-

The Stroll Gallery by Stella A&C Presents In the Name of Love! by Korean Artist ISoo Jeon

Poster Credit: The Stroll Gallery by Stella A&C 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 ISoo Jeon’s solo exhibition In the Name of Love! from March 22 to April 26. This exhibition will showcase Jeon’s unique perspective on the world around him, articulated through an array of captivating paintings that invite viewers into his artistic vision.
The artist often draws inspiration from personal experiences, as well as from universal themes that resonate with people from all walks of life. He believes that love is the deepest essence of our lives, possessing a powerful force that can uplift us even in the most challenging times. Jeon is also known for his distinctive sensibility and delicate touch, which shine through in each of his works. Through the vibrant colors and profound emotional depth in his paintings, he hopes to invite the viewers to explore and reflect on their own relationships, emotions and the connections of humanity.
The Stroll Gallery hopes that the exhibition would be more than just an artistic experience, that it could aspire to be a space for visitors to reflect on and rediscover the power of ‘Love’, which is a shared wish of both Jeon and the gallery.

In the Name of Love!, Exhibition view, Courtesy of The Stroll Gallery Venue
The Stroll gallery, Unit 504, 5F, Vanta Industrial Centre, 21-23 Tai Lin Pai Road, Kwai Chung, Hong KongGallery Hour
Monday – Sunday | 11 AM – 7 PMArtist
ISoo JeonExhibition Dates
March 22 – April 26, 2025Website
www.thestroll.galleryInstagram
https://www.instagram.com/thestroll_gallery/Contact
info@thestroll.gallery
+852 6366 0717Collaboration with Room to Read
We are proud to announce a meaningful collaboration with Room to Read, an internationally renowned nonprofit organization dedicated to transforming the lives of millions of children through literacy and gender equality in education.
ISoo Jean publishes picture books for children and we believe that the artist’s vision directly correlates with Room to Read’s aspirations in believing that literacy for children are powerful tools for change.
As part of this partnership, The Stroll Gallery will be raising awareness and funds to support Room to Read’s mission along with the exhibition opening. Visitors to the gallery will have the opportunity to contribute to this cause through donations, with proceeds directly benefiting Room to Read’s programs across Asia and Africa.
Let’s read together as a community to create a future full of love for our children!
The exhibition will run from March 22 to April 26 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.
About the Artist
ISoo Jeon (b.2008)
(IG Link: @jeon2soo / Youtube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@jeon2soo)
ISoo Jeon is a painter and author who has published a total of 18 books, where he starts his first fairy-tale book at the age of eight. Through his writings and paintings, he aims to communicate with a wider audience and influence society positively. He also places great importance on his role as an environmental activist. In 2019, the artist opened a gallery called “Walking Wolves” in Jeju Island, focusing on supporting the Jeju Single Mothers Center and friends in Africa. The gallery hosts exhibitions each year with different themes, establishing itself as an important medium for bringing warmth to the world.
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 by Stella A&C)
-

A Moment with Sanyu: HdM Gallery’s Solo Project at Art Basel Hong Kong 2025

Poster Credit: HdM Gallery HdM Gallery is pleased to present a solo project by artist Sanyu (1895-1966) at Art Basel Hong Kong 2025 from March 26 to 30. The exhibition of more than 20 works on paper, all of which are being shown for the first time in Hong Kong (and in Asia), focuses on Sanyu’s works in the 1920s, which was also the most creative and dynamic period of Sanyu’s career in France.
Sanyu was born in 1895 in a wealthy merchant family in Nanchong, Sichuan Province. He studied painting and calligraphy with his father and the famous calligrapher Zhao Xi. In 1921, Sanyu went to France to study with the help of his brother where he chose to take courses at the Acad.mie Libre de la Grande Chaumi.re in Montparnasse. In 1929, his work was recognized by the collector and art dealer Henri-Pierre Roch., who in the space of four years bought a large number of Sanyu’s oil paintings and sketches and became his most important mentor. The “exotic techniques” of Asia enriched the European continent’s fantasy for an “alternative realm”, and similarly, “Parisian life” fulfilled the East’s yearning for “enlightenment”.

Standing Nude, 1920’s, Pencil and charcoal on paper, 55 × 33 cm In 1932, Sanyu joined the Storm Society at the invitation of Pang Xunqin to help the development of China’s modern art movement. Zao Wou-Ki, Chu Teh-Chun and Wu Guanzhong were inspired by Sanyu and Xu Beihong, the first generation of artists who studied in France after having settled there. It is undeniable that Sanyu played an important role in the trend of “going to the west” and “crossing to the east” in the field of art. At the same time, in the 1930s and 1940s, due to his failing marriage and brother’s eventual death, the combined pressure of his finances and his personal life made Sanyu fall into despair, as did his move to live in the United in the 1940’s. But he finally returned to Paris in the early 1950s. In 1963, Taiwan’s Minister of Education Huang Chi-lu visited Sanyu in France and invited him to teach at Taiwan’s National Normal University. However, for various reasons, this return trip did not take place. Three years later, Sanyu passed away in his Paris home.
Sanyu’s line drawings absorb the exaggerated deformation and planar characteristics of Fauvism. His use of ink and wash replaced charcoal. The casual and flexible lines of the sketches let the aesthetics of traditional Chinese landscape find a Western way of interpretation. In his works on paper, the artist simplified the details of the characters and weakened the three-dimensional body characteristics with plump limbs, which became his own unique style, in order to capture the body movements of the characters more quickly. In the works exhibited this time, we can see that Sanyu, a young man who had just arrived in Paris, made bold experiments when faced with the free creative environment of the Acad.mie de la Grande Chaumi.re. This learning experience laid the foundation for Sanyu’s aesthetics. In the remaining forty years of his painting career, he continued to depict the permanent theme of “nudes”.

Seated Nude, 1920’s, Ink on paper, 22.5 × 28 cm Established for more than 16 years, HdM Gallery has been committed to the exchange and coexistence of Chinese and French cultures. As a bridge between Chinese and French cultures, the gallery has paid continuous attention to outstanding artists from East and West. The gallery also exhibited the works of modern abstract ink master T’ang Haywen at the 2024 Basel Art Fair in Hong Kong. All the works of Sanyu exhibited this time originally come from the collection of Henri-Pierre Roch., and were later purchased from his widow by Mr. Jean-Claude Riedel. HdM Gallery’s collaboration with the estate of Jean-Claude Riedel has made this exhibition possible.
Sanyu has exhibited in important international art institutions such as the Palais des Tuileries, the Grand Palais in Paris, the Mus.e du Louvre, the Maastricht Museum in Germany, the National Museum of History in Taipei, the International Institute of China, the Mus.e Guimet in Paris, the Mus.e d’Art Moderne in Paris, the Mus.e des Beaux-Arts de Paris and the Rijksmuseum in the Netherlands. His works have been collected by by institutions such as the Mus.e Cernuschi in Paris, the National Art Museum of China, the National Museum of History in Taipei, the Fubon Art Museum in Taipei, the Long Museum in Shanghai, the He Art Museum in Shunde, and the Deji Art Museum in Nanjing.
Address
Booth 3D21, Convention & Exhibition Centre, 1 Harbour Road, Wan Chai, Hong Kong, ChinaArtist
SanyuExhibition Dates
March 26 – 30, 2025Website
https://hdmgallery.comInstagram
https://www.instagram.com/hdm_galleryContact
d@hdmgallery.com
+86 10 5978 9320About HdM Gallery
Created in 2009 by Hadrien de Montferrand with the support of Laurent Dassault and Olivier Hervet, HdM Gallery specializes in all disciplines of contemporary art – painting, sculpture, video and installation – with a particular focus on Chinese artists. Based in Beijing, it opened a project space in Paris in 2021.
The gallery is dedicated to supporting recognized artists from different horizons; most of its Chinese artists are in the early stage of their career and the gallery promotes their work abroad. International artists on the other hand are more established and the gallery mainly attempts to raise awareness of their work in China.
Besides its normal exhibition program, HdM Gallery participates in art fairs in China and abroad including Art Basel Hong Kong, Art021 Shanghai, Art Brussels and Art Geneva, produces academic catalogues, and organizes institutional shows for its artists.
About Founders
Hadrien de Montferrand has long served as a bridge between the Art worlds of China and Europe. His more than seven years at various auction houses and Art institutions included roles as marketing director for ARTCURIAL, the largest French auction house, and for the Ullens Center for Contemporary Art in Beijing.
Laurent Dassault , an entrepreneur to the core, helped to found Arquana, continental Europe’ s leading horse auction house, in 2006. His entrepreneurial spirit extends to his charitable activities as well: Laurent serves as the administrator of the “Friends of Pompidou Museum’ s Association” in Paris, and heads the development committee for the auction house ARTCURIAL.
Olivier Hervet graduated with an MA in Classics from Oxford University in 2008. After working for Hadrien de Montferrand Gallery since its inception in 2009 where he developed the gallery’ s network of young collectors, he became a partner in 2012 with the goal of opening a second space in China.
(Text and images courtesy of HdM Gallery)
-

TARQ Presents 11th May 1980 Wedding Day by Saju Kunhan at Art Basel Hong Kong

Poster Credit: TARQ TARQ’s presentation for Art Basel Hong Kong 2025 includes new works by Saju Kunhan that delve specifically into familial archives and ancestral histories. Kunhan’s practice at large is an inquiry of the past through a personal lens, understanding history as a collection of memories. Employing a process of archival image transfer on recycled teak wood, he revitalises images from the past while highlighting alteration and manipulation as pertinent to the dissemination and formation of history.
‘11th May 1980 Wedding Day’ features black and white family photographs taken from a wedding album. The frozen stillness of the images is animated by adding a layer of painted colour which in the artist’s words is to “try to add some colour to their existence.”
The paint is applied to a digital print of the photograph, and subsequently transferred onto wood panels. This results in a complex, reverse layered image which is arranged consecutively across the walls of the booth, making it a host of painted memories brought to life. The revisitation of collective memories and myths are presented with care and dexterity for the viewers to pay attention to family histories that survive in splintered recollections and images.

11th May 1980 Wedding Day #2, 2024, Image transfer, acrylic colour, brass inlay and varnish on recycled teak wood, 84 x 60 inches, Set of 4 panels The base of each wooden panel features a grid of inlay brass. For Kunhan, brass inlay is often associated with recollections and historical representations through various temple or domestic objects. Furthermore, his use of inlay in these works generates grids and patterns that are linked to maps, locations, and divisions, tracing back to his larger body of work. The strategic use of these structures that are metaphorical references to the issues of migration and displacement are apparent in Kunhan’s visuals. The nature of recycled wood that has been subject to change, corrosion and decay over time adds another layer of felt time and the passage of it.
Using bright paint over image transfer is a significant departure for Kunhan. “Painting can reach where photography doesn’t. There are moments when I’m not happy with the picture that was taken.” His decision to work over photographic images is prompted by the urge to add something or even manipulate existing history, which he has explored only once earlier, in his work ‘Flipped Pages’, that explores a magazine archive. Considering the nature of time in photographs, he also attempts to shatter the idea of time through painted layers that dovetail between the past and present.

11th May 1980 Wedding Day #4, 2024, Image transfer, acrylic color, brass inlay and varnish on recycled teak wood, 84 x 60 inches, Set of 4 panels In this series, Kunhan’s move towards drawing from familial archives also marks his departure from his use of museum archives. The fragmented nature of family histories and experiences are connected thinly by the faculty of memory that is understood as the pillars of a structure that supports wider oral histories. Kunhan believes that an individual’s artistic response ought to stem from their emotions rather than their intellect.
In the catalogue essay of ‘Home Ground’, Kunhan’s solo presentation at TARQ in 2022, writer Skye Arundhati Thomas supports his reflections, “A family history is always representative of something much larger than itself: the social, political and cultural shifts experienced by the geography in which it is set engineers its sudden detours. Kunhan follows its routes; he is less interested in evidence that is materially traceable, and more in what lingers more ephemerally, more abstractly – in the senses, and in the small remembrances of the mind.”

11th May 1980 Wedding Day #1, 2024, Image transfer, acrylic color, brass inlay and varnish on recycled teak wood, 84 x 60 inches, Set of 4 panels Venue
TARQ | Booth 1C42 | Art Basel Hong Kong 2025Artist
Saju KunhanExhibition Dates
March 26 – 30, 2025Website
https://www.tarq.inInstagram
https://www.instagram.com/tarqmumbai/Contact
press@tarq.in
+91 9821332108About the Artist

Saju Kunhan (b. 1983) began his artistic training in his home state of Kerala, at the Government College of Fine Art, Thrissur. After receiving his Bachelor’s in Fine Arts, he went on to pursue his Master’s in Fine Arts in painting from the Sir J.J School of Art, Mumbai. In 2014, Kunhan received a Post-Graduate Diploma in Museology and Conservation from CSMVS Museum, Mumbai.
Kunhan had his second solo exhibition, Home Ground at TARQ, Mumbai in 2022 and his first solo exhibition, Stained Geographies at TARQ, Mumbai in 2017. He has been a part of exhibitions across the country. Some of his recent exhibitions of note are – Three Steps of Land at Rajiv Menon Contemoprary, Los Angeles (2024); In Our Veins Flow Ink and Fire, curated by Shubigi Rao, at the Kochi Muziris Biennale, Kochi (2022); Lokame Tharavadu, curated by Bose Krishnamachari in Alappuzha, Kerala (2021); Traversing Histories, curated by Jitha Karthikeyan at Artimis Cars, Chennai (2019); India Art Fair, represented by TARQ, Mumbai (2019); Mapping Frontiers, curated by Lina Vincent Sunish as part of the Krishnakriti Festival, Hyderabad (2018); Mattancherry, curated by Riyas Komu at URU Art Harbour, Kochi (2017); Young Subcontinent, curated by Riyas Komu at the Serendipity Arts Festival, Goa (2016); Scape & Scope, anniversary group show of TAO Art Gallery at Jehangir Art Gallery, Mumbai (2016); Liminal Affinities, the inaugural exhibition at Nine Fish Art Gallery, Mumbai (2015); The Deep Inside, two man show at Kalakriti Art Gallery, Hyderabad (2015); and Memento Mori, a group show at TARQ, Mumbai (2015).
He currently lives and works in Mumbai, India.
About TARQ
TARQ was founded in 2014 by Hena Kapadia on the values of creating a meaningful conversation around art and its myriad connotations and contexts. It was envisioned as something of a laboratory – an incubator for young contemporary artists which would work towards pushing the boundaries of how contemporary art in India is exhibited and perceived. TARQ’s youthful and experimental ethos encourages collectors, novice and seasoned alike, to approach art collecting through a perspective that marries thoughtfulness with an inquisitive eye for aesthetics and artistic processes.
Since its conception, TARQ has endeavoured to create a robust outreach program that ties in with the gallery’s exhibitions and overall raison d’être. The program is an amalgam of educational initiatives in the form of workshops, gallery walk-throughs and talks. Our intention is to engage with a diverse audience to develop an informed viewership for contemporary art in the future.
(Text and images courtesy of TARQ)
-

Kiang Malingue Presents Three Stories: Monsters, Opium, Time, a Solo Exhibition by Ho Tzu Nyen

Poster Credit: Kiang Malingue Kiang Malingue is pleased to present “Three Stories: Monsters, Opium, Time”, an exhibition of recent films and video installations by Ho Tzu Nyen. This is the esteemed artist’s second exhibition with Kiang Malingue, showcasing three independent bodies of work: “Night March of Hundred Monsters” (2021), O for Opium (2023), and a suite of more than forty “Timepieces” (2023). Timepieces was first shown at Ho’s recent mid-career survey show, Time & the Tiger at the Singapore Art Museum, which subsequently travelled to Art Sonje Center, Hessel Museum of Art, and Mudam Luxembourg – Musée d’Art Moderne Grand-Duc Jean, next to be shown at the Hamburger Kunsthalle in November 2025.
Known for critically reflecting upon the construction of history, myth, ideas and identities by working across a range of media in the past two decades, Ho continues to explore subjects as diverse as yōkai (monsters, demons, or spectres as they are known in Japan) and its intertwining with histories of Japanese Imperialism; the history of the opium trade; and the concept of time in particular manifestations. “Three Stories: Monsters, Opium, Time” is a structured exhibition that alludes to trailokya or the three realms, the religious division of the world into three domains: the netherworld, the earth, and heaven, allocated to the three-storied building of Kiang Malingue.

Ho Tzu Nyen ‘Three Stories: Monsters, Opium, Time’, Courtesy of Kiang Malingue In the place of the netherworld, “Night March of Hundred Monsters” is an ongoing project that is directly inspired by the Japanese folkloric tradition of envisioning a horde of monsters parading through nocturnal darkness. For the two “Night March of Hundred Monsters” video installations that are shown in a quasi-cinema setting made specifically for the exhibition, Ho has observed the tradition and compiled, in his signature style, an animated encyclopaedia of monsters in which each individual yōkai is carefully depicted. In his picture scroll, however, one sees not only legendary monsters such as the Kitsune (Fox Spirit), Kappa (River Sprite) or Tanuki (Raccoon Dog). A number of historical Japanese individuals who participated in the occupation of the Malayan Peninsula during World War II, including General Tomoyuki Yamashita and the wartime secret agent Yutaka Tani—both of whom were widely known as the Tiger of Malaya, have found their way into Ho’s bestiary. Ho further complicates the structure of the origin stories by identifying the monsters in historical events: The Illusionary Monk, for example, is identified as the many Japanese soldiers who metamorphosed into monks in the last days of World War II. Another fabled creature, Mokumokuren (Many Eyes of the Screen), is described as an analogy for the Thought Police in George Orwell’s 1984. These creatures remain firmly embedded in the everyday imagination, imputed into the realm of popular culture through Japanese media such as anime and manga.
In the second story, O for Opium, Ho revisits the history of the aestheticisation of opium and the opium trade, presenting an intricate image of the substance. The artist layers an array of visual materials atop each other: Archive footage of the opium trade in the Golden Triangle region; scenes from films in which opium plays a significant role, including Once Upon a Time in America (1984)and Rouge (1988); and an animated index of opium-related objects composed of smoke. These overlapping layers demonstrate the ambrosial, phantasmagorical effects of the substance, with history unfolding like a hazy, opiate-laced dream. First shown at the Thailand Biennale in 2023, O for Opium is a poignant treatise on the power, movement, and glorification of opium, a unique colonial instrument that helped shape the modern world.

Ho Tzu Nyen ‘Three Stories: Monsters, Opium, Time’, Exhibition view, Courtesy of Kiang Malingue The last story, which addresses the heterogeneous quality of time, consists of forty-three individual screen-based “Timepieces” that explore multiple temporalities. Co-commissioned by Singapore Art Museum, Art Sonje Center, and M+, in collaboration with Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo and Sharjah Art Foundation, the works are presented on customized screens that render time physical, testifying to time’s paradoxical materiality, elasticity, and relativity. Pondering time as an ethereal thing that is paradoxically all-encompassing, Ho also ensures that individual “Timepieces” are ontologically different: from one-second animated videos in an eternal loop, to applications—such as Perfect Lovers (Gonzalez-Torres) or C4 (Harrison’s Clock)—running on a 24-hour cycle that computationally corresponds to local time, fastened steadily to lived realities. The suite of “Timepieces” is an accompaniment to Ho’s major installation T for Time (2023), presently on view at Mudam Luxembourg, contemplating our contemporary experience of time as rooted in European concepts of linear progression, regulated by the Gregorian calendar, and networked by computers. Ho’s ambitious project raises the question of whether it is possible to reclaim the unassimilated experiences of time that were manifest in Southeast Asia prior to the influence of the West. As described by Ho: “In many ways, the challenge of this project was how the multiple can be composed, and how these different kinds of times can coexist without hierarchy and without collapsing into an empty pluralism.”
Opening Reception
Thursday, March 20, 2025 | 6 – 8 PMAddress
10 Sik On Street, Wanchai, Hong KongGallery Hours
Tuesday – Saturday | 12 PM – 6 PMArtist
Ho Tzu NyenExhibition Dates
March 20 – May 13, 2025Website
https://kiangmalingue.comInstagram
https://www.instagram.com/kiangmalingue/Contact
office@kiangmalingue.com
+852 28100317About Artist

A plethora of historical references dramatised by musical scores and allegorical lighting make up the pillars of Ho Tzu Nyen’s complex practice that primarily constitutes video and installation. Features in their own right, each work unravels unspoken layers of Southeast Asian histories whilst equally pointing to our own personal unknowns. Permeating Ho’s work is a pervasive sense of ambiguity, theatricality and unease, augmented by a series of deliberate literary, art historical and musical references.
Ho Tzu Nyen has been widely exhibited with one person exhibitions at Mudam, Luxembourg (2025), CCS Bard, New York (2024), Art Sonje Center, Seoul (2024), Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo, Tokyo (2024), Singapore Art Museum, Singapore (2023), Hammer Museum, Los Angeles (2022), the Yamaguchi Centre for Arts and Media, Yamaguchi (2021), Edith-Russ-Haus for Media Art, Oldenburg (2019), Kunstverein, Hamburg (2018), Ming Contemporary Art Museum, Shanghai (2018), TPAM, Yokohama (2018), Asia Art Archive (2017), Guggenheim Museum, Bilbao (2015), Mori Art Museum, Tokyo (2012) and Artspace, Sydney (2011), amongst others. He also represented Singapore at the 54th Venice Biennale (2011). Recent group exhibitions include Whitney Biennial 2024, New York (2024), Thailand Biennale 2023, Chiang Rai (2023), Palais de Tokyo, Paris (2022), Kadist Art Foundation, San Francisco (2022), 13th Gwangju Biennale, Gwangju (2021), Museum of Contemporary Art Busan, Busan (2019), Aichi Triennial 2019, Toyota City and Nagoya City (2019), Home Work 8, Beirut (2019), Sharjah Biennial 14, Sharjah (2019), Gwangju Biennale, Gwangju (2018), National Gallery Singapore, Singapore (2018), Dhaka Art Summit 2018, Dhaka (2018), Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Berlin (2017), Guggenheim Museum, New York (2016), Queensland Art Gallery / Gallery of Modern Art, Brisbane (2016), Times Museum, Guangzhou (2013), and Witte de With, Rotterdam (2012). He has participated in numerous international film festivals including Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah (2012) and the 41st Directors’ Fortnight at the Cannes International Film Festival in France (2009). He was an Artist-in-Residency at the DAAD (Berlin) from 2015 to 2016, and the Asia Art Archive, Hong Kong (2012 to 2015).
(Text and images courtesy of Kiang Malingue)
-

Soluna Fine Art Presents The Korean Narrative: Layers of Korean Aesthetics, a Group Exhibition by Korean Contemporary Artists

Poster Credit: Soluna Fine Art Soluna Fine Art proudly presents The Korean Narrative: Layers of Korean Aesthetics, a group exhibition featuring six prominent Korean contemporary artists: Choi Young-Wook, Ha Tae-Im, Kim Duck-Yong, Kim Hyun-Sik, Kim Keun-Tai, and Woo Jong-Taek. Curated in collaboration with esteemed curator Dr. Ahn Hyun-Jung, this exhibition draws inspiration from her acclaimed book “Layers of Korean Beauty”, exploring the depth of Korean art and offers profound insights into the nation’s rich cultural tapestry. Viewers are invited to experience diverse artistic expressions that reflect timeless themes of harmony, craftsmanship, and nature, which are central to Korean aesthetics and cultural heritage.
Choi Young-Wook explores themes of memory and communication, using his paintings as vessels for both personal and universal narratives, with the Moon Jar as a central symbol that fosters silent dialogues about shared human experiences. His portrayal of the Moon Jar is characterized by an emphasis on ‘bing-ryeol,’ the delicate ice crack patterns on its surface, which symbolize the karmic relationships and encounters in life. Through his art, Choi invites viewers to embark on journeys of self-discovery, serving as reminders of our past and reflecting how we navigate and embrace life’s joys and sorrows.

The Korean Narrative: Layers of Korean Aesthetics, Exhibition view, Courtesy of Soluna Fine Art Through meticulous layering techniques, Ha Tae-Im applies vibrant color bands over a foundational hue, creating dynamic compositions that contrast with the rigidity of geometric abstraction and evoke a sense of fluidity. Ha’s ongoing series, “Un Passage”, exemplifies her exploration of communication through color, as these bands interact to forge harmonious relationships and evoke emotional resonance. Ha’s art underscores the profound ability of color to convey meaning beyond words, inviting viewers into a sensory experience that deeply engages their emotions.
Inspired by the Goryeo period’s Najeon inlay techniques, Kim Duck-Yong is renowned for his sublime portrayals of nature’s beauty using mother-of-pearl and ancient wood. Incorporating the concept of “Borrowed Scenery,” a traditional East Asian design principle that integrates background landscapes into interior compositions, Kim harmoniously blends oceanic scenery with the architecture, creating interchangeable objects and subjects. Kim’s works ultimately emphasize the transcendental connection between nature and humanity—a synergistic ecology of the universe.
Kim Hyun-Sik transforms resin into vibrant, tactile works that challenge conventional definitions of painting and sculpture. Through the meticulous layering of epoxy resin, carving, and applying acrylic to create intricate flat sculptures, each of his works establishes a dynamic interplay of color and shade that invites viewers to explore a mysterious depth within the flat dimension. Kim’s works consistently delve into the themes of the seen and unseen, leading audiences to travel beyond the lines, see past the plane, and reflect on their innermost thoughts.

The Korean Narrative: Layers of Korean Aesthetics, Exhibition view, Courtesy of Soluna Fine Art Employing organic earth elements, Kim Keun-Tai’s work focuses on seeking the true definition of the origin of the material. Through a meticulous process of kneading and pouring diluted stone powder onto the canvas, he tilts the surface to allow the medium to flow freely. Kim creates an interplay between control and autonomy, enabling the material to express itself and co-create the artwork. His works serve as vessels for expressing the profound relationship between humanity and nature, inviting viewers to contemplate both the visual and deeper significance of the materials.
Renowned for his contemporary approach to traditional Korean ink painting, Woo Jong-Taek creates dynamic compositions characterized by a reduced color palette and bold brush strokes. Employing a blend of ink sticks, charcoal powder, rosin, and white clay, Woo captures the essence of nature through powerful and expressive gestures in his creative process. His paintings serve as a meditation on the essence of nature and the universe, posing questions about the origins of mankind and the world, and inviting viewers to reflect on the harmony between nature and human existence.
Opening Reception
Thursday, March 20, 2025 | 4 – 8 PMAddress
Soluna Fine Art, GF, 52 Sai Street, Sheung Wan, Hong KongGallery Hours
Tuesday – Saturday | 10 AM – 6 PMArtist
Choi Young-Wook, Ha Tae-Im, Kim Duck-Yong, Kim Hyun-Sik, Kim Keun-Tai, and Woo Jong-TaekCurator
Dr. Ahn Hyun-JungExhibition Dates
March 20 – May 17, 2025Website
https://www.solunafineart.comInstagram
https://www.instagram.com/solunafineart/Contact
+852 2955 5166
bess@solunafineart.comAbout the Artists
Ahn Hyun-Jung holds a Master’s degree in Sociology from Yonsei University, as well as a Master’s degree in Art History and a Ph.D. in Art Philosophy from Sungkyunkwan University. She is currently the head of the curatorial department at the Sungkyunkwan University Museum and an adjunct professor at Yonsei University’s Graduate School of Public Administration. Ahn has made regular appearances on cultural programs on major channels such as KBS, SBS, and EBS, and she has written columns for various news outlets, including the Dong-A Ilbo and the Korean Bar Association Newspaper. Her books, including The Gaze of Modernity: The Joseon Art Exhibition and Popular Art and Cultural Contents, demonstrate her extensive knowledge of the Korean art scene. Ahn has participated in numerous significant curatorial projects, including “Munjado from the Joseon Dynasty” at Hyundai Gallery. She is currently a member of the judging panel for the Haindoo Art Award, a public art advisory committee member for the Shinsegae Starfield Library, and an advisor for Art Space Seochon.
Choi Young-Wook (b. 1964 in Seoul, Korea) graduated from Hongik University in Seoul with a B.F.A. in Painting and an M.F.A. Over the past decade, Choi has devoted his efforts to mastering the moon jar as an art form. While his technique produces a strikingly lifelike effect on his subject matter, Choi’s ultimate objective is not merely to replicate the image of the porcelain vessel. His technique and style have evolved to connect East Asian tradition with the expressive methods of Western modern painting. Under Choi’s brush, the historic Joseon moon jar transcends space and time, becoming modern and relevant to us once again. Choi’s works are featured in both private collections and museums, including the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, National Museum of Contemporary Art, Gyeonggi Museum of Contemporary Art, and Philadelphia Museum of Art, among others.
Ha Tae-Im (b. 1973 in Korea) received her Ph.D. in Fine Arts from Hong-Ik University in Korea following her education in France. Ha’s series “Un Passage” explores communication through colour, illustrating the harmonious relationships that evoke emotional resonance. The dynamic colour bands of translucent colour over foundational hues created through the artist’s gestures generate a unique interplay between planes and voids, conjuring a rhythmic visual language. Ha has participated in numerous exhibitions domestically and internationally in Seoul, New York and more. Her works are in prestigious corporate and private collections, including the Seoul Museum of Art, Monaco Museum of Contemporary Art, Samsung Electronics and LG Electronics.
Kim Duck-Yong (b. 1961) was born in Gwangju, Korea, and received his B.F.A. and M.F.A. from the Department of Painting at Seoul National University in Korea. His artistic practice integrates both traditional and contemporary elements. Kim follows the tradition of oriental paintings by using ancient wood as his canvas, which allows the viewer to sense the warmth of nature through minor details. Kim primarily explores the contemporary mechanics of Korean society by highlighting the importance of traditional materials and painting key iconographies that echo with his heritage. His works reveal the change of time with its attribute of intergenerational transience that overarches old and new histories. With works included in important institutional collections in Korea such as the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Seoul Museum of Art, Park Soo-Keun Museum, and Gyeonggi Museum of Art, Kim has been recognized as one of the established artists among the Korean art scene.
Kim Hyun-Sik (b. 1965) was born in Sancheong, Korea and received his BFA in painting from Hongik University in Seoul. Known for his innovative approach to monochromatic paintings, Kim repeats the process of marking resinous panel with fine parallel lines to create crests and troughs and fills the grooves with paint, creating interplay of colours on his abstract works to explore the themes of emptiness and the philosophical implications of void and nothingness. He exhibited domestically in Seoul and internationally, including London, Beijing and more. Kim also participated in over 80 group exhibitions. His works are in museums and private collections, notably National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Korea and K11 Collection.
Kim Keun-Tai (b. 1953) was born in Seoul, Korea and he graduated from Chung-Ang University in Seoul. Kim had his first solo exhibition in 1988, and he has since had works exhibited both at home and overseas: Germany, Japan, Vietnam, Hong Kong and the US. While he is often associated with the Dansaekhwa (monochrome painting) movement, through deep philosophical and aesthetic research he has always sought to go beyond the conceptual limits. At a time when his contemporaries were primarily preoccupied with making figuration known as hyper-realism, the young artists’ attempt to reverse the older generation’s abstract art: Kim showed more of an affinity towards Dansaekhwa. Kim’s work has been presented in galleries and museums including Korea’s Chosun Ilbo Art Museum, Germany’s Galerie Konrad Munter and Hong Kong’s Whitestone Gallery. His works are collected by Sungkok Art Museum, PyeongChang Organizing Committee for the 2018 Olympic & Paralympic Winter Games and KEB Hana Bank.
Woo Jong-Taek (b. 1973 in Yongin, Korea) received his B.F.A. and M.F.A. in Oriental Paintings from Chung Ang University. Woo also completed a doctorate program in Sungshin Women’s University and is currently a professor of Korean Painting in Incheon National University. Woo captures the essence of nature through powerful and expressive gestures employing a blend of ink sticks, charcoal powder, rosin, and white clay in his works. His paintings serve as a meditation on the essence of nature and the universe, posing questions about the origins of humankind and the world. Since 2005 his works have been shown in both domestic and international exhibitions, including in Hamburg, Seoul, and Daegu. Woo’s works are in institutions and corporations, including the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art.
About Soluna Fine Art
Soluna Fine Art is a gallery specializing in contemporary fine art and craft. Our mission is to revitalize multicultural aesthetics and philosophy by showcasing exquisite works by established and emerging artists with traditional values in contemporary dialogue. Works by artists represented by Soluna Fine Art can be found in private collections and institutions worldwide. Our annual program includes exhibitions, fairs, educational initiatives, and multi-disciplinary collaborations on an international level.
(Text and images courtesy of Soluna Fine Art)
-

WKM Gallery Presents Embodied Perspectives, a Group Exhibition by Six Contemporary Japanese Painters

Poster Credit: WKM Gallery From 22 March to 3 May 2025, WKM Gallery is delighted to present Embodied
Perspectives, a group exhibition featuring six contemporary Japanese painters:
Soh Souen, Iori Nagashima, Koji Yamaguchi, Jun Tsunoda, Kohei Yamada, and Momo Yoshino. Though diverse in context and style, ranging from minimal abstraction to detailed figuration, each of these artists share a similar goal: the desire to connect with the physical world around them through the act of painting.Embodied Perspectives showcases paintings that highlight the body’s visceral
experience of the world; both the artist’s, as well as the viewer’s. Iori Nagashima and Soh Souen’s intimate depictions of the human body offer perhaps the most direct interpretation of this idea. Nagashima’s smartphone snapshot-like paintings of casual moments, depicted in muted colors, convey the warm, dull happiness of relationships that carry us through the mundane, while Souen’s feathery pointillist close-ups of lips, ears, and various body parts emit an almost dream-like quality, like fragmented renders of vivid, private memories.
Iori Nagashima, Untitled, 2025, Oil on canvas, 41 x 27.3 x 2 cm Koji Yamaguchi shares the figurative approach of Nagashima and Souen, but he does not depict other people; rather, he depicts the nature around him, particularly in Kawasaki and Tokyo, from his viewpoint as a skateboarder. The blurred landscapes, as seen from Yamaguchi’s viewpoint as he skates by, may lack people, but we can still feel their presence (abandoned blue construction tarps, flattened shrubbery) and absence (neglected and overgrown weeds, layers of dust and dirt collecting on the untouched tarps). The viewer is also made to feel a sense of movement and speed in their own body, as the painting allows them to vicariously see through Yamaguchi’s eyes.
Jun Tsunoda shares Yamaguchi’s interest in nature, and Nagashima and Souen’s
desire for connection to the world. The combination of these two things can describe the motivation for his “Black Plants” series, which are on display in this exhibition. Tsunoda, however, takes a very different visual approach from the others, utilising elements of abstraction to explore his somewhat spiritual relation to nature. Inspired by his move to the countryside of Yamanashi in the late 1980s, Tsunoda employs traditional Japanese lacquer and shikkui (lime plaster) to create “primitive” and graphical depictions of plant life, representing his curiosity in the unique life forces of each plant.
Jun Tsunoda, Trio, 2025, Acrylic, Japanese lacquer, oil pastel and plaster on wooden panel, 65.2 x 53 cm Momo Yoshino and Kohei Yamada take the elements of abstraction in Tsunoda’s works and push them to the next level, almost departing from figuration – but not completely. Yoshino pares down colour and shape to create simple but clever optical illusions, which deceptively appear as three-dimensional reliefs reminiscent of origami, the Japanese art of paper-folding. Yoshino’s works heighten the viewer’s awareness of their own body and its position in relation to the artwork, creating a dynamic interplay between perception and physicality. Yamada’s abstract colour fields evoke a similar effect. The meticulously layered colours, which Yamada describes as a process of “hiding backgrounds,” create a sense of depth that draws the viewer in. The result is a spatial experience that brings the viewer back into awareness of their own body thus bringing the exhibition back full circle.
The distinct styles of each artist, when put together, spotlight the uniqueness of their approaches even as they share similar aims. These six artists not only showcase the rich diversity of contemporary Japanese painting, but also illuminate its promising future.
Opening Reception
Saturday, March 22, 2025 | 3 – 8 PMAddress
20/F, Coda Designer Centre, 62 Wong Chuk Hang Road, Hong KongGallery Hours
Tuesday – Saturday | 11:00 AM – 7:00 PMArtist
Soh Souen, Iori Nagashima, Koji Yamaguchi, Jun Tsunoda, Kohei Yamada, and Momo YoshinoExhibition Dates
March 22 – May 3, 2025Website
https://www.wkm.galleryInstagram
https://www.instagram.com/wkmgallery/Contact
info@wkm.galleryAbout WKM Gallery
Founded by William Kayne Mukai in 2023, WKM Gallery is a vibrant and innovative art space in Hong Kong.
With a unique background combining French and Japanese heritage, William is committed to fostering cultural connections and promoting artists globally. The gallery serves as a platform for both emerging and established artists, encouraging creativity and cultural exchange. Initially focusing on connecting Japan and Hong Kong, William now aims to weave art from around the world into the dynamic Hong Kong art scene.
The design of the gallery seamlessly merges Japanese architectural elements with the industrial ambiance of Wong Chuk Hang. Embracing the concept of “ma” (間), which represents the space between elements and serves as a threshold between viewer and art, the gallery aspires to provide viewers with a richer aesthetic experience and a personal connection with the artwork.
(Text and images courtesy of WKM Gallery)
-

Cub_ism_ Artspace Presents ZHENG Lanxiong’s Solo Project “Closet Space” at Art Central Hong Kong 2025

2025 Hong Kong Art Central, Exhibition view, Courtesy of Cub_ism_ Artspace Cub_ism_ Artspace is pleased to announce the participation in 2025 Hong Kong Art Central and will present artist ZHENG Lanxiong’s solo project “Closet Space”at Booth B11.
Closet, the most paradoxical container in human experience, guards privacy while suggesting openness. In The Poetics of Space, Bachelard reveals the paradox of closed space: the locking closet guards the secret, while the presence of the locking hole suggests a latent desire to be opened. As a kind of ‘sentimental’ fine furniture, the space of each partition in the closet is at once juxtaposed with the real space and, in a compressed form, holds the fragments of memory excluded from the daily order.
This exhibition opens to the audience Zheng Lanxiong’s ‘Closet Space’, in which more than a dozen paintings on board and stone clay are displayed, presenting Zheng Lanxiong’s individual memories and artistic explorations. The moment the door opens and closes, the camphor breath wraps around the dust rising from the sunlight, a hidden invitation from the private sphere to the public space.
Zheng Lanxiong’s creations continue to be a tug of war between the body and the layers of colours. While the viewer tries to capture the colours of his paintings with their eyes, the images push the perception into the realm of subtle emotions —— the slight uneasiness of the spider crawling over the palm of your hand, the warmth of a hand protecting a candle flame, the pain of an electric current at the moment of a needle piercing the earlobe, the taste of iron licked by the tongue when extracting the wisdom teeth…The visual ambiguity that the image ultimately presents is precisely the native state of the body’s experience.
The artist’s work is time-consuming and labour-intensive. He is used to using tempera to stack layers on wooden boards, with each layer of colour pigment fixed as an absolute time coordinate at the moment of solidification of the medium; and the pressure of fingerprints and scratches of tools absorbed by the stone clay sculptures during the shaping stage are all endowed with the artist’s emotional fluctuations at the moment of creation. Thus, through the presentation of each cabinet, the viewer can see a small piece of the artist’s ‘individual experience’, and find a sense of déjà vu in the painting; but in fact, for Zheng Lanxiong, each piece of fragmented memory is only a small piece of himself.
Venue
Booth B11, 6/F, 8 Queen’s Road East, Wan Chai, Hong Kong, ChinaArtist
Zheng LanxiongCurator
Qinru ZhouExhibition Dates
March 25 – March 30, 2025Website
https://en.cubismartspace.comInstagram
https://www.instagram.com/cub_ism_artspace
Contact
info@cubism-artspace.comAbout the artist
Born in 1996 in Ningde, Fujian Province, Zheng Lanxiong graduated from the Mural Painting Department of the China Academy of Art as both an undergraduate and a postgraduate, and now lives in Changzhou. His works are collected by the Sydney White Rabbit Gallery and the CAA Art Museum.
Zheng Lanxiong takes the emotional connection between the individual and the image when viewing as the entry point of his creation, emphasising on the expression of personal life experiences, emotions and memories in the picture.Starting from people or things in daily life, he intercepts the fragmented parts through his personalised perspective, trying to grasp a certain subtle atmosphere, state and mood in the process of covering and recreating the paintings of Tempera.
About the gallery
Cub_ism_ Artspace was established in Shanghai in 2020 and is located in an Art Deco style heritage architecture in the core area of The Bund. Jointly founded by three post – 90s who have backgrounds in curating and literary writing, “curatorial language” is our priority. Cub_ism_ Artspace introduces inspiring emerging artists to the world. We focus on individual practices and expressions of artists from different backgrounds, especially young artists. While engaging in the Chinese contemporary art ecosystem, we also actively participate in art fairs and projects overseas.
Cub_ism_ Artspace will launch “Site Site” in 2025. As a Focused, Flowing and Ongoing Curatorial Project, “Site Site” plans to present exhibitions focusing on “site-specific” in different regions and will have its first project in London.
We think that the contemporary art, as an experience collection of historical records, emotional expressions and academic research, has the power to influence human spirituality and social morality; we firmly believe “ART WILL STAY”.
(Text and images courtesy of Cub_ism_ Artspace)
-

Highlights of Visionaries and Contemporary Art, Johyun Gallery at Art Basel Hong Kong 2025

Art Basel Hong Kong 2025, Exhibition view, Courtesy of Johyun Gallery Johyun Gallery will be participating in Art Basel Hong Kong 2025, which will be held from 26 to 30 March 2025 at the Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre. Established as Asia’s leading international art fair, it will feature 240 galleries from 42 countries and regions, and Johyun Gallery will be placed in the Galleries sector. In the Kabinett sector, Johyun Gallery will be presenting curated exhibitions of Kim Hong Joo and Kwon Dae Sup, while the main booth will showcase works by established figures such as Park Seo-Bo, Lee Bae, Kim Chong Hak, Claude Viallat, and Kishio Suga. In addition, contemporary paintings by leading contemporary artists such as Bosco Sodi, Lee Kwang Ho, Kang Kang Hoon, Jo Jong Sung, and Ahn Jisan will also be on show.
Johyun Gallery is pleased to present Kim Hong Joo and Kwon Dae Sup in the Kabinett sector of ABHK 2025. Kim Hong Joo is one of the most important artists in the history of Korean contemporary art who has consistently explored the fundamental possibilities of painting, and his practice is characterised by his painterly exploration of natural imagery such as flowers and foliage on large plain canvases, experimenting with the inherent dissonance between the physical reality and the pictorial image. Kim was featured in the ‘Lineages: Korean Art at The Met’ exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York last year. Kwon Dae Sup is known for his contemporary recontextualization of the traditional Korean ceramic style of moon jar, examining the liminal space between minimalism and complete abstraction in the simple form of the moon jar. This exhibition will highlight the formal restraint and depth of thought of both artists, foregrounding the meditative and introspective sensibility inherent in their art. Johyun Gallery_Seoul will also host a dual exhibition by Chung Chang-Sup and Kwon Dae Sup from 6 March, offering an in-depth engagement with Kwon’s nuanced realm of white porcelain.

Kim Hong Joo, Untitled, late 2010s, Acrylic on canvas , 226.5 x 227 cm The main gallery booths will firstly be occupied by Korean contemporary art masters Park Seo-Bo, Lee Bae and Kim Chong Hak, whose distinctive formal experiments have established the uniqueness of Korean contemporary art. Park Seo-Bo is a representative of the Korean monochrome painting movement, and the art fair will present his seminal Ecriture series, encompassing both chromatic and ceramic methodologies. Along with the coloured Ecriture, which are characterised by a pale lavender hue, his ceramic Ecriture, realized through kiln-fired clay rather than traditional Hanji (Korean traditional paper), will also be introduced. The adoption of ceramics as a medium enables the artist to attain heightened chromatic vibrancy, surpassing that of his earlier works on Hanji and is considered an important attempt to expand Park’s artistic experimentation. In February, Lee Bae culminated his official collateral exhibition at the 2024 Venice Biennale with a traditional Moon House Burning ceremony in Chungdo, South Korea. At ABHK, Lee will unveil a curated selection of his most emblematic works, including his Issu du Feu series. In addition to his Brushstroke Sculpture and Brushstroke paintings, which recontextualize the profound darkness of traditional ink paintings through the intrinsic materiality of charcoal, his practice embodies the gestural dynamism of brushstrokes through sculptural articulation, he explores the fundamental properties of charcoal, revealing the sculptural qualities of the intersection of matter and spirit, time and space. Kim Chong Hak is well known for his original style of painting, which straddles the line between abstract and figurative. In addition to the ‘White Series’, which resembles the snow of Seorak Mountain, Kim will present works depicting wildflowers, butterflies, and birds from Korean nature. These works offer a contemporary reinterpretation of the concept of Ki-Woon-Saeng-Dong (氣韻生動), which encapsulates the dynamic vitality inherent in East Asian painting traditions, conveying a distinctly Korean sensibility through vivid chromaticity and gestural fluidity. Kim will hold a solo exhibition at the High Museum in Atlanta, USA, in April 2025, and another solo exhibition at Johyun Gallery in Busan in June.

Kwon Dae Sup, Moon Jar, 2024, White porcelain, 54 x 54 x 58cm The presentation also reveals the distinctive material explorations of internationally renowned artists. Claude Viallat, a pivotal figure in the avant-garde collective Support/Surface, investigates the interplay of chance and spontaneity through the permeation and diffusion of paint across diverse substrates. His signature textile compositions will be featured at Johyun Gallery’s presentation. Kishio Suga, a seminal figure of the Mono-ha movement, interrogates the inherent tensions between space and materiality, and has persistently challenged formal conventions through the innovative deployment of diverse materials. Two of his Assemblages will be on display at the fair. Kishio Suga is slated for a solo exhibition at Dia Beacon, New York, in July. Bosco Sodi, renowned for his articulation of the wabi-sabi aesthetics of imperfection through rugged surfaces and richly textured relief paintings, will unveil a selection of ten works at the fair.
In addition, Recent works from Kang Kang Hoon’s ‘Cotton’ series will be showcased. His works transcend mere representation, functioning as intermediaries that evoke emotional resonance in the viewer. Kang will hold a solo exhibition at Johyun Gallery_Seoul, commencing on 30 April. In addition, Ahn Jisan will unveil two new paintings that interrogate the liminal space between life and death, articulating its inherent anxieties through a narrative collage technique. Lee Kwang Ho, renowned for his hyperrealist approach, will introduce his Wetland series, where fluid and gestural abstraction is employed to evoke a tactile sensibility. Jo Jong Sung will present Landscape Seen from Moving Perspective, a contemporary interpretation of traditional Korean painting from a moving perspective. Additionally, he will participate in the post-Art Basel Hong Kong exhibition, <From Korea to Hong Kong: Korean Visions>, hosted by the Hong Kong Cultural Center from 3 April to 30 May.
Opening Hours
March 26 12:00 – 15:00 (VIP First Choice) 15:00 – 20:00 (VIP Preview)
March 27 12:00 – 16:00 (VIP Days)
March 28 12:00 – 16:00 (VIP Days) 14:00 – 20:00 (Public Days)
March 29 11:00 – 19:00 (Public Days)
March 30 12:00 – 18:00 (Public Days)Address
ART BASEL HONG KONG 2025_ Booth IB29, Convention & Exhibition Centre 1 Harbour Road Wan Chai Hong Kong, ChinaArtist
Park Seo-Bo, Lee Bae, Kim Chong Hak, Kwon Dae Sup, Kim Hong Joo, Claude Viallat, Kishio Suga, Bosco Sodi, Lee Kwang Ho, Kang Kang Hoon, Jo Jong Sung, Ahn JisanExhibition Dates
March 26 – March 30, 2025Website
https://www.johyungallery.comInstagram
https://www.instagram.com/johyungallery/Contact
+82 051 747 8853
press@johyungallery.com(Text and images courtesy of Johyun Gallery)
-

Tang Contemporary Art Presents Asynchronous Affinities, a Solo Exhibition by Thai Artist Gongkan

Poster Credit: Tang Contemporary Art Tang Contemporary Art is excited to present the solo exhibition Asynchronous Affinities by renowned Thai artist Gongkan at the Wong Chuk Hang space in Hong Kong from March 22 to May 14, 2025.
Asynchronous Affinities marks a new phase in Gongkan’s creative practice, exploring displacement to challenge social norms, cultural codifications, and moral values while nurturing transcultural interconnections and individual development. The exhibition invites viewers to explore the poetics of in-between frontiers, gaps, and links across cultures and generations, as well as the interstices of sexual and gender diversities.
The initial impulse of this solo show relates to the concept of “Right Person / Wrong Time”, reflecting misaligned affinities. As a Thai artist with Chinese cultural roots facing global discrimination and social changes, Gongkan aims to engage audiences in introspection about personal and collective emotions, expanding possibilities for individual and social relations.
Gongkan’s creations combine ambiguous social situations—celebrating, crying, polluting, dining—generating narratives rich with contradictions and paradoxes. For example, a majestic golden Thai temple prang tops a silver unidentified object in black cosmic space, and a birthday cake transforms into a smoke-polluting factory. His art offers visitors various ways to experience struggles related to oppression and isolation while fostering altruistic relationships.

Private Hot Springs, 2025, Acrylic on canvas, 100 x 150 cm Gongkan has developed a unique oeuvre depicting a boy as a representation of himself alongside multi-gendered and multiracial figures passing through teleportation holes, creating interconnections between dreamlike cosmic spaces, cross-cultural contexts, and natural elements. His “teleport art” has gained international recognition, featuring striking minimal patterns, simplified figures, and a subtle color palette. Spherical shapes—like planetary rings, rainbows, and balloons—serve as contact zones and fields of energy, expressing resistance, sadness, eroticism, and criticality.
Gongkan’s painting technique layers deep, transitioning colors and pushing painting to its limits. This approach makes tangible the paradoxical experience of a deep virtual imaginary that feels real and profound while also transforming daily life into an extraordinary journey.
In dialogue with his paintings, Gongkan created a trans-mutating assemblage of human and non-human components, such as a Buddha hand with a robotic arm holding a rose. These elements are linked through teleportation holes, presenting a whole transitioning entity rather than mere anatomy.

Non-Traditional Recipe, 2025, Acrylic on canvas, 100 x 100 cm Expanding his artistic exploration of social and cultural critique, Gongkan has conceived a new installation featuring a Chinese table with a motorized center tray and culinary utensils for presenting “dishes” made of artifacts that reflect our consumption society: fast fashion clothes knotted like a bun, noodles made from magazine strips, and stacked CDs resembling Peking duck wraps. Through this unexpected installation, Gongkan raises profound questions about Asynchronous Affinities that affect individuals and profoundly impact people’s lives amid cultural and economic growth, gaps, clashes, overlaps, and interrelations. Like many Thai people, Gongkan has deep Chinese roots from the Teo Chew community. Such transcultural links are vital for understanding the complexity of cultural diversities and the paths for young Asian generations to navigate their lives while addressing family and cultural gaps, gender differences, and rapid economic and digital growth in pan-Asian and global contexts.
The touching video Confinements to Expectation (2020) will also be shown, depicting the artist cutting ropes that tie him to his father, evoking complex emotional responses of bond, trust, and separation.
In Gongkan’s art, shapes and colors serve as transformative components, allowing practices of passage and transition. They refer to suspended planets, crying eyes, or fluffy cakes, acting as “contact zones” traversed by intimate emotions and power dynamics.
Gongkan, rather than promoting fixed identities and stereotypes about who “I am” or “who I have to be”, is creating and sharing a daring and generous “art of becoming”.
WITH… you ~ people ~ bonds ~ heart ~ cultures ~ sex ~ nature ~ infinity ~ love…
OUT… of limits / frontiers / space / codes / time / identity / walls / exclusion…
Fusion Cuisine, 2025, Acrylic on canvas, 100 x 100 cm Opening Reception
Saturday, March 22, 2025 | 3 – 6 PMAddress
Unit 2003-08, 20/F, Landmark South, 39 Yip Kan Street, Wong Chuk Hang, Hong KongGallery Hours
Tuesday – Saturday | 11:00 AM – 7:00 PMArtist
GongkanCurator
Larys FrogierExhibition Dates
March 22 – May 14, 2025Website
https://www.tangcontemporary.comInstagram
https://www.instagram.com/tangcontemporaryart/Contact
info@tangcontemporary.com.hkAbout Artist
GONGKAN
b. 1989, ThailandGraduating from Kasetsart University Laboratory School in 2007 and from Silpakorn University, Faculty of Decorative Arts, in 2011, Kantapon Metheekul, better known as Gongkan, currently works and resides in Bangkok, Thailand. After graduating from Silpakorn University, the artist moved to New York City, where he spent 3 years working in the creative departments of advertising agencies. In his spare time, he created street art and illustrations centered on the idea of him being transported through time and space to his homeland. Gongkan’s work, which he named “Teleport Art”, gained notoriety in the New York street art scene and later in Bangkok. The element of time is a predominant concept in Gongkan’s paintings: a surrealistic realm populated with peculiar portals and human figures in groups or isolation, realized with graphic flatness. Despite the serenity fostered by the soft color palette and smooth application, the atmosphere is occasionally disrupted by the sharp incision of black on the canvas. Through presenting different visions of the present times or rewriting the past, the artist creates alternate realities in the process.
His selected and recent solo exhibitions include “Total Eclipse of the Heart”, X Museum Beijing, (China, 2024); “No Heart Here”, Pingshan Art Museum, Shenzhen, (China, 2024); “No Heart Here”, MOCA Bangkok, Bangkok, (Thailand, 2024); “Monsters in You”, Over the Influence, Los Angeles (US, 2023); “Public but Private”, Tang Contemporary Art, Seoul (Korea, 2023); “Inner Place” Tang Contemporary Art, Beijing (China, 2022); “Gongkan: For Someone Who Hates the Rainbow”, Over the Influence, Paris (France, 2022); “Introspection”, Tang Contemporary Art, Bangkok (Thailand, 2021); “Tip of the Iceberg”, Over the Influence, Los Angeles (US, 2021); “Yestertedaytomorrow”, River City Bangkok, Bangkok (Thailand, 2019), etc. Selected group exhibitions include: “Post-me Generation: How to write about young artists”, Tang Contemporary Art, Beijing (China, 2022); “Group show: Falling”, Tang Contemporary Art, Beijing (China, 2022); “Art Macao: Macao International Art Biennale 2021”, Macao Museum of Art (Macao, 2021); “Retrospective Utopia”, Tang Contemporary Art, Bangkok (Thailand, 2020); “Pollution”, River City Bangkok, Bangkok (Thailand, 2020), etc.
About Tang Contemporary Art
Tang Contemporary Art was established in 1997 in Bangkok, later establishing galleries in Beijing, Hong Kong, and most recently in South Korea and Singapore. The gallery is fully committed to producing critical projects and exhibitions to promote contemporary art regionally and worldwide, also encouraging a dynamic exchange between artists and those abroad. Acting as one of the most progressive and critically driven exhibition spaces in Asia, the gallery strives to initiate dialogue between artists, curators, collectors, and institutions working both locally and internationally. A roster of groundbreaking exhibitions has earned them international recognition, establishing their status as a pioneer of the contemporary art scene in Asia.
Acting as one of the most progressive and leading galleries in Asia, Tang Contemporary Art represents numerous internationally renowned artists, including Ai Weiwei, Huang Yongping, Adel Abdessemed, Joana Vasconcelos, Julio Le Parc, Chun Kwangyoung, Sakarin Krue-on, Heri Dono, and etc. The gallery also cooperates with numerous established artists of diverse nationalities and prominence like Nam June Paik, Michelangelo Pistoletto, Niki de Saint Phalle, and AES+F and strives to promote emerging artists including Zhao Zhao, Jonas Burgert, Jigger Cruz, and more.
Tang Contemporary Art has also attended numerous art fairs each year to promote its represented artists globally, including Art Basel Hong Kong, Frieze New York, Expo Chicago, The Armory Show, Art Geneve, KIAF, Taipei Dangdai, Shanghai Westbund, and more to encourage a dynamic exchange between Chinese artists and those abroad.
(Text and images courtesy of Tang Contemporary Art)



