You Qiu (active 1520-1583)
Spring Morning in the Han Palace
Dated 1568, Ming dynasty
Handscroll, ink on paper
24.5 x 801.2 cm
Collection of Shanghai Museum

Stories from a vibrant era

Prized late Ming collections celebrate opening of Art Museum's new wing

26 March 2025

CUHK Art Museum celebrates the grand opening of its new extension and gallery, the Lo Kwee Seong Pavilion and Harold and Christina Lee Gallery, with a special exhibition, “Transcending Transience: Art and Culture of Late Ming Jiangnan”.

The exhibition, in collaboration with the Shanghai Museum and the CUHK Department of Fine Arts, is the largest ever curated by the Art Museum. Sponsored by Bei Shan Tang Foundation, the exhibition features 193 precious art objects including paintings, calligraphy works and antiquities sourced from prominent local and international collections, including those from the Shanghai Museum, the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the Museum für Asiatische Kunst, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, and Hong Kong Museum of Art.

The collections reveal the vibrant cultural landscape of the Jiangnan region, lying south of the Yangtze River, during the late Ming period (late 16th to mid-17th century). While this period was wrought with political instability and dynastic change, Jiangnan remained the most affluent region where scholars and gentry cultivated and aspired to an elegant lifestyle in a liberal atmosphere.

With a usable floor area of 1,770 square metres, the new extension has ample room to elegantly showcase large-scale artworks from the prized collections. You Qiu’s Spring Morning in the Han Palace, for instance, is a handscroll with explicit depictions of the exploits and rendezvous of the famed beauty Zhao Feiyan in and out of the palace. Commissioned by a learned scholar, the handscroll on loan from the Shanghai Museum is celebrated for its intricate brushstrokes and elegant portrayal of the femme fatale trope.

The exhibition also features Zhang Hong’s Zhi Garden, a precious collection from the Museum für Asiatische Kunst, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin. In the first page of his album, the accomplished landscape and figure painter renders the Zhi Garden in aerial view, taking a unique visual perspective to showcase the beauty of Chinese classical gardens from a fresh angle.

Zhang Hong (1577-after 1652)
Zhi Garden
Dated 1627, Ming dynasty
Album of 8 leaves, ink and colour on paper
32 x 34.5 cm each
Collection of Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Museum für Asiatische Kunst (1988-463a-h)

The late Ming was a period of change and transformation in Chinese history, a transition that is also reflected in its art and paintings. Wu Bin’s Landscape of Shanyin is an imaginary scenery of strange grottoes and cliffs painted like surging flames.

Wu Bin (active 1573-1620)
Landscape of Shanyin
Dated 1608, Ming dynasty
Handscroll, ink and colour on paper
31.8 x 862.2 cm
Collection of Shanghai Museum

The development of Art Museum’s extension and new gallery has been made possible through the generous donations from the Lo Kwee Seong Foundation and the family of Mr and Mrs Harold Lee. Additionally, the Lee Hysan Foundation has generously donated HK$20 million to support the Art Museum’s art education initiatives. The opening ceremony last Friday was officiated by Miss Rosanna Law Shuk-pui, Secretary for Culture, Sports and Tourism; Dr Chu Xiaobo, Director of the Shanghai Museum; Dr Peter Lo Tak-shing, Chairman of Lo Kwee Seong Foundation; Dr Irene Lee Yun-lien, Chairman of Hysan Development Company Limited; Professor Dennis Lo Yuk-ming, Vice-Chancellor and President of CUHK; and Dr Rocco Yim Sen-kee, Principal of Rocco Design Architects Associates and architect of the new extension, among others.

Senior management of CUHK and major donors of named spaces in the Art Museum
(From left) Dr Rocco Yim, Miss Rosanna Law, Dr Peter Lo, Dr Irene Lee, CUHK Vice-Chancellor and President Professor Dennis Lo Yuk-ming and CUHK Art Museum Director Professor Josh Yiu Chun-chong at the lion dance eye-dotting ceremony during the inauguration of the Lo Kwee Seong Pavilion

Miss Law, who is also an alumna, said: “I am particularly impressed to see that the growth of our university museum is largely championed by the local community. While the government has strived to revitalise Hong Kong’s appeal as a tourist destination, it takes a citywide effort to make our city stand out… I believe this progressive museum will become a unique attraction in Hong Kong, welcoming more residents and tourists to visit and providing exceptional cultural experiences for us.”

The exhibition, running until 20 July, is part of CU Art March, which brings together CUHK members and the public in March and April through a diverse array of art and cultural programmes. Click here for more exhibition details.

By Gillian Cheng
Photos provided by CUHK Art Museum

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