ArtAsiaPacific

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ArtAsiaPacific is the leading English-language magazine focusing on contemporary art and culture from Asia, the Pacific and the Middle East. AAP is published six times a year, with an annual Almanac edition that recounts the past year in countries from across Asia, the Pacific, and the Middle East. For more information on our publication, distribution and current activities, please feel free to write us at [email protected].

The first segment of “Project Belonging: From There to Here,” at Ateneo Art Gallery “The Foreign in the Familiar,” spotl...
17/09/2024

The first segment of “Project Belonging: From There to Here,” at Ateneo Art Gallery “The Foreign in the Familiar,” spotlighted Spanish visual artist Enrique Marty, whose artworks intertwine surreal horror with psychological insight. Click the link in the comment section to read Sean Carballo’s full review.

Perhaps the ultimate symbol of fluidity, water shows up time and again in the practice of Channatip Chanvipava. Based in...
12/09/2024

Perhaps the ultimate symbol of fluidity, water shows up time and again in the practice of Channatip Chanvipava. Based in London, the self-taught Thai artist has been reckoning with his own fluidity for years, from his monumental change in career, after initially pursuing economics, to his sexuality. Read Camilla, our editorial assistant's interview at link in the comment section.

11/09/2024

Art’s Largest Annual Prize, the Praemium Imperiale, Announces Laureates

Not rivals but not quite friendly collaborators either, the American-owned Frieze art fair and the Korean International ...
11/09/2024

Not rivals but not quite friendly collaborators either, the American-owned Frieze art fair and the Korean International Art Fair (KIAF) have learned to cohabitate during the first week of September at the Coex Convention and Exhibition Center in Seoul. Read HG Masters, our deputy editor's report in the comment section.

11/09/2024

Ninth NGV Architecture Commission Names Winner

Walking into “Hide Me in Your Belly,” Chinese artist Yu Ji’s inaugural solo exhibition in Italy, felt like entering a zo...
11/09/2024

Walking into “Hide Me in Your Belly,” Chinese artist Yu Ji’s inaugural solo exhibition in Italy, felt like entering a zone of intimacy. Floating pieces of fabric used for her video projections and sculptural fragments positioned along the curve of the Ala Piccola Nio (the exhibition hall within the museum) translated into an unassuming yet potent landscape in which elements were both transitional and transient, constantly shifting between the corporeal and the ethereal. Their individual and collective natures existed here as objects ex nihilo, while at the same time bearing the traces of their previous manifestations. Read Manuela Lietti's review in the comment section.

Installation view of YU JI’s "Hide Me in Your Belly," Centro Pecci, Prato, Italy. Photo by Andrea Rossetti. Courtesy the artist and Sadie Coles HQ, London.

The forthcoming Bangkok Art Biennale, themed “Nurture Gaia” and set to open in the Thai capital next month, has revealed...
09/09/2024

The forthcoming Bangkok Art Biennale, themed “Nurture Gaia” and set to open in the Thai capital next month, has revealed the final details for its fourth edition, adding two more venues and 31 international artists to the lineup. Learn more in the comment section.

Bangkok Art Biennale speakers, including (from left to right) undisclosed panel moderator, Thai artist KANYA CHAROENSUPKUL, Korean pop artist CHOI JEONG HWA, Bangkok-based photographer POKCHAT WORASAB, Thai singer MUTMEE PIMDAO PANICHSAMAI, Singaporean sound artist ZUL MAHMOD, and Bangkok-based sculptor HARITORN AKARAPAT, at a press conference on September 6, 2024. Courtesy the Bangkok Art Biennale.

Intimacy in painting typically features a cis man and woman, but in Mariage d’Amour (2024), Hong Kong-born E8MKBOY depic...
06/09/2024

Intimacy in painting typically features a cis man and woman, but in Mariage d’Amour (2024), Hong Kong-born E8MKBOY depicts a marriage to “itself,” the preferred pronoun of the artist’s persona. Bound by a shimmering lilac ribbon, the bodies are so intertwined that it is difficult to discern which figure the limbs belong to—a kind of physical fusion often reserved for portraying copulation (or, in this context, consummation). Read Anna Lentchner, our assistant editor’s write up of the artist in the comment section.

Amid Hong Kong’s sweltering August heat, a new trading floor for art, ART021, has rung its opening bell, disregarding th...
05/09/2024

Amid Hong Kong’s sweltering August heat, a new trading floor for art, ART021, has rung its opening bell, disregarding the stagnant global market. Marking its newest franchise, the Shanghai-based art fair has expanded southward, launching ART021 Hong Kong from August 29 to September 1—and while the inaugural edition was successful, it was not without its faults. Click the link in the comment section to read associate editor Alex Yiu’s full report.

The sixth edition of “BOOKED,” the Hong Kong Art Book Fair at Tai Kwun Contemporary, returned last Friday, August 30, an...
04/09/2024

The sixth edition of “BOOKED,” the Hong Kong Art Book Fair at Tai Kwun Contemporary, returned last Friday, August 30, and ran until Sunday, September 1, bringing more than 110 artists, publishers, organizations, and booksellers to the JC Contemporary exhibition space. Along with providing the Hong Kong public with a range of programs such as talks, workshops, and performances, the book fair successfully welcomed dozens of local, regional, and international exhibitors, who displayed everything from zines and exhibition catalogs to multiple-hundred-paged artist books. Click the link to read some of the editors’ highlights. https://artasiapacific.com/ideas/editors-picks-from-booked-hong-kong

03/09/2024

Chinese Authorities Detain Outspoken Artist

03/09/2024

Hong Kong Art Mall Up For Grabs

Los Angeles-based artist platform Foundwork has kicked off the international open call for its 2024 Artist Prize, an ann...
03/09/2024

Los Angeles-based artist platform Foundwork has kicked off the international open call for its 2024 Artist Prize, an annual juried grant for emerging and midcareer artists working in any media.

Now in its sixth year, the award includes an unrestricted USD 10,000 grant and individual studio visits with each of the esteemed jurors on the 2024 committee. In addition, the honoree and three shortlisted artists will be invited to participate in long-form interviews as part of the ongoing Foundwork Dialogues program, which will further public engagement with their practices.

The Foundwork Artist Prize is open to artists residing anywhere in the world with limited exceptions. To be considered, artists will need to register and maintain a profile on the Foundwork website, with at least six artworks and an artist statement published on their profile page, throughout the 2024 selection period: 11:59 pm PT, September 26, 2024—11:59 pm PT, December 31, 2024. Any artist interested in learning more can visit the FAQ and Prize Rules pages on the Foundwork website for instructions, terms, and conditions, or can email support [​at​] foundwork.art.

Learn more at the link in the comment section.

*This post is brought to you by Foundwork.

In an era creaking under the weight of too much content, we are increasingly at the mercy of the immediate. This often m...
02/09/2024

In an era creaking under the weight of too much content, we are increasingly at the mercy of the immediate. This often manifests itself as a rigidity of meaning, whether in ideology, identity, or the personal as political. But many artists see value and significance in mystery and hesitancy, and are attuned to the myriad complexities of the world and of the self. These creators champion reflection, contemplation, and the timelessness of things.

Our cover feature looks at Korean painter Jinju Lee, who creates strange and uncanny scenes loaded with symbolism, oneiric detail, and seemingly surreal elements. Lee has built her most arresting works since the late 2000s in large-scale tableaux and, more recently, in dark, intimate paintings featuring isolated hands and faces, often mirrored or obscured, that evoke the subconscious.

No less revealing in terms of behaviors we hide and repress, especially when it comes to states of loneliness, sexuality, and family relations, are the films of the Malaysian-born, Taiwan-based director Tsai Ming-liang. Now in his sixties, he is one of the most revered auteurs of his generation, and he relates how over the course of four decades he has formed an intimate collaboration with the actor Lee Kang-sheng, who has appeared in all of his feature films to date.

A special feature surveys eight emerging painters who represent a new generation filled with a powerful sense of urgency, from Amanda Ba and Mikey Yates to Oscar Yi Hou and Un Cheng. In scenes of the ordinary overlaid with strong psychological overtones and through our perceptions of the body (as seen by the self and others), these painters are playfully subverting cultural categories and norms.

For Inside Burger Collection, curator Qu Chang reflects on the subject of mourning that runs through the practice of Isaac Chong Wai, as the essay interweaves passages from two 20th-century cultural theorists, Roland Barthes and Judith Butler, with her own diary entries.

Our Profiles discover the multidisciplinary works of Musquiqui Chihying, who combines literature, theory, technology, and pop culture, as well as the q***r performative works of Dew Kim, who riffs on geopolitics and religion with infusions of sadomasochism. In One on One, the Dresden-based artist Rao Fu expresses his admiration for the sublime landscapes of German Romantic painter Caspar David Friedrich.

For this issue's New Currents, we spotlight Seoul-based Hwang Sueyon, who reinterprets social-media content into sculptural works that she likens to physical performances; Choi Goen, also from Seoul, who unearths the invisible infrastructure sustaining digital technology through her sculptures; and London-based artist Victor Lim Seaward, who reflects on the legacy of colonialism’s symbolic power.

In Dispatch we hear from Jeju Island about the tireless work of the artist-activists resisting the overdevelopment of Korea’s major tourist destination. The Point looks at the recent closure of an LGBTQ+ exhibition in Istanbul, amid a larger crackdown on civil-society initiatives. Our Previews cast an eye toward exhibitions in Korea including the 15th Gwangju Biennale as well as two major upcoming showcases for Korean artists in London.

This issue in Reviews, we visit South African artist William Kentridge’s major retrospective at the Taipei Fine Arts Museum, as well as solo showcases at museums and galleries from Sydney, Tokyo, Seoul, Manila, Hong Kong, and Los Angeles. And finally, in Where I Work, AAP visits the temporary South London studio of Steph Huang as she prepared for her exhibition “See, See, Sea” at Tate Britain, and we hear how she conceives of an exhibition as similar to a game of chess, where she imagines herself as both players.

A digital edition of the full AAP Issue 140 is now available for purchase on Zinio, Google Play, iTunes, and Magzter.

Grab a copy or read online at the link in the comment section.

Artists throughout history have revered the square’s symbolic potential: Leonardo da Vinci used it to represent the idea...
02/09/2024

Artists throughout history have revered the square’s symbolic potential: Leonardo da Vinci used it to represent the ideal form of humanity in Vitruvian Man (c. 1490), while it is treated as a spiritual, revolutionary emblem in the Suprematist artist Kazimir Malevich’s Black Square (1915). Hong Kong artist Dony Cheng Hung follows this tradition, but in her work the congruent shape takes a psychological turn. A graduate from the Chinese University of Hong Kong, obtaining a bachelor’s and master’s degree in fine arts in 2017 and 2023, respectively, the artist has established a practice that spans video, painting, and installation to explore the flux between perception and emotion. Click the link in the comment section to read associate editor Alex Yiu’s full profiling.

Stills from DONY CHENG HONG’s The Landscape of the World of Straight Lines, 2024, single-channel video: 4 min 5 sec. Courtesy the artist.

Taking cues from the cybernetic process and applying it to technology and religion, Hong Kong-based artist Liao Jiaming ...
28/08/2024

Taking cues from the cybernetic process and applying it to technology and religion, Hong Kong-based artist Liao Jiaming will conclude the eighth annual de Sarthe Artists Residency (de Sarthe Gallery) with the exhibition “Melting Suns on the Screens,” featuring new installations, video, and mixed media artworks that revealed his speculative techno-religious system. ArtAsiaPacific’s Alex Yiu sat down with Liao to discuss the conceptual framework behind his thought-provoking works. Link in the comments.

As the third edition of Frieze Seoul and the long-running KIAF Seoul converge at the COEX Convention & Exhibition Center...
27/08/2024

As the third edition of Frieze Seoul and the long-running KIAF Seoul converge at the COEX Convention & Exhibition Center in Gangnam, the Korean capital will be pulsating with contemporary art and its fans. Amid all the openings, talks, and events, the editors selected some of the major exhibitions at Seoul’s museums, private art centers, and art spaces to check out in early September. Click the link in the comment section to read more.

From anthropomorphic goddesses to dizzying bindi patterns, Bharti Kher’s creations are an ode to the symbiotic contradic...
26/08/2024

From anthropomorphic goddesses to dizzying bindi patterns, Bharti Kher’s creations are an ode to the symbiotic contradictions in our world. Whether a painting, sculpture, or installation, each of her artworks combines disparate elements that collide and transform in unexpected ways, much like the British Indian artist’s own hybrid identity. In concert with the her ongoing UK exhibition “Alchemies,” our editorial intern Annette Meier surveyed Bharti Kher's most influential works. Link in the comment section.

Weekly News Roundup: August 23, 2024–Frieze and KIAF Organizers Share Highlights–Massive Public Art Project to Hit NYC–T...
23/08/2024

Weekly News Roundup: August 23, 2024
–Frieze and KIAF Organizers Share Highlights
–Massive Public Art Project to Hit NYC
–The Met to Unveil Lee Bul Commission
–Displaced Gallery Finds New Home in West Bund
–Major Merger of Beijing Cultural Districts
–Accession of Golden Lion-Winning Artwork

Read the full roundup in the comment section.

On August 17, Iranian Armenian abstract painter Sirak Melkonian passed away in Toronto at the age of 93. Melkonian was c...
23/08/2024

On August 17, Iranian Armenian abstract painter Sirak Melkonian passed away in Toronto at the age of 93. Melkonian was considered one of the founders of the modern Iranian art movement and was best known for his limited color palette, with works that emphasized lines and forms inspired by nature. Link to the obituary in the comment section.

“ . . . For many of us, especially the chronically online, generational labels have become an obsession. Once considered...
22/08/2024

“ . . . For many of us, especially the chronically online, generational labels have become an obsession. Once considered the jargon of sociologists and advertisers, the terms ‘Baby Boomers,’ ‘Gen X,’ ‘Millennials,’ ‘Gen Z,’ ‘Gen Alpha,’ and so on, have entered public discourse and reshaped our sociocultural zeitgeist, and not without good reason. . . . Underpinned by this framework, the compendium Future Present: Contemporary Korean Art (2023), edited by Andy St. Louis, spotlights 25 Korean artists, most of whom were born in the 1980s.” Read Alex Yiu, our associate editor's review in the comment section.

The Japanese pop artist Keiichi Tanaami passed away on August 9 after a two-month battle with myelodysplastic syndrome (...
21/08/2024

The Japanese pop artist Keiichi Tanaami passed away on August 9 after a two-month battle with myelodysplastic syndrome (a rare blood cancer). The news was announced by Tokyo-based art gallery Nanzuka Underground, which revealed that the 88-year-old had been receiving medical treatment since June, but was ultimately unable to recover from a subarachnoid hemorrhage.

“Fever​s​ ​are​​ our bod​ies’ biological defense against illness. ​They also serve as a metaphor for ​the ​calenture ​of...
21/08/2024

“Fever​s​ ​are​​ our bod​ies’ biological defense against illness. ​They also serve as a metaphor for ​the ​calenture ​of​​ overwrought passion, ​the heat of the city, or the need to self-regulate and attune to hidden traumas. In “Fever Dream,” viewers experienced artworks that expressed a myriad of feverish states and ​which ​sought to generate reflection on how we might learn to acknowledge and tend to our mental febrility.” Read Hung Duong's review on “Fever Dream” at The UP Vargas Museum, University of the Philippines in the comment section.

Installation view of MARK SALVATUS’s Codes series, 2007- , acrylic and ink on maps, collage, and image on decal stickers. Courtesy the UP Vargas Museum, Metro Manila.

“The words were fragmented by sporadic light, frustrating and overwhelming the senses. But this confusion was part of a ...
20/08/2024

“The words were fragmented by sporadic light, frustrating and overwhelming the senses. But this confusion was part of a larger process to realize Korakrit Arunanondchai’s nostalgia for unity as a whole, for the meditative installation facilitated the momentary passing of meaning in its entirety.”

Read Kamori Osthanada's review of Korakrit Arunanondchai's “nostalgia for unity” at Bangkok Kunsthalle in the comment section.

Installation view of KORAKRIT ARUNANONDCHAI’s nostalgia for unity, 2024, immersive installation with imageless film and carbon-embedded ground, at the Bangkok Kunsthalle. Courtesy Bangkok Kunsthalle.

"Featuring over 30 performances over two weekends and a dense program including artists’ talks and workshops in collabor...
19/08/2024

"Featuring over 30 performances over two weekends and a dense program including artists’ talks and workshops in collaboration with other organizations, Freespace Noise Fest was unprecedented for Hong Kong. Perhaps the event was a reaction to the city’s ever-changing underground scene, especially considering that most alternative spaces dedicated to experimental practice vanish shortly after emerging due to Hong Kong’s hefty costs, noise restrictions, and limited spaces, among other factors. And despite not being fashionable to most subversive artists, the institutional support the festival received opened up further exposure to alternative practices, potentially kickstarting renewed dialogue and artistic development on these underrepresented art forms. If allowed, the festival ought to continue and be expanded to align with the growing worldwide prominence and significance of sound-oriented art forms, which follow a long history of experimental arts." Read Alex Yiu's highlights from Freespace Noise Fest in the comment section.

Weekly News Roundup: August 16, 2024–New Ruling in Artists Versus AI Lawsuit–Liverpool to Host Massive Anish Kapoor Inst...
16/08/2024

Weekly News Roundup: August 16, 2024

–New Ruling in Artists Versus AI Lawsuit
–Liverpool to Host Massive Anish Kapoor Installations
–Major Aboriginal Art Prize Names Winner
–Gemma Smith Wins Mosman Art Prize
–Melbourne Showcases Female-Centric SciFi

Read the news roundup now in the comment section.

NOLI RICTOR in front of Kamanti, 2023, synthetic polymer paint on linen, 290 × 200 cm. Photo by Charlie Bliss. Courtesy Museum and Art Gallery of the Northern Territory.

New York-based Art Projects International (API) announced the passing of its founder and director Jung Lee Sanders, who ...
15/08/2024

New York-based Art Projects International (API) announced the passing of its founder and director Jung Lee Sanders, who died on August 6 after a year-long battle with cancer.

“Trained in Chinese traditional meticulous (gongbi) and literati (xieyi) painting, Kang [Chunhui] distinguishes herself ...
15/08/2024

“Trained in Chinese traditional meticulous (gongbi) and literati (xieyi) painting, Kang [Chunhui] distinguishes herself through her contemporary reinterpretation of Buddhist mural iconography from the Kizil Caves, where she researched for two years (2006–2008). In “Observing My Distant Self” at INKstudio, Beijing, Kang critically examines her own artistic output by selecting representative pieces from her eight main pictorial series and placing them in designated Xinjiang locations.” Read Nataline Colonnello's review here: https://artasiapacific.com/shows/observing-my-distant-self-kang-chunhui-s-journey-to-the-inner-land

*In collaboration with INK studio

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ArtAsiaPacific is the leading English-language magazine focusing on contemporary art and culture from Asia, the Pacific and the Middle East. AAP is published six times a year, with an annual Almanac edition that recounts the past year in the 67 countries from Turkey to Tonga. For more information on our publication, distribution and current activities, please feel free to write us at [email protected].

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