How Leslie Cheung was a fan of late Chinese-American sculptor Ming Fay



As a child, Parker Fay lived in a kind of wonderland, surrounded by giant fruit, seeds, bones and replicas of other organic forms. For him, this was the norm.

โ€œI almost thought of them as furniture,โ€ Parker says about the creations of his father, the late Chinese-American sculptor Ming Fay. โ€œI only began to understand the significance of their impact when I saw my friendsโ€™ reactions to the space.โ€

Known for his fantastical, papier-mรขchรฉ creations as well as prominent public art projects across America, Fay was adept at infusing ordinary objects with a fresh, larger than life sense of whimsy.

He died in March at the age of 82 in his adopted home, New York, a highly regarded artist and professor.

With one of the best-known museums in the US currently hosting the largest retrospective of the artist, a long-time friend and collaborator hopes that Fay will gain wider recognition in Hong Kong โ€“ the city where he grew up and where he had lifelong connections.

โ€œIn Hong Kong, Chinese ink artists such as Lui Shou-kwan are the most famous pioneers. But in his own way, Ming Fay was truly an avant-garde Hong Kong artist,โ€ says Kwok Mang-ho, known as the Frog King.

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