M+, Hong Kong’s museum of visual culture located in West Kowloon, will no longer oversee the city’s exhibition at the 2026 Venice Biennale. Instead, the Hong Kong Museum of Art (HKMOA) will lead preparations for the presentation.
The government-appointed Hong Kong Arts Development Council has removed Hong Kong’s M+ contemporary art museum as the organizer of the city’s pavilion at the Sixty-First Venice Biennale, to take place May 9–November 22, 2026.
The selection of exhibitions and other events featured in the CAA Committee on Women in the Arts Spring Picks emphasize capacious connections that both well-known artists and their lesser.
Whether you’re in Tokyo, Cape Town or Abu Dhabi, these are the must-see shows near you — built around the likes of Ellsworth Kelly, Louise Bourgeois, Nicolas Party and the Chinese art of scent
The city’s art ecosystem is rapidly expanding, but an economic slowdown across China and continued political interference from Beijing could mean stormy seas ahead
Paintings from a nearly 300-year-old museum in Naples, Italy, are on display at the Hong Kong Museum of Art’s ‘The Road to the Baroque’ exhibition
Lui Shou-kwan, who learned his art by copying classical paintings, distilled Chinese ink landscapes down to a radical abstraction with roots in Zen Buddhist art.
There would have been little point in a Surrealist exhibition with all the sexual references removed. There is, thankfully, no fig leaf at the Hong Kong Museum of Art. Yet, there are some stunning omissions
Mythologies: Surrealism and Beyond – Masterpieces from Centre Pompidou’ is running at the Hong Kong Museum of Art until September 15. The exhibition includes response works by two Hong Kong artists, Keith Lam and Hazel Wong, which put a modern spin on the idea of myths.
Portals, Stories, and Other Journeys (23 April–1 August 2021), a group show at Tai Kwun's JC Contemporary, engages with Asia Art Archive's (AAA) Ha Bik Chuen Archive Project (2014–2021).