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ShanghART Singapore Presents Simplified, a Solo Exhibition by Tang Maohong

Poster credit: ShanghART Singapore Singapore, May 2026 — ShanghART Singapore is delighted to present Simplified, a solo exhibition by the Chinese artist Tang Maohong, opening on 16 May 2026 at 4pm. This exhibition brings together a selection of the artist’s latest paintings, developed extensively over the past year following his relocation to Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. It also marks his return to Singapore after his 2019 solo exhibition, and twenty years since his participation in the first Singapore Biennale.
Tang’s new body of work reflects a significant development in his practice, centered around explorations into the process of painting, and its relationship with the result. The act of painting typically results in two outcomes – the image on the canvas and the mixed colours on the palette. The works stem from the approach of mixing colours directly on the painting surface instead of using a palette. This simple gesture collapses two planes into one, creating a mutually-influencing relationship within the same pictorial space.
Originating from a period of constraint, this approach has been refined over the past year into a more distilled visual language. Tang pares down his compositions to focus on the relationship between the intended image and the residual colour. Deceptively simple, the underlying tension is withheld from the apparent harmonious coexistence of the two elements, experienced only upon prolonged inspection.

Installation view of Simplified, Courtesy of ShanghART Singapore Tang’s practice has consistently engaged with the nature of images and how we perceive them. He initially opted to work with animation for its ability to explore the instability of images through time. Forms derived from the real world would morph, dissolve, and reassemble, remaining familiar yet resistant to fixed interpretations. Over time, this temporal process became increasingly condensed, leading him back to painting. What once unfolded sequentially is now internalised, with shifts and transformations embedded within a single, suspended surface.
Operating between abstraction and figuration across different mediums, Tang’s works often resist immediate recognition. His forms appear familiar yet elusive, inviting sustained attention rather than instant interpretation. At the core of his practice is an ongoing inquiry into perception – how images are formed, how meaning emerges, and how both remain inherently unstable.
Across two decades, Tang has continued to refine and distill his approach, pursuing the same fundamental questions with increasing precision. This presentation marks a pivotal moment in that trajectory. The new paintings bring together image, material, and structure into a tightly resolved yet open-ended condition, where process and result are held in balance. For Tang, painting is not a means of searching for fixed answers, but a reciprocal process in which meaning emerges from the act of painting itself.
“At the end of 2020, I returned from Seoul to Guilin. Due to the pandemic, I was quarantined in a hotel in Shenzhen for two weeks, during which I made some small acrylic paintings on paper. Working under limited conditions, I mixed paints directly on the surface of the work, using it as a palette. As a result, two things remained on the surface: the image I intended to paint, and the colours that would otherwise have stayed on the palette. Every colour thus appeared in duplicates.
This led me to consider reversing the process. If colours are mixed to create a painting, then painting itself can also become a way of mixing colours. In that sense, it becomes natural for the colour patches to remain on the surface and take part in the composition—the painting becomes a palette, where one paints on the palette itself. In the process of painting, the painted image and the color patches shape and complete each other, mutually causal, each with its own integrity.
This is not a new technique, but a way of presenting new relationships on the painted surface: the painted image and the paint that produces it together form a complete composition. These reflect my thoughts on “what to paint” and “how to paint“.
Why do I paint in this way? Because it makes me feel grounded.
What is painting? It is not about solving problems, but about holding myself accountable to time.”

Installation view of Simplified, Courtesy of ShanghART Singapore Venue
ShanghART Singapore, 9 Lock Road, #02-22, Gillman Barracks, Singapore 108937Artists
Tang MaohongExhibition Dates
May 16 – June 28, 2026Website
https://www.shanghartgallery.comInstagram
https://www.instagram.com/shanghart.singapore/Contact
tianlim@shanghartgallery.comAbout the Artist
Tang Maohong (b.1975, Lingchuan, Guangxi; lives and works in Kuala Lumpur) explores the nature of images and perception across animation and painting. His simultaneously references and subtly unsettles art history and popular culture, integrating diverse visual elements that blur the boundaries between fine art and the everyday. His early animations feature morphing, unstable forms, while his recent paintings condense these transformations into single, suspended surfaces. Absurd, humorous, and quietly confrontational, his works reflect an image-saturated psyche while continually loosening the relationship between representation, material, and visual experience.
He has exhibited across the U.S.A., South Korea, Singapore, India, Germany, Italy, China and has participated in the 7th Shanghai Biennale (2009), the Asian Art Biennial (2007), as well as the inaugural Singapore Biennale (2006).
About ShanghART
ShanghART Gallery was established in Shanghai in 1996. It has since grown to become one of China’s most influential art institutions and a vital player in the development of contemporary art in China, working with over 50 pioneering and emerging artists, including DING Yi, LI Shan, LIN Aojie, Arin RUNGJANG, SUN Xun, Melati SURYODARMO, TANG Da Wu, Apichatpong WEERASETHAKUL, XU ZHEN®, YANG Fudong, ZENG Fanzhi, and ZHAO Renhui Robert.
ShanghART Singapore was established in 2012 as the gallery’s Southeast Asia wing, located in the contemporary art cluster Gillman Barracks. The gallery’s first overseas space serves as a platform to introduce Chinese contemporary art to the region while developing collaborations with Southeast Asian artists, facilitating cross-cultural dialogues and enriching artistic exchanges within the global art community.
(Text and images courtesy of ShanghART Singapore)
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ShanghART Singapore Presents Group Exhibition: Everyday We Create Histories

Poster credit: ShanghART Singapore Singapore, March 2026 — ShanghART Singapore is pleased to present Everyday We Create Histories, bringing together works by nine artists who offer different ways of looking at, constructing, and questioning history. Spanning across painting, photography, sculpture, and animation, the exhibition provides multiple entry points into the idea of history, positioning artists as observers of the past and artmaking as an act of both remembrance and resistance.
We often understand “history” as a record of past events. Yet not everything that happens becomes history. Events must be witnessed, documented, and circulated before they are collectively remembered as part of history. At each stage, various factors and decisions determine whether an event gets turned into history, and how it is framed. Under such conditions, history reveals itself as contingent and malleable rather than singular and fixed.

Arin RUNGJANG, Abode of Dignity, 2017, Inkjet print on baryta gold fibre gloss paper, river water, embankment soil, Photograph 90 x 160 cm | Painting 90 x 160 cm, Edition of 3 + 1AP It is within this space where artistic practice operates. Artists offer their own readings of the world, attending to the cracks and dents within history through their work. Their efforts range from the everyday to the monumental; from glancing at the recent present to looking at the distant past. Drawing on motifs, crafting narratives, and engaging materiality, the artists created works that invoke intersecting possibilities, suggesting presence as much as absence. What remains unspoken and outside of the frame can at times appear as loud and clear as what is placed before our eyes.
Across diverse contexts and subjects, the artists in Everyday We Create Histories continually examine both present and past, sharing distinctive takes that could shed light on the future as much as reflecting on what has been. The exhibition invites us to look beyond what is visible and read between the lines, encouraging us to reconsider our roles not only as a spectator, but also as active participants in the ongoing making and reading of history, day after day.

Installation view of Everyday We Create Histories Venue
ShanghART Singapore, 9 Lock Road, #02-22, Gillman Barracks, Singapore 108937Artists
Lai Yu Tong, Li Shan, Lu Lei, Arin Rungjang, Sun Xun, Melati Suryodarmo, Boedi Widjaja, Xu Zhen, Yang FudongExhibition Dates
14 March – 30 April 2026Website
https://www.shanghartgallery.comInstagram
https://www.instagram.com/shanghart.singapore/Contact
infosg@shanghartgallery.com(Text and images courtesy of ShanghART Singapore)
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ShanghART Singapore Annexe Presents Immortal Words :: 字基, a Solo Exhibition by Boedi Widjaja

Poster credit: ShanghART Singapore Annexe Boedi Widjaja’s solo exhibition “Immortal Words :: 字基” is now on view at ShanghART Singapore Annexe, running through 1 March. The project splices poetry with genetic code, meditating on the diasporic condition.The artist asks: if history is displaced, how might it take up new space through the body? His four-line toponymic poem spatialises as DNA nano-sculptures—line, circle, cube—released through a gachapon machine, with a microfluidic molecular writing process unspooled on video. A living participatory work realized with geneticist Eric Yap, and with the support of NAC Creation Grant, Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine and Institute of Digital Molecular Analytics and Science, NTU Singapore.
Boedi Widjaja (b. 1975, Indonesia; based in Singapore) explores migration through the conceptual frames of house, home and homeland, engaging with space and semiotics. Trained in architecture and design, Boedi works across media—from bio art and performance to experimental photography and architectural installations—often combining scientific phenomena with poetic gesture.
Widjaja received the inaugural QAGOMA and Singapore Art Museum co-commission for his Black–Hut series, presented at the 9th Asia Pacific Triennial (2018-19) and the 6th Singapore Biennale (2019-20). His works have been included in international group shows such as Thailand Biennale: The Open World, Chiang Rai, Thailand (2023); Cladogram: KMA’s 2nd International Juried Biennial, Katonah Museum of Art, New York (2021), in which he was awarded First Prize; MAP1: Waterways, Diaspora Pavilion, 57th Venice Biennale (2017); Jerusalem Biennale (2017); Yinchuan Biennale (2016); From east to the Barbican, Barbican, London (2015); Infinity in flux, ArtJog, Indonesia (2015); and Bains Numériques #7, Enghien-les-Bains, France (2012) amongst others. Recent solo exhibitions include Kang Ouw《侠客行》(2022), Esplanade Tunnel, Singapore; Declaration of (2019), Helwaser Gallery, New York; Rivers and lakes Tanah dan air (2018), ShanghART Singapore; and Black—Hut (2016), Singapore Biennale Affiliate Project, ICA Singapore. He was an Artist-in-Residence at the NTU Centre for Contemporary Art Singapore, Temenggong Singapore and DRAWinternational France.

Installation view of Immortal Words :: 字基, Courtesy of ShanghART Singapore Annexe Venue
ShanghART Singapore Annexe, 9 Lock Road, #02-22, Gillman Barracks, Singapore 108937Artists
Boedi WidjajaExhibition Dates
17 January – 1 March, 2026Gallery Hours
Wednesday – Sunday | 12PM – 6 PMWebsite
https://www.shanghartgallery.com/Instagram
https://www.instagram.com/shanghartgallery/Contact
infosg@shanghartgallery.com(Text and images courtesy of ShanghART Singapore Annexe)
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ShanghART Gallery Present Group Exhibition: Low-Density Drift

Poster credit: ShanghART Gallery ShanghART is pleased to present the group exhibition “Low-Density Drift” at ShanghART SUHE from January 16 to February 28, 2026. The exhibition brings together seven highly experimental and avant-garde artists from the Chinese-speaking world—Joyce Ho, Yiyao Tang , Wang Qingyuan, Yin Yunya, Zhang Wenxin, Zheng Xue, and Zhong Yunshu—who explore the subtle distance between reality and dreams through diverse media, presenting artistic expressions of contemporary perception, emotional cycles, and psychological experience.

Joyce Ho Tsai-Jou, Before it Happens_Fog, 2025, Single-channel video, 3 minutes 15 seconds “Low-Density Drift” does not refer to complete disorientation or a loss of consciousness, but rather aims to capture a unique suspension and displacement characteristic of contemporary mental states. The exhibition attempts to construct a traversable “landscape of consciousness,” encompassing both the alienation and reconstruction of daily experience, as well as a delicate exploration of deep memories and the collective unconscious. The practices of seven artists, like seven different grammars of perception, weave together a complex network of low-resolution images through video, installation, and painting. This invites viewers to temporarily escape the purposeful logic of reality and embark on a sensory journey that allows for wandering, immersion, and multiple interpretations. This exhibition not only reveals the individual explorations of different artists but also aims to provide a contemplative buffer, allowing viewers to temporarily escape the torrent of information and efficiency and rediscover the slow, ambiguous, yet rich primal texture of perception itself.

Installation view of Low-Density Drift 
Installation view of Low-Density Drift Venue
ShanghART SUHE, 204, 30 Wen’an Road, Jing’an, ShanghaiArtists
Joyce Ho, Yiyao Tang, Wang Qingyuan, Yin Yunya, Zhang Wenxin, Zheng Xue, Zhong YunshuExhibition Dates
16 January – 28 February, 2026Gallery Hours
Wednesday – Saturday | 11:30 – 18:00Website
https://www.shanghartgallery.com/Instagram
https://www.instagram.com/shanghartgallery/Contact
press@shanghartgallery.com(Text and images courtesy of ShanghART Gallery)
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ShanghART Singapore Presents The Dogs, a Solo Exhibition by Lai Yu Tong

Poster credit: ShanghART Singapore ShanghART Singapore is pleased to present Lai Yu Tong’s first solo exhibition with the gallery, The Dogs, opening on 30 August 2025. Featuring a new series of works that centres around his encounters with a pack of stray dogs, the artist invites us to reconsider our relationship with entities that exist on the fringes of our environments, while reflecting upon his own experiences and interactions with the dogs across several months.

Lai Yu Tong, The Dogs (Feet), 2025, Graphite on paper, beeswax, 7 x 14 cm, Framed size: 53 x 61 x 4.5 cm Drawing upon observations of the present, Lai’s practice examines the overlooked and neglected. Everyday objects and subjects such as cars, crows, hands, and chairs feature as motifs across his works that are cast within the stories and scenarios that he creates around them. By looking at something for extended periods of time, he brings out alternative perspectives on the familiar. Recently, his gaze fixates upon the stray dogs that he encounters around a forested area close to where he lives. Their existence as wild, untamed and shy creatures that roam under the shadows of Singapore intrigues him.

Lai Yu Tong, The Dogs (Burnt Hole), 2025, Cardboard, 20 x 25.5 cm, Framed size: 62 x 79 x 4.5 cm In a highly developed and controlled society, the presence of these dogs introduces a degree of unpredictability, even instilling a sense of danger. Initial encounters with them ended with Lai retreating out of fear. However, following multiple visits where he would observe, photograph and sometimes feed the dogs, the fear that he felt eventually shifts into a kind of love, as he forms a connection with these misunderstood creatures.

Lai Yu Tong, Dog (Greywash), 2025, Emulsion paint on pine wood, 55 x 80 x 12 cm Storytelling makes up a big part of Lai’s approach, manifesting in forms such as drawing, sculpture, and sound. In these latest works, Lai seeks to retell his encounters with these enigmatic creatures through intimate pieces of drawings and collages on various modest everyday materials — cardboard, wood, and paper. He simultaneously draws and obscures the dogs, playing with techniques of erasure and transparency that render his subjects as ghostly figures and impressions. Such loose methods of representation allude to the elusiveness and placelessness of the subjects he draws, whilst also allowing them to take on other identities and connotations.

Lai Yu Tong, The Dogs (Road), 2025, Soft pastel on gesso board, 22.5 x 30 x 2 cm, Framed size: 53 x 61 x 4.5 cmThrough a selection of two-dimensional works, a sculpture, a sound piece and a performance, the gallery space is transformed into a site of encounter between the audience and the dogs. Bridging the distance between us and them through Lai’s own experiences, the exhibition encourages visitors to empathise and identify with the beings that live on the edges of our environments; out of sight and away from what we are familiar with.
Venue
9 Lock Road, #02-22, Gillman Barracks, Singapore 108937Artist
Lai Yu TongExhibition Dates
August 30 – November 9, 2025Gallery Hours
Wednesday – Saturday | 12 – 6 PMWebsite
https://www.shanghartgallery.com/Instagram
https://www.instagram.com/shanghart.singaporeContact
info@shanghartsingapore.comAbout Artist
Lai Yu Tong is an artist from Singapore who works across drawing, image-making, sculpture and sound. His practice is interested in creating adequate media to articulate the present, believing in the intrinsic need for humans to make images and tell stories. Recent works of his consider how art can evoke empathy in a world so damaged.
Lai has presented his work at group exhibitions in Singapore and abroad, most recently at Radio28 (MX), Plague Space (RUS) and Barely Art Fair (US); and held solo exhibitions in Singapore at Temporary Unit (2022), The Substation (2021), Comma Space (2020), and DECK (2019).
Besides his art, Lai regularly publishes books under Thumb Books, a self-founded press that makes children’s books for both children and adults. His recent curatorial projects include Frida (2023), an exhibition platform by his kitchen window; and Robin (2022), a series of group exhibitions held in camping tents around Singapore.About Gallery
ShanghART Gallery was established in Shanghai in 1996. It has since grown to become one of China’s most influential art institutions and a vital player in the development of contemporary art in China, working with over 50 pioneering and emerging artists, including DING Yi, HAN Mengyun, LI Shan, LIN Aojie, Arin RUNGJANG, SUN Xun, Melati SURYODARMO, TANG Da Wu, Apichatpong WEERASETHAKUL, XU ZHEN®, YANG Fudong, ZENG Fanzhi, and ZHAO Renhui Robert.
ShanghART Singapore was established in 2012 as the gallery’s Southeast Asia wing, located in the contemporary art cluster Gillman Barracks. The gallery’s first overseas space serves as a platform to introduce Chinese contemporary art to the region while developing collaborations with Southeast Asian artists, facilitating cross-cultural dialogues and enriching artistic exchanges within the global art
community.(Text and images courtesy of ShanghART Singapore)


