Art Basel Hong Kong & Art Central top arts events in Hong Kong

Citywide Celebration of Creativity this Spring
2023-03-24
/
/ New Delhi
/ Events
Art Basel Hong Kong
Art Basel Hong Kong & Art Central top arts events in Hong Kong

Hong Kong’s homegrown art fair has established itself as a vital platform for emerging artists

With two major arts festivals lined up, Spring is celebration of arts and creativity across Hong Kong, which has emerged as a major destination for arts tourism.
Rate this post

The eyes of the art world have turned to Hong Kong as colour, creativity and vibrancy descend upon the city for the arts and culture scene. According to a press statement, headlined by large-scale fairs Art Basel Hong Kong and Art Central, the internationally renowned celebration of arts and culture sees a suite of world-class events, encounters and experiences taking place throughout the city, showcasing Hong Kong’s thriving creative landscape while reinforcing its position as a global cultural hub.

Art Basel Hong Kong and Art Central anchor arts lineup

Art Basel Hong Kong, which is taking place from March 23-25, is hosting the biggest edition of the international art fair since 2019 which this year features 177 exhibitors from 32 countries and territories. Taking place concurrently is Art Central, from March 22-25, Hong Kong’s homegrown art fair that has established itself as one of the region’s most significant platforms for emerging artists. The statement adds that these two world-class art fairs have helped Hong Kong become firmly established as one the world’s foremost hubs for international arts and cultural exchange. 

The statement goes on to say that in particular, Hong Kong Tourism Board is teaming up with Art Central in launching an “Arts in Hong Kong café” to invite visitors to walk into the contemporary art gallery like café and see the collaborative works of local and overseas artists.

Show-stopping installations, must-see exhibitions across the city

As Hong Kong’s stock on the global arts stage continues to go from strength to strength, a host of opportunities for artistic encounters can also be discovered around town, says the statement.

Harbour City is currently home to large-scale work Giants: Rising Up. The first of French artist JR’s Giants series in Asia, this 12mx12m installation depicts a larger-than-life high-jumper in graceful mid-flight backdropped by the iconic Victoria Harbour, and features a nod to traditional Hong Kong craftsmanship with the use of bamboo scaffolding, running from March 13 to April 23.

Pacific Place hosts the world premiere of Gravity, a 10-metre-tall work by Los Angeles-based conceptual artist Awol Erizku. The piece is a playful depiction of the figure of King Tutankhamun that invites visitors to take a detour from their usual route, and represents the first-ever offsite activation of Art Basel Hong Kong’s Encounters sector, running from March 17 to April 2.

ArtisTree this month has unveiled ArtisTree Selects: Urban Rocks, a solo exhibition featuring brand-new sculptural works by Hong Kong-based French artist Polo Bourieau. The 12 stone sculptures, made in the intimacy of the artist’s Tuscan workshop in 2021, are inspired by Chinese scholars’ rocks, and examine humanity’s indelible mark on the planet, that runs from March 16 to April 9.

Art Basel Hong Kong

CHAT art exhibition features works by 26 art and culture creators

Clouds, Power and Ornament – Roving Central Asia is now showing at Centre for Heritage, Arts and Textile at The Mills. Greater China’s first-ever comprehensive Central Asian textile art exhibition features works by 26 art and culture creators from the landlocked region to explore how artists and designers there use textile as a medium of preservation, response and cohesion. The exhibition opened on February 25 and will continue until May 21.

Street Art in the spotlight

The statement adds that street art will be in the spotlight this dynamic art week, with prominent showcases examining the movement from its beginnings to the here and now.

Street art festival HKwalls makes a vibrant return to Hong Kong this week. The eighth edition of the much-loved event will once again transform neighbourhoods in the Central and Western District into outdoor galleries, and has also invited six internationally acclaimed mural and street artists to create their first pieces in the city.

Another harbor-front highlight is Vltraphotonics, a 4,000 sqm digital artwork by Spanish street artist J Demsky that takes over the façades of Tsim Sha Tsui Centre and Empire Centre. The site-specific work, a collaboration between HKwalls street art festival and Sino Group, will light up Victoria Harbour each night until April 12 with over 82,000 LED bulbs.

K11 Arts Foundation presents City As Studio, Greater China’s largest ever exhibition of graffiti and street art. Curated by Jeffrey Deitch, the show examines the history of the form from its emergence as counter-cultural expression in 1970s New York to its rise as a global phenomenon, and features works by pioneers Jean-Michel Basquiat, Keith Haring, Fab 5 Freddy, Lady Pink and more.

The statement adds that throughout the year, Hong Kong plays host to a vibrant and diverse range of arts and cultural events that showcase the city’s creative energy and talent. These events set the stage for even more cultural celebrations, such as the upcoming Le French May. 

Leave a Reply

Get Magazine