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Opinion | My verdict on Hong Kong Art Week: security laws much discussed. So is tacky public art
- Visitors from mainland China called out Hong Kong for trying to look like any other Chinese city, and for pandering to selfie-takers. They have every right to
- As for art fairs, buyers appear to have been cautious, as were some artists when it came to new security laws, but these didn’t stop vibrant art being shown
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Why you can trust SCMP
There were certainly different opinions among visitors who came for Art Week, the annual round of Hong Kong fairs and openings just before Easter.
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Some claimed they had witnessed the city’s resurrection, others left with a more sombre impression.
Here is my take on the main conversation topics.
1 Was Art Basel Hong Kong a flop or a hit?
Art fairs may have public days, but don’t be fooled. Transactions are still secretive and fewer than a quarter of the 242 galleries taking part in Art Basel Hong Kong volunteered sales reports this year.
Those reports included multimillion-dollar deals (for example, a Willem de Kooning sold for US$9 million at Hauser & Wirth’s booth and three Yayoi Kusamas at Victoria Miro for a combined US$11 million) but most were below the US$100,000 mark.
Gallery owners found buyers to be more cautious, perhaps less hasty than during the boom years. But some, such as first-time exhibitor YveYang Gallery – which also showed at Supper Club, the new art fair – were pleasantly surprised.
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