Reframing Strangeness: Ha Bik Chuen’s Motherboards and Collagraphs

Date
May 10 – Aug 10
Location
Para Site
22/F, Wing Wah Industrial Bldg.

677 King’s Road

Quarry Bay,
Hong Kong
Opening Reception
May 9, 2025
6:30–8:30pm

Para Site is pleased to present ‘Reframing Strangeness: Ha Bik Chuen’s Motherboards and Collagraphs, an exhibition that refocuses on Ha’s printmaking practice on the occasion of Ha’s 100th birth anniversary.

‘Motherboard’ is the term Hong Kong-based artist Ha Bik Chuen (1925–2009) coined for his collagraph plates. Unlike computer motherboards, Ha’s creations are decidedly analogue. They are assembled from wood and other found material through a highly labour-intensive process. Throughout his life, Ha created over 100 motherboards and kept them away from public view. He used these motherboards to produce over 3,000 editioned collagraphs mostly in the 1970s and 1980s.

‘Reframing Strangeness’ stages a selection of Ha’s motherboards, collagraphs and gouache drawings. On these surfaces, otherworldly creatures hover mid-air and ancient Chinese oracle bone scripts are combined with modern Chinese traditional characters and letters from the Roman alphabet. In the exhibition, the motherboards are placed next to their ‘offspring’ collagraphs and ‘parallel’ drawings to offer a re-reading of Ha’s interconnected art practice. 

In the mid-20th century, Hong Kong was on the brink of significant economic and societal transformation. During this time, the surfaces of motherboards became an arena for Ha to explore a unique modernist visual vocabulary while also nurturing his passion for obsessive record-keeping of all kinds. ‘Reframing Strangeness’ encourages viewers to examine Ha’s motherboards as aesthetic objects. It invites them to contemplate the artist’s distinctive relationship to materials circulating in the region then, which was a key part of Ha’s art-making process.

The exhibition can also be considered as another interpretative engagement with Ha’s expansive practice by various practitioners, including the Jogjakarta-based research group Hyphen—, London-based publisher Afterall and Hong Kong-based artist Kensa Hung. In addition to showcasing his work, the exhibition will foster further discussion through a series of public programmes, including podcasts and workshops. These initiatives aim to explore intergenerational conversations on remembrance, conservation, and the reproduction and manipulation of materials, extending the discourse surrounding Ha’s practice from the city to the world beyond.

‘Reframing Strangeness: Ha Bik Chuen’s Motherboards and Collagraphs’ is curated by Michelle Wun Ting Wong and is developed from a chapter of her doctoral thesis on the life and work of Ha Bik Chuen.

Major support for this exhibition is generously provided by Virginia Sun Yee. Additional support is provided by the Supporters’ Circle, including Jean-Marc Bottazzi, Brady Ng, Rossi & Rossi, and Yuri van der Leest.

About the artist

Ha Bik Chuen (1925–2009) was a Hong Kong-based artist who made prints, sculptures, collage books, and was also a prolific photographer. He publicly showed prints and sculptures, but kept most of his photographs and all his collage books private. Born in Guangdong, he moved to Hong Kong via Macau in 1958. After closing his family-run paper flower factory in the 1960s, Ha became an artist and an active participant of the Hong Kong art scene by documenting exhibitions and events through photography. Ha’s posthumous legacy as an artist who did not receive any academic training includes a vast personal collection of visual materials that form a crucial part of Hong Kong’s cultural and art history. These materials include photographs he took of over 2,500 exhibitions that he attended in and out of the city. Ha and his materials have been featured in exhibitions as Shanghai Biennale (2016), Singapore Biennale (2019), and ‘Portals, Stories, and Other Journeys’ (2021) at Tai Kwun Contemporary. Ha’s archive has since become one of the key resources of writing Hong Kong art history.

About the curator

Michelle Wun Ting Wong completed her PhD studies in Art History at The University of Hong Kong in 2025, exploring the modernity emerging from Post WWII Hong Kong. From 2012–20 she was a researcher at Asia Art Archive (AAA), focusing on Hong Kong art history and histories of exchange and circulation through exhibitions and periodicals. Her curatorial projects include ‘Portals, Stories, and Other Journeys’ at Tai Kwun Contemporary (2021); ‘Afterglow’, Yokohama Triennale 2020; and 11th Gwangju Biennale (2016). Her writing has been published in Ambitious Alignments: New Histories of Southeast Asian Art, 1945–1990 (2018), the journal Southeast of Now (2019) amongst others. Since 2022, she’s co-run the independent art space New Park with artists South Ho Siu Nam and Billy HC Kwok. Wong’s PhD dissertation is an in-depth study of the work and life of Ha Bik Chuen and his relationship to the cultural modernity and artistic modernism emerging from mid-twentieth century Hong Kong. Before returning to graduate school at HKU, Wong was AAA’s lead researcher and part of an archivist team organising and digitising Ha’s archive.