Ellen Pau was born to a family of medical doctors. Growing up, she was immersed in an intellectual environment enriched by her father's intensive scientific knowledge. When she was nine-years old , Pau received a Kodak 135 film camera from her father and became interested in photographic techniques and the world of imagery. [6][7]
During her undergraduate study, she worked as a stage actor, music editor, and concert organizer while at Polytechnic.[8][9] She also joined experimental theatre company Zuni Icosahedron where she became more familiar with contemporary art.[9] A mostly self-taught artist, she gained a master's degree in Visual Culture at Chinese University of Hong Kong in 2008.
Pau's interest in art and technology perhaps could be traced back to her visit to the Expo '70 when she was eight-year-old. The Expo '70 has been massively promoted in Asia, including Hong Kong. With her family, Pau had spent a few days at the Expo and went through most of the pavilions. One of them with people doing weird things and with a lot of screens leaves a great impression on her. She later found out that what she saw was the Pepsi-Cola Pavilion Project (1968-1972) by renowned American experimental group, Experiments in Art and Technology (E.A.T.).
Work
Inspired by 1960s filmmakers and artists such as Jean-Luc Godard and Martha Rosler,[10] Pau created her first super-8 film Glove in 1984.[5] In the early 1990s, Pau began to create video installations, such as Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore in collaboration with Chan Pik Yu and Jesse Dai[11] and Recycling Cinema (1998), a video that captures blurred images of moving vehicles on a Hong Kong highway, was exhibited at the Hong Kong Pavilion in the 49th Venice Biennale in 2001,[12] and in Art and China after 1989: Theater of the World at the Guggenheim Museum (2017).[13]
Pau is active as a curator and organizer in the art world. A vocal supporter of the independent arts scene, she has advocated for increasing funding and exhibition opportunities for artists in non-traditional.[14] In 1986, together with Wong Chi-fai, May Fung, and Comyn Mo, she founded Videotage, Hong Kong's oldest video and media art space.[5] In 1996, she founded Microwave International New Media Arts Festival, an annual event that includes exhibitions, conferences, seminars, school tours and workshops.[9] Pau has also independently curated exhibitions including Digit@logue (2008) at the Hong Kong Museum of Art.[15][16] From 2013 to 2019, Pau was appointed by the Hong Kong Arts Development Council (HKADC) as a representative of the arts sector in Film Arts.[17] Later in 2014, she was further appointed to the interim acquisition committee of M+[18] in West Kowloon Cultural District to advise on collection development.[8]
The video work of this video-installation being re-made in 2016
Movement#1/10
1996
5:44
Hi-8
Edited with SVHS
Video Circle: Recycling Opera
1996
Video Installation
Video Circle is an installation with 32 televisions, conceived by Danny Yung.
The Great Movement: Red Stock
1997
Video Installation
Expiration
1997-2000
5:10
DV
Sweetness
1998
Video Installation
Recycling Cinema
1999
12:00
DV
Recycling Cinema
2000
8:00
DV + Video Installation
For Some Reasons
2003
10:51
DV
Not Yet
2004
10:00
Video Installation
Fanfare for the Common Man
2010
4:02
DV
For Some Blues
2015
2:30
DV
The Spectre of the Will
2019
The Spectre of the Real
2019
Publications
Elaine W. NG(伍穎瑜): dye-a-di-a-logue with Ellen Pau. Monographs in Contemporary Art Books. 2004. ISBN0975335405.
SING Song-yong(孫松榮), 'Delayed Plasticity: A Preliminary Investigation of the Political Criticism of Sinophone Single-Channel Video Art in the 1980s,' Journal of Taipei Fine Arts Museum, 34 (Nov 2017), 65–90. (in Chinese)
Linda Lai (2015), 'Video Art in Hong Kong: Organologic Sketches for a Dispersive History', in Hong Kong Visual Arts Yearbook 2014, Hong Kong: Department of Fine Arts, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, 15–54.[1]
Alice Jim, ‘Screen Structures: Overview of Media Art Development in Hong Kong.’ Hong Kong Visual Arts Yearbook 2003 (1), Hong Kong: Department of Fine Arts, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2004, 150–58.[2]
Ellen Pau, "Development of Hong Kong Video Art." VTEXT, June 1997, p. 54 -57.
References
^Kong, Travis (2012). "Ellen Pau". In Gerstner, David (ed.). Routledge International Encyclopedia of Queer Culture. Routledge. p. 451. ISBN978-1136761812.