Missing Hong Kong Art Month already? 6 exhibitions and installations you shouldn’t miss this spring, from TeamLab’s viral harbourside installation to an exhibition celebrating Chinese novelist Jin Yong
- TeamLab has scattered giant light-emitting ovoids from Tamar Park into the harbour, while the Hong Kong Heritage Museum has a sculpture exhibition that brings to life characters from Jin Yong’s novels
- M+ has a show combining ink paintings with installations, featuring works by Zao Wou-Ki, Xu Bing and Amar Kanwar – plus a photo exhibition in collaboration with the Bibliothèque Nationale de France
1. “Shanshui: Echoes and Signals”, and more at M+
In West Kowloon, be ready to catch some of the largest-scale works on display during Art Month at M+, with three shows across drastically different media. If you haven’t caught it, “Shanshui: Echoes and Signals” explores landscapes and humanity through traditional Chinese ink painting, sculpture and more. The exhibition features works by artists of different generations including Yang Jiechang, Xu Bing, Zao Wou-Ki, Wesley Tongson and Guo Hongwei, plus an LED installation by Tatsuo Miyajima, alongside video installations by Liu Chuang, Amar Kanwar and Nguyen Trinh Thi.
Through July 1, M+ is exploring the medium of photography via “Noir & Blanc: A Story of Photography”, a collaboration with the Bibliothèque Nationale de France (BNF). This is a thematic presentation of photography over the course of a century – from 1915 to 2019 – featuring over 170 celebrated photographers from BNF’s archive, as well as 30 works from M+’s own collections. The exhibition is split into three sections, Aiming for Contrast, Light and Shadow and Colour Chart, which cover everyday moments of stark opposition, how photographers paint with light, and the tonal nuances of grey respectively.
2. “Another Day in Hong Kong” at Asia Art Archive
Through August 31, the Asia Art Archive is presenting “Another Day in Hong Kong”, a photo exhibition drawing on archives, memories and imagination to capture Hong Kong on the very specific but ordinary day of October 19, 1996. The project is the sequel to a previous exercise and exhibition, “One Day in Hong Kong”, in which residents from all over the territory were asked to photograph the people and events of their daily life within a 24-hour period on September 7, 1990.