April 2, 2025
Art Gallery

Ho Tzu Nyen, Charmaine Poh and over 10 Singapore galleries storm Hong Kong art week


HONG KONG – With an estimated 80,000 people shuttling between events during Hong Kong’s art week from March 24 to 30, it was Singapore artist Ho Tzu Nyen’s AI-generated animation that was visible across the Victoria harbour.

Night Charades, his video homage to the golden age of Hong Kong cinema, offered a spectacle on art museum M+’s gigantic facade. The pride-of-place co-commission by M+ and Art Basel will be a Hong Kong centrepiece until June 29, proving the veteran artist’s pan-Asian cachet.

Ho headlines a typically strong Singaporean participation at Asia’s buzziest art event of the year, which also includes performance lectures by Singaporeans Charmaine Poh and Shavonne Wong, and booths by more than 10 galleries with a Singaporean presence.

The art week revolves around the city’s twin flagship art fairs of Art Basel and Art Central, matched with a slew of satellite exhibitions across the city, celebrity sightings and edgy parties.

At its heart, Art Basel at the Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre was the usual overwhelming proposition. Featuring 240 galleries from 42 countries and territories, it boasts a critical mass Singapore’s own fair Art SG can only salivate at.

Among participants with a Singapore presence are galleries Ames Yavuz, Gajah Gallery, Intersections, Mizuma Art Gallery, Ota Fine Arts, Richard Koh Fine Art, ShanghART, STPI, Sullivan+Strumpf and Tang Contemporary Art.

Ames Yavuz is part of the fair’s Encounters programme, where monumental installations are presented in the aisles to make for visual wonderment. Its offering is a touching work, Ngangkari Ngura, by senior indigenous Australian artist Betty Muffler, whose meticulous white-on-black paintings resemble tree trunks and are drawn from her First Nations knowledge of being a traditional healer.

Betty Muffler with her work Ngangkari Ngura.PHOTO: COURTESY OF THE ARTIST

STPI, an established presence in the fair, has curated a subtly eye-catching booth comprising the works of South Korean artist Do Ho Suh, Indonesian artist Eko Nugroho, Filipino artist Pacita Abad and Thailand’s Natee Utarit.

But it is Singaporean artist Yanyun Chen’s large-scale charcoal painting and another screen work developed during her residency at STPI that are sited front-of-booth to draw visitors in.

Chen, who was at Art Basel for the first time, said: “I’m in awe of the scale and quality in Hong Kong, and I’m honoured and humbled to see my works alongside many artists I deeply respect. I have gained knowledge of different ways to practise, exchange and grow through observing how the global art scene congregates around different notions of what art and culture should be.”

STPI’s booth at Art Basel Hong Kong 2025.PHOTO: STPI

At alternative art fair Art Central at the Central Harbourfront, Singapore artist Charmaine Poh continues her success story since the presentation of two videos at the 2024 Venice Biennale. She performed her half-hour In The Shadow Of The Cosmic four times over the course of the week.

This exorcism of her trauma of being a child actor and having her image proliferated without consent ropes in two other Hong Kong artists which the fair linked her up with. The Butoh-inspired result came with masks of her childhood self distributed to audience members – an intense, participatory experience that also made use of AI to conjure a techno-futuristic vibe.

Charmaine Poh performs In The Shadow Of The Cosmic with two Hong Kong performers Viola Grief and Florence Lam.PHOTO: ART CENTRAL

Of her first performance at an art fair, Poh said: “Such a piece presents its own set of logistical challenges, like its set and installation requirements, as well as finding local performers. Presenting this work in this context can be confronting. It offers a space for other ways of experiencing art that cannot be contained within a fair booth.”

Shavonne Wong, whose AI project Eva turned heads at Art SG in January, was invited to give her take on the psychology behind people’s interactions with AI and the emotional questions this raises.

The Art Central galleries with a Singapore presence include The Columns Gallery, Opera Gallery and Whitestone Gallery.

Meanwhile, homegrown fashion brand Charles & Keith also plugged into the art craze of Hong Kong, debuting a new look at its Fashion Walk boutique created by Singapore’s Venice Biennale representative Robert Zhao.

Zhao, whose research has focused on Singapore’s secondary forests, has interspersed the store’s display shelves with photos, videos and sculptural cutouts of animals and plants he found in Hong Kong during a research trip.

A sculptural cutout in Charles & Keith’s boutique store by Robert Zhao.PHOTO: CHARLES & KEITH

There are the porcupines he found ambling just 10 minutes from the city and cows resting on the beach. There is as well an exclusive bag, with just 50 pieces, for sale –Charles & Keith’s Micro Toni Knotted Crescent Hobo Bag embroidered with the phrase Wild Where You Are and a hand-painted porcupine on its ribbon tie.

Robert Zhao has interspersed the store’s display shelves with sculptural cutouts of animals and plants he found in Hong Kong during a research trip.PHOTO: CHARLES & KEITH

Singapore representatives spotted in Hong Kong included artists Ming Wong, president of Art Galleries Association Singapore Audrey Yeo, collectors Albert Lim and Linda Neo and personnel from the Singapore Art Museum. Hong Kong remains the Asian city to see and be seen.

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