8 Under-the-Radar Shows to See During Hong Kong Art Week


Curator Aaditya Sathish recently recalled returning to Hong Kong from New York in 2020, at the height of the pandemic. It was, he said, a fascinating time. “From what I could understand, Hong Kong was very much a place to trade global contemporary art. But over the pandemic, there was a focus on the local. A lot of independent art spaces started to emerge, and I remember seeing everyone flock to these places,” he told ARTnews. “There was a desperate need to look at what was around us.”

Indeed, Hong Kong’s art scene has been through a crash course in survival, shaped by a whirlwind of disruptions—from mass pro-democracy protests to the pandemic, and more recently, the imposition of the national security law.

As arts journalist Enid Tsui notes in her newly published book, Art in Hong Kong: A City in Flux, defining “Hong Kong art” is no easy task. For years, Hong Kong artists have avoided grand ideological declarations, instead gravitating toward the everyday, the mundane, and the deeply personal. But the turbulence of recent years has fueled waves of protest art and socially engaged practices.

No doubt, this year’s Hong Kong Art Week will dazzle collectors as they swoop into the city, treating them to a buffet of masterpieces and the hottest blue-chip names money can buy, both at Art Basel Hong Kong and in the museums and galleries across the city.

Take M+, for instance. One of its headlining exhibitions is a blockbuster show of more than 60 works by Picasso (alongside the works of 30 artists from Asia and its diaspora).

But some might wonder, for a museum that was founded to challenge the Western-centric narratives dominating the art world and prides itself on championing the “now,” how yet another exhibition of a long-canonized figure will feel to an international audience who, at this point, has seen Picasso’s work in just about every major museum, auction house, or coffee table book.

For those interested in a more authentic sense of Hong Kong’s art scene, they’d be better poised of traversing the industrial elevators in Wong Chuk Hang or the narrow lanes and unpolished corners of Kowloon’s residential neighborhoods to see a fuller picture of what the city’s artists have to offer.

Given their own lived experiences, Hong Kong’s art community has a particularly sharp understanding of how art can serve as both a refuge and a means of processing collective trauma, not to mention an act of defiance in an increasingly authoritarian global landscape. Even now, they continue to navigate the shifting political realities of the city, finding ways to create, critique, and endure.

Below, you’ll find eight standout shows on view during Hong Kong Art Week—at independent, artist-led, or small gallery spaces—that go beyond blue-chip names and easy-to-digest aesthetics, and instead center the work of female and queer artists and invite audiences to reflect on societal inequalities, shifting power dynamics, and even pressing geopolitical tensions.

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