Howie Tsui: Retainers of Anarchy is a solo exhibition featuring new work from Howie Tsui that considers wuxia as a narrative tool for dissidence and resistance. Wuxia, a traditional form of martial arts literature that expanded into 20th-century popular film and television, was created out of narratives and characters often from lower social classes that uphold chivalric ideals against oppressive forces during unstable times. The People’s Republic of China placed wuxia under heavy censorship for fear of arousing anti-government sentiment. However, practitioners advanced the form in Hong Kong making it one of the most popular genres of Chinese fiction.
The title work, Retainers of Anarchy, is a 25-metre scroll-like video installation that references life during the Song dynasty (960–1279 CE) and more recent digitizations of historical scrolls. Tsui’s version undermines the idealized portraiture of social cohesion found in the digitized scrolls by setting the narrative in Kowloon’s notorious walled city—an ungoverned tenement of disenfranchised refugees in Hong Kong which was demolished in 1994.
Retainers of Anarchy is on display at the Art Gallery of Greater Victoria from June 12, 2021 until October 24, 2021. This accompanying catalogue features Tsui’s animated key frame drawings creatively interpreted in book form with contributing texts by Alice Ming Wai Jim, Diana Freundl, Michelle S. Gewurtz and Michelle Jacques.
Edited by Diana Freundl, Michelle S. Gewurtz and Michelle Jacques
95 pages7 x 11 inches
ISBN 9780888853813
Colour illustrations
Hardcover
Co-published by the Art Gallery of Greater Victoria and the Ottawa Art Gallery in partnership with the Vancouver Art Gallery
2017