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Against the Grid 2.0
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Flock
6 Feb – 6 Mar, 2026
Sin Sin Fine Art
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Domestic Setting: Part I
6 Feb – 14 Mar, 2026
Flowers Gallery
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Small is Beautiful 10
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31 Jan – 14 Mar, 2026
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Double Umami
30 Jan – 7 Mar, 2026
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TEMPUS FUGIT —— Chen Xiangbo Fine-brush Paintings Show for Ringing the Year of Pony
24 Jan – 7 Apr, 2026
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EDIT
17 Jan – 7 Mar, 2026
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Play Gravity
16 Jan – 14 Mar, 2026
Kiang Malingue
SHEUNG WAN
Still be-Life
15 Jan – 28 Feb, 2026
Contemporary by Angela Li
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Against the Grid
10 Jan – 14 Mar, 2026
DE SARTHE
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Wu Shan Solo Exhibition
8 Jan – 14 Mar, 2026
gdm (Galerie du Monde)
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Vibrant Echoes: Chinyee’s 60-Year Retrospective
16 Dec – 11 Mar, 2026
Alisan Fine Arts
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Spencer Sweeney: Paint
19 Nov – 28 Feb, 2026
Gagosian
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France-Lise McGurn: Bad TV
19 Nov – 13 Mar, 2026
MASSIMODECARLO
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Ann Leda Shapiro: Body is Landscape
8 Nov – 7 Mar, 2026
Axel Vervoordt Gallery
CENTRAL
Maria Lassnig. Self with Dragon
26 Sep – 28 Feb, 2026
Hauser & Wirth
OPENING SOON
Domestic Setting: Part I
6 Feb – 14 Mar, 2026
Flowers Gallery

Shin Min, Usual Suspects-Donghee, 2024

Flowers Gallery Hong Kong is pleased to present Domestic Setting: Part I, the first edition of a new exhibition series that examines artistic production through a domestic lens. Conceived as a sequence of smaller-format group exhibitions, the series features works aligned with the physical dimensions, temporal rhythms, and emotional landscapes of the home. Across painting, drawing, sculpture, and mixed media, the domestic interior is framed as a critical structure through which care, labour, gender, and space are continuously negotiated. With the home a historically gendered space, the exhibition also considers how acts of making mirror or interrupt patterns and expectations of maintenance, repetition, and quiet endurance. Within this framework, the domestic emerges as both a site of containment and a potential space of resistance, where marginal gestures and minor forms accrue meaning through intimate, sustained presence rather than spectacle.

Labour and the body emerge explicitly in the work of Shin Min, whose practice addresses the figure of the worker within systems of service and exploitation. Shin's work reveals labour as an unseen yet essential force that sustains the systems around us.

Intimacy within familial and emotional bonds is explored in the paintings of Tomona Matsukawa,
whose works draw on close relationships and everyday encounters. Through a restrained pictorial language, Matsukawa renders moments of proximity and quiet tension, where domestic space becomes a container for memory, affection, and unspoken negotiation. Similarly, Shen Wei
contributes an intimate painting rooted in the sensual and personal confines of the home, where
interior space is an extension of bodily and emotional states, shaped by touch, stillness, and
enclosure.

Questions of scale are central to Tomislav Nikolic's paintings, which demand close viewing and sustained attention. Their modest dimensions resist immediate legibility, encouraging a slower, more intimate mode of engagement that mirrors the rhythms of domestic life.

A recurring though understated element within the works is that of animals, which appear as figures of companionship, labour, and otherness embedded within domestic life. In the practices of Taewon Ahn, Dusadee Huntrakhul, and Wu Jiaru, animal forms function not as symbolic motifs but as relational agents that unsettle distinctions between the human and non-human, the cared-for and the overlooked, positioning animals as cohabitants within shared systems of vulnerability, dependency, and attention.

Dusadee Huntrakhul's life-size bronze sculptures of geckos occupy the exhibition space with a subtle, almost peripheral presence. Often associated with domestic interiors in Southeast Asia, the gecko becomes a figure of quiet residency: alert, resilient, uninvited, and largely unnoticed. These works enter into dialogue with Taewon Ahn's dysmorphic cat sculptures, whose distorted forms introduce a note of discomfort within familiarity. Together, they complicate the notion of domestic comfort, suggesting the home as a space where care and unease may coexist.

Young In Hong presents two new works from her ongoing Drawing Plants series. These embroidered drawings depict flowers and plants that have moved in and out of her home and garden over time. Treated as living companions with distinct characters and biographies, the plants are often linked to people close to the artist, forming a web of relations that extend beyond human interaction. As plants grow, die, or are replaced, their documentation becomes a means of holding their presence beyond physical time.

Future iterations in the Domestic Setting series will continue to expand and explore how artworks mirror and can inhabit, rather than merely occupy, the spaces of everyday life.

About the Artists

Taewon Ahn (b. 1993, based in Seoul)

Taewon Ahn explores expression through sensation. Ahn primarily works in painting and sculpture. Ahn majored in Western painting at Chung-Ang University. Recent solo exhibitions include Sync, Project Native Informant, London (2025); deep sea fish, Diesel Art Gallery, Tokyo (2025); and PPURI, P21, Seoul (2024). Group exhibitions include Condo London, Project Native Informant, London (2024); Liminal Room, Plan X Gallery, Milan (2023); and Postmodern Children, Busan Museum of Modern Art, Busan (2022), among others.

Young In Hong (b. 1972, based in Bristol)

Young In Hong has long explored the theme of equality in art, continually rearranging the hierarchical order of the world. Hong holds a Ph.D. in Art from Goldsmiths College, London, and has exhibited widely in Korea, Japan, Taiwan, India, the UK, Italy, Belgium and France. In 2019, she was shortlisted for the Korean Artist Prize hosted by the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art. She received the Kimsechoong Art Prize in 2011 and the Suk-Nam Art Prize in 2003. Recent solo exhibitions include Young In Hong: Five Acts & A Monologue, Art Sonje Center, Seoul (2025); Young In Hong: Amateur Composer, PKM Gallery, Seoul (2025); Five Acts, Spike Island, Bristol (2024); Ring of Animals, Kunsthal Extra City, Antwerp (2023), among others.

Dusadee Huntrakul (b. 1978, based in Bangkok)

Dusadee Huntrakul is a multidisciplinary artist working across sculpture, ceramics, drawing, painting, and text. Seeking human connections that extend across time, his works span the topics of mortality, anthropology, and urban ecological observation. Inspired in 1998 when his late brother brought home ceramic pots from a community college class in the USA, Huntrakul began working with clay nearly twenty years ago at his uncle’s studio in Bangkok. He remains committed to using fired clay, language, and other materials to compose spaces that feel both familiar and unknown.

Wu Jiaru (b.1992, based in Hong Kong)

Wu Jiaru explores the intersection of myth, memory, and contemporary society. Through large-scale paintings and installations, she creates immersive experiences that question the forces shaping our lives and identities, drawing on influences from mythology to modern philosophy.

Wu received her dual BA degrees in Fine Arts and English Language from Tsinghua University in 2014, and her MFA from the School of Creative Media at City University of Hong Kong in 2017. Her work is in the collection of M+ Musuem, Hong Kong, Morgan Stanley Art Collection, New York and The Burger Collection, Switzerland & Hong Kong.

Tomona Matsukawa (b.1987, based in Kyoto)

Tomona Matsukawa was born in Aichi, Japan and is currently based in Kyoto. She graduated with a B.A. in Oil Painting from Tama Art University in 2011. Her work has been exhibited at the National Art Center (Tokyo, 2013), Ohara Museum of Art (Okayama, 2016), Mori Art Museum (Tokyo, 2016), Yuka Tsuruno Gallery (Tokyo, 2019), Haku Gallery (Kyoto, 2019), Powerlong Museum (Shanghai, 2022), N&A Art Site, Tokyo (2022), Museum of Modern Art (Ibaraki, 2022) and LOVE Fashion - In Search of Myself at National Museum of Modern Art Kyoto, Contemporary Art Museum Kumamoto, Tokyo Opera City Art Gallery (2024). She was the recipient of the Fukuzawa Ichiro award (2011) and the 25th Holbein Scholarship (2010). In 2017 she was a finalist for the well- regarded Asian Art Award. Her work is in the collections of Ohara Museum of Art, Okayama; the Takahashi Ryutaro collection; Mori Art Museum, Tokyo; and the Pigozzi collection.

Shin Min (b. 1985, based in Seoul)

Shin Min's practice unravels the complexities of labor, gender, and class. She earned a Bachelor’s
degree in Mechanical and System Design Engineering from Hong-ik University and has worked
in Seoul. Solo exhibitions include P21, Seoul (2025); Incheon Art Platform, Incheon (2017); Seogyo Art Experiment Center, Seoul (2015); and Place Mak, Seoul (2014). Group exhibitions include the 7th Changwon Sculpture Biennale, Changwon (2024); SEMA Buk Seoul, Seoul (2024); Jeonbuk Province Art Museum, Jeonbuk (2024); and MOCA, Busan (2023). As a guest performer with Trust Dance Theater (2006–2008), she directed and performed in several projects, including I Can’t STOP!, Samil-ro Changgo Theater, Seoul (2022); and Documentary Theater – Inhale, Exhale, Hold, Incheon Art Platform, Incheon (2016). Her works are held in the collections of Jeonbuk Province Art Museum, Mirae High School of Science and Technology, and Ulsan Labor History Museum 1987. She is the inaugural winner of the MGM Discoveries Art Prize.

Tomislav Nikolic (b. 1970, based in Melbourne)

Tomislav Nikolic builds paintings through hundreds of layers of pigment, resulting in chromatically intense and physically resonant works. He is known for exploring colour’s capacity to convey metaphorical and symbolic narratives, as well as its ability to express physical presence and character. His career has expanded significantly in recent years, with exhibitions in Australia, New Zealand, Germany, and Spain.

Nikolic received the Bulgari Art Award in 2017. His work is held in numerous private and public
collections, including the Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney; the National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne: the Chartwell Collection at Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tamaki, Auckland; The Obayashi Collection, Tokyo.

Shen Wei (b.1977, based in New York)

Shen Wei is a Chinese-born American interdisciplinary artist based in New York City. Working
across photography, painting, performance, and moving image, his practice explores how bodies, botanical forms, and constructed environments shape perception, intimacy, and presence. His work examines how images, materials, and environments generate meaning through spatial and sensory encounter. His work is held in major public and private collections, including the Museum of Modern Art, the Getty Museum, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Carnegie Museum of Art, the Morgan Library & Museum, the Long Museum, and the Sharjah Art Foundation. He holds an MFA from the School of Visual Arts and a BFA from the Minneapolis College of Art and Design.

Domestic Setting: Part I
6 February – 14 March 2026
Preview: 5 February (Thursday), 6–8 PM

49 Tung Street, Sheung Wan
Hong Kong
hongkong@flowersgallery.com
www.flowersgallery.com
Flowers Gallery

Address: 49 Tung Street, Sheung Wan

Opening Hours: Tue–Sat 12pm–6pm

Phone: +852 2576 5088

Website: flowersgallery.com