“Studio” brings together twelve of China's most prominent contemporary.By exploring their studios and working conditions through each artist's own lens, the source of their creative output is put on display... >> Read more
While perhaps satisfying the demands of experienced collectors for a few quality works, it also offers a chance for entry-level collectors and ordinary viewers. With public sculptures in the shape of Transformers, rhinoceroses, and such like, it is like any other tourist attraction—a place of entertainment for the public over the May Day break... >> Read more
Michael Lin’s most favored themes—inquiries into notions of hometown and elsewhere, dialogues between works of art and architecture, and his own particular critiques of consumerist society—were condensed in a Shanghai villa. >> Read more
Zheng Bo is not a prolific artist. He maintains a certain distance from art circles, yet he has studied and practiced socially engaged art and social engagement for over a decade.
In Tang Yongxiang's work, objects and scenes are first captured unconsciously by camera, establishing a contingent relationship with the artist’s lived-experience. >> Read more