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11 Dec – 15 Mar, 2025
Alisan Fine Arts
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Peter Howson: Luxuria
16 Jan – 15 Mar, 2025
Flowers Gallery
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Xie Xiaoze: The Archaeology of Knowledge
25 Jan – 19 Apr, 2025
Alisan Atelier
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In Memoriam
6 Feb – 10 Mar, 2025
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The Tale of Beas River
6 Feb – 12 Mar, 2025
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Unsold ≠ Worthless, Shifting Perspectives
8 Feb – 15 Mar, 2025
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Never Describe a Sunset
13 Feb – 16 Mar, 2025
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18 Feb – 12 Apr, 2025
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20 Feb – 20 Mar, 2025
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Multiple Unrealities: Alessandro Giannì Solo Exhibition
22 Feb – 19 Mar, 2025
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Playful Scramble in Dragon’s Lair - Hayaki Nishigaki Solo Exhibition
22 Feb – 17 May, 2025
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From Dust to Light
26 Feb – 13 Apr, 2025
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6 Mar – 5 Apr, 2025
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7 Mar – 7 Apr, 2025
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19 Mar – 24 May, 2025
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Three Stories: Monsters, Opium, Time
20 Mar – 13 May, 2025
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The Korean Narrative: Layers of Korean Aesthetics
20 Mar – 17 May, 2025
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21 Mar – 26 Apr, 2025
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WAN CHAI
Collect Hong Kong 2025
22 Mar – 4 Apr, 2025
Hong Kong Arts Centre
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Hong Kong Poetry
22 Mar – 27 Apr, 2025
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GONGKAN: ASYNCHRONOUS AFFINITIES
22 Mar – 14 May, 2025
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24 Mar – 10 May, 2025
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Beneath the Golden Canopy
24 Mar – 16 May, 2025
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Tradition Transformed
24 Mar – 14 Jun, 2025
Alisan Fine Arts
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Sarah Sze
25 Mar – 3 May, 2025
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Louise Bourgeois. Soft Landscape
25 Mar – 10 May, 2025
Hauser & Wirth
ADMIRALTY
Objects of Play: Hoo Mojong Centennial Retrospective
26 Mar – 6 Jul, 2025
Asia Society Hong Kong Center
Xie Xiaoze: The Archaeology of Knowledge
25 Jan – 19 Apr, 2025
Alisan Atelier

Xie Xiaoze, Chinese Library No. 78, 2023, Oil on linen, 122x183cm

Alisan Fine Arts is pleased to present Xie Xiaoze: The Archaeology of Knowledge, the artist’s debut exhibition with the gallery and his first solo exhibition in Hong Kong. As the opening act of Alisan Atelier in 2025, the exhibition presents a selection of thought-provoking oil paintings, ink on paper and resin and porcelain sculptures —— primarily drawing from Xie’s acclaimed Chinese Library series and Amber of History series, and from the past year. These works excavate the ancient poetics and contemporary relevance of books and knowledge.

Born in rural Guangdong province in 1966, Xie was profoundly influenced by early memories of his father, a school principal, being forced to collect books for destruction during the Cultural Revolution. After moving to the United States in 1993, where he now serves as a professor of art at Stanford University, Xie developed a deep fascination with books. This led him to explore major museums and libraries worldwide, including return visits to China, investigating repositories of past knowledge. For over three decades, his practice has focused on unravelling the complex relationships between knowledge, history and power through paintings, installations, photographs and videos.

The Chinese Library Series
Initiated in 1993, The Library series represents Xie's most extensive body of work, with The Chinese Library series following in 1995, Using a rich palette, Xie depicts stacks of Chinese thread-bound books and manuscripts, their pages curling and crumbling, marked by barely legible characters. In a photorealist style, he captures the solemnity of books in soft light, invoking the reverence felt when gingerly leafing through ancient, fragile papers, while hinting at the books’ content and emotional resonance.

The exhibition presents several oil paintings alongside ink on paper works from this series. These contrasting media offer distinct interpretations of the same subject: while oil paint achieves an air of hyperrealism, the paper medium conveys fragility and echoes traditional Chinese landscape painting. As Xie notes, “The abstract style of this ink on rice-paper painting initially obscures the subject—Chinese thread-bound books. “As in the study of the frayed books, the familiar elements of Western representational painting—light, shadow, volume, space—are supplanted by the vocabulary of dynastic Chinese landscape painting in which rocks, trees, clouds, and water are composed of rugged brush strokes and subtle layers of ink wash.”

Amber of History- Library Cave at Dunhuang
In early 2017, Xie was invited to be the first artist-in-residence for the Dunhuang Foundation in the United States. During his residency, after researching the area’s history, he launched a project centred on Cave 17—the Library Cave. This experience profoundly impacted his artistic development, aligning with his vision of bridging traditional culture with contemporary concepts and integrating academic research into art. He conceptualises the Library Cave as a “historical amber,” “memory stratum,” and “time capsule” that preserves the genetic heritage of Chinese culture, bringing forth the dusty scrolls and poetic history hidden within the cave to our present vision. The exhibition features recent ink paintings and resin sculptures from the series.Xie’s solo exhibition at Pingshan Art Museum in Shenzhen which ended in February 2025 was a showcase dedicated to this series of work.

Tracing Banned Books
Xie’s research into library collections led him to explore literary censorship in Chinese history. He has methodically documented banned books from the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911) through the Republic Era (1911-1949) and early People's Republic period (1950s), examining how censorship reflects changing political ideologies, religious allegiances, and moral priorities. The research has informed both his paintings and archival installations over the years, including an exhibition at Asia Society New York, Xie Xiaoze: Object of Evidence (2019-2020). This upcoming exhibition includes his life-size, hand-sculpted and hand-painted porcelain reproductions of previously banned books, some of which will be displayed publicly for the first time.

Aiisan Atelier's solo exhibition Archaeology of Knowledge is on view concurrently with Stanford Art Gallery's Ashes of Memory, and solo exhibition at Tsinghua University Art Museum, Beijing, China.

Artist Talk & Guided Tour by Xie Xiaoze
25 March, Tuesday, 4PM-6PM

During Art Basel Hong Kong, Alisan Atelier will be specially open from 27 (Thu) - 30 (Sun) 10am-7pm with complimentary shuttle bus from Hong Kong Convention & Exhibition Centre to Hing Wai Centre every 20 mins.

Press contact:
Kathleen Mak
+852 2526 1099
kmak@alisan.com.hk
Alisan Atelier

Address: 1904, Hing Wai Centre, 7 Tin Wan Praya Road, Tin Wan, Aberdeen

Opening Hours: Wed–Sat 10am–6pm

Phone: +852 2526 1099

Website: alisan.com.hk