FILTER
BY DISTRICT
Clear
CURRENTLY SHOWING
SHEUNG WAN
Ken Currie: Leviathan
26 Mar – 9 May, 2026
Flowers Gallery
ADMIRALTY
Hung Hsien: Between Worlds
25 Mar – 21 Jun, 2026
Asia Society Hong Kong Center
CENTRAL
Mary Weatherford: Persephone
24 Mar – 2 May, 2026
Gagosian
CENTRAL
Time After Time
24 Mar – 25 Apr, 2026
Ora-Ora
CENTRAL
A Grass Roof
24 Mar – 21 May, 2026
MASSIMODECARLO
CENTRAL
On Mermaid & Bird
24 Mar – 26 Apr, 2026
I.F. Gallery
WAN CHAI
Seeking Traces
24 Mar – 23 May, 2026
Kiang Malingue
SOUTHERN
Lap-See Lam: Bamboo Palace, Revisited
23 Mar – 2 May, 2026
Blindspot Gallery
SOUTHERN
SIDE CORE - under city
21 Mar – 16 May, 2026
wamono art
SOUTHERN
HKG-TYO 1974-2023
21 Mar – 23 May, 2026
WKM Gallery
CENTRAL
Beyond the Ordinary – Contemporary Book Art
21 Mar – 30 Sep, 2026
Print Art Contemporary
SOUTHERN
Resonance
21 Mar – 9 May, 2026
Whitestone Gallery
SOUTHERN
Jack Tworkov 1900-1982: Pioneer of Abstract Expressionism – A Survey
21 Mar – 9 May, 2026
DE SARTHE
SOUTHERN
Pouring Shadow - Contrast & Balance
20 Mar – 20 May, 2026
Sin Sin Fine Art
CENTRAL
REMEMBRANCE: A Tribute to the Work of Dinh Q. Lê
20 Mar – 16 May, 2026
10 Chancery Lane Gallery
CENTRAL
Chen Hui-Chiao: Under One Sky
20 Mar – 28 May, 2026
gdm (Galerie du Monde)
CENTRAL
FILTER: Reconstructing the Unseen
19 Mar – 18 Apr, 2026
JPS Gallery
CENTRAL
The Ascent: 15 Years of 3812 Gallery – Anniversary Exhibition
19 Mar – 7 May, 2026
3812 Gallery
SHEUNG WAN
Liu Ying: Visions of the Incarnate
19 Mar – 30 Apr, 2026
Leo Gallery
SHEUNG WAN
Luca Sára Rózsa: Last Trip to the Amazon
18 Mar – 9 May, 2026
Double Q Gallery
CENTRAL
In Pursuit of Naïveté: Fang Zhaoling’s Journey
16 Mar – 13 May, 2026
Alisan Fine Arts
SAI WAN (WESTERN)
Trichiasis
14 Mar – 8 Apr, 2026
HART HAUS
SAI WAN (WESTERN)
Double Blue: An Altered Fairy Tale of Hong Kong (I)
14 Mar – 7 Apr, 2026
HART HAUS
KWAI TSING
BINGYI: Formation of the Cosmos
14 Mar – 2 May, 2026
Hanart TZ Gallery
SOUTHERN
IRRÉSISTIBLES
13 Mar – 10 Apr, 2026
Boogie Woogie Photography
SOUTHERN
Ritual Lines
7 Mar – 30 Apr, 2026
Art Perspective
SHEUNG WAN
Layers to Essence
5 Mar – 18 Apr, 2026
Soluna Fine Art
SHEUNG WAN
What Hums in the Rain
5 Mar – 2 May, 2026
Contemporary by Angela Li
SOUTHERN
Zhang Xiaoli: Wandering Mindscape
28 Feb – 23 May, 2026
Alisan Atelier
SOUTHERN
Trevor Yeung: swallowing rumination, gracefully
24 Feb – 2 May, 2026
Blindspot Gallery
SOUTHERN
TEMPUS FUGIT —— Chen Xiangbo Fine-brush Paintings Show for Ringing the Year of Pony
24 Jan – 7 Apr, 2026
Y Gallery
OPENING SOON
Play Gravity
16 Jan – 14 Mar, 2026
Kiang Malingue

Yirui Jia, Picnic, 2025. Acrylic on canvas, 216 x 244 cm; 85 x 96 in.

Kiang Malingue is pleased to present at its Hong Kong location “Play Gravity”, Yirui Jia’s first solo exhibition with the gallery.

Yirui Jia was born in China in 1997 and moved to the US in 2015. She graduated with a BFA from Gettysburg College in Pennsylvania in 2019 and an MFA from the School of Visual Arts in New York in 2022. In the last five years, Jia has presented a series of boisterous, multilayered paintings driven by unplanned cadenza and relentless overpainting, building a highly theatricalised world that is colourful and exuberant, communicating between intuition and lived experience. She understands painting as a process of impulse and detour, commanding recurring characters such as an alien-like skeleton and a heroic one-eyed bride who freely changes into a warrior, an astronaut, or an untamed femme fatale.

Jia has created for the current exhibition more than twenty paintings that dilate on the spirited, volatile, and playfully expressive aspects of her art. A dozen paintings in “Play Gravity” depict an owl, or an assembly of the nocturnal bird soaring and perching against a vehemently vibrant backdrop. A giant and a small owl can be found in Picnic (2025); these cross-eyed, comical raptors bisect—effectively dismember—a reclining female figure who is seen playing a flute. The painting's mottled surface accentuates the dishevelled, strewn feathers, nesting a slapdash reality that defies gravity, where one collides and intertwines haphazardly with another. Storm Eye (2025), along with a smaller version of it that incorporates a layer of painted newspaper, vertically divides the composition into two, leaving a fluttering owl to the right side of the picture. The highly deformed human figure next to it is the red-haired heroine that Jia has portrayed in many of her works; the artist’s frenzied brushstrokes transforms her into a fiery, cyclopean monument-figure, whose gaping maw resembles a violent volcanic crater.

Informed by the history of birds in art and literature—such as, most notably, Georg Baselitz’s bird paintings and Haruki Murakami’s The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle—Jia introduces birds into her practice as a vehicle to explore non-anatomical, non-representational possibilities. The playfully constructed, economically coloured owls dart and weave in curious gestures, scattering their plumage onto other things, landscapes, and skies, gnawing open a weightless, disorienting world. Owl γ (2025) and Atlas 1 (2025) are similar in composition: the former gathering a flock of owls around an ice cube, and the latter a bloody piece of meat. Jia’s depiction of encirclement and references to Chaïm Soutine’s carcass paintings intensify a kind of vitalist ferocity that has for long permeated her art.

“Play Gravity” also includes a selection of paintings that revisit some of Jia’s favourite subjects, such as skeletons: Front and Back (2025) features a reclining flute player as in Picnic; this time, her body is divided by and entangled with the front and rear sides of the same winged skeleton. Traffic cones, Jia’s prominent signifier of grounded-ness and gravity, also return in Storm Eye and Bones and Cones (2025); the latter, along with the densely layered To Be or Not To Be (2025), incorporates found vintage maps and gel—devices Jia employs to create and encase additional layers of space in painting. The three “Legendary La Rose Noire” works, which clearly reference the Hong Kong film 92 Legendary La Rose Noire directed by Jeffrey Lau, provide space for Jia’s shapeshifting femme fatale to take over and perform a nocturnal vitality that is spontaneous, uninhibited, mischievous, and victorious.

(About Yirui Jia)

Within Jia’s work resides a cast of characters—many of whom are derived from popular culture and cartoon influences to anthropomorphic objects and animals. Each character has their own complex identity within the childlike worlds in which they are portrayed, empowered by the reinvention of the ordinary. Jia embraces the idea of her paintings serving as visualized narratives to the sculptures and vice-versa. The first of her family to become an artist, Jia is inspired by daily life—the personal and shared experiences, “the undifferentiated universality of objects,” and, perhaps most importantly, the humor of it all.

Jia’s work has been featured in previous solo and group exhibitions at Kiang Malingue, Hong Kong; Mitchell-Innes & Nash, New York; Historic Hampton House, Miami; COMA, Sydney; Jupiter Contemporary, Miami Beach; LKIF Gallery, Seoul; Bill Brady Gallery, Los Angeles; PM/AM Gallery, London; Each Modern, Taipei; Tang Contemporary Art, Beijing; Latitude Gallery, New York; We Space, Shanghai; WerkStadt, Berlin; and Hive Art Center, Beijing. Yirui currently lives and works in New York.

Kiang Malingue

Address: 10 Sik On St., Wan Chai

Opening Hours: Tue–Sat 12pm–6pm

Phone: +852 2810 0317

Website: kiangmalingue.com