Following her show at London’s Tate Modern, South Africa-based visual activist and photographer Zanele Muholi brings the exhibition to Hong Kong, where she showcases more than 50 autobiographical and highly personal portraits. Muholi has celebrated the lives of South Africa’s Black lesbian, gay, trans, queer, and intersex communities through her work since the early 2000s. In this exhibition, Muholi explores, in her own words, “the journey, self-image, and possibilities of a Black person in today's global society” through a series of works, which she started producing back in 2012.
Until August 15. Pearl Lam Galleries, 6/F Pedder Building, 12 Pedder Street, Central. Find out more at
American abstract painter Greg Bogin’s debut art exhibition in Hong Kong presents works that he specifically created for the city. Bogin’s style is a combination of Minimalism and pop, and he is known for incorporating cut-outs on custom-shaped canvases in gradient shapes of colours. He calls these the “holes in the works, so viewers can see the wall or parts of the perimeter missing”. By intentionally creating simple shapes with ambiguous meanings, Bogin toys with the viewer’s desire to add meaning to shapes or symbols.
Until August 12. G/F and 1/F, 159 Hollywood Road, Central. Find out more at
Selected from Hong Kong’s largest private museum's permanent collection, this new exhibition features 150 sets of historic silver––including family heirlooms, trophies and furniture, produced between the 18th and 20th centuries. It showcases the design and craftsmanship of various brands and types of silver metal—some of which even come in gold colour—and explores the lineages of generations of silversmiths.
From June 16. 181-199 Hollywood Road, Sheung Wan. Find out more at
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The pandemic has, to a certain extent, frozen time as activities and events in the city have been stalled. This group exhibition––curated by Leung Shiu Kee Eric––features works by seven Hong Kong artists who, varied in styles and practices, explore the understanding of time, memories and history. For example, artist Cheung Ho Keung imagines himself in the future as he “looks back” at present Hong Kong and paints illusory historical sites.
From July 2 to August 7. G/F, 248 Hollywood Road, Sheung Wan. Find out more at
The MK Lau Collection, which is owned by tycoon Victor Lo, is one of Asia’s most comprehensive private collections of 19th and 20th-century Chinese brush-and-ink paintings and calligraphy, as well as contemporary ink paintings. Co-curated by art historian Catherine Maudsley, this exhibition showcases 36 works from the MK Lau Collection by 13 Hong Kong ink artists, including pioneering painter Lui Shou-kwan.
Until September 27. 1 Duddell Street, Central. Find out more at
The use of pronouns is a topic of discussion around the world right now, with the Oxford English Dictionary now listing the pronoun “ze” as a gender-neutral alternative to “he” or “she”. Ze/Ro at Ben Brown Fine Arts, an exhibition organised by Hong Kong-based curator Shirky Chan and featuring five local female artists, references this pronoun and explores the female body, gender identity and belonging. Among the works on show are paintings, embroidery, sculptures and video installations.
Until August 26. 202, The Factory, 1 Yip Fat Street, Wong Chuk Hang. Find out more at
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Argentinian artist Valentina Liernur explores how materials can be used to achieve new effects in paintings. She often works with denim and gabardine and shifts between abstraction and figuration to play with the mark-making quality of oil paint on unconventional canvases. This exhibition is her debut show with the gallery and her first presentation in Asia. It showcases a new series in which she depicts female figures in mundane, everyday situations.
Until August 7. 304, 3/F, The Pedder Building, 12 Pedder Street, Central. Find out more at
This art exhibition––by Hong Kong’s only gallery dedicated to Asian craftsmanship––focuses on metal. Contemporary artists and traditional craftsmen from Hong Kong and Japan have worked with metals such as copper, brass, silver and galvanised iron to create pieces that combine traditional craft skills with contemporary aesthetics. On show are incense burners, doorknobs, sake cups, alembic copper stills and musical instruments, as well as a selection of tools that the artisans used to make the pieces.
Until July 24. 11 Peel Street, Peel Street, Central. Find out more at
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This exhibition brings together Felix Gonzalez-Torres, Raymond Pettibon, Jason Rhoades, Diana Thater, Rirkrit Tiravanija and Lisa Yuskavage, all of whom are from or based in the US and shook up the art scenes in New York and Los Angeles in the 1990s and 2000s. By incorporating unconventional subjects into their video installations, paintings and sculptures, they all address social concerns such as consumerism, gender, sexuality, identity and the destruction of the natural world.
Until July 31. 5-6/F, H Queen’s, 80 Queen’s Road Central, Central. Find out more at
More than 100 pieces by surrealist masters such as Salvador Dalí, René Magritte, Joan Miró and Man Ray have been brought to Hong Kong all the way from the Centre Pompidou in Paris. The exhibition is part of Le French May arts festival and has been curated by Didier Ottinger, the deputy director of the Centre Pompidou. It explores how surrealist artists aimed to delve into the unconscious mind and how various cultural and social movements went on to influence the movement.
Until September 15. 10 Salisbury Road, Tsim Sha Tsui. Find out more at