FILTER
BY DISTRICT
Clear
CURRENTLY SHOWING
SOUTHERN
Trevor Yeung: swallowing rumination, gracefully
24 Feb – 2 May, 2026
Blindspot Gallery
KWAI TSING
A Galloping Year of the Horse
7 Feb – 28 Feb, 2026
Hanart TZ Gallery
SOUTHERN
European Artists Group Exhibition: The Sun Shone from a Different Place
7 Feb – 17 Mar, 2026
Tang Contemporary Art (Wong Chuk Hang)
SOUTHERN
Against the Grid 2.0
7 Feb – 14 Mar, 2026
DE SARTHE
SOUTHERN
Flock
6 Feb – 6 Mar, 2026
Sin Sin Fine Art
SHEUNG WAN
Domestic Setting: Part I
6 Feb – 14 Mar, 2026
Flowers Gallery
CENTRAL
Beyond Context
6 Feb – 17 Mar, 2026
Tang Contemporary Art (Central)
SHEUNG WAN
Small is Beautiful 10
5 Feb – 10 Mar, 2026
Leo Gallery
CENTRAL
Towards Zero
5 Feb – 14 Mar, 2026
Ora-Ora
SHEUNG WAN
Echoes in Between: Four Voices in Korean Abstraction
4 Feb – 19 Mar, 2026
Soluna Fine Art
SOUTHERN
Waterfalls and Magpies
31 Jan – 14 Mar, 2026
Whitestone Gallery
CENTRAL
Double Umami
30 Jan – 7 Mar, 2026
JPS Gallery
SOUTHERN
TEMPUS FUGIT —— Chen Xiangbo Fine-brush Paintings Show for Ringing the Year of Pony
24 Jan – 7 Apr, 2026
Y Gallery
SOUTHERN
EDIT
17 Jan – 7 Mar, 2026
WKM Gallery
WAN CHAI
Play Gravity
16 Jan – 14 Mar, 2026
Kiang Malingue
SHEUNG WAN
Still be-Life
15 Jan – 28 Feb, 2026
Contemporary by Angela Li
SOUTHERN
Against the Grid
10 Jan – 14 Mar, 2026
DE SARTHE
CENTRAL
Wu Shan Solo Exhibition
8 Jan – 14 Mar, 2026
gdm (Galerie du Monde)
CENTRAL
Vibrant Echoes: Chinyee’s 60-Year Retrospective
16 Dec – 11 Mar, 2026
Alisan Fine Arts
CENTRAL
Spencer Sweeney: Paint
19 Nov – 28 Feb, 2026
Gagosian
CENTRAL
France-Lise McGurn: Bad TV
19 Nov – 13 Mar, 2026
MASSIMODECARLO
SOUTHERN
Ann Leda Shapiro: Body is Landscape
8 Nov – 7 Mar, 2026
Axel Vervoordt Gallery
CENTRAL
Maria Lassnig. Self with Dragon
26 Sep – 28 Feb, 2026
Hauser & Wirth
OPENING SOON
European Artists Group Exhibition: The Sun Shone from a Different Place
7 Feb – 17 Mar, 2026
Tang Contemporary Art (Wong Chuk Hang)

In this captivating showcase, fourteen artists from various European generations respond to reality, memory, and imagination through their unique creative journeys. Though their subjects vary—portraits, families, cities, myths, emotions, and symbols—the common thread is the notion of painting as a slow process of understanding the world.

"The Sun Shone from a Different Place" does not simply denote difference; it speaks to the vantage point from which we observe. As our perspective shifts, so too does the direction of light, revealing new layers and textures of the world around us.

This exploration of light sources continually challenges the limits of visual perception. Von Wolfe blurs the lines between traditional oil painting and AI co-creation with his surreal compositions, crafting an ambiguous realm where reality and illusion entwine. In contrast, Jonas Burgert delves into the human spirit, constructing a microcosm rich in symbolism. His narratives unfold like battles on the fringes of an apocalyptic landscape, capturing the intangible loss, fear, and struggle within the human soul.

Amid this profound introspection, Marinella Senatore introduces the power of community, transforming "light" into a social medium that elevates the creative space into a shared theater. Meanwhile, Alessandro Giannì employs collage techniques to navigate cultural symbols, seeking individual coordinates within contemporary society.

As the narratives shift towards intimate emotional dimensions, Frida Wannerberger and Alice Herbst unveil intricate autobiographical hues. Wannerberger transforms bodily forms and attire into expressive instruments, weaving an emotional biography of identity, while Herbst dissects everyday objects with calm precision, reconstructing perspectives on self-observation. In this identity reformation, Armin Boehm responds to societal anxieties and contradictions through densely layered visual structures.

This analysis of reality further evolves within the exhibition into a deep reconstruction of symbols and structures. Michael Alexander Campbell extracts forms from photography, fostering an original tension that exists "before representation," while Ryan Mosley creates an absurd theatrical exploration—examining the shifting dynamics of social and familial relationships. Alicja Pakosz encourages us to reconsider seemingly mundane behaviors and thoughts, defining these often-overlooked actions as "banal national symbols" through her research into Polish lore and local popular culture.

In an ultimate expression of painting’s purity, Eleanor Johnson and Gillian Ayres engage in a dialogue that transcends time. Johnson’s figures dance between abstraction and figuration, embodying the eternal and sublime quality of classical masterworks; whereas Ayres employs vibrant, celebratory colors to transform natural experiences into visual festivities. Lastly, Edgar Plans and HIMBAD bring these grand narratives back to contemporary life through the intuition and ironic symbols of street art, with their fluid graffiti lines reflecting their humorous yet slightly rebellious souls.

As these works converge within the same space, they illuminate a collective practice of "painting as slow cognition." In an age where images are swiftly generated by AI, these artists choose to return to the canvas, solidifying ephemeral thoughts with layers of paint. The visual illusions of Von Wolfe, the apocalyptic anxieties of Burgert, Wannerberger's emotional biographies, and Johnson’s ethereal sublimity create a powerful complementarity within the space. Though each artist’s light source varies, when these beams intertwine, they collectively illuminate the rich, multifaceted depth of contemporary European painting—a realm that both honors tradition and boldly challenges reality.

Text / Sam Yang
Tang Contemporary Art (Wong Chuk Hang)

Address: Unit 2003-08, 20/F, Landmark South, 39 Yip Kan Street, Wong Chuk Hang

Opening Hours: Tue–Sat 11am–7pm

Phone: +852 3703 9246

Website: tangcontemporary.com