A renewed Art Basel and The Peninsula’s Art in Resonance puts an ever evolving Hong Kong on display.
This is not a typical night at The Peninsula Hong Kong. The Grande Dame of the Far East may have sat as a beacon on Kowloon’s harbor for more than 95 years, but tonight, the Hong Kong institution is transformed into something almost unrecognizable.
Each of the hotel’s 10 restaurants is closed for usual service and I doubt very few guests are in their rooms. A DJ booth stands where the string quartet usually plays, guests dance in the lobby where afternoon tea is typically served while colored lights pulsate against the grand fluted ceiling.
Almost 1,000 guests, artists and Hong Kong’s elite are attending a gala to celebrate the launch of Art in Resonance, the Peninsula’s art program.
Since its launch in 2019, the commission-based program has celebrated and supported emerging and mid-career artists to produce significant new public artworks. This year’s showcase features works from four visionary artists – Elise Morin, Kingsley Ng, Lachlan Turczan and Saya Woolfalk – which will be displayed at The Peninsula Hong Kong until May 17, before traveling to other Peninsula properties.
As crowds stand in awe around Morin’s magnificent SOLI, which shines – quite literally, thanks to the use of thousands of crushed CDs sparkling like crystals – in the center of The Peninsula’s lobby, it’s easy to forget that Hong Kong only officially lifted its Covid-19 restrictions and reopened its borders a little over 12 months ago.
Instead, this is the Monday of the last week in March, which the LED buildings across Victoria Harbor flash to remind us is Hong Kong’s Art Month.
A Star Ferry jaunt across to Hong Kong Island and they are setting up for Art Basel, which opens for previews the following day. The fair may only run from March 28 to 30, but satellite exhibitions and events have bloomed across the city since March began, in the city’s month-long celebration of its booming cultural scene.
When Art Basel closes at the end of the week, it will be celebrated as the most successful since the pandemic. A record attendance of 75,000 visitors will have dropped by to see the 242 galleries on show, with 65 exhibitors being new to the fair and 68 returning following the pandemic.
Hong Kong is a very different city from that which hosted Art Basel in 2019. This peninsula in particular looks almost unrecognizable, mostly thanks to the opening of the ambitious redevelopment of the West Kowloon Cultural District, one of the largest cultural projects in the world. Establishing a thriving cultural quarter for Hong Kong, the project has seen the opening of the M+ Museum in 2021, Asia’s first global museum for contemporary arts, the Hong Kong Palace Museum open in 2022, and the Xiqu Centre established as the home of Chinese opera at the end of 2019.
But that’s not the only difference since 2019. While Hong Kong is no doubt undergoing its own cultural renaissance, this revival is happening against a backdrop of political and economic disturbances. The weekend before Art Basel and Art in Resonance opened, the fast-tracked and expanded security bill known as Article 23 was signed into law, reigniting concerns around China’s legal oversight of the SAR.
Amid other concerns around the slowing down of China’s economy, it is fair to say that this background noise of uncertainty is not going to diffuse overnight – but then again when have uncomfortable conditions failed to produce great art?
Art Basel Hong Kong proves no different.
As the cultural hub for Asia and the Asia Pacific, Hong Kong sits as the gateway to the region’s rich and evolving cultural landscape – which is becoming increasingly more influential, since just last year China (including mainland and SAR regions such as Hong Kong) overtook the UK as the world’s second-largest art market (19% compared with 17%). With more than half of its exhibitors operating in the region, Art Basel offers an unparalleled and dynamic overview of the rich artist scene across the continent and beyond.