• The Stroll Gallery Presents White Stroll, a Group Exhibition by Three Artists

    The Stroll Gallery Presents White Stroll, a Group Exhibition by Three Artists

    Poster credit: The Stroll gallery

    The Stroll Gallery by Stella A&C (hereinafter called The Stroll gallery), a Hong Kong-based venue that has been introducing the works of Korean artists, will host an exhibition <White Stroll | 하얀 산책자> from September 12 to November 22. This exhibition invites visitors to embrace the subtle beauty of everyday life through ceramics, glassware, and crafted objects.

    Insig Kim, Moon Jar, Ceramics (matte), Diameter: 32 cm, © The Stroll gallery

    Moon jars, tableware and tea sets collection will be featured in the first month of the exhibition. With each piece crafted with intricate details, combining minimalist design, the crafted objects create a beautiful balance of form and function, blurring the lines between craft, art and design and creating functional pieces that can accompany you for a lifetime.

    The second month explores Korea’s vibrant food and drinks culture, highlighting how ceramics enhance the dining experience. Discover tableware designed for Korean dishes and how they enrich the joy of sharing meals with loved ones.

    Toki Nashiki, Vase, Stoneware, silver, 14 x 14 x 10 cm, © Toki Nashiki

    In the final month, we would be showcasing different artwork and crafted objects, exploring the flow of thought and the unstoppable energy of life. Artists’ and ceramists’ creations reflect a deep connection to the rhythms of nature and the human experience, inviting viewers to contemplate the dynamic interplay between stillness and movement.

    From Moon Jars to various tableware, each piece tells a story and reflects the beauty found in everyday life, blending traditional craftsmanship with contemporary aesthetics. These everyday objects also provide moments of peace in our fast-paced world. The Stroll gallery eagerly anticipates sharing this cultural exploration with you over the coming months.

    Songkuk Park, Paper Plate, Ceramics, Dimensions Variable, © Songkuk Park

    Venue
    The Stroll gallery, Unit 504, 5F, Vanta Industrial Centre, 21-23 Tai Lin Pai Road, Kwai Chung

    Artists
    Insig Kim, Songkuk Park, Toki Nashiki

    Exhibition Dates
    September 12 – November 22, 2025

    Gallery Hours
    Tuesday – Saturday | 11 AM – 7 PM

    Website
    https://thestroll.gallery

    Instagram
    https://www.instagram.com/thestroll_gallery/

    Contact
    info@thestroll.gallery
    Tel: +852 6366 0717

    About Gallery

    Stroll, an online platform that has been introducing the value and beauty of Korean crafts in Hong Kong, has transformed into The Stroll gallery in Kwai Chung in July 2022.

    In line with the Hong Kong government’s industrial area revitalization policy, The Stroll gallery creates and delivers new values and aesthetics by transforming an industrial place of history into a venue of art and culture by converging various fields of crafts, art, and technology. The Stroll gallery has been created as a new concept space that combines Korean art and culture through our high-quality art sense and design capability.

    The Stroll gallery has introduced Korean crafts and artists to major art and cultural organizations in Hong Kong such as the Korean Cultural Center Hong Kong, M+ Museum, and IFC Mall, and will continue to bring more diverse Korean artists to Hong Kong and the world. 

    (Text and images courtesy of The Stroll gallery)


  • HKSC Presents Folds, Wrinkles and Crevices of the Everyday, a Solo Exhibition by Linda Chiu-han Lai

    HKSC Presents Folds, Wrinkles and Crevices of the Everyday, a Solo Exhibition by Linda Chiu-han Lai

    Poster credit: HKICC Lee Shau Kee School of Creativity (HKSC)

    HKICC Lee Shau Kee School of Creativity (HKSC) is honoured to present the solo exhibition Folds, Wrinkles and Crevices of the Everyday by transdisciplinary artist and scholar, Linda Chiu-han Lai.

    History is the study of the past. Populated by countless people, objects and incidents, the vastness of the past exceeds any individual imagination. Rather than focusing on major historical events that affect millions of people, such as those involving nations, ethnicities, or wars, transdisciplinary artist Linda Chiu-han Lai pays close attention to the histories of everyday life, for instance the minute details of her house-moving experience or the memoir for old objects, the “small anecdotes” of everyday life that make up most of this immense past.

    Everyday life is not merely the focus of Lai’s creative interest but also the raw material for her work. Daily objects are ubiquitous across Lai’s oeuvre, especially the toys that are present throughout this exhibition, lending a sense of spontaneity and contingency to her works. Another key material common to her pratice consists of film and video fragments, which have an inherent dimension of time. Many of these fragments are drawn from Lai’s ever-growing audiovisual archive. The real or imagined daily moments captured in these clips are epitomes of the past preserved and re-presented through moving images. Regardless of material and medium, Lai reorders and recontexualizes them to highlight the depth and multiplicity of the past, unravelling the hidden connections between seemingly unrelated things.

    Folds, Wrinkles and Crevices of the Everyday is a constellation of temporal points, lines, and planes than Lai excavates from the fissures between vastly different time scales

    Dedicated to nurturing the next generation in the creative and cultural industries, HKSC places great emphasis on cultivating a diverse and vibrant artistic environment. The exhibition, along with its rich array of ring events, is reserved in part for our students and faculty, while also being open to the public for shared appreciation. 

    Linda Chiu-han Lai, Daydreaming: history of everyday life miniatures, 2025, Jars, miniature models, disused found objects, 8cm (W) x 10cm (H) x 8cm (D), Courtesy of the artist

    Venue
    Gallery, HKICC Lee Shau Kee School of Creativity, 135 Junction Road, Kowloon, Hong Kong

    Artist
    Linda Chiu-han Lai

    Exhibition Dates
    October 18 – November 22, 2025

    Gallery Hours
    Monday – Sunday | 12 – 8 PM

    Instagram
    https://www.instagram.com/hksc_official/

    Contact
    artscentre@creativehk.edu.hk

    About Artist

    Photo by Hector Rodriguez

    Hong Kong-based transdisciplinary artist and scholar Linda Chiu-han Lai is renowned for her pioneering work in intermedia arts and media archaeology. Central to Lai’s works is her historiographic experiments, which she realizes through critical narrativity and the questioning of genealogical origins. Grounded in a feminist sensibility, she integrates Critical Theory (conceptual lens), visual ethnography (method) and new materialism (philosophical speculation) to conceptually extend her PhD training in Cinema Studies through her creative practice. To her, practice or action comes before theorization. Lai is the founder of the new media art group Writing Machine Collective (2004-) and the participatory art initiative The Floating Projects (2015-). In June 2023, she retired from her 25-year full-time faculty work at the School of Creative Media, the City University of Hong Kong, and has remained an active researcher and artist.

    (Text and images courtesy of HKICC Lee Shau Kee School of Creativity (HKSC) )


  • 10 Chancery Lane Gallery Presents Whisper, a Group Exhibition by Ten Artists

    10 Chancery Lane Gallery Presents Whisper, a Group Exhibition by Ten Artists

    Poster credit: 10 Chancery Lane Gallery

    10 Chancery Lane Gallery presents “WHISPER”, a group exhibition that brings together ten artists, Chung Sanghwa, Ho Fan, Huang Rui, Lewis Lee, Eilly Li, Laurent Martin “Lo”, Christine Nguyen, Pan Jian, Wang Keping and John Young. “WHISPER” aims to create an immersive space that invites viewers to experience a sense of calm and introspection through the artworks of ten diverse artists. Each artist interprets the theme of serenity in unique ways, using various mediums to evoke feelings of tranquillity, stillness, and connection to the inner self and the surrounding world.

    WHISPER, Exhibition View, Courtesy of 10 Chancery Lane Gallery

    Artists Christine Nguyen, Ho Fan, Pan Jian and Wang Keping find quietude in nature capturing moments of stillness:

    Vietnamese-American artist Christine Nguyen’s photo-based works draw upon the imagery of nature, the sciences, and the cosmos but it is not limited to a conventional reading of these realms. It imagines that the depths of the ocean reach into outer space, that through an organic prism, vision can fluctuate between the micro- and macroscopic. Her practice is devoted to the natural world and its curiosities. “It has been my inspiration and a place that I find meditative and complex but also mysterious. It has allowed me to continuously know more about the world we live in.”

    Hong Kong master photographer Ho Fan photographed Hong Kong in the mid-20th century. Ho’s sail photo is a striking example of his ability to capture the essence of life at sea, blending natural elements with human activity. In this image, the sailboat often becomes a focal point, set against a backdrop of dramatic skies or serene waters. Through this photo, Ho Fan not only showcases his technical prowess but also his deep emotional connection to the landscapes he loved to capture.

    Chinese artist Pan Jian’s forest and water paintings are reflective of his sensitivity and connectedness to emotive hidden landscapes he seeks and the intense feelings they elude. The way Pan Jian composes his paintings often creates a sense of movement, mirroring the ebb and flow of his emotions. Curved lines, swirling patterns, and dynamic brushstrokes can suggest a narrative of one’s own interpretation, conveying feelings of joy, sadness, or contemplation as the viewer’s eye travels through the piece.

    Wang Keping’s sculptures have always portrayed his deep connection to the tree from which the wood itself is expressed through his forms. He often confesses that the wood is like the body, in that it has soft and hard parts that push his chisels in a collaborative way seeking his creations. Using yew wood the circular form is knotted and robust from the natural contours of the bulbous trunk giving a unique character to the sculpture by preserving the essence of the tree in all its bold and subtle forms.

    Wang Keping, Sitting Woman (3 – WK14), 2010, Yew wood, 35 x 36 x 20 cm

    It is through minimalism and simplicity that Korean artist Chung Sanghwa and French artist Laurent Martin “Lo” explore their works:

    Chung Sanghwa was part of the Dansaekhwa movement in Korea. This group of artists had a deep connection to nature and drew inspiration from natural elements, incorporating organic forms, colors, and textures into their work. This reflects a broader cultural appreciation for the beauty and transience of the natural world. Chung has often mentioned the meditative aspects of his painting process, emphasizing how the act of creation serves as a form of introspection and mindfulness. He views painting as a meditative practice, akin to meditation itself. By focusing intently on each stroke and layer, he creates a space for contemplation. This focus helps him to clear his mind and connect with his inner thoughts and feelings. The work on view is unique in his practice where it features earthy brown, which is rarely found in his oeuvres.

    Laurent Martin “Lo”’s artistic philosophy is his fascination with bamboo and its inherent qualities. He delves into the material’s unique attributes of balance, lightness, and flexibility, seeking to push its boundaries and discover new possibilities. Through his expertise, he unveils the mathematics, poetry, and sensuality inherent in bamboo, harnessing its potential to create captivating sculptural forms.

    Laurent Martin “Lo”, Euphoria, 2025, Smoked bamboo, bamboo paper, white ceramic, Height 210 cm, Rotation diameter 80 cm

    Huang Rui and John Young find their whisper through abstraction:

    Huang Rui is a visionary artist whose abstract creations draw inspiration from Taoism and the emotive power of music, particularly Antonín Dvořák’s opera Rusalka. His work reflects the essence of nature and the fluidity of existence, inviting viewers to connect with themes of harmony, balance, and the beauty of impermanence. Just as music can pierce the heart with profound emotion, Huang’s art stirs the soul, creating a dialogue between visual art and melody that invites contemplation on the interconnectedness of life, art, and the universe.

    Hong Kong-Australian artist John Young’s abstract paintings of mellowed and rich hews contain a palpable sense of melancholy and introspection often reflecting the complexities of the diasporic experience. This emotional depth invites viewers to connect with the themes of belonging and identity. Nature plays a significant role in Young’s paintings, often depicted in a way that emphasizes its beauty and fragility. His landscapes serve not only as picturesque scenes but also as a commentary on environmental issues and the relationship between humanity and the natural world.

    John Young, Naive & Sentimental Painting III, 2006, Oil on linen, 146.5 x 190 cm

    Two Young Hong Kong artists Eilly Li and Lewis Lee will also be featured:

    Eilly Li uses her art practices to present sentimental emotions and moments of serenity amid uncertainties and turbulences in life. Focusing on the minute details and fleeting moments in life, she draws inspiration from her photography, choosing the immersive oil painting process to revisit the flowing sceneries and capture the transience of life. Inspired by literature, she adopts the ambiguity of metaphor to reiterate the unspoken meaning and ambiance of her art-making.

    Lewis Lee was in the process of creating a new painting inspired by the theme of Whisper and released on the day of the opening.

    Lewis Lee, Full Moon, 2025, Oil on canvas, 60 x 50 cm

    WHISPER is more than just an exhibition; it seeks to create a sanctuary of calm, prompting reflection and connection in a bustling world. Through the diverse perspectives of these ten artists, visitors will leave with a renewed sense of peace and inspiration.

    Venue
    G/F, 10 Chancery Lane, SoHo, Central, Hong Kong

    Artists
    Chung Sanghwa, Ho Fan, Huang Rui, Eilly Li, Lewis Lee, Laurent Martin “Lo”, Christine Nguyen, Pan Jian, Wang Keping, John Young

    Exhibition Dates
    October 16 – November 15, 2025

    Gallery Hours
    Monday – Friday | 10 AM – 6 PM
    Saturday | 11 AM – 5 PM

    Website
    https://www.10chancerylanegallery.com/

    Instagram
    https://www.instagram.com/10chancerylanegallery/

    Contact
    info@10chancerylanegallery.com
    Tel: +852 2810 0065

    About Gallery

    Established in 2001, when Hong Kong’s art scene was burgeoning, Katie de Tilly started 10 Chancery Lane Gallery. Along the back wall of the, then running, Victoria Prison, now the buzzing Tai Kwun Heritage and Cultural site, the little walking lane opened into a gallery specializing in contemporary art from the Asia-Pacific. Over the past 24 years, 10 Chancery Lane has worked with some of the region’s great artists, curators, and museums. The gallery’s motto still stands: “We are committed to giving a breath of fresh air to the Hong Kong art scene by bringing works that can expand horizons, open minds, and view the world, and life in general, through varying eyes, ideas, and souls. Art is not just decoration for our walls but a connection with our deep inner selves and the world around us.”

    (Text and images courtesy of 10 Chancery Lane Gallery)


  • No Idea Gallery Presents The Weight of Light, a Solo Exhibition by Kei Meguro

    No Idea Gallery Presents The Weight of Light, a Solo Exhibition by Kei Meguro

    Poster credit: No Idea Gallery

    The Weight of Light is Kei Meguro’s solo exhibition exploring the delicate tension between light and shadow, fragility and strength, sorrow and beauty. Through her photorealistic graphite drawings, Meguro captures fleeting emotions, childhood innocence, and the quiet presence of nature. The show features a new collection of works, debut of limited edition prints titled The Weight of Light, and curated archival pieces from past collections.

    The Weight of Light, Exhibition view, Courtesy of No Idea Gallery

    This exhibition marks Meguro’s return to Hong Kong, where she spent part of her childhood, and invites viewers to pause in the in-between space where chaos meets calm and resilience blooms.

    Venue
    No Idea Gallery, Suite 1703, Chinachem Hollywood Centre, 1-13 Hollywood Road, Central, Hong Kong

    Artist
    Kei Meguro

    Exhibition Dates
    October 10 – November 9, 2025

    Gallery Hours
    Tuesday – Sunday | 12 – 7 PM (Closed on Mondays)

    Website
    https://noideagallery.com/

    Instagram
    https://www.instagram.com/noideagallery/?hl=en

    About Artist

    Kei Meguro is a Japanese artist based between Tokyo and Brooklyn. She graduated from the School of Visual Arts in New York with a BFA in Graphic Design. Her work is known for its intricate, photorealistic style created using pencil and graphite, often with subtle touches of color.

    Meguro’s art explores themes of identity, psychology, and emotional nuance. Her ability to capture delicate details and inner worlds has led to collaborations with global brands such as Adobe, HBO, New Balance, and Tiffany & Co. She has exhibited in galleries worldwide and shared her creative insights at events like Adobe MAX and Apple workshops. 

    (Text and images courtesy of No Idea Gallery)


  • Tang Contemporary Art Presents Imprints of Time

    Tang Contemporary Art Presents Imprints of Time

    Poster credit: Tang Contemporary Art

    Imprints of Time is more than an exhibition—it is a living dialogue that transcends time, dissolving the boundaries between past and future to weave Hong Kong’s collective memory into an unfolding, flowing narrative. Featuring ten artists spanning from the post-80s generation to Gen-Z, this show explores the intimate resonance between personal identity and the city’s soul. Their works rise beyond individual expression to form a rich cultural polyphony—layered histories, constant reinventions, and the resilient core of selfhood amidst relentless change.

    Installation View, Courtesy of Tang Contemporary Art

    In this ever-shifting metropolis, transformation itself becomes the central theme. Each artwork acts as a temporal amber—preserving vanished moments and crystallizing fragile poetry that lingers before dissolution. Through varied media—drawing, painting, sculpture, and installation—the artists decode Hong Kong’s cultural alchemy, translating its hybrid heritage into a vivid visual poetry.

    Chow Chun Fai, Chungking Express 1994 at Graham Street Central, 2025, Acrylic on canvas, 100 x 150 cm

    Ling Wai Shan’s meditative canvases pause the urban clamor, creating serene breathing spaces on each frame; Kwong Man Chun reinterprets cityscapes through classical East Asian aesthetics, bridging centuries-old brushwork with the steel lattice of contemporary skylines. The dialogue between Chow Chun Fai’s vanishing street corners and Lewis Lee’s cross-border urban reflections echoes the tension between preservation and innovation, whispering of nature’s subtle reclamation. Angela Yuen’s radiant light installations capture the city’s fleeting iridescence, while Kila Cheung’s bold sculptures joyfully defy artistic conventions. Diasporic voices emerge in Peter Hong-Tsun Chan and Jade Ching-yuk Ng’s surreal homages, shaped by transatlantic longing; Tam Kwan Yuen reflects the city through a warm lens of Singaporean cultural intimacy. Pak Sheung Chuen’s conceptual works choreograph serendipitous encounters with time itself, transforming everyday moments into cosmic theaters. His oeuvre tenderly excavates memory’s strata, revealing invisible tensions between concrete and sky, steel and soil.

    Angela Yuen, The Dreamer V, 2025, Plastic Toys, Made in Hong Kong plastic toys, resin, motor, gear, beads, LED lights, 39 x 41x 34 cm

    To wander through Imprints of Time is to traverse a palimpsest of eras—a layered manuscript where images echo across decades. The exhibition composes a multi-voiced symphony, harmonizing Hong Kong’s past, present, and future. From hushed brushstrokes to pulsating installations, these works unravel the metaphysics of place—exploring how time sculpts identity and space nurtures belonging.

    Peter Hong-Tsun Chan, Skyline in Flux (Kai Tak), 2025, Oil on linen, 60 x 75 cm

    Each artwork functions as a cultural prism, reflecting not only the city’s transformations but inviting viewers to inscribe their own stories onto Hong Kong’s evolving canvas. These imprints are more than records; they are participatory rituals, urging us to trace the grooves of time with our fingertips and discover, amid constant flux, something enduringly our own.

    Kila Cheung, Young Bird, 2025, 60 x 150 x 52 cm, Bronze

    Venue
    2003-2008, 20/F, Landmark South, 39 Yip Kan Street, Wong Chuk Hang, Hong Kong

    Artist
    Peter Hong-Tsun Chan, Kila Cheung, Chow Chun Fai, Kwong Man Chun, Lewis Lee, Ling Wai Shan, Jade Ching-yuk Ng, Pak Sheung Chuen, Tam Kwan Yuen, Angela Yuen

    Exhibition Dates
    16 August – 23 September, 2025

    Gallery Hours
    Tuesday – Saturday | 11 AM – 7 PM

    Website
    https://www.tangcontemporary.com

    Instagram
    https://www.instagram.com/tangcontemporaryart/

    Contact
    info@tangcontemporary.com.hk 

    About Artists

    Peter Hong-Tsun Chan
    b. 1985, Hong Kong, China
    Lives and works in Toronto, Canada

    Peter Hong-Tsun Chan received his BAA from Sheridan College Institute of Technology in Toronto, Canada.

    Chan’s current practice is centred on the dissection of the probabilistic concept of chance in both social and visual culture. Defined as operating outside the purview of oneself, chance and its many manifestations such as accident and luck, when incorporated into artistic processes, speak directly to questions of aesthetic and social philosophy. Through his newest work, Chan explores anew the concept of chance within the larger framework of socioculturalism.

    His recent exhibitions include Opening Sequence, Long Story Short, Los Angeles (2023, solo); Teach Me How to Fish, Art Intelligence Global, Hong Kong (2024); Crescent Heights, Harper’s, Los Angeles (2024); Threshold, New Image Art, Los Angeles (2024); Focal Point 2, Long Story Short, New York (2023).

    Kila Cheung
    b. 1986, Hong Kong, China
    Lives and works in Hong Kong, China

    Kila Cheung graduated from the Hong Kong Polytechnic University. He is a full-time artist specialized in painting and sculpture. Kila values childishness, curiosity, and the courage to break rules and dreams.

    In 2016, he received the Hong Kong Young Design Talent Award. In 2017, he took up an internship in Japan and started his creating with wooden sculptures. In 2018, he travelled to Taiwan for an artist residency in Taipei.

    His first solo exhibition, “Twinkle Twinkle Little Guy” (2018) was held in Gallery by the Harbour, Hong Kong. “Teens in Sunroom” (2019), his second solo exhibition, was held in The Little Hut Gallery, Taipei. Kila was the planner for the book “Art Toy Story” (2018). In 2020, his solo exhibition “Moving Utopia” was held in Dot Dot Dot Gallery, Hong Kong. In 2021, his works were exhibited in N’s YARD, Japan and his solo exhibition “Best Before” was held in JPS Gallery, Tokyo. In 2022, he had a solo exhibition “Oh! My Young God” in INVINCIBLE SP, an art space in Taipei. In 2023, his first solo exhibition in Europe “Peace of Freedom” was held in Ojiri Gallery, London. His solo exhibition “AS LIGHT AS COPPER, AS HEAVY AS PAPER” was held in Quiet Gallery, Tokyo. He exhibited a 6-meter-high sculpture “Home No.9 Taste of The Lost Memory Home” and an installation of 100 warning lights “Twinkle Twinkle Little Square” at Tsuen Wan Town Hall Plaza. Also, held a solo exhibition “Still” at Gallery by the Harbour, along with showcasing a 4-meter-high installation “Twinkle Twinkle Little Giant—Little Jizo” near Victoria Harbour. In 2024, he held a dual exhibition “Home” with Japanese artist Moe Nakamura at GALLERY TSUBAKI in Tokyo and his first solo exhibition in the United States “Little Fires Everyone” at GR gallery in New York. In 2025, his solo exhibition “In The Old Home” was held in otherthings by THE SHOPHOUSE, Hong Kong.

    Chow Chun Fai
    b. 1980, Hong Kong, China
    Lives and works in Hong Kong, China

    Chow Chun Fai graduated from the Chinese University of Hong Kong, the Department of Fine Arts (BA and MFA). In 2012 he ran in the Hong Kong Legislative Council elections, for the Sports, Performing Arts, Culture and Publication constituency. Most recently his work has been featured in the following exhibitions: “Chow Chun Fai Solo Exhibition: Map of Amnesia”(Tang Contemporary Art, Hong Kong, 2024); “Chow Chun Fai Solo Exhibition: Interview the Interviewer” (SC Gallery, Hong Kong, 2023); “Chow Chun Fai & Stephen Wong Chun Hei Duo Exhibition – A Mirage of a Shining City” (Tang Contemporary Art, Hong Kong, 2023); “Portrait From Behind” (Gallery Exit, Hong Kong, 2020); “Chow Chun Fai” (Eli Klein Gallery, New York, 2018); “Everything Comes With an Expiry Date” (Klein Sun Gallery, New York, 2016); “Venice Meeting Point” (Venice Biennale, 2015); “Hong Kong Eye” (Saatchi Gallery, London, 2012), the “Liverpool Biennial” (Liverpool, 2012).

    Chow is the recipient of the Grand Prize of the Hong Kong Arts Centre 30th Anniversary Awards, and the Sovereign Asian Art Prize.

    Kwong Man Chun
    b. 1989, Hunan Province, China
    Lives and works in Hong Kong, China

    Distilling Kwong Man Chun’s studies of China Southern Culture and Chinese notions of void and emptiness, Kwong Man Chun found his own singular vehicle through which to pronounce his own worldview: that of the lake that is pure and reflected. Through perspective, environment, mirroring and weathering, he diligently examines a metaphysical, human sense of being. In “Huang Cen Ling and Tenemen House”, existing within Kwong Man Chun’s aesthetics and thinking, the perspective of Chinese Genre Painting and brings them together with splash ink and colour. Attempt to deconstruct the texture and elegance of water, stones, flowers, furniture. a fantasy volume composed of scenery and shapes his presentation: the previous generation established what they thought of eternity for us. Kwong holds a Bachelor of Arts in Visual Arts from Hong Kong Baptist University. He has participated in exhibitions in Hong Kong, China, Japan, Australia and USA since 2013.

    Lee Kam Ching, Lewis
    b. 1998, Hong Kong, China
    Lives and works in Hong Kong, China

    Lee Kam Ching, Lewis graduated from The Chinese University of Hong Kong in 2023, majored in fine arts. He grew up between Hong Kong and Shenzhen. He then uses landscape painting to express his personal experiences of his family and his ancestry.Through his work, he responds to the scars left by previous generations, exploring identity and constructing his own worldview in a playful yet surreal manner. His past works have encompassed painting, photography, installation and artificial landscape. His works have been exhibited in Hong Kong, Mainland, Taiwan and Japan before.

    Ling Wai Shan, Heidi
    b. 2001, Hong Kong, China
    Lives and works in Hong Kong, China

    Ling Wai Shan, Heidi graduated with the degree of Bachelor of Visual Arts, Academy of Visual Arts, Hong Kong Baptist University in 2023. She focuses on contemporary social issues, exploring complex relationships between humans, nature, culture, and interactions between the body and the city. She uses symbolism and metaphor to express thoughts and emotions on these topics. Her artwork is rich in poetic and subtle expressions, utilising symbolic meanings to convey emotions and provide insights into contemporary social issues. By transforming symbols and combining objects, viewers are prompted to interpret and imagine. The artwork through meticulous color and brushwork, revealing the relationship between space, light, and objects, employs the use of transparency to explore the relationship between the visible and the invisible, while contemplating the connection between the truth of things and their appearances.

    She held her solo exhibition “The Moon Wanes As It Waxes” at Touch Gallery in 2024. Her group exhibitions include “The Weight of Stillness,” Contemporary by Angela Li, Hong Kong (China, 2024); “Patients Not Eligible for Sick Leave,” Hui Gallery, New Asia College, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong (China, 2024); “Virtual Scenery,” a.m. space, Hong Kong (China, 2024); “Evergreen,” Odds and Ends, Hong Kong (China, 2024); “Being Something,” Contemporary by Angela Li, Hong Kong (China, 2023); “The Blossoms in the Flowerless,” Koo Ming Kown Exhibition Gallery, Hong Kong (China, 2023); “and still they move,” AVA BA Grad Show 2023, Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong (China, 2023); “Sorry, I want to leave the archipelago,” Cattle Depot Artist Village, Hong Kong (China, 2023).

    Jade Ching-Yuk Ng
    b. 1992, Hong Kong, China
    Lives and works in London, UK

    Jade Ching-Yuk Ng exemplifies life experience as the main material, combined with different symbolic visual vocabularies, so as to find the gap between reality and virtuality. She has worked on various mediums to challenge the possibilities of creating paintings beyond paints. She depicts the fragility of a physical intimate relationship between herself and others. She is drawn to the sensibility of constant touches and separation among us. By reinterpreting traditional forms of symbolism, her work creates a new, ambiguous and obscure fiction. Ng’s work craves attention of our loneliness, intimacy and emptiness in today’s hyper-realistic world.

    Her soft, intricate works emboss the fragility of a physical intimate relationship between herself and others. Jade is interested in quoting the essence of touch and separation at a moment in time to depict a notion of loneliness, intimacy and emptiness. By exploring the possibilities of forms in painting, Jade conceives of her paintings as an assembly of her and others’ body puzzles. Often revolving around personal travel experience, classical myth, alchemy, religious rituals and anatomy as references, Jade deconstructs their symbolism by attaching her own interpretation, and her symbols seem to depart from their literal connotations into an obscure and ambiguous fiction. The agency of framing becomes a gesture of embracing, defining actual and pictorial surrealistic space. The essence of modernist architecture influences how she constructs and adds odds to her composition in the picture. She develops them into printmaking, painting, sculptural painting and the most recent cut-outs and wood reliefs. Its theatricality encourages visitors to consider characters that are depicted in dialogue with themselves, whilst also considering the fine edge of collision in reality and imagination.

    Ng obtained her BA at Slade School of Fine Art in 2016 and MA at Royal College of Art in 2018. She is a recipient of Cass Art Painting Prize in 2016 and Travers Smith Art Award in 2018. She was awarded the Abbey Major Painting Scholarship by the British School at Rome in 2018. Her work was commented on and published by art historians Katy Hessel and Kate Mothes respectively. She worked at Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design in 2014. Her work has exhibited internationally, such as Arusha Gallery (London; Edinburgh, UK), Matt’s Gallery (London, UK), San Mei Gallery (London, UK), Cornucopia Gallery (London, UK), Whitechapel 46 (London, UK), Siegfried Contemporary (London, UK), Assembly Point (London, UK), Horse Hospital (London, UK), CGP Gallery (London, UK), Canal Mills Armley (Leeds, UK), Video Pub (Jerusalem, Israel), Academia di Romania a Roma (Rome, Italy) . Part of her work has been collected by Penguin Random House.

    Her solo exhibitions include “Echo of Silhouettes,” Tang Contemporary Art (Beijing, 2024); Comfort in Discomfort,” Ronchini (London, 2023); “GUSH,” Tang Contemporary Art (Hong Kong, 2022); “It’s (kind of) a love story,” Natasha Arselan (London, 2022); “I is another,” Cornucopia Gallery (London, 2021)

    Pak Sheung Chuen
    b. 1977, Fujian, China
    Lives and works in Hong Kong

    Pak Sheung Cheun’s works primarily focus on conceptual art and painting. He excels at incorporating everyday life situations into his creations, sparking contemplation about current circumstances. He has been a columnist for the Sunday edition of Ming Pao newspaper since 2003. Pak has authored books such as ODD ONE IN: Hong Kong Diary, ODD ONE IN II: Invisible Travel and Nightmare Wallpaper.

    He has represented Hong Kong in various significant international exhibitions, including the Venice Biennale (2009), Liverpool Biennial, Yokohama Triennale, and Taipei Biennial. In 2011, he was selected as one of the five outstanding artists in the Asia-Pacific region by AAP art magazine and has been featured on the covers of LEAP and Contemporary Art and Investment magazines. He is acclaimed as one of the twelve important Chinese artists. In 2012, Pak received the HKADC Best Artist Award, the China Contemporary Art Award (CCAA) Best Artist Award, and the Best Booth Award at Frieze London. His works are held in collections at institutions such as M+, Tate Modern, and the New York Public Library. In recent years, he has been involved in teaching and has served as a resident artist and lecturer at institutions like York University in Toronto and Tokyo University of the Arts. He delivers art lectures annually at various colleges and universities. From 2023-2024, he hold the position of Assistant Professor at Tainan National University of the Arts. From 2019 to 2022, he served as the art consultant for the Jockey Club BGCA “Arts make SENse” programme. Later, he co-founded the HASS Lab team with Cherry Chan, engaging in art interventions in the community, social welfare services, and education.

    Tam Kwan Yuen
    b. 1986, Hong Kong, China
    Lives and works in Singapore

    Tam Kwan Yuen’s works have been regularly selected into international juried shows and have won several awards. In April 2016, his painting, “Good Morning, NYC!” has won the JAN GARY and WILLIAM D. GORMAN MEMORIAL AWARD in the prestigious 149th Annual International Exhibition of American Watercolor Society (AWS). In 2020, he is the third Singaporean to be conferred Signature Membership in the AWS. His works have been featured in art publications, including the 17th Issue of the Art of Watercolor Magazine and selected as Winner in North Light Books’ Splash 18: Value | Light + Dark Issue edited by Rachel Rubin Wolf. He has also been recently awarded the Nanyang Outstanding Young Alumni Award by his alma mater, Nanyang Technological University, for his outstanding achievements in art.

    Tam has been active in both the local and international art scene. In January 2025, he participated in ART SG, Southeast Asia’s leading international art fair held in Marina Bay Sands, Singapore. His work, Evening View from Victoria Peak, Hong Kong, was exhibited at the fair. He currently paints scenes both locally and abroad, with a modern approach to his painting technique. He is represented by Artcommune Gallery in Singapore.

    Angela Yuen
    b. 1991, Hong Kong, China
    Lives and works in Hong Kong, China

    Angela Yuen graduated from the Academy of Visual Arts, Hong Kong Baptist University in 2014. She went to Linfield College in the U.S. for an exchange program in 2013 to develop her installation art and received the Dean’s List Honours. In 2016, she had her artist in residency at Red Gate Gallery, Beijing. In 2019, she had her artist in residency at HART Haus, Hong Kong.

    About Gallery

    Tang Contemporary Art was founded in Bangkok in 1997 with the entirety of supporting artists with creative and critical art projects. Over the last 27 years, curated exhibitions were based on promoting contemporary art in favor of a more sustainable and solidary ground for art creation and collective learning with the aim to foster more dynamic trans-cultural relationships between the Asian and the International art scenes. Tang Contemporary Art also tailors art projectors for patrons and collectors to engage with art in their respective eco-system.

    Tang Contemporary Art has recently added an 8th gallery space in the vibrating city of Singapore, alongside Bangkok, Beijing, Hong Kong, and Seoul, coupled with active participation in annual art fairs like Art Basel Hong Kong, KIAF, Frieze New York, Expo Chicago, The Armory Show, Art Geneve, Taipei Dangdai, Art SG and Masterpiece London.

    Acting as one of the most progressive galleries in Asia, Tang Contemporary Art represents both the internationally renowned and the emerging. With an unparalleled contribution to the Asian and Chinese contemporary arts and its inclusion in the global art scenes, Tang Contemporary Art aims to create the best conditions for initiating dialogues between artists, curators, collectors, and institutions, as well as for nurturing new methodologies of making of contemporary art histories, promoting emerging young artists, and providing a platform for arts and cultural exchange both locally and internationally.

    (Text and images courtesy of Tang Contemporary Art)


  • Pace Presents Tongues of Flare, a Solo Exhibition by Li Hei Di

    Pace Presents Tongues of Flare, a Solo Exhibition by Li Hei Di

    Installation View, ©Li Hei Di, Courtesy Pace Gallery

    Pace is pleased to present Tongues of Flare, an exhibition of new paintings and sculpture by Li Hei Di, at its Hong Kong gallery. On view from May 29 to August 29, this presentation marks Li’s first solo show with Pace since they joined the gallery’s program in 2024. Following its run at Pace in Hong Kong, Tongues of Flarewill travel to the Pond Society during Shanghai Art Week in the fall.

    Gapes at the vanity of toil, 2025, Oil on linen, 74-13/16″ x 66-15/16″, ©Li Hei Di, Courtesy Pace Gallery

    Born in Shenyang, China in 1997, Li, who currently lives and works in London, is known for their explorations of human embodiment, displacement, and intimacy in luminous paintings that blend abstraction and figuration. In their vibrant, dreamlike canvases—where ghostly, translucent bodies and body parts pulsate in and out of view amid abstract forms and washes of color—Li embeds latent narratives about gender, repressed and fulfilled desire, and emotional fluidity for viewers to uncover and decipher. Primarily a painter, they also work across sculpture and performance, mediums that complement their otherworldly canvases.

    Li’s work has figured in recent group exhibitions at the Hepworth Wakefield in the United Kingdom, The Warehouse in Dallas, Le Consortium in Dijon, France, the Yuz Museum in Shanghai, and Marquez Art Projects in Miami, as well as the 2023 X Museum Triennial in Beijing. They are represented in the collections of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art; the High Museum in Atlanta; the Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami; the Columbus Museum of Art in Ohio; the Hepworth Wakefield; the Long Museum in Shanghai; and the Yageo Foundation in Taiwan.

    Wild Sumac in Early Autumn, 2025, Oil on linen, 64-15/16″ x 76-3/4″, ©Li Hei Di, Courtesy Pace Gallery

    The artist’s exhibition at Pace in Hong Kong will spotlight 11 new, never-before-exhibited paintings produced in 2025. Meditating on self-discovery and enactments of physical and spiritual transformation, these works imagine the body as an architecture of energies and feelings—a space where chaos, love, passion, and other phenomena converge and collide. These layered compositions, where spectral figures reveal and obscure themselves at different moments, speak to the complexities of selfhood and the conflicts between our internal selves and forces of the external world.

    Straw Fires of Crop Time, 2025, Oil on linen, 66-15/16″ x 51-3/16″, ©Li Hei Di, Courtesy Pace Gallery

    In this group of paintings, the most vulnerable and diaristic works that Li has created to date, the artist continues to use the natural world—in particular, movements and flows of water—as a metaphor for the evolutionary process of becoming one’s self. Wild abstractions rendered in saturated colors oscillate and undulate across their canvases with an oceanic rhythm, fluctuating with each motion of Li’s brush. As with their past bodies of work, they have also drawn inspiration from various literary sources—including Georges Bataille’s Eroticism: Death and Sensuality, Han Kang’s The Vegetarian, and Torrey Peters’s Detransition, Baby—for their latest paintings. In these books—particularly in The Vegetarian, which tells the story of a woman who becomes increasingly convinced that she is turning into a plant—Li has uncovered new ideas about sexuality, monstrosity, and transfiguration that manifest in their new works. Each painting in this series can be understood as a seed for profound, liberating growth, revealing how change can emerge from the most hidden corners of the self.

    A new wood sculpture by the artist will also be on view in the exhibition. Depicting an abstracted body at repose within a cradle-like vessel, this work reflects the state of the physical body and the mind at night during sleep—sinking ever deeper into theshifting, unpredictable world of the unconscious. Presented together in Hong Kong, Li’s paintings and sculpture transport viewers to a realm where the boundaries between life and death, beauty and struggle, and imagination and reality are collapsed.

    The monstrosity lies between us, 2025, Oil on linen, 59-1/16″ x 47-1/4″, ©Li Hei Di, Courtesy Pace Gallery

    Venue
    Pace Gallery, 12/F, H Queen’s, 80 Queen’s Road, Central, Hong Kong

    Artist
    Li Hei Di

    Exhibition Dates
    May 29 – August 29, 2025

    Gallery Hours
    Tuesday – Saturday | 11 AM – 7 PM

    Website
    https://www.pacegallery.com

    Instagram
    https://www.instagram.com/pacegallery/

    Contact
    hongkong@pacegallery.com

    About Artist

    Li Hei Di (b. 1997, Shenyang, China) lives and works in London. The artist attended a one-year student exchange program in Ohio before studying at Idyllwild Arts in southern California. They received a BA in Fine Art from Chelsea College of Arts, London, in 2020, and an MA in Painting from the Royal College of Art, London, in 2022. Their first one-artist exhibition was held at Linseed Projects, Shanghai (2022), followed by Michael Kohn Gallery, Los Angeles (2023) and Pippy Houldsworth Gallery, London (2024). Recent group exhibitions including their work have been held at Gagosian Gallery, Hong Kong (2023); Centre of International Contemporary Art, Vancouver (2023); X Museum Triennial, Beijing (2023); Yuz Museum, Shanghai (2023); Metropolitan Museum of Manila, Philippines (2024); Le Consortium, Dijon, France (2024); GRIMM, New York (2024); and The Hepworth Wakefield, West Yorkshire, United Kingdom (2025–2026). Their work is held in numerous public collections worldwide, including the Columbus Museum of Art, Ohio; The Hepworth Wakefield, West Yorkshire, United Kingdom; High Museum of Art, Atlanta, Georgia; Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami; Long Museum, Shanghai; Los Angeles County Museum of Art; and Yageo Foundation, Taipei, among others.

    About Gallery

    Pace is a leading international art gallery representing some of the most influential artists and estates of the 20th and 21st centuries, founded by Arne Glimcher in 1960. Holding decades-long relationships with Alexander Calder, Jean Dubuffet, Agnes Martin, Louise Nevelson, and Mark Rothko, Pace has a unique history that can be traced to its early support of artists central to the Abstract Expressionist and Light and Space movements. Now in its seventh decade, the gallery continues to nurture its longstanding relationships with its legacy artists and estates while also making an investment in the careers of contemporary artists, including Torkwase Dyson, Loie Hollowell, Robert Nava, Adam Pendleton, and Marina Perez Simão.

    Under the current leadership of CEO Marc Glimcher and President Samanthe Rubell, Pace has established itself as a collaborative force in the art world, partnering with other galleries and nonprofit organizations around the world in recent years. The gallery advances its mission to support its artists and share their visionary work with audiences and collectors around the world through a robust global program anchored by its exhibitions of both 20th century and contemporary art and scholarly projects from its imprint Pace Publishing, which produces books introducing new voices to the art historical canon. This artist-first ethos also extends to public installations, philanthropic events, performances, and other interdisciplinary programming presented by Pace.

    Today, Pace has nine locations worldwide, including two galleries in New York—its eight-story headquarters at 540 West 25th Street and an adjacent 8,000-square-foot exhibition space at 510 West 25th Street. The gallery’s history in the New York art world dates to 1963, when it opened its first space in the city on East 57th Street. A champion of Light and Space artists, Pace has also been active in California for some 60 years, opening its West Coast flagship in Los Angeles in 2022. It maintains European footholds in London and Geneva as well as Berlin, where it established an office in 2023 and a gallery space in 2025. Pace was one of the first international galleries to have a major presence in Asia, where it has been active since 2008, the year it first opened in Beijing’s vibrant 798 Art District. It now operates galleries in Hong Kong and Seoul and opened its first gallery in Japan in Tokyo’s Azabudai Hills development in 2024.

    (Text and images courtesy of Pace)


  • Blindspot Gallery Presents Polyglot, a Solo Exhibition by Wing Po So

    Blindspot Gallery Presents Polyglot, a Solo Exhibition by Wing Po So

    Installation view of “Wing Po So: Polyglot”, 2025, Blindspot Gallery, Image courtesy of artist and Blindspot Gallery

    Blindspot Gallery is pleased to debut Wing Po So’s solo exhibition “Polyglot”, on view from 17 June to 23 August 2025, featuring her recent body of work. So’s intuitive approach towards art-making draws nourishment from her formative encounters with Chinese medicine, characterized by a meticulous observation of nature and its interconnectivity. She wields the materia medica derived from our living environment as vocabularies in her conceptual works, seeking to excavate the inner logic and systems latent in our surroundings. So shows a distinct sensitivity, curiosity, and fantasy towards nature and the cosmos, all through a pharmacological lens.

    Installation view of “Wing Po So: Polyglot”, 2025, Blindspot Gallery, Image courtesy of artist and Blindspot Gallery

    “Polyglot” refers to an individual of multilingual proficiency, and here, So draws a parallel between materials and language. “Polyglot” encapsulates how materials embody the multiple “languages” of nature’s patterns. Akin to how languages carry their own logic, codes, and structures, materials embody their own rules and systems. So’s works accentuate the patterns, forces and interconnectivities hidden in our everyday.

    By foregrounding “material as language”, “Polyglot” invites viewers to not only attune to what is being said but to how it is being said—through grain, fiber, residue, tension, and transformation. Just as language evolves over time and use, materials have the ability to metamorphose, combine, and regenerate, embodying how nature is an archive of living potentials.

    The exhibition opens with its titular piece Polyglot: Mulberry (2023), which explores the cyclicality of life from growth to decay, and the myriad possibilities it can yield. The installation appears as an eco-system, with an assemblage of archaic Chinese medicinal jars containing different elements— ground powders, gnarly branches and roots, and crushed leaves. These substances are all derived from the mulberry tree, known in Chinese medicine for the curative remedies that can be extracted from its various parts.

     Polyglot: Mulberry, 2023, Mulberry twigs, mulberry mistletoe, mulberry leaves, mulberry roots,  mulberry root bark, dried mulberry, Sanghuangporus sanghuang, mulberry extract (anthocyanidin), fan, mp3 players, motors, wooden ball, glass containers, metal lids, speakers, Installation size variable, Image courtesy of artist and Blindspot Gallery

    Here, the tree is dissected and turned into a regenerative playground. The kinetic elements within each jar and the sound it creates evoke the workings of the Chinese medicine store, where the rhythmic interaction between tools and natural materials transforms things from one to another.

    Magnolia Bud (2025) and Pattern Drawing (2025) embody So’s curiosity in the invisible forces and patterns that underpin our living environment: “what is unseen is not absent, but active, humming beneath the surface,” said the artist. Magnolia Bud appears as a small furry entity, and upon closer looking, it vibrates ever so slightly. It is made with the hairs of the magnolia tree bud, marking the first signs of Spring, signaling a vitality and reigniting of life. This uncanny being, oscillating between animal and vegetative forms, is slowly awakened, hinting at the energy that surges from within.

    In Pattern Drawing, a dangling magnetic seed hovers incessantly above the hematite1, where magnetic beans are evenly scattered, propelled by a repulsive force that choreographs its motion, creating a pattern. The work shows the way that the forces of nature mould and move what we see, intangible yet palpable.

    Magnolia Bud, 2025, Magnolia tree buds, 3D printed shell, motor, 8 x 14 x 9 cm, Image courtesy of artist and Blindspot Gallery

    So’s installations Hidden Terrains (2025) and Make Moves (2025) simulate the systems woven from disparate elements, underlining the interdependency within every ecology. In Hidden Terrains, So brings to the surface networks of water pipes which form closed systems, their structures mirroring that of rhizomatic ginger, growing beneath our feet through cracks and impeding roots. The pipes have translucent ginger skin covering their openings, illuminated from within and projecting the sound of water dripping. It signals life that thrives internally, demonstrating a resilience that defies hierarchy.

    Make Moves is a video that draws on the logic of Conway’s Game of Life, where cells self-generate, reproduce, and die off depending on underpopulation and overpopulation, illustrating a symbiotic dynamic. In the video installation, images of asteroids configured into a grid flash before us on a mound of pumice powder on the floor. If one rock appears with two or three surrounding it, more appear in the next configuration, whereas if one appears with more than three, they vanish after, echoing the game’s rules. The asteroids are in fact volcanic lava rocks used in Chinese medicine, showing the interplay in So’s works between the miniscule and the cosmic.

    Hidden Terrains 1 (close-up), 2025, Ginger skin, brass water pipes and fittings, LED lights, speaker, 184 x 133 x 49 cm, Image courtesy of artist and Blindspot Gallery

    So instils fantasy into her works, envisioning alternate universes out of the mundane: “mixing reality and fiction allows me to convey this unfamiliarity with and alienation from nature,” said So. In a group of installations made with used Chinese medicine cabinets salvaged from defunct pharmacies, she imagines parasitic microcosms that have emerged within, forming an interdependent ecology. In Sea Ear Hi-Hat (Take Turns) (2025), the breathing sound of abalone can be heard coming out of the cabinets, the shells opening and closing slowly. Perched on the back of drawers in The Navigation of Volcanic Stones (2025), pumices spin erratically, their movements steered by a compass seeking to help navigate their direction.

    In The Bookmaking Habits of Select Species (in the Drawers) (2025), a constellation is formed by the spectral perforations left by tiny arthropods on the underside of drawers, serving as an inscription of life’s perseverance. They resemble an indecipherable alien code, an ode to Ken Liu’s 2012 sci-fi short story, The Bookmaking Habits of Select Species, imagining how extraterrestrial species preserve their writings. The abstracted form straddles between materiality and immateriality, illuminating the mystery of the invisible forces that shape our world. To observe it is to decipher it.

    “Art-making to me is really like the idea of travelling, taking me to various places, meeting different people, connecting the dots of languages and knowledge to form constellations in the sky – to satisfy curiosity,” said the artist.

    Sea Ear Hi-Hat (Take Turns) (close-up), 2025, Herbal medicine drawers, wood, abalone shells, brass rods, motors, 92 x 138 x 108 cm, Image courtesy of artist and Blindspot Gallery

    Venue
    Blindspot Gallery, 15/F, Po Chai Industrial Building, 28 Wong Chuk Hang Road, Wong Chuk Hang, Hong Kong

    Artist
    Wing Po So

    Exhibition Dates
    June 17 – August 23, 2025

    Gallery Hours
    Tuesday – Saturday | 10:30 AM – 6:30 PM (Sunday and Monday, by appointment only); closed on public holidays

    Website
    https://blindspotgallery.com

    Instagram
    https://www.instagram.com/blindspotgallery/

    Contact
    info@blindspotgallery.com

    About Artist

    Wing Po So (b. 1985, Hong Kong) creates installations, sculptures, and videos using Chinese medicinal ingredients as artistic materials, excavating the hidden interconnections, patterns, and systems within nature. Her practice is influenced by her formative encounters with traditional Chinese medicine, drawing on its emphasis on a sensitivity and observation towards the living environment, nature and the Universe. So applies the same theory of knowledge in her investigation of forms, materiality, metaphysics, relationality and cosmology. So’s solo exhibitions took place at Para Site (2025) and Tai Kwun Contemporary (2018). She will also take part in the upcoming Seoul Mediacity Biennale (2025). Her work was recently exhibited at Para Site (2024 & 2020), Hong Kong Museum of Art (2024), 13th Taipei Biennial (2023), 14th Shanghai Biennale (2023), X Museum Triennale (2023), Kathmandu Triennale (2022), and UCCA Center for Contemporary Art in Beijing (2020), among others.

    About Gallery

    Set up in 2010, Blindspot Gallery is a contemporary art gallery based in Hong Kong. The gallery features diverse contemporary art practices, by emerging and established artists mainly from Asia and beyond. The gallery is committed to connecting its represented artists with an international platform and fostering global dialogues in the art community through its exhibition program and institutional collaborations.

    (Text and images courtesy of Blindspot Gallery)


  • 3812 Gallery Presents Dreamscape, a Group Exhibition by Talented Hong Kong Artists

    3812 Gallery Presents Dreamscape, a Group Exhibition by Talented Hong Kong Artists

    Poster Credit: 3812 Gallery

    3812 Gallery is excited to present “Dreamscape”, our summer show featuring young, talented Hong Kong artists. This captivating group exhibition explores a dreamlike realm of floral and natural landscapes in abstract forms, inviting tranquil contemplation during the summer season. The exhibition features four young artists, each with a distinctive abstract visual language, weaving a liminal space between reality and mirage, consciousness and the subconscious, past, present, and future. “Dreamscape” will run from 12 June to 29 August, 2025 at the gallery’s Hong Kong location.

    “Dreamscape”, as it is collectively crafted by a host of new blood, seeks to invite viewers on a visually dynamic, lively, and trippy sojourn—one grounded in each individual’s inner space and unfolding into the conscious sphere for introspection, retrospection, nostalgia, as well as a pure appreciation of nature’s simple beauty. Viewers may well find themselves pleasantly lost in contemplation within the kaleidoscopic dream oases affectionately rendered by the four emerging artists.

    Kwan Yung Yee, All my fountains are in you, 2025, Acrylic on canvas, 50 x 60 cm

    Thomas Ngan (b. 1995), with his duality of both realism and abstraction, delivers a misty, demure, subtly hypnotic dreamscape. Each piece, as its title suggests, is steeped in a unique yet coherent narrative arc. His envisioned dream world evokes echoes of Claude Monet’s Water Lilies, reimagined through a contemporary lens. The dreamscape orchestrated by Joanne Chan (b. 1992) emanates a fluid, kinetic rhythm, brought to life through her gestural spraying and oil painting techniques. Her dream world—reminiscent of an underwater teeming with vibrant blooms—invites viewers on an intoxicating journey that oscillates between vitality, renewal, and deep reflection on life. Kwan Yung Yee (b. 1991), with her clean lines and pastel-hued digital aesthetics, escorts viewers through a therapeutic sanctuary—one seemingly insulated by the divine—where solace and inner peace abound. Staying within the inner space between memory and reverie, the dream interface created by Curtis Chan (b. 1989) extends into a utopia where viewers may lacquer their past with fairytale ideals.

    Curtis Chan, The Warmth of Lake Ash, 2024, Acrylic on canvas, 40.6 x 50.8 cm

    All rendered on the unifying canvas of “flora” and “landscape”, each artist’s nuanced “Dreamscape” reflects a distinct facet of their creative process. Thomas Ngan harnesses the brilliance of illumination, casting light on flora and natural scenes to create a bright-shadowed, eclectic vista that hints at life’s dualities of uncertainty and hope. Joanne Chan’s exuberant blooms, painted in vivid flourishes, transport audiences to the height of spring and summer, inviting them to reconnect with nature’s vitality. Subtle and ornate smatterings of flowers in Kwan Yung Yee’s works contribute to a garden-like sanctuary, soothing and introspective. Curtis Chan’s delicately rendered, minimalist flowers—set against a dreamlike soliloquy—offer a utopian and hopeful coda to the exhibition.

    Folded between reality and illusion and shrouded in captivating mystery, the exhibition is curated to transport viewers into a shared, coherent, and multi-layered dreamscape. Through masterful technique and bold artistic license, these young artists collectively construct a dream world that transcends surface aesthetics, drawing visitors into profound reflection, both inward and outward.

    We cordially invite you to the “Dreamscape” at 3812 Gallery Hong Kong — a journey into dialogue with the artists, the dream weavers, and with your own inner selves: past, present, and future. 

    Joanne Chan, Whispers in Bloom – Fireflies Glowfield, 2025, Oil on canvas, 35 x 30cm

    Venue
    26/F, Wyndham Place, 44 Wyndham Street, Central, Hong Kong

    Artist
    Thomas Ngan, Joanne Chan, Kwan Yung Yee, Curtis Chan

    Exhibition Date
    June 12 – Aug 29, 2025

    Gallery Hours
    Monday – Friday | 11 AM – 7 PM, closed on public holidays

    Website
    https://www.3812gallery.com

    Instagram
    https://www.instagram.com/3812gallery/

    Contact
    hongkong@3812cap.com

    (Text and images courtesy of 3812 Gallery)


  • Innovations in Art, Fashion & Design: Highlights from the 2025 GAMMA Exhibition in Hong Kong

    Innovations in Art, Fashion & Design: Highlights from the 2025 GAMMA Exhibition in Hong Kong

    Poster Credit: Global Alliance of Marketing & Management Associations

    Exhibition Date
    July 24 – 27, 2025

    Venue
    The Fashion Gallery (Jockey Club Innovation Tower)  -> (Link)

    Co-hosts
    – School of Fashion & Textiles, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University
    – Global Alliance of Marketing & Management Associations

    Partners
    Korean Scholars of Marketing Science
    Center for Sustainability & Wellbeing, Yonsei University

    Sponsors
    – Korea Economy and Management Development Institute
    – CSW Lab Inc.

    Award Committee
    – Committee Chair: Erin Cho, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong
    – Art Director: Juhyun Kim, Kyungsung University, Republic of Korea
    – Benjamin Voyer, ESCP Europe, UK
    – Raffaele Donvito, University of Florence, Italy
    – Aluna-Yue Lyu, China Central Academy of Fine Arts, China
    – Eun Joo Kim, Terra Design Studio, USA
    – Yangbin Park, The University of Memphis, USA
    – Webson Ji, Asian Art Contemporary, USA
    – Su young Lee, Kunsan National University, Republic of Korea
    – Jeanne Tan, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong 
    **Award winners ‘Artists of the Year’ will be selected through evaluation by an international team of juries. 

    Areas
    – Fine Arts (Painting, Sculpture)
    – Design (Fashion, Textile, Architecture, Industrial, Visual)
    – Community Art (Image)

    Registration for Exhibition
    Application Fee: Free
    Group Exhibition: 100USD / 1 image
    Solo Exhibition: 800USD
    *If you would like to have a solo exhibition, please inquire by email.
    *A certificate of participation in the exhibition will be issued.
    For solo exhibition, the digital leaflet will be provided.
    **The printed image will be displayed. 

    Submission Guidelines
    Submission Deadline: 31 May 2025
    Email: gammaart@yahoo.com
    *You can submit 5 works.
    *Download and complete ‘Application Form’ (You can download the file below)
    *Submit a file (pptx file only)
    *Labeling your application (Name, Nationality)
    *Language: English

    Brief History of the ‘GAMMA Young Artist Competition & Exhibition’
    2024 GAMMA Art, Fashion & Design Exhibition in Milan
    Venue: University of Milan, Milan, Italy
    2020 GAMMA Young Artist Competition Virtual Event
    2019 GAMMA Young Artist Competition
    Venue: ESCP Europe, Paris, France
    2018 GAMMA Young Artist Competition
    Venue: Hotel New Otani Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan
    2017 GAMMA Young Artist Competition
    Venue: University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria
    2016 GAMMA Young Artist Competition
    Venue: Conrad Hong Kong, Hong Kong

    Learn More
    https://2025gmc.imweb.me

    (Text and images courtesy of Global Alliance of Marketing & Management Associations)


  • The Stroll gallery Presents Sound at First Touch, a Solo Exhibition by Suzy Kim

    The Stroll gallery Presents Sound at First Touch, a Solo Exhibition by Suzy Kim

    Poster Credit: The Stroll Gallery

    The Stroll Gallery by Stella A&C (hereinafter called The Stroll Gallery), a Hong Kong-based venue that has been introducing the works of Korean artists, will host Suzy Kim’s solo exhibition <인사 | Insa: 맞닿은 첫울림 (Sound at First Touch) > from May 9 to May 24. This exhibition explores the intersection of gesture, sound, and cultural memory, inviting visitors to reflect on stillness in the flow of time.

    The artist’s creative process involves tracing the body’s form while bowing in the adhesive, layering paint and peeling away to reveal imprints. The resulting works are not merely paintings, they are preserved performances, with each layer documenting a moment in time and each stroke embodying a dialogue between discipline and spontaneity.

    Insa 2, 2023, Acrylic and mixed media on canvas, 120 x 24 cm

    Marking her first solo exhibition, Kim deeply engages with her Korean identity and the influences of Korean artists who have come before her, especially Dansaekhwa (단색화) artists. In Korean, ‘인사’ means “to greet someone” with the gesture of bowing. This act captivated the artist due to the meaning and intention behind it, representing tradition, respect and ritual within her culture. By connecting with her Korean heritage and honoring those artists who paved the way, she discovers the dialogue between past and present, as well as the beat of her Korean identity.

    With this exhibition, The Stroll gallery hopes to provide viewers with an opportunity to connect with the rhythm of their inner selves, going beyond mere visual appreciation.

    The exhibition will run from May 9 to May 24 at The Stroll Gallery. For further information, please refer to the gallery’s official website and Instagram, or visit the gallery during the exhibition period.

    Blue Piece, 2023, Acrylic and mixed media on canvas, 60 x 90 cm

    Venue
    The Stroll gallery, Unit 504, 5F, Vanta Industrial Centre, 21-23 Tai Lin Pai Road, Kwai Chung

    Artist
    Suzy Kim

    Exhibition Dates
    May 9 – 24, 2025

    Gallery Hours
    Tuesday – Saturday | 11 AM – 7 PM

    Website
    www.thestroll.gallery

    Instagram
    https://www.instagram.com/thestroll_gallery/

    Contact
    info@thestroll.gallery

    About Artist

    Suzy Kim (b.1998) 

    (IG Link: @suzykimstudios / Website: https://www.suzykimsooji.com/)

    Suzy Kim is a Korean artist born in Seoul, currently based in Hong Kong. She explores the “journey of creation” that arises from repetitive actions. Her unique technique, which involves creating forms with adhesive and filling them with paint, is inspired by Korean sentiment and the philosophy of Dansaekhwa (단색화: Korean Monochrome Painting), visualizing the boundary where the artist’s inner world meets the external world. Having majored in Studio Art and English at Boston College, she gained recognition for her artistic merit by receiving the 2021 Allison R. McComber Junior Award. She continues to actively present her unique perspective through numerous group exhibition in the United States. Currently, she is expanding her identity as a Korean artist while establishing herself as a promising creator based in Hong Kong.

    About The Stroll Gallery by Stella A&C

    Stroll, an online platform that has been introducing the value and beauty of Korean crafts in Hong Kong, has transformed into The Stroll Gallery in Kwai Chung in July 2022.

    In line with the Hong Kong government’s industrial area revitalization policy, The Stroll Gallery creates and delivers new values and aesthetics by transforming an industrial place of history into a venue of art and culture by converging various fields of crafts, art, and technology. The Stroll Gallery has been created as a new concept space that combines Korean art and culture through our high-quality art sense and design capability.

    The Stroll Gallery has introduced Korean crafts and artists to major art and cultural organizations in Hong Kong such as the Korean Cultural Center Hong Kong, M+ Museum, and IFC Mall, and will continue to bring more diverse Korean artists to Hong Kong and the world.  

    (Text and images courtesy of The Stroll Gallery)