• 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)


  • Magician Space Presents Bug, a Solo Exhibition by Guo Cheng

    Magician Space Presents Bug, a Solo Exhibition by Guo Cheng

    Poster Credit: Magician Space

    In 1947, operators discovered a moth trapped between the relays of the Harvard Mark II computer during a system malfunction. This incident is remembered as the most famous “bug” in early computing history. This accidental collision between ecological and technological realms marks the beginning of a series of events from the 20th to the 21st century, including Guo Cheng’s exhibition titled “Bug.”

    The exhibition space is divided into two distinct yet interconnected scenarios: an uncanny data center and a peculiar outdoor field. Separated by a partition wall yet linked by a window, creatures passing between these two spaces may experience a blurring and dislocation of subjectivity.

    Pupa Stone No.2, 2025, Resin, motor, cable tray, cable, aluminum, stainless steel, conductive floor, Dimensions variable

    Entering the data center, two slowly rotating rock cores are wrapped in clusters of network cables cascading from overhead cable trays. As a green film sweeps across their surfaces, the rock cores reveal primordial soup-like totems resembling cellular structures or organic markings. In the corner, a server hosts a smartphone pressing against an Earth-shaped fabric toy, running a calendar app programmed to last until the system’s temporal limit—approximately 29.2 billion years, significantly exceeding the known age of the universe. This piece alludes to the humanization and commodification of the environment, highlighting the technological infrastructure’s consumption of geological resources. Nearby, chips encased in molten metal hint at the destructive potential inherent in technological advancement.

    Fog Basker 3669, 2024, Aluminum, custom hardware, mixed media, 90 x 25 x 25cm

    Passing through the “window” into the second scenario, viewers encounter a luminous tent installation inspired by Guo Cheng’s experiences of attracting insects with artificial lights during field research in Medog. One hypothesis about nocturnal insects being drawn to light is that they use moonlight to navigate, and artificial illumination disrupts this mechanism. Visitors approaching the installation mimic the insects’ phototactic behavior. Works within this same area can be seen as “quasi-objects,” forming a complex network composed of contemporary technological infrastructures—roads, power generators, cables, condensers, and their byproducts. Simultaneously, these pieces demonstrate nature’s resilient mechanisms of self-regulation, which remain uncontrollable and constantly in dynamic equilibrium.

    Y29B Bug, 2025, Custom software, mobile phone, server host, Earth soft toy, customized auto-spammer, 101 x 43 x 18cm

    The “bug” thus transcends its definition as merely a technical flaw awaiting rectification; it also represents a living entity within actual ecosystems. Often viewed as disturbances, bugs expose the intricate ecological interactions and symbiotic relationships at the intersections of distinct realms. The relationship between data centers and natural landscapes is not easily delineated by structures such as windows. As described in the ancient Chinese text *Da Dai Li Ji* (*The Book of Rites,* compiled *by Dai De*), humans are categorized as “naked insects,” together with the winged, the furred, the scaled, and the armored varieties of insects—a classification that encompasses all living creatures. This perspective situates humanity within a broader and deeply entangled spectrum of life.

    Venue
    798 Art Zone, 2 Jiuxianqiao Road, Chaoyang District, Beijing 100015

    Artist
    Guo Cheng

    Exhibition Dates
    May 1 – June 21, 2025

    Gallery Hours
    Tuesday – Saturday | 10:30 AM – 6:30 PM

    Website
    https://magician.space

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

    Contact
    info@magician-space.com

    (Text and images courtesy of Magician Space)


  • Artemin Gallery Presents Will There Be Morning Light in the Sleepless Nights, a Solo Exhibition  by Atom Pavarit

    Artemin Gallery Presents Will There Be Morning Light in the Sleepless Nights, a Solo Exhibition by Atom Pavarit

    Poster Credit: Artemin Gallery

    Bangkok’s rapid urbanisation has drastically reduced the city’s green spaces, leaving residents increasingly disconnected from nature. Public parks have given way to shopping malls, and concrete and glass now dominate the skyline. As a result, many people find themselves confined to artificial environments, distanced from the natural world. This transformation extends beyond physical surroundings; it reshapes how we experience light. With modern life increasingly moving indoors, our exposure to natural sunlight has diminished, aecting both physical and mental well-being. The warmth of the sun has been replaced by the cool glow of LED lights and digital screens, which quietly govern the rhythms of our days and nights.

    The Light That Never Goes Out, 2025, Oil on canvas, 100 x 100 cm

    In this series, Atom Pavarit reflects on his own routine between Pak Chong and Bangkok, where direct encounters with nature or natural light have become increasingly rare. His world is lit by artificial sources: screens, overhead bulbs, and the filtered rays that slip in through windows. Across the series, windows become a quiet but persistent presence. Whether it’s the soft spill of light through a real window or the electric glare of a digital screen mimicking one, each painting contains a frame—a threshold between interior and exterior, real and artificial. These windows serve as both openings and boundaries. They let light in, but also remind us of our distance from the outside world. In the absence of natural access, even screens begin to resemble windows, oering simulated light, curated landscapes, and secondhand experience.

    End Once More, 2025, Oil on canvas, 90 x 160 cm

    His palette, rich in yellows, greens, and blues, echoes the light we encounter every day—whether from the sun or from our devices. Yet this familiar glow plays a subtle trick. While the colors may suggest natural light, their sources of inspiration are often artificial, drawn from household fixtures and screen-based illumination. Atom rarely uses white paint in this series; instead, he leaves parts of the canvas untouched to suggest light in its purest form.

    Ironically, many of the works were inspired by the artist’s home and studio in Pak Chong, a place surrounded by nature. Yet the scenes he paints are almost always viewed from within. Windows frame the world outside rather than immersing us in it. The remaining works reflect his time in Bangkok, where access to open air and sunlight is even more limited.

    Light Without Sun, 2025, Oil on canvas, 48 x 60 cm

    Though these paintings may appear serene, they quietly ask a question: Is this our new reality—framed, filtered, and confined? Do we still have a choice? Today, we are invited to “experience” nature and light in curated environments, through immersive exhibitions, indoor installations, or the mediated glow of screens. In this context, the series asks us to reconsider how we perceive space, light, and connection in an era when even our access to the outside world is increasingly controlled and constructed.

    Light, long seen as a symbol of guidance and hope, once led the way. But in a world shaped by artificial glow, the artist gently asks: As natural light fades and digital brightness takes over, can we still find our hope and purpose? Will it lead us home, or have we already lost our way?

    Venue
    Artemin Gallery, 1F. No. 32, Ln. 251, Jihe Rd., Shilin Dist., Taipei City 111012, Taiwan

    Artist
    Atom Pavarit

    Exhibition Dates
    May 3 – June 7, 2025

    Gallery Hours
    Tuesday – Saturday | 11 AM – 6 PM

    Website
    https://www.artemingallery.com

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

    Contact
    info@artemingallery.com

    (Text and images courtesy of Artemin Gallery)


  • PKM Gallery Presents LAZY, a Solo Exhibition by Pop Artist SAMBYPEN

    PKM Gallery Presents LAZY, a Solo Exhibition by Pop Artist SAMBYPEN

    Poster Credit: PKM Gallery

    PKM Gallery presents LAZY, a solo exhibition by pop artist SAMBYPEN, from April 12th to May 17th. SAMBYPEN has reinterpreted contemporary popular culture with humor and satire. Celebrating a decade of his debut, the exhibition showcases approximately 18 new paintings that explore the psychology of laziness in modern life. Throughout the show, merchandise featuring iconography from the works and original music by emerging artists inspired by its theme will be released in stages.

    SAMBYPEN has established a distinct visual language by parodying and creating new characters drawn from commercial brands and cultural artifacts familiar to the public. His work playfully subverts recognizable imagery and phenomena from contemporary consumer society—including corporate mascots, animated characters, internet memes, films, and masterpiece paintings—and questions the distinction between the real and the artificial. Guided by the ethos of art for everyone, his practice fosters an accessible dialogue with audiences, encouraging them to engage their imagination as a means of navigating the complexities of modern life.

    CROWD, 2025, Acrylic on wood and canvas, 97 x 193.9 cm

    In LAZY, SAMBYPEN examines the psychology of laziness in contemporary society. As people grow increasingly accustomed to the speed of fast-forward media and short-form content, they often find themselves disoriented— facing a flood of tasks that feel not urgent but bothersome. The character Bomb! personifies this unease—hesitation, fear, and helplessness that arise when responsibilities are repeatedly postponed. Appearing in states of exhaustion, psychological breakdown, or imminent explosion, Bomb! inhabits painterly scenes drawn from modern works of Edward Hopper and Édouard Manet, where animated characters from The Simpsons, Pokémon, and Casper the Friendly Ghost are featured—confronting viewers with a surreal ensemble that blends melancholy and mischief.

    The sculptural paintings—produced through a layered process of pen drawing, digital graphics, CNC machining, and brushwork—represent a core part of SAMBYPEN’s visual language. Also known for his street graffiti, the artist introduces his Wall series for the first time in a gallery setting. These works draw from his graffiti practice, built through layers of spraying, painting, sanding, and redrawing, resulting in textured surfaces that evoke the weathered façades of city walls. Within these compositions, faded texts and illustrations mingle with dynamite, tanks, and cheerful animal and plant characters. The word FAKE, stamped across the surface like bubblegum stickers, poses a blunt question: Is fine art truly pure? With a language that is both concise and direct, SAMBYPEN continues to navigate the shifting lines between the real and the artificial, and between fine art and commercial culture.

    Child Wall, 2025, Mixed media on canvas, 227.3 x 181.8 cm

    Having spent his childhood in Europe and the United States, SAMBYPEN began experimenting with parody during his school years in Poland, where he recognized striking similarities between socialist imagery and the advertisements of New York’s Times Square. Since his first solo exhibition in 2015—where he satirized the Michelin mascot—he has held numerous exhibitions in Seoul, Tokyo, Hong Kong, Las Vegas, and Miami. He has also collaborated with major brands including Nike, Porsche, Adobe, and KB Kookmin Card, expanding his practice across diverse media including product design, murals, and public art.

    Venue
    40, Samcheong-ro 7-Gil, Jongno-gu, Seoul, 03049

    Artist
    SAMBYPEN

    Exhibition Dates
    April 12 – May 17, 2025

    Gallery Hours
    Tuesday – Sunday | 10 AM – 6 PM

    Website
    https://www.pkmgallery.com

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

    Contact
    INFO@PKMGALLERY.COM

    (Text and images courtesy of PKM Gallery)


  • 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)


  • Art Centrix Space Presents MAGIC ERASE, a Solo Exhibition by Hemant Gavankar

    Art Centrix Space Presents MAGIC ERASE, a Solo Exhibition by Hemant Gavankar

    Poster Credit: Art Centrix Space

    Art Centrix is pleased to present MAGIC ERASE, a solo exhibition by Hemant Gavankar, the awardee of the Art Centrix Painting Grant 2024. Curated by Sibdas Sengupta, this exhibition explores the complexities of contemporary life, focusing on the themes of transience, space, and memory. Gavankar’s practice delves into the shifting landscapes of his native Mumbai and the emotional residue left by gentrification and societal change. Through his mixed-media paintings and video works, MAGIC ERASE invites viewers to consider the vanishing and evolving nature of physical and psychological spaces.

    Inauguration of Modern Temple and other Images, 2024, Ink, oil and oil pastels on paper, 38 in x 54 in (Quadriptych)

    At the heart of Gavankar’s work lies a tension between the “real” and the “hyper-real,” echoing ideas of displacement, loss, and the digital dissolution of our surroundings. His work offers a magical realist approach to the everyday, transforming mundane experiences into reflections on longing, identity, and the fragmented self. The exhibition moves beyond conventional representations of place, inviting a deeper contemplation on the impermanence and reinvention of both the physical and the intangible.

    Grandmom’s Thumb and Land, 2024, Oil on canvas, 48 in x 60 in

    With MAGIC ERASE, Hemant Gavankar challenges us to confront the unseen, the forgotten, and the distorted truths of our contemporary existence—encouraging us to see the world not as a static reality, but as a constantly shifting landscape, both real and imagined.

    Venue
    The Art Centrix Space, Jain Farm, Behind Sector D-2, Vasant Kunj, New Delhi 110070

    Artist
    Hemant Gavankar

    Curator
    Sibdas Sengupta

    Exhibition Dates
    April 11 – May 31, 2025

    Gallery Hours
    Monday – Saturday | 11 AM – 6 PM

    Website
    https://artcentrix.com

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

    Contact
    info@artcentrix.com

    About Artist

    Hemant Gavankar is a Mumbai-based visual artist and poet, and the recipient of the Art Centrix Painting Grant 2024. He completed his BFA in Drawing and Painting and MFA in Portraiture from Sir J.J. School of Art, Mumbai, in 2016 and 2018, respectively. Hemant’s art is deeply influenced by the changing landscapes of urban existence, shaped by his experiences in Mumbai, especially in his childhood days in Mulund, a suburb on the outskirts of the city. He has witnessed the city’s rapid transformation, a process that has reshaped the social fabric of daily life and strongly influenced his artistic perspective. Over time, Hemant’s work has evolved to explore the artificiality of human-made spaces and the emotional responses they evoke in the individuals who inhabit them.

    His practice is also strongly shaped by his constant negotiation with the city narratives he has witnessed firsthand. Hemant addresses issues such as the effects of gentrification, the transformation of private and public spaces, and the loss of histories. He often explores how these changes impact the self and the collective consciousness. His art draws from both personal experiences and broader sociopolitical themes, engaging with the ideas of loss, memory, nostalgia, and the liminality of urban life. His work examines the intersections of private, public, and digital spaces, often delving into the absurdities that arise from non-aligning events in these realms.

    His recent exhibitions include ‘Expanded Disciplinarity: Chapter 1 Constructing Painterly Relations’, inaugural exhibition of Art Centrix Grants, Art Centrix Space, New Delhi (2024); ‘EREWHON’, Jehangir Art Gallery, Mumbai (2023); ‘Connecting Dots’, Abir Space (2023); ‘Unknowns 7’, Gujarat State Lalit Kala Academy, Ahmedabad (2022); and ‘Monsoon Art Show’, Jehangir Art Gallery, Mumbai (2016). He was also awarded the Rangasetu Fellowship for Visual Art in 2023 by the Maharashtra Cultural Centre. Hemant currently lives and works in Mumbai. 

    About Art Centrix Space

    Established in 2012, Art Centrix Space works with mid-career contemporary Indian artists to voice contemporary artistic inquiry reflecting the diverse vision of the Indian subcontinent. Our gallery stands as a visual testimony to the timeless interplay of imagination, imagery, and transformative visual experiences. Over the past decade, we have curated more than 40 exhibitions and participated in the India Art Fair from 2018 to 2025, as well as Art Mumbai in 2024, consistently showcasing our represented artists whose works have now been collected by museums and placed in major private and institutional collections.

    A significant milestone in our journey was the expansion into our current gallery premises – a unique 3,500-square-foot space set within a beautifully landscaped 2.5-acre environment in the heart of South Delhi. We remain committed to providing the essential stimulus needed for artistic and curatorial practices, creating an even larger platform for collaborative exhibition-making in New Delhi, the hub of Indian contemporary art. 

    Art Centrix Space specially focuses on vernacular voices  of mid-career contemporary Indian artists to develop South Asian artistic practices through exchanges, programmes, and curatorial interventions aimed at increasing visibility, fostering broader associations, and expanding the territory of Indian contemporary art. 

    We are committed to investing in our artists for the long term, grounded in shared values and trust, to establish internationally recognised contemporary Indian narratives for both artists and collectors to cherish equally. In 2024, Art Centrix Space introduced Art Centrix Grants, celebrating diverse painting methodologies in Indian art. We have been patrons of the Kochi-Muziris Biennale since 2018.

    (Text and images courtesy of Art Centrix Space)


  • Gallery Playlist Presents Vivid Touch, a Solo Exhibition by Seoyoung Jo

    Gallery Playlist Presents Vivid Touch, a Solo Exhibition by Seoyoung Jo

    Poster Credit: Gallery Playlist

    Gallery Playlist is pleased to present Vivid Touch, a solo exhibition by Jo Seoyoung, on view from April 5 to May 10, 2025. The show captures the artist’s painterly approach to observing and recording fleeting moments from everyday life through delicate colors and forms. Jo Seoyoung runs her own handmade paint brand, Mangwon Color, and brings a thoughtful and ongoing exploration of color to her work. Her paintings are filled with vibrant yet subtle tones that reflect her sensitivity and curiosity. For Jo, painting is not separate from life but a natural part of her daily rhythm. Her practice flows freely across subjects like portraits, still lifes, and landscapes without being tied to a single format. The exhibition includes 21 paintings, featuring both new works and selected earlier pieces.

    Sweet Breeze, 2025, Oil on canvas, 145.5 x 112.1 cm

    Venue
    Gallery Playlist, 3, Daecheong-ro 138beon-gil, Jung-gu, Busan, Republic of Korea

    Artists
    Seoyoung Jo

    Exhibition Dates
    April 5 – May 10, 2025

    Gallery Hours
    Wednesday – Sunday | 11 AM – 6 PM

    Website
    http://www.galleryplaylist.com

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

    Contact
    info@galleryplaylist.com

    About Artist

    Seoyoung Jo (b.1999) graduated from the Department of Painting at Hongik University in 2023. She has held solo exhibitions such as A pinch of Salt (VODAGallery, 2023), and THE FREEZING POINT (KT&G Gallery, 2023). She has also participated in various group exhibitions including Shimmering Sensory Pieces (Unbound, 2024), CATCH HOUR: Gradation moment (Oksang Factory, 2024), Vanilla Sky : Eternal Moments (K Auction, 2024), Inseparable : Reality and Fantasy (Gallery Playlist, 2024), Cheek to Cheek (S24, 2023), and DAYS, DAYS, DAYS! (Hongik Museum of Contemporary Art, 2022).

    (Text and images courtesy of Gallery Playlist)


  • Realities Reimagined: ARARIO GALLERY Presents at Art Busan 2025

    Realities Reimagined: ARARIO GALLERY Presents at Art Busan 2025

    Poster Credit: ARARIO Gallery

    ARARIO GALLERY will participate in Art Busan 2025, held from May 8 (Thu) to 11 (Sun) at BEXCO in Busan. For this year’s fair, the gallery presents a diverse range of artistic practices that explore the boundary between reality and imagination, experiment with materials and media, and delve into personal and collective memory, highlighting how these artists have contributed to expanding the discourse of contemporary art.

    CHA Hyeonwook, Wandering Things, 2025, Powdered color pigment, 73 x 117.4 cm

    The presentation will showcase the multilayered currents of contemporary art through works that traverse fiction and reality, nature and artifice, and individual memory and social narrative. KANG Cheolgyu (b. 1990, Korea) constructs a fictional world rooted in autobiographical narratives and psychological projection, unfolding a serialized exploration of personal growth. His paintings pursue painterly evolution through persistent brushwork and a deep inquiry into representation. Kohei NAWA (b. 1975, Japan) examines the relationship between the natural and artificial, the individual and the collective. His PixCell series, which merges pixels and cells, questions the nature of imagery in the digital age, dissolving the line between material and immaterial, real and virtual. GWON Osang (b. 1974, Korea) continues his sculptural experiments that blur the boundaries between photography and sculpture, flatness and three dimensionality. His hybrid works redefine the format of contemporary sculpture through a profound investigation of materiality. Subodh GUPTA (b. 1964, India) reflects on rapid urbanization, globalization, and cultural hybridity by incorporating everyday Indian objects, breaking down the boundary between the sacred and the mundane. His work examines sociocultural and economic contexts while contemplating human existence in a globalized world.

    CHOI Byungso (b. 1943, Korea) transforms the materiality of newspapers through a repetitive, meditative act of erasure. This performative approach has shaped an important trajectory within Korean experimental art, offering deep reflection on the essence of matter alongside formal exploration. AHN Jisan (b. 1979, Korea) explores the boundary between reality and imagination through thick layers of paint that emphasize material presence. His works evoke emotional intensity and visual tension, immersing the viewer in an intuitive sensory experience.

    KANG Cheolgyu, Dead Beat, 2025, Oil on canvas, 227.5 x 82 cm

    NOH Sangho (b. 1986, Korea) collects and transforms digital imagery, conducting a unique experiment that combines analog sensibilities with digital environments across painting, sculpture, and video. His work proposes new aesthetic possibilities through contemporary technology. Yuki SAEGUSA (b. 1987, Japan) blends elements of Japanese landscape painting and Northern European painting traditions, rendering complex memories and emotions through a delicate fusion of oil and tempera. Her landscapes invite introspection through sensory exploration of nature and the inner self. WON Seoung Won (b. 1972, Korea) constructs fantastical narrative rich scenes by collaging hundreds of photographs. Her works transform everyday experiences and memories into imaginative tableaux, offering keen insights into human existence with wit and visual storytelling. CHA Hyeonwook (b. 1987, Korea) merges the techniques of traditional Korean colored painting with the spontaneity of Western painting to reimagine personal memories as landscapes. His works explore the boundaries between time and space, self and other, tradition and modernity. LIM Subeom (b. 1997, Korea) envisions a mythological ecosystem where nature and civilization intertwine, prompting a reevaluation of humanity as an integral part of an organic world.

    GWON Osang, Reclining Figure(K), 2022, Archial pigment print, mixed media, 220 x 115 x 120 cm

    At Art Busan 2025, Arario Gallery will present the works of KANG Cheolgyu, Kohei NAWA, GWON Osang, Subodh GUPTA, CHOI Byungso, AHN Jisan, NOH Sangho, Yuki SAEGUSA, WON Seoung Won, CHA Hyeonwook, and LIM Subeom, each artist exploring the human condition and the world through their unique visual language. Together, their works will showcase the dynamic potential and expansive narratives of Asian contemporary art on the global stage.

    Venue
    BEXCO, Busan

    Exhibition Dates
    May 8 – 11, 2025

    Booth
    B-16 

    Artist
    KANG Cheolgyu, Kohei NAWA, GWON Osang, Subodh GUPTA, CHOI Byungso, AHN Jisan, NOH Sangho, Yuki SAEGUSA, WON Seoung Won, CHA Hyeonwook, LIM Subeom

    Website
    https://www.arariogallery.com

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

    Contact
    Youngshin LEE, Sales Manager
    M. +82 10 4943 0797 / E. youngshin.lee@arariogallery.com
    Sojung KANG, Executive Director
    M. +82 10 9256 1491 / E. sojung.kang@arariogallery.com

    (Text and images courtesy of ARARIO GALLERY)


  • Gallery Playlist Presents Layers of, a Duo Exhibition by Ahn Jongwoo and Yeom Ginam

    Gallery Playlist Presents Layers of, a Duo Exhibition by Ahn Jongwoo and Yeom Ginam

    Poster Credit: Gallery Playlist

    Gallery Playlist is pleased to present Layers of, a two-person exhibition featuring Ahn Jongwoo and  Yeom Ginam, on view from April 5 to May 10, 2025. 

    This exhibition explores the passage of time shaped by memory, light, and material, while visually  examining the boundary between presence and absence. Each artist investigates the process of  accumulation and disappearance in their own way. As viewers follow the layered surfaces they have  constructed, they encounter moments where past and present overlap. 

    Jongwoo Ahn, Stil life with Corn flakes, 2025, Cyanotype on Korean pape, 60 x 120 x 4 cm

    Within the works, light and shadow are constantly shifting, long forgotten memories resurface, and  presence takes on new meaning through its interplay with absence. The exhibition features 39 works  in total, including both new pieces and significant earlier works by the artists.

    Ginam Yeom, Unbending Flash #5 (focusing on love), 2023, Acrylic on canvas, 140 x 140 cm

    Venue
    Gallery Playlist, 3, Daecheong-ro 138beon-gil, Jung-gu, Busan, Republic of Korea

    Artists
    Jongwoo Ahn, Ginam Yeom

    Exhibition Dates
    April 5 – May 10, 2025

    Gallery Hours
    Wednesday – Sunday | 11 AM – 6 PM

    Website
    http://www.galleryplaylist.com

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

    Contact
    info@galleryplaylist.com

    (Text and images courtesy of Gallery Playlist)


  • LATITUDE 28 Presents To look, and to look again at Art Dubai 2025

    LATITUDE 28 Presents To look, and to look again at Art Dubai 2025

    Poster Credit: LATITUDE 28

    This exhibition grapples with flux. It moves in gestures of tension and release—between material and illusion, inheritance and reinvention, recognition and estrangement. The works assembled here refuse containment, slipping between thresholds of the seen and the unseen, the personal and the political, the traditional and the disruptive. They demand a different kind of seeing—not passive observation but an active exchange, where perception is constantly tested, shifted, and redefined.

    To Look, and To Look Again brings together a group of contemporary artists whose practices question the visible and surface-bound, inviting viewers to look beneath and beyond. Beneath each artwork lies another—an accumulation of marks, stories, and absences. Like sediment, meaning builds in layers: through memory, erosion, fracture, and return. This is not just a visual experience, but an archaeological one. What we see is shaped by what came before—what was buried, forgotten, or refused. The past hums beneath our feet, pressing upward, reshaping the present.

    Sanket Viramgami, Untitled, 2025, Acrylic on canvas, 60 x 48 inches

    Some artists approach this space through a deconstruction of form. Farhat Ali splices visual languages together—miniature, pop, and mass culture—to expose the seams of constructed narratives. Noor Ali Chagani structures longing into brick and mortar, where walls become symbols of both shelter and separation. Sudipta Das constructs fragile paper sculptures that embody the tension between permanence and precarity, displacement and home. Sanket Viramgami merges Persian, Indian, and contemporary idioms into surreal, layered landscapes where time and tradition collapse. Viraj Khanna manipulates textile and embroidery to blur artifice and identity—each stitch an interrogation of power and privilege.

    Others explore the instability of narrative itself. Waswo X. Waswo stages identity as a performance, exposing the rehearsed nature of selfhood. Ketaki Sarpotdar lets fable unravel, allowing memory and myth to bleed into one another. Gopa Trivedi inscribes time onto surface, dissolving the divide between personal history and collective memory. Shalina Vichitra uses the language of cartography to map displacement and belonging, where territories shift and borders breathe. Waseem Ahmed reinterprets traditional forms through a socio-political lens, subverting historical motifs to challenge power and visibility. Some artists turn to material itself as a site of resistance. Ravinder Reddy Gavva distorts figuration toward excess, stretching beauty until it fractures into critique. Maryam Baniasadi reimagines the environment not as setting, but as force—where decay and regeneration are bound in constant, entangled motion. Khadim Ali, informed by the trauma of forced migrations, threads together miniature painting traditions and contemporary conflict to explore the interplay of power, memory, and exile.

    Maryam Baniasadi, Call for Spring, 2024, Gouache on wasli, 6.5 x 8 inches (12 x 14 inches)

    Across these works, boundaries break and reform. Surfaces refuse stasis. What is erased lingers as an imprint. Meaning is never fixed—it unfolds in motion, through the act of looking, and looking again.

    To see, then, is to negotiate: between knowing and unknowing, certainty and ambiguity, the visible and the implied. In this space, looking becomes an excavation. These works do not offer resolution—they open fault lines. The image is only the beginning. Beneath it: gestures rephrased, histories resurfaced, maps redrawn.

    The challenge is not just to see—but to return.

    To look, and to look again.

    –Curatorial Text by Khushboo Jain

    Preview
    April 16, 2025 | 2 – 9 PM
    April 17, 2025 | 2 – 9 PM

    Booth No.
    B13 ( Arena – Hall1)

    Venue
    Madinath Jumeirah, Jumeirah, Beach Road AI Sufouh1, Dubai, UAE

    Public Days
    April 18, 2025 | 2 – 9 PM
    April 19, 2025 | 2 – 9 PM
    April 20, 2025 | 12PM – 6 PM

    Artists
    Farhat Ali, Gopa Trivedi, Ketaki Sarpotdar, Khadim Ali, Maryam Baniasadi, Noor Ali Chagani, Ravinder Reddy Gavva, Sanket Viramgami, Shalina Vichitra, Sudipta Das, Viraj Khanna, Waseem Ahmed, Waswo X. Waswo

    Website
    www.latitude28.com

    Instagram
    https://www.instagram.com/latitude_28/

    Contact
    latitude28@gmail.com

    About LATITUDE 28

    Established in 2010, LATITUDE 28 has redefined contemporary gallery practice with its lateral, avant-garde approach. The gallery stands as a vanguard in nurturing and showcasing emerging South Asian artists by championing experimental material-based practices while fostering meaningful connections among stakeholders -artists, collectors, patrons, arts professionals, and enthusiasts. By prioritising mentoring and capacity building, it shapes creative practices, through programs that drive cultural discourse across the region and beyond. 

    The gallery’s commitment to inclusivity and accessibility makes it a critical nexus for cultural exchange, connecting artists with leading institutions worldwide. Through curated exhibitions that weave together art, history, and socio-political narratives, LATITUDE 28 facilitates an understanding of the forces shaping contemporary society. This approach ensures that each exhibition is a dynamic, immersive experience that engages and challenges audiences.

    As an incubator of innovative artistic expressions, the gallery facilitates dynamic exchanges through site-specific artworks, artist talks, and immersive curatorial experiences, setting new standards for what galleries can achieve. Its influence in shaping artistic discourse and inspiring collections is felt across continents, making LATITUDE 28 an essential player in global cultural conversations.

    Under the strategic leadership of Founder and Director Bhavna Kakar—also the Founder and Editor-in-Chief of TAKE on Art, South Asia’s premier contemporary art publication—LATITUDE 28 has cultivated a robust network of collectors and patrons. This network extends deeply into the Global artistic ecosystems, bridging continental divides and enhancing cross-cultural dialogues.

    (Text and images courtesy of LATITUDE 28)