
Success of ‘Art March Hong Kong' reaffirms city's status as dynamic international art hub
Major events reaffirm Hong Kong as a global art hub
Major events reaffirm Hong Kong as a global art hub
Visitors to Hong Kong last month would have seen first-hand how the dynamic metropolis has fully embraced art.
Advertisement
Major international events, including the 12th edition of Art Basel Hong Kong and the city's own Art Central fair, had – very visibly – taken up residency in the heart of the city, at the Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre and Central Harbourfront, where local galleries hosted exhibitions and parties.
Other activities including special auctions under the 'Art March Hong Kong 2025' celebration initiated by Hong Kong's art and culture hub, the West Kowloon Cultural District, and the fourth Museum Summit, organised by the city's Leisure and Cultural Services Department, emphasised how Hong Kong has achieved its aim to become an international art hub. It is now also the third-largest centre for art auctions in the world.
Art patron Alia Al-Senussi (left) and painter Fatina Kong believe the Hong Kong government's efforts have helped the city to achieve its aim to become a global art hub.
Organisers say this year's three-day Art Basel Hong Kong drew an estimated 91,000 visitors, including 'prominent private collectors and art patrons from over 70 countries and territories', who came to look at artworks from the collections of 240 galleries from across the globe.
Among them was collector and art patron Alia Al-Senussi, who has also served as Art Basel's United Kingdom, Middle East and North Africa representative for over a decade. She believes international art galleries and artists are drawn to Hong Kong because it offers both inclusivity and opportunity.
'People travelling to a new place often get intimidated by the idea of something foreign or different to them,' she says. 'But when artists and collectors in the art world come to Hong Kong, they understand how to make those connections to people, even from their own hometowns – and so, being in Hong Kong makes the world small, but in the most special way.
Advertisement
'Whether it's at Duddell's over lunch, or in the convention centre at a booth, or over a drink at Dragon-i late at night … it's a really perfect place to come and be able to make those connections.'
Her Libyan heritage and education in the UK and the United States have made her an ideal interlocutor for the global art scene. For years, she has visited Hong Kong for art collaborations and curated exhibitions, including one at restaurant and cultural space Duddell's in Central, featuring Saudi Arabian artist and doctor Ahmed Mater, believed to be the first artist from that country to showcase his work in the city.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
02-07-2025
- South China Morning Post
Hong Kong needs more than Kai Tak venue to realise mega-event dreams
The opening of Kai Tak Sports Park has given a substantial boost to the city's bid to become a leading centre for hosting top international events. Hundreds of thousands of spectators have flocked to the venue in the last four months to enjoy an impressive selection of performances. But the impact of the new complex, with its 50,000-seat stadium and indoor arena, on other venues must be considered. There is a need to adapt. The Leisure and Cultural Services Department has revealed there will be a repositioning of locations it manages and a shake-up of booking arrangements. Hong Kong Coliseum, in Hung Hom, is famous for Cantopop concerts, but sports events made up more than a fifth of successful applications to hire it last year. The venue is set to host a basketball competition in the National Games in November and an international table tennis tournament in December. In future, priority will be given to concerts rather than sport, giving the 12,500-seat location a clearer identity. The move should open up much-needed slots for local performers, who struggle to book it. Only 37 applications out of 220 last year were granted, and there have been complaints pop stars have repeatedly been rejected. Sha Tin Town Hall will, under the plans, focus on Cantonese opera, providing welcome new opportunities for professional troupes. Fans are still reeling from the closure of the much-loved Sunbeam Theatre , even though it has found a new location. Efforts to promote and develop Cantonese opera must continue. The East Kowloon Cultural Centre in Kowloon Bay, set to fully open by the end of the year, will feature long-running performances and art technology, broadening the city's entertainment scene. It makes sense to differentiate between venues, adjusting to the Kai Tak era. But the booking process must be accessible, transparent and fair, with clear criteria.


HKFP
27-06-2025
- HKFP
Hong Kong Coliseum to prioritise concerts over sports in mega-event push
The Leisure and Cultural Services Department (LCSD) has said it will offer the Hong Kong Coliseum more concert booking slots in a move to reposition the venue from sports events to live concerts. Under an updated policy, the LCSD aims to provide more performance slots for arts groups and establish clearer venue identities, 'thereby fostering a diversified, professional, industry and mega-event development of performing arts,' a Thursday statement read. The Hong Kong Coliseum in Hung Hom, previously given priority for sports events, will be repositioned to prioritise concerts, thereby promoting the development of a 'concert economy,' the department said. The move also comes after the flagship Kai Tak Sports Park recorded 590,000 concertgoers in the first three months since its opening, with over half of them tourists. A total of 15 large-scale concerts, including those by British band Coldplay, Taiwanese band Mayday, and Hong Kong pop star Nicholas Tse, have been held at Kai Tak Stadium and Kai Tak Arena since the sprawling sports park officially opened on March 1. Taiwanese superstar Jay Chou is set to perform for three nights this month, starting on Friday. Post-pandemic, the Hong Kong government has made it a key policy priority to hold large-scale events in the city, ranging from sports to arts and music, in a bid to boost its tourism industry. The LCSD also said on Thursday that the East Kowloon Cultural Centre, still under construction and expected to be operational by the end of the year, would be reserved for long-running local performances and arts technology programmes. 'The objective is to promote the curation, production and long-running performances of more local signature performing arts programmes, thereby fostering the development of the sector as an industry, and enhancing cultural tourism,' the statement read. The Sha Tin Town Hall auditorium will be reserved mainly for Cantonese opera, considered Hong Kong's intangible cultural heritage item. According to the LCSD, it will also enhance the Venue Partnership Scheme, which aims to foster ties between venues and performing arts groups. The scheme, set to run for three years from April next year, will provide more performance slots for different arts groups and deepen partnerships between the venues and performing arts groups or organisations.


South China Morning Post
26-06-2025
- South China Morning Post
Hong Kong repositions venues in a bid to boost development of performing arts
Sha Tin Town Hall will be reserved for Cantonese Opera while the Hong Kong Coliseum will be positioned as a concert venue, the government said on Thursday. The reform of the hiring policy of the city's performance venues is part of a wider effort to promote the mega-event development of the performing arts in Hong Kong, following the official opening of Kai Tak Stadium in March. The Leisure and Cultural Services Department said the latest move could provide more performance slots for use by different art groups and establish clearer venue identities. Under the reform, the 1,372-seat auditorium in Sha Tin Town Hall will be reserved for Cantonese opera, the first world-class intangible cultural heritage in Hong Kong. Professional troupes fulfilling certain criteria could make special bookings throughout the year for Cantonese opera or opera-excerpt performances to promote high-quality productions and the inheritance of the cultural heritage, the department added. The Hong Kong Coliseum in Hung Hom will prioritise concerts in an attempt to develop a live music economy. Photo: Edmond So '[The new policy] could ensure reasonable opportunities for proficient troupes to hire performance venues while supporting the professional and industry development of Cantonese opera.'