In 1990, there was a Deep Dish TV series of five one-hour programs, "...will be televised: Video Documents From Asia,” curated and produced by Shu Lea Cheang. The program intended to reverse the usual flow of communication from America to the other, lesser-heard side of the globe, from “the developing countries to the developed metropolis.” The title of Hong Kong’s document, “Only Something That Is About To Disappear Becomes An Image,” was a line excerpted from an essay that later became a book, Hong Kong: Culture and the Politics of Disappearance by Professor Ackbar Abbas. The series is probably one of the earliest creative video projects in Hong Kong art history. Most of the works were the outcome of a video workshop that had privileged access to selected films archived in the Government Information Service. Some footage dated back to the early 20th century, almost around the time movies were born. Filmmakers in those times were mostly in the military, journalists, or working with the church. Many images that captured the street life of Hong Kong in the last century were handheld and nostalgic. In the 1990 project, it was mainly the first generation of Hong Kong video artists—amateurs, non-journalists, the camcorder generation—who did the works. This video document is a landmark to announce the fading of the colonial age and entrance into the post-'97 era.
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