Chinaman's Peak: Walking the Mountain

1992 25m Dir. Paul Wong

About this movie

The images seem to suggest a traditional Chinese funeral ceremony associated with ancestor worship, though Wong has remarked they do not represent any particular ritual. The work deals with death, remembrance, and history, and was conceived as a memorial to the Chinese workers who died building the Canadian railway through the Rocky Mountains. It is also dedicated to the artist’s father, Hoy Ming Wong, and to two friends and collaborators who committed suicide, Ken Fletcher (1954-1978) and Paul Speed (1967-1991). Wong created the work while artist-in-residence at the Banff Centre for the Arts in Alberta. Chinaman’s Peak is the name of a mountain near Banff where, according to legend, a Chinese worker killed himself. The work was first performed at Tunnel Mountain, Banff in 1992, before being exhibited as an installation at the Contemporary Art Gallery in Vancouver, for the Chinese New Year, in 1993.

Quick facts

Year
1992
Runtime
25m
Director
Language
EN
🎬 Paul Wong

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Chinaman's Peak: Walking the Mountain has a runtime of 25m ( and 25 minutes).
Chinaman's Peak: Walking the Mountain was directed by Paul Wong and released in 1992.

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