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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Timmy_YipTimmy Yip - Wikipedia

    Timothy Yip Kam-tim (Chinese: 葉錦添; born 1967) is a Hong Kong art director and designer for fiction films. He is best known for his work on the 2000 martial arts film Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, for which he won an Academy Award for Best Art Direction. Yip also won a BAFTA award for the film's costume design.

  2. www.timyipstudio.com › content › biography2023 - Love Infinity

    Tim Yip Solo Exhibition, National Tsing Hua University, Taiwan Art Taipei , Taipei World Trade Center Floating Leaves Garden, Dior and Chinese Contemporary Artists , Christian Dior 60th Anniversary Exhibition, UCCA, Beijing

  3. Yip spent two years on the filming of ‘Love Infinity’, and his cinematic style is something of a stream of consciousness, weaving together narratives of some of the most instrumental figures in London’s contemporary cultural landscape, in a style that takes on the baton from Andy Warhol’s late 60’s and early 70’s screen tests and unedited films such as ‘Sleep’ (which ran for ...

  4. 1 de mar. de 2023 · By Tim Gihring //. When Tim Yip won the Academy Award for art direction, for Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, in 2001, he was so nervous—as Catherine Zeta-Jones handed him the Oscar—that he was only able to thank his family and the film’s director, Ang Lee, before the band played him off the stage. It was awkward.

  5. 100K Followers, 1,029 Following, 1,149 Posts - Tim Yip 葉錦添 (@timyipstime) on Instagram: "Artist, Director, Art Director, Costume Designer & Photographer for Film & Stage #TimYip #lilili_untitled @timyip_loveinfinity"

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  6. This spring, the Oscar and BAFTA winner’s latest and unprecedented cinematic experiment will reshape the boundaries of theatrical experience. Released globally on the streaming service MUBI, 24 March 2022 sees the stirring start of an original film genre led by Tim Yips Love Infinity.

  7. 10 de ago. de 2021 · The famous Oscar-winning visual designer Timmy Yip designed the uniforms . Yip wanted China’s athletes to march into Tokyo not only in style, but in clothes that clearly represented China’s culture and values. Instead of the usual red and yellow combo, Yip chose to highlight China’s signature colors with large areas of white.