ArtAsiaPacific

On the Other Side of Fear

ften we don’t appreciate something until it’s gone. In the first two months of 2020, this cliché unfortunately rang true. With governments across Asia imposing quarantines and travel restrictions to contain the spread of Covid-19, and art organizations canceling events and postponing exhibitions in line with the mandates of health authorities, free movement diminished along with the usual art-world assemblies, at fairs, auctions, and exhibition openings. Now, the questions of how else we might commune and what it means to

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from ArtAsiaPacific

ArtAsiaPacific3 min read
Milan
Pirelli HangarBicocca Thao Nguyen Phan’s works are at once beautiful and devastating, their harrowing stories poetically revealed like emotional gut punches. And one is struck by the extent of the tragedy and the burning shame at knowing almost none
ArtAsiaPacific9 min read
Robert Gober
Robert Gober was born in a small town in Connecticut in 1954 and is known for his wry, terse, whimsical sculptural lexicon and his depiction of domestic, quotidian objects, such as legs, babies’ cribs, doors, wallpaper, newspapers, and kitchen sinks.
ArtAsiaPacific11 min read
Yuko Mohri
A bowl of fruit is a classical subject in European painting. A long roll of paper might provide the perfect surface for a calligrapher’s strokes or an ink painter’s depiction of a beautiful landscape. A well-tuned piano’s strings vibrate at just the

Related