Hulu Culture Explained

Hulu Culture
文化葫蘆
Formation:2009
Location:Hong Kong
Type:Non-governmental organization
Purpose:Culture Preservation
Key People:Simon Go 吳文正; Iman Fok 霍天雯

Hulu Culture is a Hong Kong based non-profit organisation established in 2009 that endeavors to protect Hong Kong traditional culture and heritage. Based in Kwai Chung Town in the New Territories, it is partly funded by the Hong Kong Jockey Club.[1] the organisation also received a grant of $1,515,600 from the Government of Hong Kong for their "Energising Kowloon East: Sustainable Development of Made in Hong Kong Project".[2]

Background

Etymology

The name "Hulu Culture" comes from a Chinese mythological story in which Iron-Crutch Li, one of the Eight Immortals, had a calabash or hulu, full of universal cures, which he used for the good of the common people.[3] "Hulu Culture" represents a traditional popular sense of diversification and embraces a wide sector of the community, reflecting the myth.

Mission

Hulu Concept was founded in 2004 to preserve and carry forward Hong Kong's traditional culture. It later became the organisation Hulu Culture, in 2009. The group assists local authors in the publication of their works and at the same time searches for stories and objects which usually go unnoticed or have been forgotten. Hulu Culture has held various large and small scale exhibitions and seminars with community culture as their themes, to which artists, scholars and students have been invited to participate and share their expertise. Hulu's mission is to spread the message that Hong Kong is an interesting and colorful big city to a worldwide audience through its efforts to promote traditional culture and heritage. In addition, its goal is to contribute to renewing local culture in the context of urban economic development.[4]

Foundation

Hulu Culture was founded by Simon Go, who grew up in Kowloon City, Hong Kong where he found that the old groceries stores and shops fostered a feeling of nostalgia. He graduated from The Hong Kong Polytechnic University with a design degree and had been working as a photo-journalist for over 10 years before he started his career in culture preservation. Go's photos focus on lower-class citizens and in the 1990s, he held an exhibition to show the true face of poverty behind social prosperity. Besides photography, he is also dedicated to recording the lifestyles of Hong Kong's people through interviews. Ho's wife, Iman Fok (pinyin Huò Tiānwén), who is a social worker by profession, also decided to join Hulu Culture as the chief executive to assist with cultural preservation.[5] [6]

Funding

Hulu Culture has received over four million Hong Kong dollars in donations from the Hong Kong Jockey Club.

Activities

Hulu concept uses artistic and multimedia materials to present “themes” or “locations” of HongKong through words and images and is in the process of providing a research and online resource centre. Resultant research findings will become virtual exhibitions available via the organisation's web site.Expansion of such materials aims to allow the public, including artists, cultural workers and the younger generation to get in touch with local community culture while also providing teaching materials for general education courses to aid in understanding community history and culture. Seminars and workshops are planned periodically where scholars speak on local culture while academic workshops will provide guided cultural tours as community events.[7]

Publications

Exhibitions

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Jockey Club supports HULU Culture to bring out uniqueness of Kwai Tsing and Tsuen Wan. Hong Kong Jockey Club. 24 October 2012. 29 May 2014.
  2. Web site: Six projects approved for funding under Sustainable Development Fund. Government of Hong Kong. 26 August 2013. 29 May 2014.
  3. Web site: Eight Immortals. Nationsonline.org. 30 May 2014.
  4. Web site: http://paper.wenweipo.com/2009/12/31/OT0912310011.htm . zh:從文化保育 到文化葫蘆. From Cultural Preservation comes Hulu Culture.. Wen Wei Po Daily. 31 December 2009. 31 May 2014. zh.
  5. Web site: 「文化葫芦」里的霍天雯. Inside Hulu Culture with Huao Tianwen. Wen Wei Po Daily. 20 January 2010. 30 May 2014. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20120227125606/http://trans.wenweipo.com/gb/paper.wenweipo.com/2010/01/20/RW1001200001.htm. 27 February 2012.
  6. Web site: 幸福摩天輪——一對葫蘆夫妻. Wheel of Happiness - the husband and wife team behind Hulu. Sing Tao Daily. 11 March 2010. 31 May 2014.
  7. Web site: Preserving Indigenous Culture. Hulu. 30 May 2014.
  8. Book: Simon Go. Hong Kong Apothecary: A Visual History of Chinese Medicine Packaging. 2003. Princeton Architectural Press. 978-1-56898-390-5.
  9. Web site: Second Heritage X Art X Design Walk in Sham Shui Po this.... Yannie Chan. East Slope Publishing. Muse. 2 September 2011. 6 June 2014.
  10. Web site: Milestones. PMQ. 30 May 2014.