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Each stop on the tram that crosses Hong Kong Island is equipped with plastic sheeting that supports printed advertising. They were widely tagged by the demonstrators during the large demonstrations in the second half of 2019.The day after the rallies, the cleaning services worked to erase the inscriptions with detergent. During the following demonstration, other slogans were superimposed on the traces that remained and were again made illegible by the action of the detergents.
Each stop on the tram that crosses Hong Kong Island is equipped with plastic sheeting that supports printed advertising. They were widely tagged by the demonstrators during the large demonstrations in the second half of 2019.The day after the rallies, the cleaning services worked to erase the inscriptions with detergent. During the following demonstration, other slogans were superimposed on the traces that remained and were again made illegible by the action of the detergents.







Spray paint, detergent on plastic canvas. Size: approx 2.20m x 18m. Pedder street tram stop, Central, Hong Kong -January 2020














Each stop on the tram that crosses Hong Kong Island is equipped with plastic sheeting that supports printed advertising. They were widely tagged by the demonstrators during the large demonstrations in the second half of 2019.
The day after the rallies, the cleaning services worked to erase the inscriptions with detergent. During the following demonstration, other slogans were superimposed on the traces that remained and were again made illegible by the action of the detergents.
The day after the rallies, the cleaning services worked to erase the inscriptions with detergent. During the following demonstration, other slogans were superimposed on the traces that remained and were again made illegible by the action of the detergents.
Ask the dust
Chatham Garden Flats, Kowloon, Hong Kong 2005
Chatham Garden Flats, Kowloon, Hong Kong, May 2005
































































































KEP - les villas
Kep fut dans les années soixante une station balnéaire à la mode. La haute société de Phnom Penh y fit construire de luxueuses villas. Quand leur mission de chasser les Khmer rouges de la région prit fin en 1992, les Vietnamiens dans leur retraite emportèrent tous les matériaux qui pouvaient avoir de la valeur. Mobilier, miroirs, chandeliers, carreaux de céramiques, dallage, furent arrachés ainsi que les chambranles et les huisseries et les installations électriques, fils, câbles, interrupteurs. La population livrée à elle mème s’installa dans ces villas dont les propriétaires avaient disparus. Lors de mon séjour à Kep en 2008 il n’y avait toujours ni eau courante ni électricité, et les ouverture béantes ne comportaient ni portes ni fenêtres.








KEP - the sea front












Kampot















































images réalisées en collaboration
avec le regretté Philippe Batrosse (1957-2015)
avec le regretté Philippe Batrosse (1957-2015)




BD, Hervé Barrussaud, Jean Luc Moulène, Philippe Batrosse




West Berlin, early 80’s, Chris Stanfield
Tonnerre | Puisaye | Forterre work in progress




Looze






Tonnerre -2014







Massangis



Shanghai 2007




