After the Tsai Ming-liang exhibition at the Museum of Louvre; the Tsai Ming-liang Retrospective at the Museum of Moving Image in New York; the International Film Installation Exhibition: Discovering The Other at the Taipei Palace Museum; and representing Taiwan in Venice Biennale in 2007, Tsai Ming-liang…… >> Read more
The Long Museum is pleased to announce WANG Yuyang: Tonight I shall mediate on that which I am, a major exhibition of sculptures, installations, paintings and performances by WANG Yuyang, organized by New York based curator ZHANG Ga. >> Read more
Long Museum (West Bund) is delighted to announce a forthcoming solo show of the acclaimed contemporary abstract painter Ding Yi, entitled What's Left to Appear. >> Read more
With over 5000 museums built in the past decade or so, China is experiencing a museum boom of epic proportions. Cynics can point at how, on the one hand, these structures are just empty shells containing a motley crew of poorly presented artifacts... >> Read more
The T-Museum, just south of junction of the Grand Canal and the Qiantangjiang River in the West Lake Scenic Area, certainly boasts amazing fengshui. That should keep the stream of riches flowing its way, but whether it will be blessed with critical auspiciousness is another question entirely... >> Read more
Given the growing tendency for artists to blend different media, and otherwise break or bend the distinctions between them, the exhibition as a whole evinces a sense of relative stability and solidity, with relatively little by way of challenging, novel media. >> Read more
Less than a year after the Long Museum was founded in Pudong, Shanghai by the collector-couple Liu Yiqian and Wang Wei in 2012, another Long Museum—Long Museum West Bund—is scheduled to open. Randian talks to Huang Jian, the managing director... >> Read more
< >< >The end of the year 2012 witnessed the opening of Long Museum Pudong, inaugurated with its opening exhibition “Through All Ages”. On March 28th, 2014, Long Museum West Bund will be officially open to the public.
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Echoing the first words of A Tale of Two Cities (1859), Charles Dickens’ famous novel set at the time of the French Revolution, this exhibition jumps forward to the present to consider how contemporary art and aesthetics use the past to express the future. >> Read more