More ambitious installations punctuate the fair, deepening the journey towards more layered narratives and research. A standout in this edition is 'The Digital Fossiliser' by Silvester Mok, presented by Touch Gallery, a live 3D-printing environment, part laboratory, part speculative archaeology. Drawing on Hong Kong's first dinosaur fossil discovery in 2024, the project reflects on how life and objects are preserved across time. Inspired by natural fossilization and amber formation, Mok employs 3D scanning and printing as a form of 'accelerated fossilization', transforming everyday objects into ceramic and resin artifacts. Presented as a living workshop within a fictional lab and realized in collaboration with Myron Lai, Carmen Tsui, and Simon Wu, the installation delves into questions of permanence, value, and memory in the digital age.
LIS10 Gallery from Arezzo, Italy, brings a compelling intergenerational dialogue from the African continent, pairing the rigorous and tradition-bound abstractions of Esther Mahlangu, chosen for 'Central Stage', a new section of the fair curated by Enoch Cheng that highlights six Hong Kong artists whose practices have recently received significant institutional recognition, with the highly tactile and more instinctively gestural works of Jack Kabangu and Aboudia, bridging different geographies and painterly vocabularies. The gallery is also hosting a pop-up at M Place in Wong Chuk Hang, the same building where Rossi & Rossi can be found.
A section dedicated to Indonesian art, 'Rising Currents', curated by Manajemen Talenta Nasional (MTN), gathers a strong cohort of emerging and established galleries, offering a glimpse of its rapidly growing art scene. The group includes EDSU House (Yogyakarta), Galeri Ruang Dini (Bandung), ISA Art Gallery (Jakarta), Puri Art Gallery (Bali), RUCI Art Space (Jakarta), SAL Project (Jakarta), and SEWU SATU (Jakarta). At Vice & Virtue in Jakarta, the surreal collages of Joko Nastain stand out, mysterious compositions populated by disparate symbolic presences, unfolding within impossible, dreamlike playgrounds. Priced between HK$9,800 and HK$11,000, several works had already sold in the early hours.
Equally compelling are the mechanical puppets by Niluh Pangesty at Puri Art Gallery. Drawing from traditional symbologies, mythologies, and folklore, Pangesty creates articulated works in ink and linoleum that interrogate the condition of women. Reconstructing the visual language of wayang, as seen in Kamasan painting and shadow puppetry, she reconstructs religious epics and moral tales, offering alternative perspectives on socio-cultural traditions. The works are affordably priced between $1,100 and $3,100, despite their craftsmanship and the imaginative force of their symbolism. 'As first-time exhibitors, we are pleased to get a wonderful response to our curated artists, with many visitors finding the works refreshing and compelling,' said director Yuanita Sawitri, who emphasized that the gallery's mission is to champion Southeast Asian talent, specifically Indonesian artists, to a global audience.
