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Lomi
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Anonymous Monuments
15 Nov – 15 Dec, 2025
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Torii | Ulana Switucha
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Blue Lotus Gallery
KWUN TONG
Harbour Day
13 Nov – 7 Dec, 2025
WURE AREA
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ALIGHIERO E BOETTI ONONIMO
12 Nov – 14 Feb, 2026
Ben Brown Fine Arts
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Cats in a Floating World
10 Nov – 31 Dec, 2025
I.F. Gallery
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Moments | Ryan Cheng x Yuko Fukuba Johnsson
8 Nov – 31 Jan, 2026
wamono art
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Ann Leda Shapiro: Body is Landscape
8 Nov – 7 Mar, 2026
Axel Vervoordt Gallery
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Two Paths of Perception: Shiqing Deng & Nianxin Li Dual Solo Exhibition
8 Nov – 13 Dec, 2025
Tang Contemporary Art (Wong Chuk Hang)
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Hsiao Chin Archives - The Light of Hope Exhibition
7 Nov – 31 Dec, 2025
3812 Gallery
WAN CHAI
Subrisio Saltat
7 Nov – 24 Dec, 2025
Kiang Malingue
SOUTHERN
Jacky Tao Solo Exhibition: Ecstasy
1 Nov – 13 Dec, 2025
SC Gallery
SOUTHERN
Wei Wei, anybody home?
1 Nov – 30 Nov, 2025
a Gallery
SHEUNG WAN
SWAG
23 Oct – 29 Nov, 2025
Contemporary by Angela Li
CENTRAL
Maria Lassnig. Self with Dragon
26 Sep – 28 Feb, 2026
Hauser & Wirth
CENTRAL
Lui Shou-kwan: Artist Teacher Scholar
25 Sep – 6 Dec, 2025
Alisan Fine Arts
OPENING SOON
To Regenerate the Lost: A Solo Exhibition by Maria Kulikovska
3 Dec – 31 Jan, 2026
Double Q Gallery

“It would be better for you to turn around and go into the thick grasses…it would be better for you to go away this very evening when twilight begins to fall, and you should not come back if tomorrow, or after tomorrow, dawn breaks, because for you it will be much better for there to be no tomorrow and no day after tomorrow.” – Krasznahorkai László, Baron Wenckheim’s Homecoming

What is a home when the ground is pulled from beneath your feet? Is it a memory, a desire, a body, or a lineage of knowledge passed down through generations for survival? To Regenerate the Lost, the first solo exhibition by Maria Kulikovska in Hong Kong, transforms the gallery into an intimate exploration of the existential meanings of home, prompting a radical reimagining of what it means to belong. Kulikovska, whose life has been marked by exile and displacement, uses the raw materials of existence—the body, medicine, plants, and memory—to build a space for a home that exists only in the threshold between necessity and imagination.

The journey begins with a classical proposition: a standing pregnant figure. A symbol of life, continuity, and safety, she serves as the viewer’s initial entry point, an alluring emblem of stability in a world soon to collapse. From here, visitors are invited to pass through a curtain, a simple yet profound act of initiation. The threshold leads not to comfort, but to a realm that, as Kulikovska writes, “burns you alive”.

Beyond this curtain, the certainties of the home left behind are incinerated. Kulikovska constructs an immersive environment where the very right to safety and shelter is interrogated and undone. In this space of profound uncertainty, what then remains? The artist proposes that our most vital tools for regeneration are intangible: memories that anchor us and desires that propel us forward. These are not mere sentimental echoes; in Kulikovska’s world, they become tangible treasures and vivid expressions of a deep, human knowledge of self-healing.

The works in this space are direct manifestations of this philosophy of healing, born from the raw material she gathered over the past year. Here, we encounter the ghost of a life once prepared: a mattress on the floor, unused underwear, vases, crutches, and a cane—objects bought to welcome a new baby in a home that was never occupied, their purpose erased by war. Kulikovska performs an act of alchemy, preserving these relics in epoxy. Within their translucent tombs, she embeds healing herbs, using knowledge passed down from her grandmother, a woman exiled in life threatening circumstances to Crimea.

This gesture towards intergenerational healing lies at the core of the exhibition. The artist’s own body, strained by the simultaneous demands of pregnancy, motherhood, and constant physical movement, found its remedy not in conventional medicine, but through an intuitive return to ancestral wisdom. The herbs are more than material; they embody a lineage of resilience, a tangible memory of care that crosses borders. While Kulikovska has lost most of her material possessions, she has learned to regenerate from this loss. Her creativity is now fuelled by the act of recreating what home meant and still means: not a fixed structure, but an enduring, embodied knowledge of how to build a life from the fragments, and how to locate safety within oneself when the world offers none.

Written by Eszter Csillag
Double Q Gallery

Address: 68 Lok Ku Road, Sheung Wan

Opening Hours: Wed–Sat 11am–6pm; Mon–Tue By Appt. Only

Phone: +852 3797 2922

Email: hello@doubleqgallery.com

Website: doubleqgallery.com