Kowloon Walled City brought back to life on Instagram using AI, in artworks that move beyond its lawless reputation

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The Chinese government and British colonial administration in Hong Kong announced in 1987 that Kowloon Walled City would be demolished, and after the eviction of its residents, including a few holdouts who were forcibly removed, demolition began in 1993.

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Kowloon Walled City: tales from Hong Kong’s ‘City of Darkness’

Kowloon Walled City: tales from Hong Kong’s ‘City of Darkness’

Kowloon Walled City has always intrigued art director and digital creator Bianca Tse Wai-shan, which is why she launched an Instagram account called @walledcity_wildest_dreams filled with imaginative, AI-generated images that bring the enclave back to life.

Children play on a rooftop in Kowloon Walled City. Photo: Greg Girard
Rooftop Children is based on a historical photograph of a low-flying plane above Kowloon City and Greg Girard’s photographs of children playing on the rooftop of the Walled City. Photo: AI-generated image/Bianca Tse

Tse never got to visit Kowloon Walled City – it was demolished when she was 12; she became acquainted with it after playing the Japanese adventure video game Kowloon’s Gate, whose setting is inspired by it.

“It was the first video game I had ever touched or played, and the whole world in the game really amused me,” she says.

It reminded her of her childhood in temporary housing in Fanling, in Hong Kong’s New Territories.

Dentist City is an AI-generated image inspired by Joe Cognigni’s photograph Teeth for Sale, which was taken in Kowloon Walled City. Photo: AI-generated image/Bianca Tse

“It’s relevant to my childhood, because I’m from a family with nothing,” she says. “I lived in a slum, and I had no toys.

“I remember on Chinese New Year, I was sitting on the floor with my mum and selling toys when everyone was visiting their families. I was selling used metal to the shops for HK$10.”

It was at this time that her interest in art began, since drawing was the cheapest way to entertain herself. “I’d watch cartoons and draw, and I’d go to the library every day, read all the illustration books, and then I just [kept] drawing.”

Artist Bianca Tse (centre) as a child in the temporary housing area in Fanling where she lived with her family. Photo: Bianca Tse
Bianca Tse Wai-shan at Kowloon Walled City Park on the site of the old Kowloon Walled City. Photo: Xiaomei Chen

She studied visual communication at Hong Kong Polytechnic University and entered the advertising industry, but soon became burned out. “It’s a really exhausting industry,” she says.

She left her full-time job and has freelanced for more than 10 years, working on various advertising campaigns and design projects for a range of corporate clients.

But a year ago, Tse had the itch to do something new. “You don’t really have your personality when you work for brands,” she says, explaining that her work always revolves around the client’s needs.

A client receives a perm from a hairdresser in Kowloon Walled City. Photo: Greg Girard
Hair Perming is inspired by Greg Girard’s photos of a barber shop that once existed in Kowloon Walled City. Photo: AI-generated image/Bianca Tse

“I really needed an [outlet] for creativity and my passion. When AI came out, everyone was saying, ‘We don’t need designers any more. All the artists will be eliminated.’ I was curious as to what it was, and I [felt] I needed to acquire those skills for my career as well,” Tse says.

So she began exploring the use of artificial intelligence to create visuals, and experimented with using Midjourney, a generative AI program. She posted her first AI- generated images on her Instagram account in April 2023, most of which were inspired by Kowloon Walled City.

One, of a girl lying amid rubbish and fish, is a nod to its notoriously bad sewage system, while another is set in the enclave but is inspired by a childhood memory of waiting for her mother.

“My mum ran a frozen meat shop in the wet market when I was a kid, so one of the posts is about a little girl waiting in the rain in the wet market,” she says.

With Imaginary Friends is an AI-generated image inspired by Tse’s childhood memory of waiting for her mother at a wet market. Photo: AI-generated image/Bianca Tse

Many of Tse’s early AI-generated works were inspired by photographer Greg Girard’s images in the book City of Darkness: Life in Kowloon Walled City (and the updated City of Darkness: Revisited), which he worked on with writer Ian Lambot.

Referencing Girard’s photographs of children playing on a rooftop in Kowloon Walled City, Tse generated works that show young children on swings overlooking buildings in Kowloon City and playing soccer near the edges of buildings.

Later on, Tse began creating videos from her AI-generated images, depicting everything from Kowloon Walled City’s family food businesses to fight scenes inspired by the film Bloodsport (1998).
An Untaken Photo is based on a description given by Greg Girard of a photo he wished he had taken in the Walled City. This is an AI-generated image combined with historical photos of a stewardess’ uniform. Photo: Greg Girard/AI-generated composite/Bianca Tse
Concrete Organism. Tse describes Kowloon Walled City as “an urban symphony, where structures evolve like living organisms, where every brick tells a story”. Photo: AI-generated image/Bianca Tse

She also created a video of cats lying amid heaps of waste, inspired by Girard’s photo of a grocery store owner and his cats, and another video that pays homage to its architecture.

In addition to using existing photographs, graphics and articles as inspiration, Tse conducted interviews which she used as source material for her AI work.

One of her interviews was with Girard, who gave her the task of creating an image that he wished he had taken, while another was with the artist known as Plumber King, a former resident of Kowloon Walled City.

I want to bring out the good sides of it … I want to bring out the resilience

Bianca Tse

“I wanted to make the page more informative, so people can have some takeaways reading the post,” she says of including more text in her posts in recent months, adding that she did not want to just show a random AI image that was visually interesting.

Aside from visual satisfaction, Tse hopes that her work will allow people to view Kowloon Walled City through a new lens, and set aside its associations with drugs, gambling and prostitution.

“My work is not accurate, of course. It’s imaginative, but it can give a new perspective for people to learn about and experience the history of Hong Kong,” Tse says.

Home Memories is an AI-generated image inspired by the demolition of Kowloon Walled City. Photo: AI-generated image/Bianca Tse
Overpopulation is an AI-generated image inspired by the Walled City’s dense population. Photo: AI-generated image/Bianca Tse

“Before I started this project, I thought: it’s the City of Darkness. It’s a place full of crime, it must have been very frightening to enter, it must have been very dangerous.

“But the more I work on [this], the more I talk to the people who used to live there or who photographed there … the more I want to bring out the good sides of it, because most of the people who lived in the Walled City were actually just normal citizens like you and me – they just didn’t have much money,” she says.

“I want to bring out the resilience, and I think that’s what we share as Hong Kong citizens too.”

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