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          <TD WIDTH=321 HEIGHT=600 bgcolor="#FFFFFF" align="left" valign="top"><p class="header">Press 
              &gt; Hong Kong Standard</p>
            <p class="tddefined"><strong><font size="-1"><em>Sunday HongKong Standard</em></font></strong><br>
              Marjorie Kouns is very much a &#8220;hands-on&#8221; artist whose 
              latest display of installation art is generating a lot of interest 
              at The Fringe Club, writes Annabel Walker.<br>
              There is something elementary about Marjorie Kouns&#8217; work. 
              Handing from the ceiling of the Fringe Club foyer are the tracings 
              of hands, while stuck to plastic blow-up gloves are hand shapes 
              cut from felt. &quot;water music&quot; plays to relax you and the 
              clicks and claps of hand movements sound.<br>
              Kouns believes hands communicate messages to the people of the world 
              whatever their language and the installation features hand associated 
              works (&#8220;handsome&#8221;, hand made&#8221;, &#8220;give me 
              a hand&#8221;) in a variety of languages.<br>
              &#8220;This installation is throwing a lot of things at someone 
              if they aren&#8217;t used to it&#8221;, said Kouns, who is in Hong 
              Kong for the first time.<br>
              &#8220;It will feel like you are walking in space because, as well 
              as the spheres hanging from the ceiling, I will place something 
              ion the ground so you won&#8217;t be sure if it&#8217;s the ground 
              you are walking on or not.<br>
              &#8220;I am also working with the sensory aspect. I have &#8216;space&#8217; 
              music playing which is calming and hypnotizing&#8221;<br>
              Kouns trained as a sculptor, but has been involved in installation 
              art for many years. She finds her sculpture background has given 
              her the awareness of the 3-D element to her art.</p>
            <p class="tddefined"><strong>PUSH and PULL</strong><br>
              Her previous works, Timelines focused on the impact of light and 
              shadow on urban environments. Her obsession recently has been with 
              hands.<br>
              It all started when Kouns invited adults and children to send drawings, 
              tracking and faxes of their hands to her studio in New York. The 
              images of hands seemed to spark off something Kouns had been mulling 
              over.<br>
              &#8220;The push, pull, giving and receiving that is represented 
              by hands had been with me all my life&#8221;, she said.<br>
              &#8220;I wanted to show the dichotomy because, although hands are 
              receiving and pull you in, they also push you away. I began to think 
              how much we communicate with our hands. Yet in this technological 
              age, it is our hands that keep us apart. &#8220;Our hands type on 
              the computer, dial the numbers on the telephone and use the paper 
              &#8211; we never see the human being any more because we are so 
              electronically connected. It&#8217;s those issues I want to explore; 
              whether hands are what are pulling us into the larger picture or 
              part of what is keeping us at arm&#8217;s distance from society.&#8221; 
              <br>
              Gathering so many impressions and interpretations, Kouns developed 
              her interest into a full show. After Hong Kong her plan is to make 
              &#8220;some sort of a book&#8221; of the hands and to develop the 
              sculptural side of the installation.<br>
              Invited to be artist-in-residence for the United Nations Women&#8217;s 
              Conference last year, Kouns displayed her hands installation as 
              a means of crossing language and cultural barriers. &#8220;Hands 
              have had a universal symbolism since the beginning of Time&#8221; 
              she said.<br>
              During the Beijing conference, Kouns invited women to take part 
              in the installation by drawing their hands, signing their name and 
              country and hanging them with the hundreds of others she collected. 
              Here, as in Beijing, there will be an area set aside for people 
              who want to add their own handprints to the installation.<br>
              &#8220;People get really into it,&#8221; Kouns said, recalling the 
              reaction of people at her earlier shows.<br>
              &#8220;You see people become really involved-they are hunched over 
              the worktable almost like children.&#8221;<br>
            </p>
            <p class="tddefined"><strong>Achievements of women</strong><br>
              For Kouns, the women&#8217;s conference was a sign of how much women 
              have achieved, although she feels the casualness of women today 
              may mean gains are lost.<br>
              A Mandarin speaker, she was able to hear how speeches were translated-she 
              points to Hilary Clinton&#8217;s mention of human rights as an area 
              which was noticeably toned down. There were also disruptions while 
              delegates were speaking.<br>
              At one point they literally switched translators midway through 
              the speech and we lost five minutes of the presentation. Maybe it 
              was the end of the translator&#8217;s shift, but if you only have 
              a speech of 45 minutes, why arrange for a shift change in the middle 
              of it?&#8221; Kouns added.<br>
              She described the conference as &#8220;Hong Kong at rush hour&#8221;, 
              but ultimately a worthwhile event.<br>
              &#8220;Amid all the politics and human rights issues, they did the 
              best they could,&#8221; Kouns said.<br>
              She is excited to be exhibiting in Hong Kong although she acknowledges 
              installation work is not everybody&#8217;s idea of art.<br>
              &#8220;For some people their sense of art is something framed, hanging 
              on a wall behind glass. There is so much quality out there that 
              isn&#8217;t in this category,&#8221; Kouns said.<br>
              &#8220; This is better than blue chip art, because it&#8217;s approachable. 
              It arouses so much more curiosity.&#8221;<br>
              But in a society like Hong Kong, it can be hard for installation 
              artists to make a living. Without the support of the corporations 
              and sponsorship back home, Kouns said, her artistic work would be 
              compromised.<br>
            </p>
            <p class="tddefined"><strong>Corporate Support</strong><br>
              &#8220;I feel strongly that an artist should look into their own 
              style and not whether or not the piece can be sold. Fortunately 
              there are a lot of corporations who still believe in this type of 
              work,&#8221; she said.<br>
              &#8220;What is needed is the venues to give the artists the space 
              to speak out in their own creative forms. I know it&#8217;s kind 
              of small here, but in Hong Kong I see a lot of potential.&#8221;</p>
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          <TD WIDTH=645 HEIGHT=26 COLSPAN=3 bgcolor="#FFFFFF" class="tddefined" align="center" valign="top"><a href="press_daily.html">Daily 
            News </a>: <a href="press_nymagazine.html">NY 
            Magazine</a> : <a href="press_nytimes.html">New York Times</a> : <a href="press_fringe.html">NY 
            Fringe</a> : <a href="press_villager.html">The Villager</a> :<a href="press_hurriyet.html"> 
            Hurriyet</a> : <a href="press_stuggart.html">Stuttgart</a> : <a href="press_forum.html"> 
            Forum </a>: HK Standard</TD>
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