Yes, dinner tomorrow at home

  • Dates
    2022 - Ongoing
  • Author
  • Locations New York, Toronto, Rotterdam, Hong Kong

This film series explores my Chinese identity and centers around a multi-generational conversation about cultural preservation visually anchored through domestic spaces.

Yes, dinner tomorrow at home investigates the effect of immigration on Hong Kongers and the evolution of the post-immigration generation’s identity. This project is centered around my maternal side of the family's migration. My aunt immigrated to the Netherlands in 1972 to be with her husband, while my mom immigrated to Canada in 1988 in anticipation of the political climate that would occur in 1997, once China repossessed Hong Kong from Britain. Now, Hong Kong is facing a democratic crisis in response to a recent change in extradition law. The city has always had a warped identity, as it seems to be living on borrowed time. However, the historical tug-of-war between China and Britain cultivated a space with an unreplicable bond for all Hong Kongers across the globe.

My work shows how Hong Kong immigrants in my family have preserved and passed on Chinese traditions to their children, while the newer generations navigate their own identities. In this chapter of my longterm series, I photographed my family in the Netherlands, Canada, and Hong Kong. I wrestled with the definition of Chinese identity within the generations who grew up outside of Hong Kong, while also making images of my cousins who never left. There are cumulative daily decisions my generation makes that inherently bring us and our descendants closer to our culture, while other customs inevitably fade. The photos integrate portraits and domestic objects that embody Asian Diasporic culture.

The first thing I gravitate towards is working within the domestic space, because home is the best place to get a sense of a person. The home is filled with items that have been curated by the dweller, therefore creating a sense of comfort. From there, I can observe their surroundings and begin cultivating a connection with them. As we share space, the process of image making seamlessly flows from one image to the next — each image melting off another layer of tension until we’re left with a tender understanding.

I pace back and forth between my tripod and subject to ask for their opinion on the pose, composition, and lighting of the shot. The process of shooting my family with film is my methodology of asserting my presence in the room. My Mamiya RZ 67 medium format camera has a waist level viewfinder where I am required to look down simulating a bowing motion. This integral gesture reminds me of the shared collaborative relationship I’m having with my family — I want to be able to honor and elevate the people that I photograph. The slow burn of composing one image with film creates a heightened sense of excitement where both me and my subject can exist in the same realm of anticipation of what we have created together. They begin to establish their individual presence with every suggestion given and we are able to invoke a spectrum of emotions — from heavy to humorous — in the final shots. Although many shoots begin with the same intention, because of this collaboration, the end result becomes distinct in its own story.

© Hailey Ip - Image from the Yes, dinner tomorrow at home photography project
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Toronto, Ontario. Talia's mom and Aunt are engulfed in the new show they're binging. Auntie Fanny just moved from Hong Kong to support Auntie Flo after the passing of her late husband. 2023.

© Hailey Ip - Image from the Yes, dinner tomorrow at home photography project
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Toronto, Canada. My best friend Cass took a hard fall in the snow and her mom quickly began to work the bruise with herbal oil. 2022.

© Hailey Ip - Image from the Yes, dinner tomorrow at home photography project
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Hong Kong. Jocelyn hung her clothes up on the balcony to air dry. This is one of the most common rituals within a Hong Kong household because of limited space. The clothes will be left for several hours to be semi-dried in the humid weather. 2023.

© Hailey Ip - Image from the Yes, dinner tomorrow at home photography project
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Rotterdam, the Netherlands. A harmonious cycle of care that my cousins’ kids have for one another. They each give bits of themselves to Chloe (the one sitting on the bed) and nurture her to become her own. 2023.

© Hailey Ip - Image from the Yes, dinner tomorrow at home photography project
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Toronto, Ontario. Dr. Uncle Clive shuffles home every night, body aching from his long work hours, and sits on his stool to admire his fish. The glow from the aquarium compliments his illuminating smile. 2023.

© Hailey Ip - Image from the Yes, dinner tomorrow at home photography project
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Toronto, Canada. The ceramic pot holds the daily Chinese soup that warms the body and heart after a long day. The ladle rests nearby for swift access to a nutritious meal. 2022.

© Hailey Ip - Image from the Yes, dinner tomorrow at home photography project
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Hong Kong. The warm breeze blows through the balcony as my friend, Jocelyn, and her mom decompress in the living room. She’s home for winter break while she’s attending university in New York. 2023.

© Hailey Ip - Image from the Yes, dinner tomorrow at home photography project
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Rotterdam, the Netherlands. I look up to the next generation, my cousins’ children, they embody a collective confidence as they continue to shape one another’s identity. 2023.

© Hailey Ip - Image from the Yes, dinner tomorrow at home photography project
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Hong Kong. Jocelyn and I acknowledge the presence of a camera, the importance of our story, the desire to be more than we are. 2023.

© Hailey Ip - Image from the Yes, dinner tomorrow at home photography project
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My dad in his childhood flat where he hoards his gadgets and gizmos. He never immigrated to Canada with my mom. Instead, he’s surrounded by fading pictures of his loved ones. He’s documenting me while I capture him. 2023.

© Hailey Ip - Image from the Yes, dinner tomorrow at home photography project
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Toronto, Canada. My half-sister, Yardley, teaches her son, Tyler, how to stretch after her daily run. She acknowledges you and so does he. 2022.

© Hailey Ip - Image from the Yes, dinner tomorrow at home photography project
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Toronto, Canada. The tension built from emotional and physical exhaustion batters the body. My mom, a quiet woman, never asks her children for repayment for her sacrifice. I choose to alleviate her burdens in a silent manner.

© Hailey Ip - Image from the Yes, dinner tomorrow at home photography project
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Toronto, Canada. After dinner, Uncle Eric prepares the pomelo. A pomelo inherently is a laborious fruit to prepare because of the thick skin surrounding it. Once the skin is torn, there is a commitment to provide time and energy for other people’s fulfill

© Hailey Ip - Image from the Yes, dinner tomorrow at home photography project
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Toronto, Canada. Auntie Cherry is using her hands to care for my friend, Talia. Women have cycled through Cherry’s home for over a decade where she provides both emotional and physical care to our community. 2022.

© Hailey Ip - Image from the Yes, dinner tomorrow at home photography project
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Toronto, Canada. My mom hired this Auntie to clean the house. I walked past her as she took her lunch break and read her shirt. I thought it was humorous, but underlyingly spoke about the immigrant experience. 2022.

© Hailey Ip - Image from the Yes, dinner tomorrow at home photography project
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New York, USA. A steam fish is as good as gold to an international Chinese student living in New York. Rose and Jade demolished it. 2022.

© Hailey Ip - Image from the Yes, dinner tomorrow at home photography project
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Hong Kong. This is the first time my half brother has been included in a series of my work. He is relatively new to my life. This is only my second time meeting him, but our resemblance is stronger than some of my full siblings. 2023.

© Hailey Ip - Image from the Yes, dinner tomorrow at home photography project
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Rotterdam, the Netherlands. The shrine to the elders is being upheld on catalogs of old recipes and photo albums. My Aunt visits them daily as she grabs her grocery cart and lays fresh trays of orange peels to be sundried. 2023

© Hailey Ip - Image from the Yes, dinner tomorrow at home photography project
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Toronto, Ontario. My nieces were hypnotized by another L.O.L Surprise doll unboxing that they religiously watch at my mom's house. 2022.

Yes, dinner tomorrow at home by Hailey Ip

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