On 25 March 2024, The Peninsula will herald the return of its lauded global art programme, “Art in Resonance,” with a new exhibition at its flagship Hong Kong hotel. The opening, which kicks off during Hong Kong Art Week, features specially commissioned works from four visionary artists: Elise Morin, Kingsley Ng, Lachlan Turczan, and Saya Woolfalk. The exhibition will be open to the public through 17 May.
Originally introduced by The Peninsula in 2019 in collaboration with global cultural advisors Isolde Brielmaier and Bettina Prentice, Art in Resonance offers Peninsula guests deeply immersive experiences in their hotels’ respective destination cities. The programme also supports the larger cultural ecosystem by providing emerging artists with the funding, curatorial support, and logistical capabilities to produce significant and complex new public artworks.
“This programme has always been about us committing to a deeper and more impactful engagement with artists—providing patronage and a foundational platform for their work rather than being passive venues,” said Gareth Roberts, Deputy Chief Operating Officer of the Hong Kong and Shanghai Hotels, Limited.
“We are especially proud to have given Hong Kong artist Kingsley Ng the ability to produce his most ambitious project to date. Ng has certainly proven that the hotel’s legendary façade remains a fertile canvas for artistic imagination.”
Strikingly Immersive and Innovative New Works
The exhibition will see Kingsley Ng (b. 1980, Hong Kong, China) unveil Esmeralda (lead image), a monumental kinetic installation created expressly for the hotel’s iconic forecourt. The piece takes its title from Italo Calvino’s celebrated 1972 novel Invisible Cities: a meditation on culture, memory, truth, past and present.
Made with jade-coloured ribbons, each spanning 36 meters in length and individually controlled by motorised winches, Esmeralda will undulate between the physics of gravity and the buoyancy of air. The colossal work allows the artist to evoke the ephemeral ocean tides that have brought travellers from all over the world to Hong Kong for centuries.
Another dynamic work commissioned for the 2024 exhibit is Lachlan Turczan’s (b. 1993, Los Angeles, USA) Harmonic Resonance, a kinetic sculpture providing a hypnotic, meditative exploration of visible sound. The work features a parabolic mirror measuring over 1.6m in diameter, which encloses a shallow pool of water. Low-frequency infrasonic tones allow the artist to choreograph oscillating patterns to form on the water’s surface.
“I have spent the past decade refining an art practice that follows a simple, natural algorithm: sound shapes water, water shapes light,” explained the artist, who cites the California Light and Space Movement from the 1960s as a major influence.
Elise Morin’s (b. 1978, Paris, France) glittering SOLI, originally commissioned in 2019, has been significantly expanded for the Hong Kong exhibition. Morin’s multidisciplinary studio practice fuses science, art, and technology as she continues her exploration of landscape as a genre.
The sculpture – made from thousands of obsolete CDs, each industrially pulverised according to their security grade – is reminiscent of the resplendent palaces of her native France but instead offers a quiet commentary on the material burden of waste.
Finally, Saya Woolfalk (b. 1979, Gifu, Japan) will present the Visionary Reality Portal, an immersive and multisensory digital meditation chamber. Woolfalk’s studio practice is devoted to her ongoing series The Empathics, a fictional group that merges DNA with plants to achieve utopia.
Through the Empathics’ physical transformation, the artist is able to explore themes of hybridity, spirituality, ethnography, and racial discourse.
Housed in a purpose-built space on the ground floor, Visionary Reality Portal is constructed from hand-painted paper, live-action, and 3D animation and includes a myriad of cultural references from mandalas to stained glass windows to nkisi (sacred traditional African objects that embody animal spirits).
Woolfalk has also designed a custom Instagram filter that can be used within the exhibit, allowing visitors to become part of the installation and form a lasting part of the artist’s digital archive.
“From the inception of the Art in Resonance programme, The Peninsula Hotels has consistently demonstrated a brave commitment to artists’ visions,” said Bettina Prentice, co-curator of the Hong Kong exhibition. “By choosing to act as an incubator for bold and experimental ideas from new voices, the brand has made these complex concepts into reality.”
A Brand-wide Commitment to Contemporary Arts
For generations, the Peninsula has been committed to promoting the rich and vibrant cultural aspects of its properties’ destination cities by inviting its guests to engage with art through numerous channels.
The group has hosted artist residencies, mounted enriching and culturally representative exhibits, talks and symposia, and offered studio visits and workshops with local creators whose work exemplifies the distinctive flavour and energy of their home cities.
The exhibition artworks will remain at The Peninsula Hong Kong through 17 May, after which they will be displayed at other Peninsula properties and joined by additional, newly commissioned installations from local artists.
For the duration of the exhibit, The Peninsula Hong Kong will offer visitors free access to all pieces, as well as guided tours and activities that further illuminate the city’s vibrant art scene.
In tandem with the exhibition, The Peninsula Hong Kong will offer guests a special cocktail menu of Art in Resonance concoctions at the Felix Lab in the Collectors’ Lounge of Art Basel Hong Kong.
The menu features four cocktails and a mocktail, all conceived to resonate with the hotel’s art installations: Potato Soliloquy, Grape Soliloquy, Succulent Soliloquy, Corn Soliloquy and the non-alcoholic Coconut Soliloquy. They will also be available at The Bar of The Peninsula Hong Kong from 26 March to 17 May 2024.
More information can be found at The Peninsula’s Art in Resonance programme webpage, www.peninsula.com/art.