"Booth 1C07"
Eric Baudart, Cho Yong-Ik, Chou Yu-Cheng, Brook Hsu, Kwan Sheung Chi, Phillip Lai, Liu Xiaohui, Fabien Mérelle, Nabuqi, Ellen Pau, Homer Shew, Tao Hui, Tromarama, Su-Mei Tse, Samson Young, Zheng Zhou
Edouard Malingue Gallery
Studio: Unit B2, 12/F, Blue Box Factory Building, 25 Hing Wo Street, Aberdeen, Hong Kong+86 21 6468 2389 e-mail:
Multiple location : Shanghai Hong Kong
Art Basel Hong Kong 2022
Convention & Exhibition Centre 1 Harbour Road Wan Chai Hong Kong, China+41 58 206 27 06 e-mail:
May 27 > 29, 2022

Booth 1C07
Kiang Malingue is pleased to present at Art Basel Hong Kong more than 30 artworks by Eric Baudart, Cho Yong-Ik, Chou Yu-Cheng, Brook Hsu, Kwan Sheung Chi, Phillip Lai, Liu Xiaohui, Fabien Mérelle, Nabuqi, Ellen Pau, Homer Shew, Tao Hui, Tromarama, Su-Mei Tse, Samson Young, and Zheng Zhou. From paintings of friendly faces, ghostly bodies and abstract formations, musical score-like marks on paper, to historical videos, and bronze and stone sculptures that resemble archaeological findings, the presentation showcases iconic pieces and surveys exciting artistic developments.
Highlights from this year's presentation include a recent group of Moody series paintings by Chou Yu-Cheng, further elaborating the unique painting method Chou devised at the peak of the pandemic in 2020. The Bibliotheque #1 (2022) marking the beginning of yet another exciting series takes one step further: introducing rectangularity and a pantone card-like structure, it takes as its compositional starting point the quotidian quest of charting a nice-looking bookcase, presenting to the audience a pseudo-private scene that is unprecedentedly ordered, and chaotic.
Known for revealing existential conundrums by depicting human figures in hauntingly still or frantic moments, Liu Xiaohui in his recent painting Untitled (Woman and cat in front of a black abstract painting) (2021) includes an unusual appearance of an animal. The woman is typically anti-narcissistic, failing at meeting the viewer's gaze but is instead being slowly absorbed by the mise en abyme black painting; the black cat on the other hand is ominously glaring at the viewer, heightening the unnatural scale and depth of the largely monochrome composition.
Included in the presentation is also Ellen Pau's early work Drained Ⅱ (1989), a video that comments on the materialization of the electronic image. Repeated in it is a segment of a stage performance, generating a spatio-temporal whirlwind. Human figures are drawn into, hidden behind and going through a matrix of artificial spaces, appearing merely as fungible animated units. A closed cycle of production and discourse, the electronic medium itself becomes the source of creation. As the video expands and unfolds upon itself, a woman constantly falls onto the ground and finally disappears in between frames.
Also on view is Tao Hui's Mongolism (2010), demonstrating the artist's early interest in exploring Chinese television aesthetics in relation to identity issues. It makes free use of elements from traditional arts and cultures, and presents a reality that is caught between yearning for a magical, pre-secular dimension, and progressing towards a modern, tarnished present. In a style that comes close to 1990s Chinese soap operas, the bewildering, idiosyncratic characters tell stories of metamorphosis, masquerade and suspended individual developments. Tao Hui constructs in the film his earliest diva-flâneur-heroine figure, upon which narratives of future important works are based.
Among the numerous sculptures presented by Kiang Malingue, is Fabien Mérelle's Pentateuque (2021). The latest in a series originated from the artist's eponymous drawing made in 2012, the bronze sculpture revisits one of the artist's favourite subjects — a fantastically acrobatic stacking of a majestic elephant on top of a young man. A monumental, life-size Pentateuque was on view in the Statue Square Gardens in 2013; the latest iteration emphasises the importance of strength, balance, responsibility, beauty and humour in the post-pandemic era.
At the Film Sector of Art Basel Hong Kong, Kiang Malingue presents Samson Young's Sonata for Smoke (2020, revised 2021), and Wong Ping's Sorry for the late reply (2021).
Kiang Malingue is pleased to present at Art Basel Hong Kong more than 30 artworks by Eric Baudart, Cho Yong-Ik, Chou Yu-Cheng, Brook Hsu, Kwan Sheung Chi, Phillip Lai, Liu Xiaohui, Fabien Mérelle, Nabuqi, Ellen Pau, Homer Shew, Tao Hui, Tromarama, Su-Mei Tse, Samson Young, and Zheng Zhou. From paintings of friendly faces, ghostly bodies and abstract formations, musical score-like marks on paper, to historical videos, and bronze and stone sculptures that resemble archaeological findings, the presentation showcases iconic pieces and surveys exciting artistic developments.
Highlights from this year's presentation include a recent group of Moody series paintings by Chou Yu-Cheng, further elaborating the unique painting method Chou devised at the peak of the pandemic in 2020. The Bibliotheque #1 (2022) marking the beginning of yet another exciting series takes one step further: introducing rectangularity and a pantone card-like structure, it takes as its compositional starting point the quotidian quest of charting a nice-looking bookcase, presenting to the audience a pseudo-private scene that is unprecedentedly ordered, and chaotic.
Known for revealing existential conundrums by depicting human figures in hauntingly still or frantic moments, Liu Xiaohui in his recent painting Untitled (Woman and cat in front of a black abstract painting) (2021) includes an unusual appearance of an animal. The woman is typically anti-narcissistic, failing at meeting the viewer's gaze but is instead being slowly absorbed by the mise en abyme black painting; the black cat on the other hand is ominously glaring at the viewer, heightening the unnatural scale and depth of the largely monochrome composition.
Included in the presentation is also Ellen Pau's early work Drained Ⅱ (1989), a video that comments on the materialization of the electronic image. Repeated in it is a segment of a stage performance, generating a spatio-temporal whirlwind. Human figures are drawn into, hidden behind and going through a matrix of artificial spaces, appearing merely as fungible animated units. A closed cycle of production and discourse, the electronic medium itself becomes the source of creation. As the video expands and unfolds upon itself, a woman constantly falls onto the ground and finally disappears in between frames.
Also on view is Tao Hui's Mongolism (2010), demonstrating the artist's early interest in exploring Chinese television aesthetics in relation to identity issues. It makes free use of elements from traditional arts and cultures, and presents a reality that is caught between yearning for a magical, pre-secular dimension, and progressing towards a modern, tarnished present. In a style that comes close to 1990s Chinese soap operas, the bewildering, idiosyncratic characters tell stories of metamorphosis, masquerade and suspended individual developments. Tao Hui constructs in the film his earliest diva-flâneur-heroine figure, upon which narratives of future important works are based.
Among the numerous sculptures presented by Kiang Malingue, is Fabien Mérelle's Pentateuque (2021). The latest in a series originated from the artist's eponymous drawing made in 2012, the bronze sculpture revisits one of the artist's favourite subjects — a fantastically acrobatic stacking of a majestic elephant on top of a young man. A monumental, life-size Pentateuque was on view in the Statue Square Gardens in 2013; the latest iteration emphasises the importance of strength, balance, responsibility, beauty and humour in the post-pandemic era.
At the Film Sector of Art Basel Hong Kong, Kiang Malingue presents Samson Young's Sonata for Smoke (2020, revised 2021), and Wong Ping's Sorry for the late reply (2021).
![]() | Eric Baudart | |
![]() | Cho Yong-Ik | |
![]() | Chou Yu-Cheng | |
![]() | Brook Hsu | |
![]() | Kwan Sheung Chi | |
![]() | Phillip Lai | |
![]() | Liu Xiaohui | |
![]() | Fabien Mérelle | |
![]() | Nabuqi | |
![]() | Ellen Pau | |
![]() | Homer Shew | |
![]() | Tao Hui | |
![]() | Tromarama | |
![]() | Su-Mei Tse | |
![]() | Samson Young | |
![]() | Zheng Zhou | |
Private View (by invitation only)
Wednesday, May 25, 12nn to 8pm
Thursday, May 26, 12nn to 8pm
Friday, May 27, 12nn to 2pm
Saturday, May 28, 12nn to 2pm
Sunday, May 29, 11am to 12nn
Vernissage
Friday, May 27, 2pm to 8pm
Wednesday, May 25, 12nn to 8pm
Thursday, May 26, 12nn to 8pm
Friday, May 27, 12nn to 2pm
Saturday, May 28, 12nn to 2pm
Sunday, May 29, 11am to 12nn
Vernissage
Friday, May 27, 2pm to 8pm
mpefm
HONG KONG fair art press release
Show Hours :
Saturday, May 28, 2pm to 8pm
Sunday, May 29, 12nn to 6pm
TICKET OPTIONS
Premier Pass HK$2,700.00
Vernissage Matinee (2pm-5pm) HK$950.00
Vernissage Evening (5pm-8pm) HK$950.00
Adult Sunday Mid-Day Ticket entry 12nn-3pm HK$350.00
Concession Sunday Mid-Day Ticket entry 12nn-3pm (Full-time Student, Disable & Minder, Senior Citizen 65+) HK$250.00
Concession Sunday Half-Day Ticket entry 3pm-6pm (Full-time Student, Disable & Minder, Senior Citizen 65+) HK$300.00
Adult Sunday Half-Day Ticket entry 3pm-6pm HK$400.00
Adult Sunday Mid-Day Ticket entry 12nn-3pm HK$350.00
Adult Sunday Half-Day Ticket entry 3pm-6pm HK$400.00
Tickets may now be purchased online. You are encouraged to plan ahead as only a limited number of tickets will be available at the show venue.
Concession prices are available to full-time students, individuals with disabilities and seniors aged 65 or above.
Vernissage & Weekend Access holders will enjoy 50% off Art Basel | Year 50.
Admission is free for children aged five and under when accompanied by an adult.
Saturday, May 28, 2pm to 8pm
Sunday, May 29, 12nn to 6pm
TICKET OPTIONS
Premier Pass HK$2,700.00
Vernissage Matinee (2pm-5pm) HK$950.00
Vernissage Evening (5pm-8pm) HK$950.00
Adult Sunday Mid-Day Ticket entry 12nn-3pm HK$350.00
Concession Sunday Mid-Day Ticket entry 12nn-3pm (Full-time Student, Disable & Minder, Senior Citizen 65+) HK$250.00
Concession Sunday Half-Day Ticket entry 3pm-6pm (Full-time Student, Disable & Minder, Senior Citizen 65+) HK$300.00
Adult Sunday Half-Day Ticket entry 3pm-6pm HK$400.00
Adult Sunday Mid-Day Ticket entry 12nn-3pm HK$350.00
Adult Sunday Half-Day Ticket entry 3pm-6pm HK$400.00
Tickets may now be purchased online. You are encouraged to plan ahead as only a limited number of tickets will be available at the show venue.
Concession prices are available to full-time students, individuals with disabilities and seniors aged 65 or above.
Vernissage & Weekend Access holders will enjoy 50% off Art Basel | Year 50.
Admission is free for children aged five and under when accompanied by an adult.
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