Sunday, January 15, 2023

China Reports 60K Covid Deaths... True or False?


Hospitals in China are overwhelmed with Covid-19 patients

In a bid to silence other countries for criticising China for not sharing Covid-19 data on infections and deaths, it yesterday claimed that just under 60,000 deaths were recorded from December 8 to January 12, when the zero-Covid restrictions were lifted.

The authorities also claim fever clinic visits and hospitalisations have peaked.

It is the first time China has released a death toll since its abrupt pivot away from its punishing zero-Covid strategy. 

Jiao claims 60K have died from Covid-19
Jiao Yahui, director of the National Health Commission's medical affairs department, said medical institutes recorded 5,503 deaths due to respiratory failure caused by Covid-19 infection, and 54,435 deaths of people with Covid-19 who had underlying health conditions, such as cancer or cardiovascular diseases.

"The standard is basically in line with those adopted by the World Health Organisation and other major countries," she said.

The average age of those who died was 80.3, and 90 percent of the fatalities were people aged 65 and older.

While it's definitely more than the over 5,000 that China reported since the pandemic began in December 2019, but many infectious disease experts are still skeptical.

One of them is Yanzhong Huang, a senior fellow for global health at the Council on Foreign Relations.

Huang skeptical of 60K number, believes higher
"The sharp revision is an official response to international criticism of the lack of transparency and accuracy in China's reporting of Covid-related data," he told CNN. 

"Given the still huge gap between the official count of Covid deaths and the international estimate, I don't think the revision will quell outside doubts on the government data."

In an interview with Reuters, Huang said it was unclear whether the new data accurately reflected the actual fatalities because doctors were discouraged from reporting Covid-related deaths, and the numbers only included deaths in hospitals.

"In the countryside, for example, many elderly people died at home but were not tested for Covid due to the lack of access to test kits or their unwillingness to get tested," he said.

And now the great migration is underway -- millions of people are on planes, trains and automobiles to get back to their hometowns for Spring Festival that starts on January 22. There are estimates that over 2 billion passenger trips will be made.

Travellers flood the Guangzhou train station
It is very possible that while traveling people will be infected with Covid-19 and spread the virus to their relatives. This could have an even more devastating effect, as those living in remote rural areas will be least likely to be vaccinated and if infected, will not have access to medicine and hospitals equipped to deal with respiratory illnesses.

For Jiao to claim the virus has already peaked is wishful thinking.

Saturday, January 14, 2023

Impending Mainland Invasion

Mainlanders are applying to travel to Hong Kong and Macau

Hong Kong is facing an invasion of mainlanders in the next days, weeks and months as soon as they can get their travel permits sorted.

After almost three years of no travel, many Chinese are itching to get to Hong Kong whether it be to eat their favourite Cantonese street food or delicacies, or shop for luxury brand items.

Almost 1 million mainlanders have applied for entry permits to Hong Kong, Macau or Taiwan since Beijing eased Covid-19 restrictions last month. Over 335,000 have applied for new passports.

Businesses from hospitality to retail are keen to welcome these visitors back to the city, while local residents are terrified of going out now and are staying home to avoid the deluge of people on the streets.

Most of the visitors are traveling by land, as flights are only 11 percent of the same period in 2019. Shanghai's Pudong Airport is seeing a volume of 11,000 passengers a day these days.

Nevertheless, many others are seeing visas to go to Canada -- for good.

Anecdotally I'm hearing of families moving now or as soon as they can get their visas, even though the second school term has already started. Children are anxious about leaving their homeland and they may not be placed in a school right away, but the parents want them over here as soon as possible.

It shows you how mainlanders are eager to "run" while they can...




Friday, January 13, 2023

Macau Doubling Down on HK Tourists

When Covid first hit, Shun Tak Ferry Terminal fell silent

The buzzing of the Turbojets from Shun Tak Ferry Terminal has returned after many Covid restrictions were lifted on January 8.

Before then, for about three years the terminal was completely dead, the Turbojets docked with no where to go, and the harbourfront was nice and quiet for once. Wonder if the sea life below also enjoyed a resurgence. Were there any marine biologists taking advantage of this time to study that?

People lining up for hours for ferry tickets
In any event, business is ramping up big time in Macau, now that the former Portuguese enclave is enticing Hong Kong visitors if they buy ferry tickets to go there, stay at least one night, the return tickets are free, until March 31.

And guess what -- people are lining up for hours to take advantage of the deal (that saves them less than HK$200 or US$25.60)... 

Macau Government Tourism Office deputy director Cheng Wai-tong said Friday that he expected about 10,000 Hongkongers would visit Macau on a daily basis during the Lunar New Year period, and is hoping for the return of the daily average of 20,000 in 2019.

About 8 months ago the terminal was empty
"The more Hong Kong people visit Macau the better," he said. "This is tied to the capacity of ferries and buses, because it will take some time to restore services to pre-Covid-19 levels."

One woman reported standing in line for four hours and 45 minutes. Others grumbled about how long they had to wait in line and said they should have opened more ticket windows.

Typical Hong Kong bitching about efficiency.

Nevertheless, with Hongkongers taking advantage of the "Macau Treat" campaign, hotels are seeing a 63 percent occupancy, which is not bad to start off and considering everyone is experiencing labour shortages.

Macau was devastated by Covid-19, as it is so dependent on visitors, in particular gamblers.

Macau hopes gambling will get it back on track
Even though Beijing has laid down the law that Macau has to move away from gambling and diversify its economy, the Special Administrative Region may have to depend on Baccarat tables and other enticements just to get the city back to pre-pandemic levels.

The great procrastination has begun...







Thursday, January 12, 2023

Snack Shop Kwan Kee to Close

Kwan Kee will be shutting its doors for good later this year


It's sad to hear the news that the snack shop Kwan Kee in Sham Shui Po is closing after over 60 years, as the owner is looking to retire.

The open-air shop is right next to the MTR station (Exit B2), and while the shop sold magazines, bottled water and candies, people went there to buy freshly-made puddings, like put chai goh (a caramel-coloured pudding with red beans solidified in a small bowl and then was eaten on wooden skewers.

Another that I liked was the black sesame pudding cut up in giant cubes, the same could be said for red bean pudding, and coconut jellies that are placed in thin plastic bags.

Its best seller is put chai goh pudding
Not only is this place patronised by locals, it was also given Michelin approval in 2015, in a list promoting Hong Kong's street foods. That designation led to even more people flocking to the shop to try their treats.

The owner, Fu Wing-cheung, told the media in 2018 that if it wasn't for the puddings which bring in the revenue, the shop would have closed ages ago if it just relied on groceries.

"[Puddings] are our main selling point now. The money we make from groceries is only a supplement that can barely cover the electricity bill, Fu explained.

Kwan Kee is a see-dor, or a shop, which were very common in the 1960s and 1970s before supermarket chains sprouted all over the city. 

"We are pretty much the only see-dor left in this district," he said almost five years ago.

His father started Kwan Kee in the 1960s, steaming the puddings in their shack in Sham Shui Po, and then they were sold on the streets by his wife. Fu took over the business in the early1980s and setting up the shop on Fuk Wah Street since 1984.

Black sesame is popular and coconut puddings
Fu's younger brother starts making the puddings at 2.30am, as they need several hours to cool in order to sell, while Fu himself shuttles between the kitchen and shop until 11pm at night. 

He says making the puddings is not complicated, but time consuming.

In 2018 Fu, then 63, said his children were not keen to take over the business "because they are too educated to do this kind of toiling work".

"If the day comes when I reach a certain age, and my children have all grown up then I will simply retire," Fu said. "Don't say I'm shutting this place down; I'm just letting it retire too."

Word on the street is that Kwan Kee will retire in May... 

Kwan Kee
115-117 Fuk Wah Street
Sham Shui Po
(next to Sham Shui Po MTR Exit B2)

Wednesday, January 11, 2023

Quote of the Day: Ke Huy Quan

Quan gave an emotional acceptance speech tonight

The Golden Globes were handed out tonight and we love Ke Huy Quan's acceptance speech for Best Supporting Actor in Everything Everywhere All At Once.

He became famous as a child actor in Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom 38 years ago. After that Quan doubted himself and his ability to keep going in acting.

But almost four decades later he has affirmed to himself and the rest of the world that he deserves to be on the stage.

Here's his speech:

Wow. Thank you. Thank you so much. 

I was raised to never forget where I came from and to always remember who gave me my first opportunity. I am so happy to see Steven Spielberg here tonight. Steven, thank you. 

When I started my career as a child actor in Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, I felt I felt so very lucky to have been chosen. As I grew older, I started to wonder if that was it. If it was just luck, through so many years, I was afraid I had nothing more to offer, that no matter what I did, I would, I would never surpass what I achieved as a kid. 

Thankfully, more than 30 years later, two guys thought of me. They remembered that kid and they gave me an opportunity to try again. Everything that has happened since has been unbelievable. Daniel Kwan, Daniel Scheinert, thank you so so much for helping me find my answer. You have given me more than I could have ever hoped. 

Thank you to the Hollywood foreign press Association for this incredible honour. Thank you to A24 Ley Line Entertainment and Agbo. 

Thank you to our incredible producer Jonathan Wong. Thank you to Michelle Yeoh, Jamie Lee Curtis, Stephanie Hsu, and our entire EEAAO family. And last but not least, I want to say the most important person in my life, the one person that never stopped believing in me, my wife Echo, I love you with all my heart. 

Thank you so much. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.

Jimmy Lai's Next Digital to be Delisted


Next Digital will be delisted from the HK Stock Exchange


Another nail in the coffin for Next Digital -- the company that Jimmy Lai Chee-ying founded in 1990 will be delisted from the Hong Kong Stock Exchange on January 12 at 9am.

Lai was arrested in August 2020
When Lai was arrested in August 2020 and then the newspaper he founded, Apple Daily, shut down for good in June 2021 because Next Digital's HK$18 million (US$2.3 million) in assets were frozen by the authorities, it was only a matter of time before the company would be delisted. It is also in the process of being liquidated.

Many will never forget the day 200 police officers descended on the Tsueng Kwan O office and paraded Lai in handcuffs around the office. It was a blatant threat, but the staff knew what to do -- report the story in real time. 

Why not -- they had a front row seat and they were part of the story too.

They invited the media in on June 24, 2021, their last day of printing, knowing it was an historic moment that had to be recorded for everyone to remember.

Lai owns 72 percent of the company's shares, while his ardent supporters propped up the stock a few times towards the end.

Last edition of Apple Daily in June 2021
When Lai was arrested for allegedly colluding with foreign forces on August 20, 2020, the stock rallied from HK$0.75 to HK$1.96 that day. 

Then the authorities froze Next Digital's assets on May 17, 2021, along with Lai's bank accounts; that led to the suspension of share trading.

But four days later trading resumed and the stock opened 141.9 percent higher to HK$0.45 and rallied to HK$0.80.

Delisting Next Digital is just a formality, but memories of Apple Daily, Next Digital and Lai will long be remembered.

Tuesday, January 10, 2023

Noma Signals the End of Extreme Fine Dining?

Redzepi says Noma will become a food lab with pop-ups

Chef Rene Redzepi, the creative mind behind the best restaurant in the world, Noma, in Copenhagen, will stop its regular dining service and focus on its food lab and do periodic pop-ups. 

He made the announcement in the New York Times, which led to shockwaves around the culinary world. How could it be? If Noma can't make it, what about us? 

Noma's food is labour intensive
Or is it a sign that foraging for obscure ingredients is too much, as well as the labour involved in creating edible art on a plate? 

The latter probably has something to do with it -- for decades fine dining restaurants have depended on cheap or free labour from young, hungry chefs eager to learn from mater chefs in the hopes of putting this experience on their resumes to get a better job elsewhere, or to eventually open their own place.

Many visiting chefs I interviewed over the years in Hong Kong said they had worked at Noma, or the previous hot restaurant, el bulli, which definitely boosted their careers, even if they only worked there for a few months. If they learned how to cook is another thing, as one woman told the NYT that she spent hours creating 120 beetles out of fruit leather. 

Another chef who was in charge of fermentation had to create a dish of moldy asparagus and make the dish look like a diorama.

One dish features a beetle made of fruit leather
Why?

Manipulating food to be something else was a fad 10 years ago with molecular gastronomy that threw diners for a loop, manipulating food to look like something else, but now it's back to basics, and the usual chef jargon of "seasonality" and "fresh produce". 

So does Noma have to be so labour intensive? Redzepi has taken the restaurant into such high standards that it's hard for him to step back to be like everyone else. That's how Noma stood out from the crowd with its unusual ingredients and incredible plating, but as he says it is unsustainable.

The other extreme is Joel Robuchon, whose food had to be presented precisely. One young chef recalled having to use a rule to measure butter and his dishes were known for having lots of dots on them that had to be evenly spaced out on the plate. Tedious work that is eaten in seconds.

Hong Kong's Caprice has some "tweezer food"
Thank goodness most fine dining restaurants in Hong Kong are not like Noma -- they are very cost conscious as almost all the food is imported as well as tableware, crockery, equipment and so on. There are some restaurants that present "tweezer food", but for the most part they are cooking food that is recognisable.

In Vancouver it's mostly casual, with some fine dining places putting more effort into the presentation. 

But will Noma's stepping back inspire the restaurant industry to change and start paying everyone a decent wage? Will the custom of young chefs staging or interning end? It may mean diners will have to pay more for the privilege of having someone cook for them... are they prepared to fork out more for that experience?
 




Monday, January 9, 2023

Canada Welcomes More Hongkongers

More Hongkongers choosing to move to Canada 

More Hongkongers are choosing to come to Canada, particularly young people who have graduated since 2016, as the country has specific pathways for them to become permanent residents.

Since the pathways were announced in June 2021 in response to the national security law implemented in 2020, 1,700 Hongkongers have been granted permanent residency, and nearly 33,000 work and study permits.

About 17,000 have applied for open work permits, and less than 16,000 for study visas.

Canada targeting young Hongkongers
Canada's policies are specifically targeting young people, either recent graduates, or those already or intending to study here.

Hong Kong graduates who studied in Canada or have worked here for at least a year after obtaining postsecondary qualifications within the past five years can apply for permanent residency.

Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) received 1,760 applications for permanent residency between the launch of the scheme and October last year.

More than 90 percent used their Canadian educational qualifications to apply, the rest used their work experience in the country. 

Of the 1,760 who applied, 1,700 were granted permanent residency, 49 were refused, and 11 withdrew, which means a 97 percent success rate.

"With many young Hongkongers casting their eyes abroad, we want them to choose Canada," said a spokesman for IRCC.

Canadian pathways announced in June 2021
With the work permits, recent graduates can come to Canada and apply for a job and bring dependents with them. Nearly 17,400 work permits or extensions were issued to Hongkongers from the launch of the scheme until last October.

Of them 72 percent were in their 20s, 20 percent in their 30s, 6 percent in their 40s and 1 percent over 50 and below 20 years of age.

To qualify for permanent residency, those with a three-year open work permit must work full time for at least one year, or 1,560 hours.

The United Kingdom and Australia are other destinations Hongkongers are applying to. In the UK, the British National (Overseas) visa pathway allows Hongkongers to live and work there for five years and then are eligible for citizenship.

Meanwhile Hong Kong graduates who studied in Australia must remain there for three to four years before becoming eligible for permanent residency.

Hongkongers also choosing the UK, Australia
With Canada's scheme being the easiest, it's not surprising to see so many young people applying, while others holding BN(O) passports and have cash to burn are trying their luck in the UK.

Canada is also looking to increase its population by 1.45 million with young immigrants in the next three years, and Hongkongers are just one of the many welcomed with open arms.

Sunday, January 8, 2023

Review: Love, Charlie: The Rise and Fall of Chef Charlie Trotter

An unflinching portrait of Trotter, and a peek into a chef's life

I had only heard of the name Charlie Trotter and how he was one of the top chefs in the United States. While Wolfgang Puck is the celebrity chef to the stars, Trotter was the serious gourmet chef in Chicago.

It was a shock to hear he died in 2013, as I thought he died only a few years ago -- but it's almost a decade ago.

Love, Charlie, The Rise and Fall of Chef Charlie Trotter is a very good documentary that explores every aspect of his life from childhood to when he died at the age of 54 of a stroke.

Trotter wrote many letters to his first wife Lisa
Director Rebecca Halpern deftly weaves together super 8 films, previous interviews of Trotter, as well as interviews with his mother, sister, ex-wife and celebrity chefs like Puck, Emeril Lagasse, and Grant Achatz.

They tell the story of a guy named Chuck Trotter who seemed happy-go-lucky, but if he did something he was quite passionate, a bit eccentric and cocky. His ex-wife Lisa has wonderful memories of Trotter when they met in college and she kept all his letters and postcards he sent to her.

He decided to become a cook, and threw all his energy into it, interning in many places, moving on to the next if he felt he wasn't learning anymore. Then he decided to go to Europe with the goal of opening his own place, and that's when he met Lisa again who happened to be in Paris. They critiqued restaurants they went to, and sketched out his ideal place, which would be modelled after Fredy Girardet's eponymous restaurant in Switzerland.

Chuck became Charlie Trotter, which meant becoming more serious when he opened the restaurant in 1987. He wanted to prove to his father, who was financing the restaurant, that he could pull this off. His father was supportive, but also critical, constantly putting Trotter and Lisa, now his wife and manager on their toes, with restaurant consultants telling them what to do.

Bourdain with Trotter and Lagasse
That led to Trotter becoming more difficult to work for in the kitchen, which led to him having a cameo in My Best Friend's Wedding, where the documentary shows the clip of him screaming in the kitchen, "I will kill your whole family if you don't get this right! I need this perfect!" He was confident enough to parody himself on film.

However, his father also warned him to listen to his staff and look after them; they would complain to his father about how they were treated. The film shows a typewritten letter that his father gave him in 1993 -- but it doesn't seem like Trotter listened to the advice as the same problems were still festering 10 years later.

Meanwhile Trotter would eat, breathe, live and sleep in the restaurant, causing his marriage to fall apart. Lisa wanted out, and soon he married another woman who gave birth to his son, Dylan.

But when it came to his cuisine, Trotter was a genius -- Puck says Trotter was championing vegetables at a time when they were secondary elements on the plate. A food journalist pointed out Trotter was using quinoa before anyone else knew what it was. And he was keen on using micro greens, which made one farmer's produce famous. 

He was also willing to take risks -- going from a la carte and set menu to just set menu, and then not offering cocktails, only wine. As he says himself in an interview, he wanted to control the entire dining experience from beginning to end because he knows the food better than his guests.

Trotter influenced numerous young chefs 
The documentary even interviews Trotter's best customer, Ray Harris, who ate there at least once a week if not more, and claims he never ate the same thing twice. He basically made Trotter's chefs go crazy trying to figure out a new set menu for him. But Harris loved everything Trotter put in front of him.

Perfection was everything for Trotter. Achatz -- a top chef in his own right, recalls how he once prepared food on dishes that were dusty and got chewed out for it by Trotter. Achatz wanted to quit, but Trotter laid a guilt trip on him that he would let the rest of the team down if he left.

When Michelin finally came to Chicago in 2010, Achatz had his own restaurant, Alinea, and it was given three stars, while Trotter received two. He was angry at Michelin for not knowing what is good food, but others in the film point out Trotter had lost his touch, hadn't changed things up in the restaurant, and the second year also received two stars.

The financial crisis in 2008-09 caused Trotter's restaurant empire to crumble; his various restaurants in Los Cabos, Las Vegas and a takeaway eatery in Chicago all closed.

In 2012 he decided to close his restaurant after an impressive 25-year-run, claiming he would travel and do a master's degree. By this time he was already suffering mini strokes, but he refused to see a doctor after being traumatised when he was six years old. 

His sister recalls at Trotter's funeral how so many people came up to her and her mother, telling them how Trotter had made them the chefs they were today, or how he profoundly affected their careers.

It's a bitter sweet end for Trotter, who affected so many people, but died so young. Love, Charlie is unflinching in its portrayal of Trotter, both the good and bad, and gives an insight into how chefs are under a lot of pressure everyday. Their food has to be top notch all the time, because one bad meal and that guest will never return, and will tell all their friends about their bad experience.

And he relies on his brigade, his team to execute these dishes perfectly every time, which is why they are under a lot of stress too. But some people thrive on this pressure, while many others cave in. That said, the days of screaming chefs is pretty much over -- no one will take that kind of verbal abuse anymore. 

Nevertheless Trotter represents a certain period in American fine dining and will forever be remembered for his contribution in putting Chicago on the culinary map.

Directed by Rebecca Halpern
96 minutes


Saturday, January 7, 2023

BC Reactivates Emergency Hospital Operations Centres


20 hospital emergency operations centres will reopen Jan 9

With the concern of rising cases of not only Covid-19, flu and respiratory illness, British Columbia is reactivating 20 hospital emergency operations centres from January 9.

BC Health Minster Adrian Dix said demand for hospital care is high -- more than 10,000 people were in acute care in the province as of Thursday, a six percent increase from New Year's Eve.

Patients with Covid-19, respiratory synctial virus (RSV) and influenza are in hospital, according to Dix.

When it comes to Covid-19, there are between 300 to 400 cases in hospital in BC.

Dix sees hospitalisation numbers rising
He believes the cases are rising after the Christmas holidays after many people gathered for the first time in three years, and expects the next six weeks to be "really busy".

The emergency operations centres will be in operation for at least six weeks and then review the situation in terms of hospital bed availability, and figure out ways to ease emergency department congestion.

However, health officials are stopping short of calling for mask mandates, which has frustrated some health workers who believe mask-wearing should be strongly recommended particularly in indoor spaces that are crowded.

Provincial Health Officer Dr Bonnie Henry only advised people to get vaccinated and to wear masks when appropriate.

"If I'm the only one on the bus and the windows are open, and I'm feeling perfectly fine, then no, I probably wouldn't," she said in a radio interview earlier this week on CBC Radio Vancouver.

Henry stops short of strongly advising masking
"If the bus is crowded, or somebody at home is sick, or I'm finished at the end of a cold, and I'm no longer infectious, I wear a mask."

This is hardly helpful advice, further muddying the waters of what people should do to protect themselves. 

One would think with the rising number of hospitalisations and now the plan to reactivate hospital emergency operations centres that Henry would strongly recommend wearing masks.

Her lack lackadaisical attitude towards Covid-19 is baffling and the results are going to lead to more hospitalisations because her advice is not clear. 

While there are a few more people wearing masks out and about, it's not enough to prevent the majority from catching Covid, RSV or influenza...

Friday, January 6, 2023

Over 286K HKers Apply to Travel to Mainland


Borders are reopening between Hong Kong and Guangdong

After Chief Executive John Lee Ka-chiu announced that up to 60,000 Hong Kong residents could cross the border into the mainland daily from January 8, the time slots were quickly filled up. By 8am on Friday, more than 286,000 residents had registered their visits online.

Lee made the quota announcement on Thursday
From Sunday, 50,000 travellers a day can use land checkpoints at the Lok Ma Chau railway station, Man Kam To and then Shenzhen Bay Port to enter the mainland without having to undergo quarantine if they have reserved a spot online. 

There is also a daily quota of 1,000 for drivers and passengers of private and rental cars who use the Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macau Bridge.

Meanwhile there is an equal number of places for mainland residents to apply to go to Hong Kong by registering on an Shenzhen government-operated reservation system.

Interestingly there are no quotas for the numbers of travellers entering China via the airport, two ferry terminals and the Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macau Bridge shuttle buses. The government estimates there could be around 10,000 visitors through these other routes, but neither side will track these travellers in either direction... wonder why...

Travellers from both sides need to produce a negative polymerase chain reaction or PCR test taken within 48 hours and are not required to quarantine.

Travellers on the bridge won't be subject to quota
Hong Kong lawmakers are pleased with the quota arrangements, but are pushing to increase them further after the start of the Year of the Rabbit.

However, many Hongkongers are terrified of not only an impending invasion of mainlanders -- they are arriving vaccinated or not, as they don't need to show any proof of having had any jabs.

Some have already trickled into the city, though the onslaught is happening in days...



Thursday, January 5, 2023

Canadian Women Artists You Didn't Know


Newton's portrait of painter Louis Muhlstock


I'd been meaning to go to the Vancouver Art Gallery to check out its exhibition, Uninvited: Canadian Women Artists in the Modern Moment for months, but yesterday when I realised it would be closing in a few days, I made the effort to go this afternoon!

Portrait of FH Varley
When it comes to Canadian art, who comes to mind? The Group of Seven (Franklin Carmichael, Lawren Harris, AY Jackson, Frank Johnston, Arthur Lismer, JEH MacDonald, and Frederick Varley. Other artists who joined later were AJ Casson, Edwin Holgate, and Lionel LeMoine FitzGerald.

So a bunch of men, and one woman -- Emily Carr.

But it turns out there were a lot of women artists in the same time period, from the 1920s to 1930s and this exhibition shines a spotlight on them. Not only did they paint, but also sculpt and photograph.

A few of them were the wives of artists in the Group of Seven, like Bess Larkin Housser Harris, the wife of Lawren Harris. The couple liked going to remote places in nature to paint, though her favourite painting is called Old Mine Shaft, Cobalt, and the mountain scene was the work she kept with her until she died.

There's a powerful abstract painting by Vera Weatherbie called Portrait of FH Varley. He is painted with a long coat, his arms folded with a cigarette in his left hand and he looks off into the distance. There is a silhouette behind him, that reminds me of a butterfly. 

His face is not painted clearly, but his facial expression is quite intense with a slight furrowed brow, the palette of greens, yellows and a tinge of orangey-pink. 

Housser Harris' favourite painting
It turns out Weatherbie was Varley's muse, as he painted her portrait several times. He later recounted that she was the "single greatest influence" on his art and life. The admiration was mutual.

The composition of this portrait was interesting -- looking down at the subject, who rests his arms on the back of the chair and looks beyond the canvas elsewhere. It's a painting of artist Louis Muhlstock, who painted street life in Montreal and the plight of the working class during the Great Depression. He has an angular face, broad shoulders, and looking sharp in his jacket, shirt and tie.

Weatherbie also painted the lives of immigrant workers and one of her paintings is called My-E-En. It depicts an Asian man working in a cannery, wearing a broad hat, and white clothing as he holds up a platter of three fish. It's interesting to see Asian people -- it's not clear if he is Chinese or Japanese, but he seems to be portrayed as being happy with this work...

Sea and Shore in marble by Wyle
Meanwhile Florence Wyle's sculptures are mesmerising in that they convey so much emotion without too much detail. One work is called Sea and Shore, featuring a woman's body from the neck down, the partial arms revealing a draping, while the breasts are revealed, and the rest of the body covered in a fabric that drapes down to suggest the legs below.

Carved out of marble, it is strong but also delicate, and sensual, revealing the flowing lines of the female form.

And of course how can this exhibition not include Emily Carr? Several of her paintings are featured towards the end of the show. One is called Stumps and Sky, and one may remember a few months back when a pair of climate change activists came to the Vancouver Art Gallery and chose this painting to throw maple syrup on it (though it was covered in glass) and then glue themselves to the wall below...

At least the stunt brought more attention to the art gallery and the exhibition?

So pleased to learn more about Canadian female artists, who to me painted just as well as the men. In some cases they had a similar masculine feel, others a more feminine touch. Hopefully the gallery and others will make more of an effort to showcase women artists. I'm glad I didn't miss this show!

Uninvited: Canadian Women Artists in the Modern Moment
Until January 8, 2023
Vancouver Art Gallery

Wednesday, January 4, 2023

Cardinal Zen to Fly to Rome, Chinese Raring to Party in HK

Zen allowed to travel to Rome to attend former pope's funeral


A bit of good news coming out of Hong Kong -- the courts have allowed Cardinal Joseph Zen to fly to Rome to attend the funeral of former pope Benedict at the Vatican.

Zen's lawyers made the application in a closed-door hearing at West Kowloon Court, asking for the former bishop's passport so that he could attend the unprecedented funeral that will be held on Thursday morning local time.

Former pope Benedict passed away on Saturday in a monastery on December 31 at the age of 95. He was the first pope in almost 600 years to resign citing failing health. He stepped down in 2013 after succeeding John Paul II in 2005.

Zen's application met no objections in court
It is understood that Principal Magistrate Peter Law Tak-chuen, one of the jurists approved by Hong Kong's Chief Executive to oversee national security proceedings, had allowed Zen to travel between Wednesday and Sunday, after the prosecution raised no objection.

When Zen returns to Hong Kong he must surrender his passport to the police. He is believed to be the first person arrested on suspicion of a national security law offence to be allowed to travel while under investigation.

Wonder if Zen will be able to meet with Pope Francis to talk? 

It's a slim hope...

Meanwhile China is not pleased that other countries have imposed negative Covid-19 tests on its citizens when they travel to places like Canada, Australia, the United States, Italy, and Malaysia to name a few.

China claims it may retaliate.

However, anyone travelling to China needs to show a negative polymerase chain reaction or PCR test, so what's the difference?

Chinese Blackpink fans eager to see them in HK
Nevertheless, it looks like many Chinese residents will travel to Hong Kong to party.

Many have snapped up tickets way above the listed price to see South Korean girl group Blackpink, who will be performing at Asia-World Expo from January 13-15. Tickets were sold out within two hours in November and many were being resold by scalpers. 

One ticket bought for HK$2,999 (US$383,60) is now on sale for HK$25,000, which includes a seat that is 13 rows from the stage and VIP access to the group's pre-show rehearsal and other benefits.

Others are keen to attend the music festival Clockenflap that was unable to hold shows for three years. The three-day event will now be staged in early March (previously it was in mid-November). 

Mando-pop stars JJ Lin and Jay Chou will also be having concerts in Hong Kong in March and August respectively.

And these are only the people who want to fly to Hong Kong to attend concerts. What about those eager to shop and eat?

Hope everyone there has their bivalent vaccine shots...




Tuesday, January 3, 2023

Wastewater from HK, China Flights to be Tested at YVR

Wastewater from China and HK flights will be tested for Covid

Just to reiterate, starting on January 5, travellers from China, Hong Kong and Macau, regardless of vaccination status, must present a negative Covid-19 test taken 48 hours before departure for flights to Canada. The measure will be in place for 30 days and then reassessed.

And what is very interesting is that Vancouver International Airport or YVR will take part in a pilot project where wastewater from certain aircraft from the above-mentioned places will be tested to track the surge of the virus which has spread like wildfire in China. 

Wastewater from YVR is already being monitored at the Iona Wastewater Treatment Plant, just north of the airport.

Travellers must present negative Covid-19 tests
But Trevor Boudreau, director of external relations for Vancouver Airport Authority said a few months ago YVR was approached by the Public Health Agency of Canada and the BC Centre for Disease Control about sampling wastewater not just from the terminal but also from the depot where plane waste is deposited.

Boudreau said following the latest travel measures, health officials approached YVR again for a pilot project "to directly sample waste from certain aircraft arriving from specific destinations".

The government is also expanding its wastewater testing at Toronto's Pearson International Airport.

PHAC will be starting the pilot in the last two weeks of January and will run it for the short term focused on flights from China and Hong Kong, as there are no direct flights from Macau.

Dr Isaac Bogoch, an infectious diseases specialist with the University Health Network in Toronto, said wastewater testing can be useful in tracking emerging mutations of Covid-19.

Testing can help track emerging Covid variants
"It's really important to have a good understanding of which variants are circulating, which ones are in Canada, and that just gives us some very valuable information that is often actionable," he said.

He also noted it was important to be transparent with the data.

"It's extremely important to share this data with the world and when we have open platforms for sharing genomic sequencing, we're in a much better place and we just have a much more well-informed global population," he said, adding such monitoring is a necessary next step as Covid-19 ebbs and flows.

It's also a non-evasive way to collect data if people are not being tested on arrival.

Monday, January 2, 2023

CE to Decide on NSL Legal Representation

Lai had hired King's Counsel Tim Owen to defend him 

After Hong Kong's highest court allowed Apple Daily founder and publisher Jimmy Lai Chee-ying to have British national Tim Owen to represent him in a national security trial, the government asked Beijing for an interpretation of the law on this.

What was the verdict?

Hong Kong's chief executive, specifically John Lee Ka-chiu can decide on this matter once and for all -- and that the decision could not be appealed in court.

HK's high court had allowed Owen in NSL case
Well that settles it then... quite obvious on how Lee stands on the issue and is more evidence of the rule of law being further eroded.

"Hong Kong is to be governed by a decision-making body that works secretively and whose decisions are not to be challenged in court. The repercussions on Hong Kong's rule of law are clearly far-reaching," said Ling Bing, a Chinese law specialist at the University of Sydney.

Michael Davis, formerly of the law school at the University of Hong Kong, said he viewed the interpretation as creating further avenues for the local government to "dictate outcomes on critical issues before the court".

"The court will now face the prospect of a committee overruling it if it does not rule in favour of the prosecution when national security is raised," he said. 

"That will surely weigh heavily on every decision where national security issues are raised by the government."

Lee will now decide on Lai's legal representation
Davis also warned the expansion and strengthening of the government's power would have repercussions for the rule of law and free expression.

However, Professor Albert Chen Hung-yee, a constitutional law expert at HKU, said the interpretation didn't give the chief executive more power, but that the city's leader and the oversight committee already had this authority.

In any case, it does not bode well for Lai and the cause for democracy in Hong Kong.

The goal posts are constantly shifting, and for the benefit of the pro-establishment. 



Sunday, January 1, 2023

Canada Also Wants Negative Covid Test

How much longer will flight crew wear hazmat suits onboard?

Happy New Year! And if you arrive in Canada from China, Hong Kong and Macau from January 5 onwards, you will have to produce a negative Covid-19 test within 48 hours of your flight.

Canada is now following other countries such as the United States, Japan, Italy, India and Malaysia in trying to slow down the possible surge in Covid-19 cases coming into their respective countries.

Negative Covid test needed to enter Canada
Any traveller from China, Hong Kong and Macau who is two years and older and regardless of their vaccination status must produce a negative molecular or antigen test that was supervised by a telehealth service accredited laboratory or testing provider.

The Public Health Agency of Canada is concerned there could be other variants swirling around on the Chinese mainland that the rest of the world is unaware of and hope that testing will try to keep out as many other variants as possible; that said most people outside of China have either been infected with Covid-19 and recovered, or are sufficiently vaccinated to protect themselves.

While Canada's measure is only for 30 days and then will be reassessed to continue or not, epidemiologists like University of Hong Kong's Ben Cowling do not find this a good way in stopping the virus from entering other countries.

Testing inbound travellers, with the exception of those at a few tourist destinations, "does not have much impact on the domestic spread of infections because travellers only [make up] a small fraction of a population at any given time," Cowling said in an email, adding there was no epidemiological rationale for travel restrictions at this stage of the pandemic.

HK travelers must produce negative test too
Meanwhile, before the end of 2022, several notable people passed away, including Brazilian football legend Pele, fashion designer Vivienne Westwood, former Pope Benedict Ratzinger, journalist Barbara Walters, and Canadian singer and songwriter Ian Tyson.

Everyone is hoping 2023 will be much better and despite inflation, climate change and Covid-19 still lingering. No one wants to waste another moment after almost three years were gone.

Wishing everyone good health, happiness for the coming year!


Tasting Chinese (and Hakka) Food Around the World

Kwan traveled the world seeking out Chinese restaurants  This evening I went to a talk called "Food and the Chinese Diaspora" at t...