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February 25th, 2011

Huzzah

youarereceivingthisemailbecause

Recent developments in North Africa brings to mind an email I’d sent out some time back.

February 24th, 2011

Circumstances maketh the woman

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When my mom visited a few months ago, she pickled a bottle of green chillies on her last night in Hong Kong for her daughter who had missed having pickled green chillies with her wanton mee. Since then I’ve pickled a few more bottles myself, always with that particular brand of rice vinegar (in old-school glass bottles) mom had instructed. Homesickness cured by the saucerfuls, thank you mommy how I love you so.

February 21st, 2011

Weekend snippets #12

Making the best of this bout of gloomy, cold and drizzly weather we have been experiencing in Hong Kong since the Chinese New Year holidays. Shouldn’t it be spring already ?

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February 16th, 2011

A qipao by any other name

Some memorable peeks from an exhibition I visited last year.

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Caption courtesy of the exhibition:

This is a photograph of Manchurian women and Han women from the late Qing dynasty. Some are wearing a top longer than the typical Han blouse and one is wearing a shortened Manchurian gown, showing signs of assimilation in fashion.

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Caption courtesy of the exhibition:

This is the uniform worn by students at the Peihua School for Women in Beijing, an elite Christian middle school. Chinese top matched with western pleated skirt, illustrating an attractive and fashionable style at the time.

First from the right is Phyllis Lin Whei-Yin, age 12, who would go on to become one of Republican China’s most talented women. Celebrated poet, Xu Zhimo was one of her many fervent admirers. She eventually married renowned architect, Liang Sicheng, the oldest son of Liang Qichao. Also in this photograph are Phyllis Lin Whei-Yin’s cousins.

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I think I much prefer the original qipao, delicate yet dignified and more suited for daily wear.

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Caption courtesy of the exhibition:

School girls in qipao at the Canton Christian College (later Lingnan University), Guangzhou, 1927.

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Caption courtesy of the exhibition:

In 1929, the Nationalist government listed the qipao as a form of ceremonial attire. The Nationalist Government Gazette, Volume 143, 18 April 1929.

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Art deco influences.

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Caption courtesy of the exhibition:

Celebrated writer Eileen Chang (left) and her aunt, 1930s.

The exhibition featured Chang rather prominently and quoted extensively from her first work in English, Chinese Life and Fashions, a must read for anyone interested in the evolution of Chinese aesthetics against the backdrop of the birth of modern China.

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Caption courtesy of the exhibition:

Family portrait, Hebei, 1931-1932.

This has to be my favorite photo of the lot. I love how the family looks so contemporary, not solely in the way they look but also in their candid expressions. The photo could have been taken just yesterday if not for their outfits.

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Caption courtesy of the exhibition:

Liu Shaoqi’s wife Wang Guangmei on a diplomatic mission to Afghanistan in April 1966. Besides Wang Guangmei, other female members of the delegation are also wearing qipao.

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Caption courtesy of the exhibition:

The illustrations on this set of teaching materials show that the images of teachers are linked to the qipao during the 1950s and 1960s.

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Singapore, mentioned.

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