
Hong Kong pianist Aristo Sham wins prestigious Van Cliburn international competition
Hong Kong pianist Aristo Sham Ching-tao has won the 2025 edition of the prestigious Van Cliburn International Piano Competition, putting him on track for global stardom.
Sham, 29, is the first pianist from Hong Kong to win the competition, held in Fort Worth in the US state of Texas.
The announcement on June 7 of his victory followed two-and-a-half weeks of intense anticipation as music lovers around the world followed live streams of the contest's four gruelling rounds, which began on May 21 with 28 competitors from 15 countries.
After Sham's name was read out by jury chairman Paul Lewis to loud cheers in the packed Bass Performance Hall, the winner stepped onto the stage wearing a bow tie and a huge smile to receive his gold medal and trophy.
Aristo Sham, of Hong Kong (right), the overall winner, bronze medal winner Evren Ozel, of the United States (left), and Vitaly Starikov, of Israel and Russia, who came second, during the awards ceremony of the 17th Van Cliburn International Piano Competition at Bass Hall in Fort Worth, Texas, US. Photo: Brandon Wade
The silver medal went to Vitaly Starikov of Israel and Russia, and the bronze to Evren Ozel of the United States.
Sham started on the piano at the age of three with his piano teacher mother at home in Hong Kong and began competing internationally at the age of 10 while attending the Diocesan Boys' School and studying under Shirley Ip and Professor Eleanor Wong at the Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
20 minutes ago
- South China Morning Post
Ana de Armas talks about being back on screen with Keanu Reeves after 10 years
Years before Ana de Armas was using an ice skate to slice a neck in From the World of John Wick: Ballerina, she co-starred with Keanu Reeves in a very different film. Advertisement The erotic thriller Knock Knock, released in 2015, was de Armas' first Hollywood film. De Armas, born and raised in Cuba, had just come to Los Angeles after acting in Spain. English was new to her, so she had to learn her lines phonetically. 'It was tough and I felt miserable at times and very lonely,' she says in an interview. 'But I wanted to prove myself. I remember being in meetings with producers and they would be like, 'OK, I'll see you in a year when you learn English'. Before I left the office, I would say, 'I'll see you in two months'.' And now, 10 years after those scenes with Reeves , de Armas is, for the first time, headlining a big summer action film. Advertisement In Ballerina, which opened in cinemas on June 6, de Armas' progressive development as an unlikely action star reaches a butt-kicking crescendo, inheriting the mantle of one of the most esteemed high-body-count franchises.


South China Morning Post
27 minutes ago
- South China Morning Post
Golden Harvest's MegaBox draws crowds as yet another cinema closes in Hong Kong
Hong Kong film-goers snapped up discounted tickets for the final day of operation of Golden Harvest's MegaBox cinema on Sunday, with some disheartened fans finding comfort in the news that another theatre chain will take over the space soon. In the afternoon, the seven-screen cinema was bustling with long-time regulars and others who were simply nearby residents, eager to snap up HK$40 (US$5) tickets for most screenings. The operator announced last week it was closing, becoming the latest in a string of cinemas to close in the city and the fifth so far this year. It added CineArt would open a new cinema in the shopping centre next month with upgraded design and facilities. Among Sunday's film-goers was Alan Man, who said he saw almost 30 films at MegaBox this year and 70 last year, sometimes packing three or four into a single day. 'I particularly like this cinema because it is cheap, not crowded and has comfortable seats. I can spend the whole day in this cinema,' said the supermarket salesman in his twenties. 'I am super sad because I will lose a 'me-place' to relax.'


South China Morning Post
2 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
An artist imagines what Hong Kong would look like if giant animals took over
Every week, Talking Points gives you a worksheet to practise your reading comprehension with exercises about the story we've written. Hong Kong illustrator Maf Cheung recalled the silly moment when her friend's cat crouched under a chair and stared at her pup. 'My dog is extremely introverted and not social at all, while Eevee is one of those cats that bullies the weak but fears the strong,' recalled Cheung, who is in her 30s. 'Since my Yorkie was bigger, Eevee gave her this sceptical look and chose a ... safe spot.' That moment inspired Cheung to draw a giant version of Eevee peeking through a bridge in Causeway Bay. The giant feline makes a passing green tram look as small as a toy. 'The way she looked at us felt like she was judging all of humanity,' she added. This was the first piece in Cheung's 'Hong Kong Giant Animal Series'. These pieces imagine oversized animals roaming around the city. She started working on this series in 2022. In 2023, she published 90 of these pieces in a book. In April and May, one of Cheung's artworks was featured in an exhibition in the Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum. Cheung's advice to young illustrators in Hong Kong is to take the time to find their voice as an artist. 'Art is inherently slow. It grows from experience and reflection – and those things need time to settle and take shape,' she said. Sparrows are helping people learn about a Hong Kong neighbourhood Reimagining Hong Kong When Cheung was in primary school, her best friends weren't her classmates. They were her dad's pets: goldfish, koi, turtles, birds, chinchillas and even hawks. 'I spent more time with those animals than I did playing with other kids. Even when we had family gatherings, I preferred being with the pets,' she said. 'Animals gave me emotional comfort.' That is why animals are so important in her art. 'By making them giant, I'm projecting my feelings onto them. These are the beings I trust, the ones that help me relax,' Cheung explained. Her art also focuses on places in Hong Kong that are disappearing or already gone. For example, she has drawn Queen's Pier, the old Hung Hom MTR station, and the iconic neon signs of Nam Cheong Pawn Shop and Leung Tim Choppers Factory. One of her pieces features a giant sparrow at the former Hung Hom station. 'A fan messaged me and said, 'It's perfect that you drew a sparrow there because, in my experience, the sparrows at Hung Hom are the fattest in all of Hong Kong because they eat McDonald's,'' Cheung said. Maf Cheung's artwork highlights Hong Kong's famous neon lights. Photo: Handout Mix of reality and fantasy Cheung's art mixes what is real with what is a fantasy. Her inspiration started with Hayao Miyazaki's animated film, Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind. 'It was the first of his works I saw, and I was hooked. I watched everything he released after that,' the artist explained. 'That's where the fairy-tale dreaminess in my art comes from.' She added that the dreamlike parts of her work also showed her emotions. Cheung gave the example of her favourite artwork in her giant animal series. It shows a flying squirrel that saves a girl at Lei Tak Estate. 'That piece was actually about processing my own negative emotions at the time. A lot was happening in Hong Kong then, and I was feeling overwhelmed,' she said. 'I imagined – what if in that moment, a giant flying squirrel came to save me? That idea brought me comfort.' To test your understanding of this story, download our printable worksheet or answer the questions in the quiz below.