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SOUTHERN
Playful Scramble in Dragon’s Lair - Hayaki Nishigaki Solo Exhibition
22 Feb – 17 May, 2025
wamono art
CENTRAL
Through Time—Print Art in Aberdeen Street
22 Feb – 31 Aug, 2025
Print Art Contemporary
CENTRAL
Wu Guanzhen:Echoes of Shadow Exhibition
14 Mar – 8 May, 2025
Art of Nature Contemporary (Central)
CENTRAL
TSANG Kin-Wah: T REE O GO D EVIL
19 Mar – 24 May, 2025
gdm (Galerie du Monde)
WAN CHAI
Three Stories: Monsters, Opium, Time
20 Mar – 13 May, 2025
Kiang Malingue
SHEUNG WAN
The Korean Narrative: Layers of Korean Aesthetics
20 Mar – 17 May, 2025
Soluna Fine Art
SHEUNG WAN
Secret Garden - Byoungho Kim Solo Exhibition
20 Mar – 20 May, 2025
Leo Gallery
SOUTHERN
GONGKAN: ASYNCHRONOUS AFFINITIES
22 Mar – 14 May, 2025
Tang Contemporary Art (Wong Chuk Hang)
SOUTHERN
Soul Light Legacy Plan
22 Mar – 17 May, 2025
DE SARTHE
SOUTHERN
The Garden of Loved Ones: Richard Hakwins
23 Mar – 24 May, 2025
Empty Gallery
SOUTHERN
TRST03: Covey Gong
23 Mar – 24 May, 2025
Empty Gallery
SOUTHERN
Sin Wai Kin: The Time of Our Lives
24 Mar – 10 May, 2025
Blindspot Gallery
CENTRAL
NIAO NIAO: A Solo Exhibition by Su Xiaobai
24 Mar – 15 May, 2025
Pearl Lam Galleries Hong Kong
CENTRAL
Beneath the Golden Canopy
24 Mar – 16 May, 2025
MASSIMODECARLO
CENTRAL
Beauty Will Save the World: Eight Artists from Southeast Asia
24 Mar – 16 May, 2025
10 Chancery Lane Gallery
CENTRAL
Tradition Transformed
24 Mar – 14 Jun, 2025
Alisan Fine Arts
CENTRAL
Louise Bourgeois. Soft Landscape
25 Mar – 10 May, 2025
Hauser & Wirth
YAU TSIM MONG
Vapors
25 Mar – 17 May, 2025
PERROTIN
ADMIRALTY
Objects of Play: Hoo Mojong Centennial Retrospective
26 Mar – 6 Jul, 2025
Asia Society Hong Kong Center
SOUTHERN
Group Exhibition: Hon6 hon6 (瀚瀚)
26 Apr – 30 May, 2025
SC Gallery
CENTRAL
A Moveable Feast
8 May – 28 Jun, 2025
Galerie KOO
CENTRAL
Yoon Hyup: Montage
15 May – 5 Jul, 2025
Tang Contemporary Art (Central)
Yoon Hyup: Montage
15 May – 5 Jul, 2025
Tang Contemporary Art (Central)

Tang Contemporary is proud to present Yoon Hyup’s solo exhibition “Montage”, featuring 15 new artworks curated by Yonni Park and Jeeun Hong. In contemporary art, rhythm and flow transcend mere formal elements, offering new ways of understanding the world. Yoon Hyup’s art visually embodies this philosophy, presenting a creative synthesis of Eastern and Western aesthetic traditions. His lines and dots go beyond simple visual expression, forming fluid structures that interweave time and space, drawing viewers into an immersive sensory flow. Viewing Yoon Hyup’s work is not a passive act but an active experience of following dynamic, rhythmic movements. Each artwork becomes an open field of exploration rather than a static object.

Yoon Hyup’s practice transforms the structures of the city and the rhythms of nature into a distinctive visual language. The order and chaos of New York—a vast metropolis—and the movements of people within it are abstracted and reconfigured in his work. This becomes a visual translation of urban experience, and a way of embodying the inherent rhythms of human life. In this process, Yoon Hyup’s lines remain uninterrupted and organically connected, echoing the flow of Qi (氣, energy) as described in Eastern philosophy. Much like Taoist thought, which emphasizes effortless and natural movement, his lines traverse space fluidly, without resistance.

Aesthetically, Yoon Hyup’s compositions evoke Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari’s concept of rhizomatic thinking. His lines do not begin or end at fixed points; instead, they expand infinitely in all directions, guiding the viewer’s gaze and generating richly layered experiences. This structure mirrors the way humans experience the world—perception itself is not linear but multilayered and dynamic. Life is not a single narrative, but a fluid process in which countless possibilities are intertwined. Yoon Hyup’s work embodies this multiplicity of flow, inviting viewers to reconsider their understanding of reality through a distinctive visual logic.

In this context, Yoon Hyup’s work transcends conventional painterly elements to raise fundamental questions of existence: How do we move within space, and how does life shape its own rhythm? His recurring patterns and melodic variations metaphorically echo the structures of the world we inhabit, highlighting the fluid nature of being. This sensibility is reminiscent of xíngbǐ (行筆)—the expressive, continuous gesture of the brush in motion that sustains energy and rhythm within each stroke, as found in Eastern calligraphy. Yet, Yoon Hyup’s works are not mere reproductions of tradition—they are contemporary interpretations that fuse Eastern aesthetics with Western visual language.

The exhibition offers more than visual pleasure—it invites a spatial and sensory inquiry. Yoon Hyup’s lines and dots do not carry fixed meanings; rather, their significance unfolds through the viewer’s gaze and movement. Each work thus exists not as a finalized structure, but as an open, continuously evolving one. Within the space, his works function not merely as visual objects, but as instruments that mediate the flow of perception. In this way, Yoon Hyup’s art reveals itself not as a formal experiment, but as a deeply philosophical inquiry into the essence of human experience.

Yoon Hyup’s lines and colors are never still; they shift and evolve, engaging the viewer in an organic and continuous flow. His art does not merely offer aesthetic pleasure, but proposes a new way of seeing and sensing life. This exhibition serves as an entryway into the world Yoon Hyup constructs. Upon crossing that threshold, we are drawn into a new rhythm shaped by lines and color—one in which we each discover our own flow. His art continues to ask: How do we flow through this world? And within that flow, what kind of being are we becoming?
Tang Contemporary Art (Central)

Address: 10/F, H Queen's, 80 Queen's Rd. Central, Central

Opening Hours: Tues–Sat 11am–7pm

Phone: +852 2682 8289

Website: tangcontemporary.com