians promote their lifestyle

    In carnivore country, Uruguay's vegetarians promote their lifestyle
    Free snacks, monthly meetings for co-dependent carnivores and radio programmes are some of the initiatives vegetarians and vegans are undertaking...

    In carnivore country, Uruguay's vegetarians promote their lifestyle

    Scottish referendum opens Pandora's box in Britain

    Scottish referendum opens Pandora's box in Britain
    Things are very strange in Britain nowadays. People are talking politics. Pubs, supermarkets, hospitals, offices, everywhere people are more engaged in political debate than gossiping, thanks to the Scottish referendum. A record 85 percent of the electorate participated in the referendum to determine Scotland's independence.

    Scottish referendum opens Pandora's box in Britain

    Indian-origin cabbie to be tried for molestation in Australia

    Indian-origin cabbie to be tried for molestation in Australia
    A West Australian taxi driver, identified as Suni Kumar Saharan, 28, molested the woman, who is also 28 years old, after picking her up along with her four friends from Victoria Park in Perth Sep 7. ...

    Indian-origin cabbie to be tried for molestation in Australia

    Sikh woman of Indian origin in US blames her attorney for withholding truth

    Sikh woman of Indian origin in US blames her attorney for withholding truth
    A Sikh woman facing a trial for the murder of her husband's ex-wife in the US, recently left many stunned by accusing her own reputed attorney of stopping her from revealing...

    Sikh woman of Indian origin in US blames her attorney for withholding truth

    Obama calls for global support to tackle IS, other extremists

    Obama calls for global support to tackle IS, other extremists
    President Barack Obama Wednesday called on all nations to join the fight against the Islamic State (IS) and other terrorists whose brutality "forces us to look into the heart of darkness"....

    Obama calls for global support to tackle IS, other extremists

    'British pilot had sex with teenagers in India'

    'British pilot had sex with teenagers in India'
    A British Airways pilot had sex with underage boys during his stopovers in India between long-haul flights and showered them with money and gifts, a court here has been told....

    'British pilot had sex with teenagers in India'