Month: May 2026

Dan Flavin at David Zwirner Hong Kong

Dan Flavin /Grids /May 28 – Aug 8, 2026 /Opening Reception: Thursday, May 28, 5pm – 7pm / David Zwirner5-6/F, H Queen’s 80 Queen’s Road CentralCentral, Hong KongTuesday – Saturday, 11am – 7pm+852 21195900 davidzwirner.com David Zwirner is pleased to announce an exhibition of works by Dan Flavin featuring the artist’s grids, a key body of work that he began in 1976. The first focused examination of this form, this presentation will include several re-creations of the way Flavin installed the grids in significant exhibitions during his lifetime, and will feature loans from important public collections as well as the Estate of Dan Flavin. A version of this exhibition was on view at David Zwirner New York in January–February 2026, and the presentation in Hong Kong is the first solo exhibition of the artist’s work in Greater China. From 1963, when he conceived the diagonal of May 25, 1963 (to Constantin Brancusi), a single gold fluorescent lamp installed diagonally on a wall, until his death in 1996, Flavin produced a singularly consistent and prodigious body of work that utilized commercially available …

Alia Ahmad at White Cube Hong Kong

Alia Ahmad /In Time, A Bloom / مع الوقت، تزهرMay 20 – Jun 27, 2026 / White Cube Hong Kong50 Connaught Road, Central Hong Kong+852 2592 2000Tuesday – Saturday, 11am – 7pm whitecube.com Traversing the cycles of transformation shaping the desert landscape of Riyadh and its surrounds, Alia Ahmad’s first solo exhibition in Hong Kong, In Time, A Bloom /  مع الوقت، تزهر explores the emotional, cultural and historical complexity of her homeland. In thick accretions of oil and gauzy ink washes, Ahmad conjures scenes of elegiac reverie, casting the desert plane as a witness to the aspirations of civilisations across time. As Ahmad notes, this is a ‘territory shaped by ambition throughout the ages – from traversing Bedouins, religious pilgrimage, and resource-driven exploration to modern-day conflict. The arid expanses became the theatre of many ambitions. It has witnessed such enterprises evolve, transform, fade, and re-emerge with new faces and newer tools. And through all of this, the flower still blooms.’  In the accompanying essay, ‘A Total Flower’, writer Mirene Arsanios explores how Ahmad’s unique gestural language captures the mutability of the land …

Isaac Chong Wai 莊偉

At a moment when the vocabulary of visibility feels both urgent and exhausted, Isaac Chong Wai approaches the body as an instrument of memory and resistance. The Berlin-Hong Kong artist, who has shown internationally, including recently at the 14th Taipei Biennial, Whispers on the Horizon, works across glass, photography, video, drawing and performance to trace the emotional afterlives of global phenomena – anti-Asian violence, queer precarity and diasporic longing. His installations often begin in observations or cinematic myth and end in something disarmingly intimate: a gesture held too long, a mirrored surface marked by breath, choreography that turns vulnerability into quiet defiance. In 2025, Chong completed a six-month residency in New York under the Désirée and Hans Michael Jebsen Fellowship, supported by the Asian Cultural Council. The city’s contradictions, where its celebrated freedoms coexist with persistent segregation and economic strain, sharpened his enquiry into solidarity, heroism and the fragile architectures that hold marginalised bodies in public space. Jessica Wan: What was the starting point of your fieldwork in New York? How did the city reshape or sharpen the …

Zheng Bo 鄭波

Recently, Zheng Bo has been using the lagoon in the French South Pacific territory of New Caledonia as a temporary studio and daily research site. Drawn there by its exceptionally clean air and status as one of the world’s largest, most biodiverse lagoons, he works through direct, low-tech immersion – swimming, observing, filming. Reflecting on what he refers to as “eco-sensibility”, the Hong Kong artist is evolving his long-standing concerns with queer ecology and social imagination into a more modest but radical aim: “learning to live on Earth” through pleasure, beauty and care. Moving between humour, anarchist thought and close observation, he asks what art can do – not to fix the ecological crisis and save nature but to transform how we perceive and relate to it. Caroline Ha Thuc: You’ve already spent several months this year in New Caledonia and now you’re back there to work. Is this a new temporary studio? What drew you there? Zheng Bo: It was quite accidental. Some time ago, I read a report by a Swiss company that …