The Golden Realm by Toyofuku Ryo
Photograph: Courtesy Tai Ngai Lung / Oi!
Photograph: Courtesy Tai Ngai Lung / Oi!

The top art exhibitions and displays to check out in Hong Kong

Where to get your dose of culture in the city

Catharina Cheung
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Whether it’s street photography spots or world-class art galleries, Hong Kong is a city that’s bursting with creativity – thanks to the incredible art scene filled with local and international talents. To narrow things down and help you be well on your way to true culture vulture status (and level up your Insta-feed along the way), here are some of the best ongoing and upcoming art shows to visit around town.

RECOMMENDED: Discover Hong Kong’s coolest hidden art spaces or pay a visit to the city’s top museums.

Top art exhibitions and displays in Hong Kong

  • Art
  • West Kowloon
  • Recommended

The Hong Kong Palace Museum (HKPM) is currently holding a joint exhibition with the Palace of Versailles with approximately 150 magnificent pieces to peruse. This is the first time that treasures from the Forbidden City and the Palace of Versailles – both World Heritage Sites – will be featured in one exhibition in Hong Kong.

With themes spanning culture, arts, science, technology, and beyond in the royal courts of France and China, visitors can expect to admire portraits, porcelain pieces, glassware, enamelware, textiles, books, scientific instruments, and more. Look out for first-grade national treasures from the Palace Museum in Beijing, such as a chrysanthemum teapot gifted to the Qianlong Emperor that was recently discovered to be made in France, and a quiver and bow case with French-made brocade. Highlights flown over from the Palace of Versailles include a perfume fountain – the only Chinese porcelain piece that Louis XV was known to have owned – and a portrait plaque of Qianlong that Louis XVI had displayed in his study.

Tickets for this special exhibition are priced at $150, with concessions available. Holders of HKPM’s Full Access Ticket can also access The Origins of Chinese Civilisation exhibition at a combined price of $180.

  • Art
  • Mixed media
  • Wan Chai

Split across the three stories of Kiang Malingue’s building in Wan Chai, artist Ho Tzu Nyen alludes to the realms of heaven, earth, and the netherworld with three bodies of work. Night March of Hundred Monsters features video installations that are an animated encyclopedia of monsters and yōkai from Japanese folklore; meanwhile, O for Opium uses materials across various mediums to present the image of opium and its trade. The final section consists of 43 individual screen-based ‘Timepieces’ that explore how time can be paradoxically physical and all-encompassing. A truly expansive and thought-provoking collection of work.

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  • Art
  • Central

This is the late American artist’s first-ever exhibition in Asia, and will showcase some of her works from the 70s which have never been seen before. This was a pivotal period for Drexler, as she was suffering from a mental breakdown and experiencing psychosomatic colour blindness. But she never stopped her artistic creation, often drawing while listening to matinee shows at the Metropolitan Opera. If her piece Erratic Water caught your eye in the White Cube booth during Art Basel Hong Kong, then you’ll enjoy these 20 paintings and 15 works on paper as well. 

  • Art
  • Sculpture
  • Wan Chai

Osaka-born artist Sasaoka Yuriko examines the historical roles of animals in society and how humans form relationships with the natural world in this surrealist exhibition. Inspired by the story of Wojtek, an orphaned bear used in WW2 military operations that supposedly adopted human habits, Yuriko has crafted totem-like sculptures of various animals using vintage stuffed toys, putting screens in place of eyes and mouths, and showing parts of her own face instead. Are these Frankenstein-ed creatures more human or animal?

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  • Art
  • Sai Ying Pun

In celebration of Sun Museum’s 10th anniversary, the ‘Colour of the Universe’ exhibition showcases 120 stones of rare colours and jade carvings dating from the Song dynasty to the early to mid-20th century. Fans of precious stones will enjoy seeing these art pieces made from materials such as white jade, agate, amethyst, tea quartz, coral, lapis lazuli, spinach jade, and more. Keep an eye out for the oldest jade carving in the exhibition: a five-petaled agate cup in the form of a flower from the Northern Song dynasty.

  • Art
  • Abstract
  • West Kowloon
  • Recommended

Visit this special exhibition at M+ to see more than 60 masterpieces by Spanish artist Pablo Picasso spanning from the late 1890s to the early 1970s. Co-curated with the Musée national Picasso-Paris (MnPP), which holds the largest repository of Picasso’s work in the world, this is the first time that pieces from the MnPP are being shown together with works from an Asian museum collection. By placing Picasso’s work in dialogue with Asian contemporary art – approximately 80 works by more than 20 Asian and Asian-diasporic artists – the master’s enduring influence on art to this day is highlighted. 

Split into four sections that show how Picasso fits into four artist stereotypes – such as the genius in his self-mythologising works, and the outsider with how he consistently chose to upend artistic styles and traditions – this exhibition explores how Picasso became the quintessential modern 20th-century artist. 

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  • Art
  • Tsim Sha Tsui

When is Chinese calligraphy not actually calligraphy? Well, when it comes from Xu Bing’s brush, apparently. This Chinese artist is well known for what he calls ‘square word calligraphy’, which he developed in 1993 – it looks remarkably similar to Chinese characters but a closer look will reveal English words that have been deliberately designed and drawn to confuse the mind. This exhibition includes linguistic features and greetings unique to Hong Kong, as well as the Square Word Calligraphy Classroom, which provides writing tools and copybooks for visitors to attempt Xu’s special writing system.

  • Art
  • Abstract
  • Causeway Bay

One of Hong Kong’s most unforgettable and unique creatives, local first-generation performance artist Frog King has an intriguing exhibition in Mercury Recalls. This Causeway Bay bar is showcasing a range of two-dimensional ink art as well as some dizzying multi-dimensional new media art, inspired by the Akashic records – believed by the Theosophical religious group to contain all universal events and thoughts that have and will occur. Swirls, lights, and shapes reflect the intangible concept of collective subconsciousness, and since it’s being hosted in a bar, there will also be a special range of cocktails to accompany the art. To gain access, guests at Mercury Recalls must show a token to unlock the speakeasy-style space Corsican Stars hidden inside, where Frog King’s works lie in wait.

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  • Art
  • Installation
  • Fortress Hill

Among the three recent Oi! Spotlight exhibitions is renowned Japanese contemporary artist Toyofuku Ryo’s first solo exhibition in Hong Kong. His Golden Tearoom is an elegant space filled with over 200 drawings of elements in Hong Kong life. Take your time identifying everything from local dishes to the clown motif for Ocean Park’s Hair Raiser rollercoaster. There is also the Golden Playroom, where visitors are invited to interact and engage with each other through board games and electronic elements. This area is also full to the brim with distinctly local items such as Red A plastic lampshades, golden dragon sculptures often seen in banquet restaurants, metal containers for ‘aeroplane olive’ snacks, and more.

  • Art
  • West Kowloon

This latest exhibition in the M+ Open Gallery examines the process of making things as a creative expression, and how this has a lasting impact on individuals, communities, and our ecosystems. Drawing from the works of the M+ Collections, visitors are invited into the inspirations and techniques behind the processing of conceptualising, research, design, and fabrication that go into the objects and architecture we see around us. Split into four sections, it covers the broad themes of ceramics with its layered history; innovative uses of materials like neon, resin, and bamboo, including a restored Hong Kong neon sign; how computing, machine learning, and AI have impacted the making process; and the effects of consumerism and mass production on contemporary society. Tickets for ‘Making It Matters’ cost $120, and allow same-day entry to the other paid exhibitions in M+.

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  • Art
  • Outdoor art
  • Central

This public art commission by Alicja Kwade is the Polish artist’s first site-specific installation in Hong Kong, and is available for viewing at Tai Kwun until 2026. Historically and socially contextualised objects make references to Tai Kwun history while exploring the passage of time and the present.

Six glass structures stand in conjunction with eight bronze cast Monobloc chairs that are each positioned dynamically with a boulder. Drawing on the history of Tai Kwun’s Prison Yard as a place of waiting and confinement, Kwade’s art reflects on the burdens that we carry, and the idea of waiting as a form of punishment in contemporary times, with glass structures representing invisible barriers in our lives.

  • Art
  • West Kowloon

This exhibition is interesting in that instead of highlighting art, it is a look at the martial culture of the Qing court through weaponry, military equipment, scientific instruments, and more. Nearly 190 military artefacts are on loan from The Palace Museum in Beijing, including helmets, archery sets, swords and sabres, and equestrian gear, along with paintings, textiles, and books. ‘The Art of Armaments’ highlights the Manchu rulers’ emphasis on martial traditions, continually improving their weapon-making techniques, and their dedication to hunting and drills – these set the foundation for military rituals in China as well as the development of their fleets and coastal defence. 

Look out for treasures such as a Qianlong-era replica of a helmet used by Nurhaci, the Jurchen khan emperor of the Later Jin dynasty, or the sabre gifted to Prince Gong by the Daoguang Emperor. Since there are so many artefacts, the exhibition will be presented in four rotations, each lasting about three months. Visitors can access this exhibition with a general admission ticket (priced from $70 to $90), or any special exhibition ticket (ranging from $150 to $180).

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  • Art
  • Mixed media
  • West Kowloon

M+ Museum’s new thematic exhibition aims to explore the connection between landscape and humanity in our post-industrial and increasingly virtual world. Literally translating to ‘mountain and water’, shanshui is a Chinese cultural concept that has inspired Asian ink paintings across millennia. Almost 130 works split into nine thematic sections will reimagine landscape through art, moving images, sound, design, architecture, and other large-scale mediums from a range of international artists, architects, and creators.

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