
Your perfect week: what to do in Hong Kong, May 25-31
The Asian Avant-Garde Film Festival returns for its second edition at M+ from May 30 to June 1, celebrating independent filmmakers and artists who have influenced the Asian artistic landscape. Focusing on this year's theme of 'Time Will Tell', highlights include screenings of works by May Fung, Ho Tzu Nyen and
Tehching Hsieh , alongside exhibitions, talks and performances exploring how artists conceptualise the passage of time.
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South China Morning Post
2 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Lanterns, typewriters, film cameras, you name it, Indian collector has it in home museum
Cameras from a bygone era. Rusty typewriters. Vintage radios. Matchboxes once used to light contraband cigarettes. In an age of new technology and artificial intelligence, a visit to the New Delhi home of Aditya Vij is like stepping into a time machine. Every corner of his museum feels like a carefully constructed chapter of history. The anthropologist is an avid collector of artefacts and has dedicated his life to antiquities. Over decades, he has doggedly collected thousands of items that span several centuries, and documented their relevance and the impact they have had on society. Each collectible he has salvaged feels like a victory against time, Vij said, underscoring his belief that maybe one individual's attempts can quietly resist their erasure from people's memory. Vij with a handheld camera made by American brand Graflex that was used by the US Army during World War II. Photo: AP Old tin boxes and cigarette cases stacked up in Vij's home. Photo: AP 'The deepest emotion I feel while collecting these items is the sense of satisfaction that I managed to save a piece of history,' said Vij, during an interview surrounded by his collection of vintage cameras and gramophones.


South China Morning Post
3 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Chanel's Reach for the Stars high jewellery debut in Kyoto: how the house drew inspiration from Gabrielle ‘Coco' Chanel's take on Hollywood glamour for one of its ‘most important' collections
The high jewellery grand tour is in full swing. Less than a week after Cartier debuted its new high jewellery collection in Stockholm , Chanel invited a select group of clients, editors and celebrities to Kyoto, Japan's ancient capital, for the reveal of its new Reach for the Stars collection. The range is not just a homage to the celestial bodies that have long been a signature of the house's jewellery repertoire, but also a nod to its founder's background. In her one and only high jewellery collection – unveiled in Paris in 1932 – Gabrielle 'Coco' Chanel famously used motifs such as the comet for a constellation-inspired line of diamond-embellished pieces that has gone down as one of her most remarkable achievements. Advertisement Wings of Chanel necklace in white gold, platinum and natural polished diamonds with a cushion-cut Padparadscha sapphire. Photo: Handout A couple of years earlier, the designer had travelled to Hollywood, where she designed costumes for movies such as Tonight or Never (1931), starring Gloria Swanson. That short stint in Tinseltown was the starting point for Reach for the Stars, which celebrates Hollywood's golden age and its stars. Pretty much every single piece – from the cheekily named Take My Breath Away and Dreams Come True sets, to the Wings of Chanel necklace – is meant for a glamorous red carpet 'This collection is almost like a dress code,' president of Chanel watches and fine jewellery Frédéric Grangié explained in an interview in Kyoto. 'When I look at the collection and recall some of those movies, I feel that some of the pieces are like evening dresses. It's a very glamorous collection, but when Coco Chanel was in Hollywood she treated glamour in a completely different way. She was coming from a couture background as one of the greatest designers ever, and created very light dresses with a focus on the back and also silk or muslin sleeves, which gave them a 'winged' silhouette.' The comet is back as a leitmotif, appearing in some shape or form in every single piece, but Reach for the Stars truly shines in its introduction of a new motif that Grangié alluded to: the wing. The Take My Breath Away necklace in pink gold, white gold and natural polished diamonds. Photo: Handout Patrice Leguéreau – the late director of Chanel's jewellery creation studio who conjured up this range before his untimely passing last year – was inspired by one of Coco Chanel 's famous maxims: 'If you were born without wings, do nothing to prevent them from growing.'


South China Morning Post
17 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Hong Kong police arrest 5 after probe into bomb threat targeting Mayday show
Hong Kong national security police have arrested five people following an investigation into bomb threats targeting a local concert by Taiwanese band Mayday and calls for independence for the self-ruled island and the city. Advertisement Chief Superintendent Steve Li Kwai-wah of the force's National Security Department said on Tuesday that police had received emails and social media posts between April 29 and May 20 that promoted Taiwanese independence and called for the abolition of the city's Beijing-decreed national security law. The message also included threats to detonate a bomb supposedly hidden at central government premises in Hong Kong, he added. One of the suspects, a 35-year-old man, also allegedly called the 999 emergency line on May 13 and claimed a bomb would go off at Kai Tak Sports Park while the venue was hosting a concert by Mayday. The suspect is also believed to have expressed support for Hong Kong and Taiwanese independence. One of the bomb threats targeted Kai Tak Sports Park. Photo: Jonathan Wong Li said officers searched for any suspicious objects at the venue before the show but found nothing.