This is a red brick wall at Parkview, a palatial but brutalist platform of an apartment complex on the edge of a country park that was one of the sites of brutal fighting between the Japanese, British and Hong Kong local volunteer forces on Christmas Week 1945. Behind this red wall stands the storeroom where Nancy Kissel stored her husband's body, wrapped in a rug, after lacing a milkshake with powerful sedatives and bludgeoning him to death. To mark the existence of such brutal crimes in our human story, and to connect a digital work to a human event, I created this piece using customised filters and saturation to reveal the subtext of the silent and inhuman architecture. I do not use traditional software editing tools.
The Red Wall
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The Red Wall
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This is a red brick wall at Parkview, a palatial but brutalist platform of an apartment complex on the edge of a country park that was one of the sites of brutal fighting between the Japanese, British and Hong Kong local volunteer forces on Christmas Week 1945. Behind this red wall stands the storeroom where Nancy Kissel stored her husband's body, wrapped in a rug, after lacing a milkshake with powerful sedatives and bludgeoning him to death. To mark the existence of such brutal crimes in our human story, and to connect a digital work to a human event, I created this piece using customised filters and saturation to reveal the subtext of the silent and inhuman architecture. I do not use traditional software editing tools.