Image: Jaki-ed weaving workshop, Majuro, Marshall Islands, September 2017. (see Helen Grace's Asia-Pacific Triennial article below)
Welcome to the Hong Kong art critics' October newsletter!
You can read all our new articles here. For all other links please scroll down.
In Hong Kong art news, the Asia Art Archive has its yearly fundraising auction, with contemporary art on offer, including work by Yu Peng (Taiwan), Chan Ting (Hong Kong), Ruth Asawa (USA), Qiu Anxiong (China) and others.
Opened 20 years ago in Hong Kong's vibrant Kwun Tong industrial area, Osage Gallery has regularly promoted new technology, contemporary Chinese art and art from Southeast Asia. The gallery's latest exhibition, Stemflow: South by Southeast 莖流: 東南偏南, curated by Patrick Flores (National Gallery Singapore) & Reuben Keehan (Queensland Art Gallery), will be its last major exhibition before the gallery closes permanently in early 2025. It will be missed.
New reviews and articles on the AICAHK website include a video of curator Oscar Ho talking about seminal exhibitions he curated in 1997 and 1998 on Hong Kong's history and about the mythical Lo Ting. Phoebe Man adds English text to her article discussing a drawing project about sexual abuse. John Batten writes about Hong Kong's fragile social climate when I.M. Pei''s Bank of China Tower was announced to be built in 1982; and Chinese text is added to his review of the recent Bruce Nauman exhibition at Tai Kwun.
Scroll down for links to all articles - including flashback articles still topical today
Enjoy!
John Batten
Hong Kong art critic