Lam Tung Pang on “A day of two Suns”

Projected videos and an ensemble of objects and shadows evoke Lam Tung Pang’s memories of his home.

Lam Tung Pang is a Hong Kong-based artist whose work encompasses painting, drawing, performance, video, and installation. Assembling traditional iconography and found objects, Lam creates layered allegorical landscapes that engage themes of history, memory, and time. These works capture the nuanced emotions that seep out from beneath the weight of drastic political change. Lam received his BFA from the Chinese University of Hong Kong and his MFA from Central Saint Martins in London.

A day of two Suns (2019) is an ensemble of plywood mountain sculptures and found objects staged around a large paper screen, upon which videos are projected on either side. These ever-shifting compositions of faded, seemingly still videos, which depict panoramic sights in Hong Kong, reflect Lam Tung Pang’s memories of his home. The assorted objects cast shadows that obscure these memories onscreen, evoking our scattered recollection of the disappearing past. The screen and geographical motifs reference classical Chinese landscape painting, in which Lam was trained.

Title A day of two Suns (2019)
Artist(s) Lam Tung Pang
Dates 2019
Places Asia / East Asia / Hong Kong
Period, Culture, Style Contemporary
Artwork Type Installation
Material Mixed media
Technique

Cite this page as: Asian Art Museum, "Lam Tung Pang on “A day of two Suns”," in Smarthistory, March 19, 2021, accessed March 27, 2025, https://smarthistory.org/lam-tung-pang-on-a-day-of-two-suns/.