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Art Central and lead partner UOB have announced details of the art programme for the 10th edition of the fair. Carefully curated by curator Aaditya Sathish, this year’s exhibition presents transnational narratives from a bold and innovative perspective. Highlights of the exhibition include a large-scale art installation specially commissioned from Hong Kong artist Nadine Tang, performances and lecture performances, as well as a rich and diverse video art program. Art Central will take place at Hong Kong’s iconic Central Harbourfront from March 26 to 30, 2025, with a VIP preview on March 25. Art Central 2025 is a project funded by the Arts and Cultural Events Fund under the Culture, Sports and Tourism Bureau of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region Government.
As a focal event of Hong Kong Art Week, Art Central presents diverse artistic expressions with fascinating programming and actively promotes the development of the Asian art ecosystem. The exhibition’s specially-established Central Theatre will focus on the next generation of Asian artists, and will collaborate with well-known artists to host a number of performances, storytelling performances and lectures, presenting important dialogues in the art world on an international stage. A gallery exhibition will be held in conjunction with the programme, showcasing works by more than 100 galleries and over 500 artists from over 40 countries and regions around the world, making it a must-visit event in the city’s annual art celebration. The
The Video Art programme will present selected works from the Akeroyd Collection, the section of the collection of Shane Akeroyd, a Hong Kong philanthropist and renowned video art advocate, that focuses on moving images. For one hour each day, visitors can experience an exclusive screening of moving image works at Cinema Central. The Akeroyd Collection is committed to making its image collection widely circulated and displayed through its own website, image screenings and loans to international art institutions.
Hong Kong artist Nadine Tang commissioned to create a large-scale installation art
Art Central 2025 will present A Brazen Rift (After Branzi) (2025), a large-scale installation commissioned from local Hong Kong artist Nadine Tang (born 1980, Hong Kong). The work is inspired by unrealized architectural drawings by Italian architect and designer Andrea Branzi, proposing an alternative vision of urban life. For twenty years, the core of Nadine Tang's practice has been to question the ubiquitous image, using modules to liberate, question and re-create Branzi's two-dimensional perspective, turning it into complex installations and breathing life into bold and avant-garde eukaryotic structures.
This large-scale installation parallels the constant flow of people in the city center and the kinetic energy generated by the flow of people in the exhibition, inviting the audience to immerse themselves in this liminal environment between the two. This new commissioned work also demonstrates Art Central’s support for Hong Kong art and showcases the innovative spirit of this Mesozoic artist.
Video Art Program
Art Central’s video art program explores a range of moving image works and features a special on-site cinema, providing an exclusive platform for top artists to showcase their video art. Curated by Aaditya Sathish, the exhibition’s video art program “On the Shores of…” explores how contemporary networks facilitate the interaction between people and information while creating another new world. This platform enables artists and researchers to question and challenge hegemonic narratives, and to guide audiences into new logical and cognitive realms with unique and imaginative perspectives.
Project highlights include:
Performing Arts and Storytelling Shows
This year’s exhibition will feature a new highlight in its performance programme – storytelling, a research-based art form that combines text, images and action. It will be performed every day at the Central Theatre during the exhibition. Named after the unfinished work "In Search of the Miraculous" by Dutch artist Bas Jan Ader, the project brings together multiple artists to explore history, matter and the body through the echoes of gestures, playing in artistic experiments and inviting the audience into an open and creative space.
Project highlights include:
Curator Aaditya Sathish said: “This year’s Art Central programme is inspired by the urgent need to focus on the current state of our world, while imagining how it might change. The participating artists explore this central theme, presenting works that intersect transnational and personal experiences.”
Corey Andrew Barr, Art Central Fair Director, said: “Art Central’s curatorial work has always been about celebrating the energy, innovation and pioneering spirit of contemporary art in Asia. Under the curation of Aaditya Sathish, we aim to present a creative fair this year that inspires audiences, promotes dialogue and reflects the depth and diversity of art from the Asia Pacific region and beyond.”