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Virginia Harshman Contact Email: virginia.harshman@ringling.org Contact Phone Number: 9413595700 ext 2803 Sarasota, Florida- The John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art is pleased to present Howie Tsui: Retainers of Anarchy (2017) in its United States debut. The exhibition will open March 15, 2020, in the museum’s Keith D. and Linda L. Monda Gallery for Contemporary Art. Retainers of Anarchy is a monumental 25 meter-long projection with sound created from the digitization and animation of hundreds of ink drawings. The work draws from literary and artistic genres of the Song dynasty (960 –1279 CE), but undermines its idealized portraiture of social cohesion by setting the narrative in Kowloon’s notorious Walled City—an ungoverned tenement of disenfranchised refugees in Hong Kong, which was demolished in 1994. The animation pictorially references major works of Chinese art, scenes from historic stories and modern life within parallel universes. The work considers wuxia as a narrative tool for dissidence and resistance. Wuxia, a traditional form of martial arts literature that expanded into 20th century popular film and television, was created out of narratives and characters often from lower social classes that uphold chivalric ideals against oppressive forces during unstable times. The People’s Republic of China placed wuxia under heavy censorship for fear of arousing anti-government sentiment. However, practitioners advanced the form in Hong Kong making it one of the most popular genres of Chinese fiction. By representing a number of Hong Kong’s current political activists in this work, Tsui pays tribute to wuxia characters, who are also often persecuted for their activism. Howie Tsui (Tsui Ho Yan) was born in Hong Kong, raised in Nigeria and Canada. His work was included in solo and group exhibitions internationally, including the Vancouver Art Gallery, Canada; OCAT Xi’an Museum, China; Para Site, Hong Kong; Asian Art Museum of San Francisco; National Gallery of Canada; Art Labor, China; Ikkan Art Gallery, Singapore, among others. Tsui’s work is in the public collections of the National Gallery of Canada, Vancouver Art Gallery, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Canada Council Art Bank, Ottawa Art Gallery, City of Ottawa, Global Affairs Canada, Centre d'exposition de Baie-Saint-Paul, and M+ Museum of Visual Culture. Artist Talk with Howie Tsui will be held in the Chao Lecture Hall March 13, 2020, at 11 a.m. This exhibition is organized and circulated by the Vancouver Art Gallery, Canada. Additional information may be found at ringling.org or by calling 941-358-3180. Image: Howie Tsui, Retainers of Anarchy, 2017 (detail), algorithmic animation sequence, 5-channel video projection, 6-channel audio. Collection of the Vancouver Art Gallery, Purchased with proceeds from the Audain Emerging Artists Acquisition Fund. Photo: Rachel Topham, Vancouver Art Gallery # # # About The Ringling The Ringling is a pre-eminent center for the arts, history and learning that is dedicated to bringing the past and contemporary culture to life through extraordinary visitor experiences. From its inception, The Ringling has joined the diverse visual traditions and theatrical spectacle of yesterday with the genre-defying global practitioners of the present. A place of exploration, discovery and respite, The Ringling’s campus in Sarasota, Florida – which includes the Museum of Art, the Circus Museum, an historic mansion, an 18th-century theater and bayfront gardens – is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. As the State Art Museum of Florida and part of Florida State University, The Ringling fulfills an important educational mission. The Ringling offers formal and informal programs of study serving as a major resource for students, scholars, and lifelong learners of every age within the region, across the country and around the world. Media Contacts: The Ringling Virginia Harshman, public relations specialist 941-359-5700 x2803 Virginia.harshman@ringling.org