Hong Kong artist Steven Tang. Photo by Kyle Lam/HKFP. Used with permission.

This report was written by Kelly Ho and published in Hong Kong Free Press on October 26, 2025. The following edited version is published as part of a content-sharing agreement with Global Voices.

If you glance at Steven Tang’s Instagram account, you may think he is a food influencer. His posts mostly feature signature local dishes from Hong Kong: roasted meat rice, egg tarts, instant noodles with luncheon meat, you name it.

But if you squint your eyes and look closely, you will be impressed to learn that they are, in fact, all hand-drawn by the 26-year-old Hong Kong artist.

Since its creation in 2018, Tang’s Instagram page has attracted more than 45,000 followers. Many commented that his artworks made them “drool,” while others praised the realistic appearance of his drawings.

Tang is a self-taught artist who never received formal art training. He told Hong Kong Free Press (HKFP) that he had not expected that drawing with coloured pencils would transform his childhood hobby into a profession.

A foodie, Tang began sharing food art as a way to make his favourite dishes come alive on paper. His first artwork to gain public attention was published in 2018: a bowl of Yunnan-style rice noodles from the popular local restaurant chain TamJai.

Since then, he has been invited to take part in group exhibitions, some of which were specifically themed around food-related realist art. He was featured in Art Central in 2023 and the Affordable Art Fair last year.

Not ‘real’

Despite how lifelike Tang’s work looks, he said, it is not exactly “real.”

The artist sometimes takes photos of food for reference. Or, he buys food and brings it to his studio to compose the “ideal” version of the dishes. He may make changes to the form and structure of the food to make it more visually pleasing.

When drawing a plate of siu mei rice (燒味飯) — a Cantonese dish featuring steamed rice and roasted meat — Tang added some char siu (barbeque pork 叉燒) pieces without actually buying them because it was too hard to find perfect-looking barbecued pork, he said. This way, his drawing would not be dictated by how the chef prepared the dish.

“Whether you have the ability to ‘make stuff up’ depends on your experience, meaning how many times you have drawn that item before,” he said in Cantonese.

Some dishes Tang personally loves may not appear on the drawing paper, such as those “slathered with sauces on top,” because they may not look visually inviting. He has to consider what “can sell” when making a drawing, the artist said.

Capturing fading tastes

Tang was inspired to create drawings of everyday Hong Kong cuisine partly to share his passion for food with the world and partly because he was worried that some dishes might “disappear” one day, especially in a city where store closures are not uncommon.

The Chinese University of Hong Kong graduate made a drawing of a two-dish rice meal from a campus canteen he visited all the time when he pursued a bachelor’s degree in computer science. The eatery has since shuttered, and he has not been able to find the same taste elsewhere.





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