Karen Chan (born July 31, 1988), known by her artist name Chankalun, is a neon designer, set designer, exhibition designer, and a visual artist. She is among the few neon practitioners in Hong Kong.[1][2]

Chankalun
Born31 July 1988
Hong Kong
Websitehttps://theneongirl.com/

In 2018 she established Ceekayello, a Hong Kong–based art-design studio focused on exhibition and art-related projects,[3] and in 2019 she founded HKCRAFTS, a non-profit arts organization that promotes and preserves Hong Kong culture and heritage.[4]

Life and career

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Early life and education

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Chankalun was born in Hong Kong in 1988. She studied in the UK at Headington School and in the US at Parsons School of Design.[5][4][6]

Supporting traditional handicrafts

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In 2019 she took an interest in disappearing trades and crafts from Hong Kong, such as birdcage making and mahjong tile carving, and then founded HKCRAFTS, a non-governmental organization that hosts workshops to promote fading traditions.[5]

In 2020, Chankalun organized an exhibition[7] in a moving tram from Hong Kong Tramways, with the stated aim to pay tribute to traditional handicrafts.[8]

[...] this project aims to raise awareness for the necessity and importance in preserving our city’s fast-disappearing traditional craftsmanship and encourage the passing of treasured skills to the younger generation.

— First Initiative Foundation (FIF)

Neon-making

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Chankalun focuses on experimental neon-crafting techniques, influenced by her international education and mentors.[9] She was the apprentice of Dutch neon artist Remy de Feyter and Hongkongese neon bender Master Wong Kin-wah,[5][4][10] one of Hong Kong’s last original neon makers.[2][11]

Chankalun started neon crafting in order to preserve this dying craft[12] and elevate it to suit modern-day sensibilities.[4] Many streets of Hong Kong that used to be full of neon had already been stripped bare or replaced by LEDs[5] and Chankalun saw a need for a concerted effort to preserve and evolve the craft.[13] She hopes to reconstruct Hong Kong’s neon ecosystem.[2]

Art-vocate

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Commissioned by Swiss luxury cosmetic brand La Prairie, Chankalun produced in early 2023 several art installations, including a large-scale art installation, named Light as Air, inspired by the natural landscape of Montreux.[14][15] It has been exhibited during Art Basel Hong Kong at Tai Kwun Parade Ground, a prominent outdoor location on Hong Kong Island. In her constant effort to produce eco-friendly installations, Chankalun used up-cycled glass, as well as La Prairie’s White Caviar waste materials.[16]

Her neon light installation made from recycled neon glass is an embodiment of heritage preservation with sustainable sensibilities.

— Nat Geo Asia

Awards

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Chankalun in front of her tram for the exhibition Classic Craft, Modern Meaning

Classic Craft, Modern Meaning exhibition created by Chankalun about local crafts and hosted in a moving tram from Hong Kong, received a gold award in Sky Design awards[7]

Haiijaii, (meaning breathe in Thai), a light installation exhibited at Wonderfruit festival and fueled by data of air quality index collected from various locations around the world, won bronze Sky Design awards.[7] The project was carried out by neon artist Chankalun, curator Adulaya Kim Hoontrakul, visual artist Frédéric Bussière and multimedia designer Santipab Somboon.

Light as Air, commissioned by La Prairie for Art Basel Hong Kong 2023 at 大館 Tai Kwun has received the prestigious LIT Lighting Design Awards in the "Entertainment Light Design", notably, as the only winner from Hong Kong in this category, for both the "Outdoor Light Art Installation" and "Conceptual Lighting Installation" subcategories.[17]

References

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  1. ^ "Hong Kong's young 'neon nomads' keep dying trade flickering". france24.com. 15 December 2021.
  2. ^ a b c "Vogue artist-in-residence Chan Kalun redefines neon art for modern-day sensibilities". vogue.sg. 15 May 2022.
  3. ^ "Neon Art Hold's Hong Kong's Tradition And Lights Our Future, Chankalun, TEDxTinHauWomen". youtube.com.
  4. ^ a b c d "Neon artist Karen Chan reclaims a Hong Kong icon and forges her own path as a woman in a traditionally male craft". scmp.com. 29 November 2021.
  5. ^ a b c d "How the Only Female Neon Artist in Hong Kong Is Reinventing the Craft". tatlerasia.com.
  6. ^ "News & Career". Headington School.
  7. ^ a b c "2021 Visual and Graphics Design Winning Projects, Sky Design Awards". Sky Design Awards.
  8. ^ "Classic Craft, Modern Meaning, Tram 61 Exhibition". thehoneycombers.com.
  9. ^ "They're trying to preserve Hong Kong's neon lights". edition.cnn.com. 13 October 2021.
  10. ^ "27 Questions: Chankalun, neon practitioner and co-founder of HKCRAFTS". Lifestyle Asia.
  11. ^ "How Hong Kong's iconic neon signs are becoming an art form". discoverhongkong.com.
  12. ^ "Neon Signs That Lit Up Hong Kong's Nights Become a Dying Art". Bloomberg. 14 October 2022.
  13. ^ "Meet the Young Master Keeping Hong Kong's Neon Heritage Alive". zolimacitymag.com. 2 June 2021.
  14. ^ "La Prairie teams up with artist Chankalun at Art Basel Hong Kong 2023". Tatler Asia.
  15. ^ "La Prairie and Chankalun on the Making of Light as Air". Prestige.
  16. ^ "Neon artist Chankalun (Karen Chan) on Light as Air, her collaboration with La Prairie". L'Officiel Malaysia.
  17. ^ "Conceptual Lighting installation / Outdoor Light Art Installation Light as Air". LIT Lighting Design Awards. Retrieved 2024-01-15.