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LATITUDE 28 Presents Jyoti Bhatt: Through the Line & the Lens by Bhavna Kakar

Poster Credit: LATITUDE 28 New Delhi, March 2025 – LATITUDE 28 is proud to present Jyoti Bhatt: Through the Line & the Lens, a highly anticipated and the largest printmaking retrospective of recent times, presented by Bhavna Kakar and curated by acclaimed artist Rekha Rodwittiya. This landmark exhibition offers a new reading of the enduring influence of Jyoti Bhatt—one of India’s most distinguished printmakers and pedagogues—through an intimate survey of his prolific artistic journey. The exhibition, set to take place from April 12 to April 21, 2025, at Bikaner House, New Delhi, will showcase the entire collection of Jyoti Bhatt from Bhavna Kakar’s distinguished printmaking collection. Featuring a rich array of etchings, lithographs, serigraphs, photographs, and personal writings—including diaries and letters—this retrospective presents an unparalleled insight into Bhatt’s practice and philosophy. His photographic documentation of the Living Traditions of India has developed a deep conversation with his graphic prints over the decades. Our approach dives into the interconnected nature of Bhatt’s multiple practices, positioning them with his pedagogical frameworks.

Kolam Forms, 2008, Etching, Edition 14/18, 16.5 x 9.5 inches As an influential figure who has defied any singular definitions seeping into his practice, the iconic artist, printmaker, photographer, and pedagogue Jyoti Bhatt stands as a bridge between modernist and contemporary art in India. During the early post-independence years, when printmaking remained a relatively underexplored medium in India, Bhatt recognized its immense potential. He harnessed its ability to document the fleeting nature of everyday ritualistic art and the evolving vocabulary of popular culture. His mastery of various techniques imbued his prints with a layered visual language, often infused with wit and satire. Beyond printmaking, Bhatt’s extensive photographic documentation of rural artistic traditions, vernacular art forms, and the vibrant academic life of Baroda has contributed significantly to the preservation of India’s visual heritage. His work in this field has led to the development of invaluable archives, earning him global recognition.

Totaram, 2013, Etching Intaglio, Edition 7/12, 13 x 9.5 inches His profound engagement with folk symbols and motifs—meticulously recorded in his notebooks—shaped a distinct visual vocabulary that merged local traditions with contemporary sensibilities. With a career spanning over six decades, Bhatt has remained dedicated to pedagogy, championing printmaking not just as an artistic discipline but as a democratic medium capable of mass dissemination and cultural literacy.
Note from the curator
Though he would perhaps himself refuse to acknowledge this, Padmashree Jyoti Bhatt has been a path-breaking figure in our cultural history, yet strangely was never too aware of this himself. His approach is always to objectively distance himself to consider all things without the hindrance of sentimentality, before creating an opinion or defining a choice. This attitude has offered him a unique ability as an artist to examine his curiosities unfettered by normative practices, and thereby structure his pictorial linguistics without prescribing to any prevailing trend.
Through the line & the lens, is a curated selection of the artist’s graphic prints and photographs.
In the graphic prints we see how Jyoti Bhatt often uses subversive inflections as a means by which he positions his politics, and the critique he has of establishments that he views as retrogressive to the ideals of pluralism and liberal thinking. In many instances he operated as a visual artist ahead of his time, presenting language constructs that use texts, and referencing from art as a quotational strategy, which can be seen as the doorway to a post-modernist articulation that was to follow many years later.
Jyoti Bhatt’s black and white photographs presented in this exhibition are of his friends and colleagues. These photographs evoke an era where the climate of cultural change within India was charged with passionate discourse, and where the implementation of newly formed governing modules for national platforms of art activities were being strategized. Many of the people photographed in these images were engaged in articulating ideas of modernity, and its newly phrased implications. Jyoti Bhatt places these moments of personal struggle and collective enquiry before us, without any desire to underline its historical importance, but instead offers it as a personal journey he has been part of. In his usual self-effacing way, he underplays his role as a visual orator who has immortalised an era of seminal change within Indian contemporary art through such documentation.
– Rekha Rodwittiya, Distinguished artist and educator
Opening Reception
Saturday, April 12, 2025 | 6PMVenue
Bikaner House, Pandara Road, New Delhi – 110011Gallery Hours
Monday – Saturday | 11 AM – 7 PMGallery Address
LATITUDE 28, F 208 First Floor, Lado Sarai, New Delhi 110030Artist
Jyotindra Manshankar BhattExhibition Dates
April 12 – April 21, 2025 | Bikaner House
April 13 – May 25, 2025 | LATITUDE 28Website
www.latitude28.comInstagram
https://www.instagram.com/latitude_28/Contact
latitude28@gmail.comAbout the Artist

Jyotindra Manshankar Bhatt (b. 12 March 1934, Gujarat, India), also known as Jyoti Bhatt, studied painting and printmaking at M. S. University in Baroda. In the early sixties, Bhatt received a scholarship to further his studies at the Accademia di Belle Arti in Naples, Italy and the Pratt Institute in New York, where he was exposed to abstract expressionism. He studied fresco and mural painting at Banasthali Vidyapith in Rajasthan. Bhatt’s early works reflected the cubist style, later shifting to pop art imagery, to finally arrive at a style inspired by traditional folk imagery. Though Bhatt worked in a variety of mediums, including watercolour and oils, printmaking ultimately garnered him the most attention. In 1966, Bhatt returned to MSU Baroda with a thorough knowledge of the intaglio process. During this period, he and his compatriots at the Faculty of Fine Arts in Baroda came to be known as ‘The Baroda School’ of Indian Art. During the latter part of the sixties, Jyoti Bhatt developed his passion for documenting traditional Indian craft and design work. The disappearing arts of Gujarat became a focus, and Bhatt’s investigations into folk and tribal designs influenced the motifs which he employed in his style of printmaking. Throughout Jyoti Bhatt’s long career as a teacher at the MSU Faculty of Fine Arts, he photo-documented the evolution of the university, the artistic endeavours of the students and teachers and the architecturally significant buildings of Baroda. Best known for his etchings, intaglios and screen prints, he has explored and re-explored a personal language of symbols that stem from Indian culture: the peacock, the parrot, the lotus, stylized gods and goddesses and myriad variations on folk and tribal designs.
Bhatt’s significant contributions to Indian art have been recognized with numerous accolades, including the Padma Shri in 2019 and his election as a Fellow of the Lalit Kala Akademi in 2022. He has also been honored with several prestigious national and international awards, such as Asia Arts Vanguard Award, Kalidasa Award, Dhirubhai Thakar Savyasachi Saraswat Award, an Honorary Doctorate, and multiple Lifetime Achievement Awards, solidifying his legacy as a visionary who shaped Indian modernism.
During his illustrious career, he has had many solo and group exhibitions all over the world. Some of the recent solo shows include, ‘Through the Line & the Lens…: A Selection of Prints and Photographs’, curated by Rekha Rodwittiya, presented by LATITUDE 28, Bikaner House & LATITUDE 28, New Delhi (2025); ‘Revisations: Engaging the Archive’, Vadehra Art Gallery, New Delhi (2024); ‘Time & Time Again: Jyoti Bhatt’, Museum of Art & Photography, Bengaluru (2023); ‘The Photographic Eye of Jyoti Bhatt’ at Guild Art Mumbai, Gallerie88, Kolkata (2017); ‘Roop- Swaroop’, Exhibition of Photographs at Satya Gallery, Ahmedabad (2017); Exhibition of Photographs at Rukshaan Art Gallery, Mumbai (2017-18); ‘Re-Incarnations’, Mini – Retrospective show of Paintings, Prints and Photographs at ARK Gallery, Vadodara (2018); Print show at Bihar Museum, Patna (2019); ‘The Indian Portrait-xi – Jyoti Bhatt’s Photographs of His Contemporaries,’ Amdavad ni Gufa (2020); ‘Parallels That Meet: Paintings, Prints, Photographs’, DAG, New Delhi (2007); and ‘Shows of Prints and Paintings,’ Pratt Graphic Art Center, New York, USA (1964–1966). His recent group exhibitions include ‘India Art Fair’ with LATITUDE 28, New Delhi (2023); Group show at Sunaparanta Goa Centre for the Arts (2019); ‘Show of Photographs’, KIPF Kolkata International Photography Festival, Kolkata (2019); ‘Show of Photographs’ curated by Nancy Adajania, Serendipity art festival, Goa (2019); ‘Digital book and accordion book,’ India Art Fair with LATITUDE 28 & TAKE Editions, New Delhi (2022 & 2020), including in selected curated exhibitions such as ‘Body Transformed: Contemporary South Asian Photographs and Prints,’ Smithsonian’s National Museum of Asian Art, Washington, D.C. (2025); ‘The Imaginary Institution of India: Art 1975–1998,’ curated by Shanay Jhaveri, Barbican Centre, London (2024–25); and ‘Around the Table: Conversations about Milestones, Memories, Mappings,’ curated by Roobina Karode at the Kiran Nadar Museum of Art, New Delhi (2022); ‘Six Indian Photographers’ curated by Ebrahim Alkazi, Modern Art in Oxford, UK (1982). His work is also part of prestigious national and international collections, including the Kiran Nadar Museum of Art, New Delhi; the National Gallery of Modern Art, New Delhi; the Museum of Modern Art & Photography, Bengaluru; the Museum of Modern Art, New York, USA; the British Museum, London; Tate Britain; the Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.; the Uffizi Gallery, Florence; and the Gaur Collection, New Jersey, U.S.A.
At 91, he continues to work in his studio in Baroda, Gujarat, creating new artworks with unwavering passion and dedication.
About the Curator
Rekha Rodwittiya is an artist of international repute. She is an alumnus of the M.S. University of Baroda with a B.F.A in painting from the Faculty of Fine Arts in 1981. She was the first recipient of the prestigious Inlaks Fine Arts Scholarship awarded to study painting in the M.A. program at the Royal College of Art in London, from 1982 to 1984. She has held thirty-seven solo exhibitions and is widely travelled as a professional, with her work being shown extensively in India and abroad. She has undertaken numerous residency projects and site-specific works and has contributed as an artist of significance to the post-independence cultural history of India. She has been actively involved in art teaching through alternative non-institutionalised methods, as well as being a guest faculty at art colleges in the UK, France, Italy, Sweden, Australia, Japan and India; and is the founder and CEO of The Collective Studio Baroda. She is actively engaged in funding for the arts. She lectures on contemporary Indian art and cultural practices, feminism, curatorial methods and other subjects of concern within an Indian/Global engagement with the arts. She is highly regarded within the space of feminist discourse and is a champion of women’s empowerment and equal rights. She is an independent curator and maintains a blog space.
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)
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Blueprint12 Presents Kaimurai by Artist Abishek Ganesh J at Art Dubai

Poster Credit: Blueprint12 Kaimurai is the artistic and research identity through which Abishek Ganesh J navigates his practice. Rooted in the natural indigo medium, his work unfolds as a dialogue between organic forms and the dynamic energy flow experienced in the Western Ghats, drawing inspiration from ancient South Indian art, rituals, architecture, and Carnatic music. His layered compositions—marked by rhythmic strokes ranging from delicate lines to bold gestures—manifest an interplay between tranquility and intensity, mirroring the omnipresent yet often obscured energies that shape our surroundings.
At a time of environmental degradation, social displacement, and cultural fragmentation, the urgency to reimagine new modes of coexistence—both among people and with the planet—has never been more pressing. Kaimurai’s practice engages with spirituality, materiality, and the metaphysical, seeking to explore these complex interconnections. His creative process, akin to a prayer-like ritual, bridges the inner realm of meditative reflection with the physicality of mark-making. Indigo, with its rich historical and cultural resonance, serves as a potent medium—one that embodies the interconnectedness of human labor, natural cycles, and collective memory. Dyed by many hands, the pigment itself becomes a metaphor for collaboration, continuity, and coexistence.
At the heart of his work lies a reflection on duality, where calm and tension, balance and opposition coexist in a delicate yet powerful equilibrium. His practice echoes the South Indian philosophical principle “andamum pindamum ondre”, which translates to “the Macrocosm and Microcosm are one and the same.” This belief, that all matter—whether material or thought—is inherently connected, shapes the visual and conceptual vocabulary of Kaimurai’s work. His artistic process is not merely an exploration of form but an invocation of deeper, universal rhythms where the spiritual, the material, and the temporal converge.

Kaimurai, Exhibition view, Courtesy of Blueprint12 Venue
Bawwaba, Booth W9Artist
Abishek Ganesh JCurator
Mirjam VaradinisExhibition Dates
April 18 – 20, 2025Website
https://www.blueprint12.comInstagram
https://www.instagram.com/blueprint2012/Contact
blueprint2012@gmail.comAbout the Artist
Abishek (b. 1984) graduated from National Institute of Fashion Technology (NIFT) in 2005 and has spent numerous years in the apparel industry heading design for leading brands. He decided to give up his design career to focus on creating art. His recent solo shows include, ‘Drigganita’, Bikaner House, Blueprint12 (2024); ‘Divine Blue’ at Kaash Foundation Bangalore (2022) and ‘Shadjam’ at Blueprint12 (2021). Kaimurai was recently awarded the prestigious Artist in Residence at the Australian Tapestry Workshop, Melbourne, supported by the Irene Davies International Scholarship. He has been a part of the group display Sutr Santati, at Melbourne Museum (May 2023) and at NGMA, Mumbai (November 2023). Also participated at Art Mumbai 2023 & 2024; the Delhi Contemporary Art Week, Bikaner House, 2022 and 2023; and India Art Fair 2023, 2024 & 2025.
He lives and works from Bangalore, India.
About Blueprint12
Blueprint12 is an artist-centric South Asian contemporary art gallery. Our focus has been to work with emerging artists and build a two-way channel for growth, with a focus on curatorial mentorship, critical thinking, engaging in contemporary debates and providing a voice to artists that since recently have been marginalized in a global discourse. With a vision that blurs the boundary amongst nations and a critical eye towards commonalities in art practices in the region, the gallery is dedicated to introducing art collectors towards fresh and established talent that constantly push their own boundaries.
Founded by Mandiraa Lambba and Riddhi Bhalla in 2012, Blueprint12’s objectives are inspired by the pillars of transparency, collaboration and following our heart. We have been inspired by our artists to set up a program that has existed beyond the confines to our gallery objectives. To support and channelize creative talent beyond the roster of our artists, we established Platform, which supports art and design, both in physical and online space. The idea stemmed from a studio space Blueprint12 ran in the art city of Vadodara from 2013-17 to support the growing need for community art studios for younger artists.
Our approach to building the gallery program is paralleled with dedicated publications that provide an insight to our vision and into the art of our artists. Our publications engage young designers who strive to break stereotype looks in design. The publications also aim to work with young critical thinkers to provide a fresh perspective to the art we bring to the table.
Over its 12-year history, the gallery has witnessed significant acquisitions from renowned museums and foundations in India and abroad. We are driven because of our artists and participating in international art fairs, we bring South Asian art to newer destinations. Our quiet international strategy is evident in our successful participation in three editions of Art Dubai, UAE.
(Text and images courtesy of Blueprint12)
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Space Willing N Dealing Presents SeonSan: My Family’s Ancestral Mountain, a Solo Exhibition by Lim Nosik

Poster Credit: Space Willing N Dealing Space Willing N Dealing is pleased to present SeonSan: My Family’s Ancestral Mountain, a solo exhibition by Lim Nosik, on view from April 9 to May 4, 2025.
In this exhibition, Lim Nosik delves into his family’s ancestral mountain—Seonsan, a site where his family graveyard is located—through paintings that intertwine personal memory, cultural heritage, and the everyday rituals surrounding agriculture and funeral traditions. With a soft-focus, Lim explores inherited forms of life and symbolic systems that reflect how long-standing traditions and contemporary realities intersect.

SeonSan: My Family’s Ancestral Mountain, Exhibition view, Courtesy of Space Willing N Dealing Trained in traditional Eastern painting at Hongik University and later completing his graduate studies at Korea National University of Arts, Lim is well-versed in traditional materials and techniques. Yet his current practice, primarily using oil on canvas, seeks to translate the subtle textures and absorptive qualities of ink on paper into a western painting medium. His process imbues the canvas with a sense of temporal diffusion, where color and light seem to emanate from within, evoking a quiet, almost sacred visual experience that resonates with imperceptible shifts in time and space.
The imagery in Lim’s work—his father and brother working the rice paddies, laborers, wildflowers blooming alongside mountain birds, towering trees shaped by time, skies watching over the land, and scenes of grave tending—resembles poetic landscapes rather than ethnographic records. These seemingly ordinary sceneries are deeply rooted in Lim’s ancestral land, where he has spent time observing and listening to oral histories. The elements in his paintings emerge as recognizable yet softened icons, evoking symbolic clarity within blurred forms.
His painting process is closely tied to notions of physical and temporal distance. By capturing the space that lies between subjects, Lim reveals the entangled traces left in their wake. Memories distort the clarity of directly observed scenes, leaving behind lingering signs of what once was. Yet his unique imagery, guided by personal memory and softened by time, invites viewers into his intimate reconstruction of the world—imbued with individuality and shaped by his hand.

Tree – Landscape 30, 2025, Oil on canvas, 190 x 97 cm Venue
F2, 48-1 Jahamunro (Changseong-dong 98-19), Jongro-gu, Seoul, KoreaGallery Hours
Wednesday – Sunday | 12 – 7 PMArtist
Lim NosikExhibition Dates
April 9 – May 4, 2025Website
https://www.willingndealing.orgInstagram
https://www.instagram.com/space_willingndealingContact
willingndealing02@gmail.com(Text and images courtesy of Space Willing N Dealing)
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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)
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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)
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ARARIO GALLERY SHANGHAI Presents Fluid in Forms, a Group Exhibition by Ten Contemporary Artists

Poster Credit: ARARIO GALLERY SHANGHAI ARARIO GALLERY SHANGHAI is pleased to announce the opening of the inaugural exhibition at its new Shanghai space, titled Fluid in Forms, running from March 19 (Wed) to May 11 (Sun), 2025. Curated by LIANG Qing, this group exhibition will feature works by artists KIM Byoungho (b. 1974, Korea), KIM Inbai (b. 1978, Korea), LEE Jeongbae (b. 1974, Korea), LEE Seung Ae (b. 1979, Korea), LIM Nosik (b. 1989, Korea), CHEN Yufan (b. 1973, China), CHEN Yujun (b. 1976, China), HU Yun (b. 1986, China), Pocono ZHAO Yu (b. 1990, China), and Kohei YAMADA (b. 1997, Japan). This exhibition explores the diverse interpretations of everyday elements and the individual expressive approaches to the fluidity of reality as reflected in the practices of the 10 participating artists spanning a generation. Through this, it seeks to shed light on how East Asian visual traditions continue to evolve and transform within today’s global context.

LEE Seung Ae, Botanic Drum I, 2024, Graphite, paper, 116.8 x 91 cm In the realm of the intangible, all things remain in flux. The notion of “Fluid in Forms (虛实相)” signifies a dynamic presence—a continuous state of becoming—that nurtures infinite possibilities amid the dissolution of boundaries. The concept of Xu (虛, the intangible) and Shi (实, the substantial) embodies a transformation in which being and non-being give rise to one another, forming impressions and perceptions that remain elusive and difficult to define. The distinction between Xu (虛) and Shi (实) in tangible objects is shaped entirely by the perceiving subject, with its clarity dynamically reflecting one’s relationship with the surrounding environment. The resulting “Fluid in Forms (虛实相)”—where Xiàng (相) exists within Xu Shi (虚实), or the Shi Xiàng (实相) of Xu (虚)—is no longer merely the external manifestation of objects but rather a subjective image, delineated and constructed by human consciousness.

LIM Nosik, Workroom 90, 2024, Oil on canvas, 100 x 70 cm The disjunction between objective image and subjective imagery creates the reality of the intangible, which, owing to its ambiguous and hazy boundaries, possesses an imagination far exceeding that of the substantial. In the East Asian tradition of expression, clear and distinct boundaries are typically avoided in favour of absence, emptiness, void, or indeterminacy, yet present more of the unseen. The vagueness of form curtails the fixation on rigid, concrete entities, liberating the meaning of objects from their inherent physical constraints. Their meanings are no longer confined to an inherent physicality but can wander and transition across time and field, opening up broader possibilities.
Opening Reception
March 19, 2025 | 3 – 7 PMAddress
ARARIO GALLERY SHANGHAI, 2F-205, 30 Wen’an Road, Jing’an District, Shanghai, China 200085Gallery Hours
Tuesday – Saturday |11 AM – 6 PMArtist
KIM Byoungho, KIM Inbai, LEE Jeongbae, LEE Seung Ae, LIM Nosik, CHEN Yufan, CHEN Yujun, HU Yun, Pocono ZHAO Yu, Kohei YAMADACurator
LIANG QingExhibition Dates
March 19 – May 11, 2025Website
https://www.arariogallery.comInstagram
https://www.instagram.com/arariogallery_official/Contact
sojung.kang@arariogallery.com
+82-10-9256-1491About Artists
The 10 artists presented in this exhibition share the homogeneous yet distinctly diverse traditions of the East Asian cultural sphere while simultaneously experiencing varying degrees of modernity’s impact. Their works are largely connected to nature, yet the images they evoke are not entirely clear-cut representations. Instead, tangible entities are absorbed into the flow of time, continuously oscillating between appearance and withdrawal. Korean artist KIM Inbai (b. 1978, Korea) explores the invisible as a catalyst for expanding perception by simulating or observing phenomena that do not exist in visual reality. He translates the body into points, lines, and planes within space or paints it as vast and imbued with the atmosphere of traditional East Asian landscape paintings. LIM Nosik (b. 1989, Korea) similarly focuses on landscapes in his recent works and continuously explores intangible forces. Through a mode of reciprocal self-forgetfulness in observation, he depicts air and transparent atmospheres.
Chinese artists CHEN Yufan (b. 1973, China) and CHEN Yujun (b. 1976, China) draw upon memories of their hometown and their experiences of prolonged migration. Their distinct personalities yield markedly different artistic styles: the former articulates his experiences and reflections on individual existence, repetitive labour, and social order using a calm, abstract language, whereas the latter constructs scenes where memory and reality interweave in a passionate and integrative manner, thereby seeking answers regarding self-redemption and the direction of human nomadic life towards a distant future.
Korean artist LEE Jeongbae (b. 1974, Korea) captures fragments of mountains, rivers, and the sky within urban landscapes. Using geometric divisions and industrial materials such as FRP and aluminium panels, he reconstructs nature – torn apart by capitalism and materialism – into unique abstract landscapes. Similarly engaged with the urban landscape, Japanese artist Kohei YAMADA (b. 1997, Japan) expresses a distinctive sense of chromatic depth, density and contemplation through layered geometric fields of colour. By superimposing different colour fields, he reveals ‘boundaries’ as connecting and intermediate spaces.
Another subtle thread woven through the exhibition is the artists’ displacement and deduction of objects’ semantics. By dissociating and dislocating objects from their original meanings, they activate novel interpretations within contemporary contexts, wherein “meaning transcends mere material form.” In the works of Korean artist LEE Seung Ae (b. 1979, Korea), plant images conceal intangible elements such as emotion and faith, while invisible forces—energy, sentiment, light, and sound—permeate the space between the inner and outer worlds. KIM Byongho (b. 1974, Korea) likens his sculptures to artificially cultivated “gardens,” employing precise mechanical replication and paradoxical critique to expose the tensions and contradictions between the individual and the collective, homogeneity and difference, within a modern civilization built on rationalism.
Chinese artist HU Yun (b. 1986, China) traces, collects, and re-edits historical fragments to explore the boundaries between reality and transcendence, materiality and spirituality, visibility and invisibility. The plant images in his work similarly acquire richer and more diverse semantics through the deep cultural context that underpins it. Pocono ZHAO Yu (b. 1990, China), on the other hand, seeks to transform a “self-culture” perspective into one of “other cultures.” Drawing from walking and personal experience, she employs elements from semiotics, literature, and related social sciences to deconstruct scenes, thereby revealing the global flows of civilization and cultural transformation. In her works, new narrators emerge as “intruders” who interrogate historical truth and explore the intricate interplay between originals and replicas.
In the realm of the intangible, all things remain in flux. The notion of “fluid in forms” signifies a dynamic presence, a continuous state of becoming—that nurtures infinite possibilities amid the chaos of dissolving boundaries. As the Suzhou Creek flows forward, ARARIO GALLERY inaugurates a new chapter in Shanghai.
(Text and images courtesy of ARARIO GALLERY SHANGHAI)
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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)
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ARARIO GALLERY SEOUL Presents Borderline, a Solo Exhibition by Kohei YAMADA

Poster Credit: ARARIO GALLERY SEOUL ARARIO GALLERY SEOUL presents a solo exhibition by Kohei YAMADA (b. 1997, Japan), entitled Borderline, from February 26 (Wed) to April 12 (Sat), 2025. This marks the artist’s first solo exhibition in Korea. Kohei YAMADA creates abstract paintings that metaphorically explore the liminal space between contemporary urban environments and nature. His oil paintings reveal a distinctive depth of color, density, and contemplative sensibility through the layering and contrast of geometric color fields. Spanning across the ground floor and basement of ARARIO GALLERY SEOUL, the exhibition spotlights 15 paintings of YAMADA’s recent practice from 2024 to early 2025. The showcased paintings explore the concept of “borderline”—a border where opposing worlds converge and a space imbued with the potential for communication and mediation—through the language of painting.

Untitled, 2024, Oil on canvas, 162.2 x 130.8 cm Borderline: A Converging Space of Connection and Mediation
The term “borderline” (境目), which Kohei YAMADA has chosen as the central theme of this exhibition, symbolically refers to both physical and conceptual spaces where two or more opposing entities meet. The artist perceives the layers of paint meticulously built upon the canvas as delicate membranes, each encapsulating a singular moment or a fragment of memory. He focuses on the borderline—the symbolic threshold where these translucent veils come into contact.
Throughout the painting process, borderlines continuously emerge—both in the vertical layering of overlapping pigments on the canvas and in the horizontal intersections where distinct color planes collide. The geometric forms, existing as independent surfaces, interact at their edges: some absorb and merge into each other’s hues, while others contrast and repel, creating dynamic visual tension. However, these borderlines do not signify divisions; rather, they represent “junctions” or “center points” that connect disparate memories, times, and spaces.

Untitled, 2025, Oil on canvas, 91.4 x 65.3 cm Color-Field Abstraction filled with the Hue of Light, Land, and Sea: Between City and Nature
Kohei YAMADA’s paintings always begin with a luminous lemon-colored brushstroke reminiscent of radiant sunlight. Over this foundation, he layers diverse color fields, carefully constructing a unique sense of equilibrium within each composition. His works metaphorically express the organic light embedded within fragmented urban landscapes, revealing the latent presence of nature within rigid, industrialized surroundings. The geometric color fields embody the linear structures of modern cities, while the dominant reds and blues in his picture planes reflect the hues of the land and sea, respectively.
Living between downtown Tokyo and its surrounding suburban areas, YAMADA contemplates the liminal space between urbanity and nature. He projects his own sense of identity onto the ambiguous landscapes that emerge between densely packed vertical and horizontal structures of the city and the encircling natural world. The borderlines that take shape as colors meet on his canvases serve as metaphors for these in-between spaces. The subtle tension between the opposing realms—separated only by a delicate membrane—creates a precarious yet mesmerizing paradox of harmony.
Address
85 Yulgok-ro, Jongno-gu, Seoul, KoreaGallery Hours
Tuesday – Saturday | 11 AM – 6 PMArtist
Kohei YAMADAExhibition Dates
Feb 26 – April 12, 2025Website
https://www.arariogallery.comInstagram
https://www.instagram.com/arariogallery_official/Contact
info@arariogallery.com
+82 2 541 5701About the Artist

Kohei YAMADA was born in Osaka, Japan, in 1997. He earned a BFA in Painting from Musashino Art University in 2020 and an MFA in Fine Arts from Kyoto University of the Arts in 2022. He has held solo exhibitions at Taka Ishii Gallery (Tokyo, Japan, 2023), biscuit gallery (Tokyo, Japan, 2022), MtK Contemporary Art (Kyoto, Japan, 2022), and more. He has participated in group exhibitions at Mai 36 Galerie (Zurich, Switzerland, 2024), Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo (Tokyo, Japan, 2024), Le Consortium (Dijon, France, 2024), ARARIO GALLERY SEOUL (Seoul, Korea, 2024), Taka Ishii Gallery Maebashi (Gunma, Japan, 2023), ARARIO GALLERY SHANGHAI (Shanghai, China, 2022), biscuit gallery (Tokyo, Japan, 2022), and more. In 2020, he received the CAF Award from the Contemporary Art Foundation in Japan.
(Text and images courtesy of ARARIO GALLERY SEOUL)
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ARARIO GALLERY SEOUL Presents Amoy Araw: Rhythms of Play and Labor, a Solo Exhibition by Buen CALUBAYAN

Poster Credit: ARARIO GALLERY SEOUL ARARIO GALLERY SEOUL presents Buen CALUBAYAN’s (b. 1980, The Philippines) solo exhibition Amoy Araw: Rhythms of Play and Labor from 26 Feb (Wed) – 12 Apr (Sat) 2025. This is the artist’s first solo exhibition in Korea in six years since the 2019 solo show at ARARIO GALLERY Ryse Hotel. The exhibition presents 21 new works that explore themes of critical pedagogy and sensory practice through the languages of painting, video, and installation.
Buen CALUBAYAN is a Manila-based artist whose practice unfolds at the intersection of art, labor, and education. His work critically examines institutional frameworks such as painting, landscape, and linear perspective, drawing from them various strategies and practices that explore bodily rhythm, movement, and sensory capacities. By doing so, he challenges traditional models of power and oppression, reconstructing the relationship between the body and the world. Ultimately, his work focuses on the systems that govern everyday life and the institutions that shape and control our existence. Through painting, drawing, video, and installation, CALUBAYAN questions the imposed Western visual systems and offers alternative perspectives.

Draw your face to erase the land, and vice versa 4, 2024, Pastel and acrylic on canvas, 91 x 76 cm The smell of the sun, traces of movement
It is a phrase that evokes the lingering traces of movement—the rhythmic imprints—left on the bodies of children playing outdoors or laborers after a day’s work. The concept of “rhythm,” which runs through CALUBAYAN’s recent works, refers to the rhythm of light, bodily movement, shifts in the environment and landscape, and the fundamental forces that enable the creation and transmission of knowledge. This exhibition invites audiences to engage with a diverse range of works that explore these dynamic rhythms, which serve as the foundation for learning, memory, and communal experience.

A set of ecological backdrops 1, 2024, Oil on canvas, 122 x 122 cm A new sensory experience
CALUBAYAN’s artistic universe is grounded in long-term, in-depth research. Under the broad framework of “critical pedagogy,” he investigates the history of landscape painting, educational practices, and indigenous land struggles and integrates art history with socio-cultural issues to explore the inseparable dynamics of the senses, knowledge, and politics through the language of art. He considers “movement” and “rhythm” to be the essence of learning, urging a rediscovery of one’s body and senses beyond fixed conventional viewpoints. As part of the concept of “grounding”, he deconstructs traditional learning and advocates for relearning and collective study.
This exhibition is based on CALUBAYAN’s longstanding research on pedagogy, examining how conventional linear perception and colonial perspectives have constrained our senses and knowledge while exploring new possibilities to overcome these limitations. The artist critiques the neoliberal education system, which operates like a factory converting students into mere labor forces, as well as the historical legacy of perspective in art that has flattened our vision. Instead, he proposes Indigenous communities’ experiential learning methods—rooted in play and labor—as an alternative knowledge system. By expanding sensory perception, the exhibition demonstrates how body- and sensation-centered learning can foster awareness of social issues and communal empathy. Inviting audiences to rediscover their own bodies and senses beyond fixed viewpoints, this exhibition explores alternative possibilities for broadening our ways of perception.

A set of ecological backdrops 4, 2025, Pastel and acrylic on canvas, 122 x 122 cm This exhibition weaves together various strands of research and practice, including landscape painting and the institutional history of art, Waldorf pedagogy, memory work and art therapy, indigenous land struggles, education and practices centered on movement and sensation. Through video works, the artist reveals the artificial manipulation of urban landscapes and the disruption of natural rhythms, while paintings and chalk drawings explore the interaction between the body and the environment. Diagrams and drawings highlight the impact of fundamental actions—such as walking, breathing, and movement—on sensory perception. Additionally, CALUBAYAN emphasizes the educational aspect of the exhibition through notebooks and sketches that serve as a guide to his artistic practice.
Using a range of medium, CALUBAYAN expresses resistance to the ways in which our modes of existence have been structured and defined. In this exhibition, he places movement and rhythm at the core of learning, advocating for the concept of “grounding”—a process of dismantling conventional learning, relearning, and learning together. By reconnecting the body and sensory organs, the exhibition lays the groundwork for knowledge that is directly felt and experienced through the body.
Address
85 Yulgok-ro, Jongno-gu, Seoul, KoreaGallery Hours
Tuesday – Saturday | 11 AM – 6 PMArtist
Buen CALUBAYANExhibition Dates
Feb 26 – April 12, 2025Website
https://www.arariogallery.comInstagram
https://www.instagram.com/arariogallery_official/Contact
info@arariogallery.com
+82 2 541 5701About the Artist

Buen CALUBAYAN lives and works in Manila, Philippines. He studied Cultural Heritage at the University of Santo Tomas and worked as a conservation assistant at the UST Museum from 2002 to 2006 and as a researcher at the National Museum of the Philippines from 2010 to 2013. CALUBAYAN has held solo exhibitions at various institutions, including the UP Vargas Museum (Manila, Philippines, 2023–2024) and ARARIO GALLERY Ryse Hotel (Seoul, Korea, 2019), and has participated in group exhibitions at venues such as Mindset Art Center (Taipei, Taiwan, 2020), House of World Cultures (Berlin, Germany, 2017), ARARIO GALLERY SHANGHAI (Shanghai, China, 2016), Gwangju Museum of Art (Gwangju, Korea, 2014), and the Metropolitan Museum of Manila (Manila, Philippines, 2013). Moreover, from 2008 to 2018, he took part in numerous residencies in Japan, Australia, Singapore, and other locations. In 2013, CALUBAYAN received a Fernando Zóbel Prize for Visual Art at the Ateneo Art Awards in 2013 and a Thirteen Artists Award from the Cultural Center of the Philippines in 2009.
(Text and images courtesy of ARARIO GALLERY SEOUL)
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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)
