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Throughout
the ages designs that have changed the face of the world have
originated in Asia. From Shen Nong’s first set of herbal
medicines in 100 BC to the invention of paper by Cai Lun in
105AD, Chinese designers have been pointing the way forward
and creating products that are practical, beautiful, innovative
and life enhancing.
Modern Chinese people are, themselves, sometimes surprised
to realise that contemporary agriculture, shipping, astronomical
observatories, decimal mathematics, paper money, umbrellas,
wheelbarrows, multi-stage rockets, brandy and whiskey, the
game of chess, and much more, all originated from China. Early
Chinese travellers took these discoveries around the globe;
today the influence of China on the western world is no less
marked.
The reverse is also true. Asian people who have made new
homes in far flung countries around the world are embracing
western culture and ideals. They are merging their traditional
values and heritage with western ideas, to create modern day
solutions for the crucial moral and spiritual questions facing
humanity.
Today the fusion of east and west is nowhere more evident
than in Hong Kong, Asia’s gateway city. Due in part
to its colonial heritage, Hong Kong has long been a melting
pot for a broad variety of activities, making mutual understanding
and interaction between its different cultures a normal part
of everyday life.
As the modern day world continues to look for inspiration
in ancient Chinese traditions, multicultural Hong Kong is
the ideal forum for this year’s World’s
Outstanding Chinese Designer award. The Award aims
to reach out to Chinese designers across the globe, creating
a pool of shared knowledge and experience based on common
origins. The organiser’s vision is that a ripple started
in Hong Kong will form a tide reaching every corner of the
world where Chinese people are designing. This process will
help identify role models who can inspire young Chinese designers
wherever they may be.
Judging Criteria
Criteria was based upon three levels: personal, social and
industry :
Personal
The winner should be an established figure in his discipline
with a high quality of work, service and notable achievements.
He must also demonstrate his long-term efforts and total commitment
in the design field.
Industry
The winner should contribute to the design industry either
through academic exploration or in-the-field applications,
educational involvement or research studies. The winner must
have demonstrated his commitment to design training at a national
or an international level.
Social
The winner’s design should have a positive social impact
on everyday living and environmental concerns. He must demonstrate
a social consciousness and responsibility; be human-oriented
and possess a positive mindset for creating designs that enhance
the welfare of people and society.
Judging Panel
Winner of World’s Outstanding
Chinese Designer 2007
Kai-Yin
Lo
Kai-Yin Lo is recognized as
a pioneer for bringing a contemporary and easy-to-wear
style to traditional Chinese jewelry and for elevating
semi-precious stones into a mainstay in jewelry design.
A well-regarded expert on several fields of Chinese
art and culture, she has edited four books ranging from
Chinese furniture to the vernacular house and living
environment. As a designer and historian, Lo has uniquely
championed Chinese cultural heritage as a source of
creative inspiration. Throughout her career, spanning
over three decades, Lo has persistently maintained her
own unique style by interpreting old forms in entirely
contemporary terms.
In 2005, Lo was honored alongside Cartier as one of
three jewelers lauded for their “influence, style
and excellence” by the Kennedy Center, Washington
DC. Lo‘s creative designs have been sold at leading
stores across the globe. Since 1992, she has organized
and curated numerous important international art, culture,
and lifestyle exhibitions and symposia. The annual Kai-Yin
Lo Lecture at Asia Society, New York is widely regarded
as a significant forum.
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Download
HKDC Awards 2007 Yearbook here (Size: 25.2 MB)

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