Skip to main content

ICYMI: The Art and Craft of Photography Panel Talk Now Online

SigmaxAWNY-panel-2026

Live Panel Discussion during Asia Week New York, March 12, 2026

If you missed our live panel talk during Asia Week New York this March, The Art and Craft of Photography: From Asian Traditions to Contemporary Practice, you can watch it now on our site!

Presented in collaboration with Sigma Foundation, this compelling discussion traces the evolution of photography from its historical foundations to today’s most forward-looking practices. A distinguished panel of artists, a curator, and an industry expert reflect on how Japanese and broader Asian traditions continue to shape the language of contemporary image-making within a global context.

The conversation moves fluidly between tradition and experimentation, the influence of photographic technologies on artistic vision, and the curatorial challenges of presenting Japanese photography to international audiences. From postwar photographic narratives to contemporary abstraction, the panel offers rare insight into photography’s ongoing reinvention.

A must-watch for anyone interested in photography, contemporary art, and visual culture!

Panelists include:

Gen Aihara, Artist
Maggie Mustard, Assistant Curator of Photography, Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Division of Art, Prints and Photographs, The New York Public Library
Kazuto Yamaki, CEO, Sigma Corporation, and Founder, Sigma Foundation
Eric Zetterquist, Artist
Moderated by Alice Teng, Executive Director, Asia Week New York

About Sigma Foundation
The Sigma Foundation is a philanthropic initiative dedicated to advancing photography as an art form. The Foundation collaborates with artists worldwide to produce and present their work – regardless of whether they use Sigma products. Through its Photobook Project, the Sigma Foundation commissions and publishes long-form, artist-driven books. The inaugural artists in the series – Sølve Sundsbø, Julia Hetta, Stephen Gill, and Anders Petersen – reflect the Foundation’s commitment to craftsmanship, creative independence, and the enduring power of the printed image. To learn more, click here.

To watch this insightful discussion, click here!

• • •

Kawai Kanjirō: House to House Closing Soon at Japan Society

JapanSociety_KawaiInstall

Installation view of Kawai Kanjirō: House to House at Japan Society Gallery, New York, 2026. Photo by Go Sugimoto.

Kawai Kanjirō: House to House
Closing Sunday, May 10, 2026

There’s still time to experience Kawai Kanjirō: House to House,at Japan Society before it closes on May 10! This landmark exhibition, the first in the United States dedicated to the folk potter, poet, and artist Kawai Kanjirō (1890–1966), celebrates his pivotal role in shaping modern Japanese craft and aesthetics.

A key figure in the mingei (folk art) movement, which he co-founded in the mid-1920s with philosopher Yanagi Sōetsu and potter Hamada Shōji, Kawai championed the beauty of everyday objects. The exhibition features rarely seen works from his personal collection, typically housed at the Kawai Kanjirō House in Kyoto, charting his evolution from functional ceramics to late-career modernist wood sculptures.

From Kyoto to New York, House to House traces Kawai’s enduring influence on modern art in Japan and beyond.

To learn more and plan your visit, click here.

• • •

Discover San Antonio Museum of Art’s Chinese Collection

SanAntonio_Camel

Camel with Foreign Rider, Artist Unknown, Asian Art, Chinese, ca. 618-906, Earthenware with sancai lead glaze. 34 5/16 in. (87.2 cm), w. 26 3/4 in. (67.9 cm), d. 9 3/4 in. (24.8 cm), San Antonio Museum of Art, gift of Lenora and Walter F. Brown, 2013.38.11.

Off the Wall: From China to San Antonio: The Story of a Collection
Tuesday, May 12, 2026
5:30–6:30pm
Great Hall 
Free

How did the San Antonio Museum of Art come to have one of the most important collections of Chinese art in the southern United States?

From Tang dynasty sancai figures to the ionic blue-and-white porcelains of the Yuan and Ming dynasties, follow docent Anita Guajardo to discover works once prized by European nobility and experience the richness of Chinese culture through its ceramics.

Off the Wall is a curated tour series that explores special topics across SAMA’s collections. Each session is developed and facilitated by passionate docents who can’t wait to share the stories behind SAMA’s most captivating artworks and hidden gems.

To ensure an optimal experience, Off the Wall tours are limited to 25 participants. Places are available on a first-come, first-served basis. Please check in at the front desk to secure your place on the tour!

To learn more, click here.

• • •

Seizan Gallery’s Spring Events

Seizan_Awai_Asa

Asa Hiramatsu, Seesaw – 08, 2025, oil on canvas, 381.9 x 572.8 in. (970 x 1455 cm)

Seizan Gallery proudly presents a dynamic spring lineup: the debut solo exhibition of Tokyo-based painter Asa Hiramatsu at their Chelsea gallery, alongside a presentation at Future Fair featuring works by Marina Berio, Miné Okubo, and Asako Tabata.

And don’t miss their Spring Group Show, closing Saturday, May 9—a bold exhibition you won’t want to miss!

Asa Hiramatsu: To Be Cloud
May 14 – July 2, 2026
Opening Reception: Thursday, May 14, 6-8pm
525 West 26th Street, NYC

To Be Cloud gathers eighteen new paintings that distill Hiramatsu’s investigation into the inner landscape she carries within herself — and that, she believes, each of us carries as well.

A self-taught painter and illustrator, Hiramatsu makes tranquil, contemplative scenes built up in muted color and the heavy, layered surface of oil paint. She calls them inner landscapes: a world she holds within herself, running parallel to the one we share. For Hiramatsu, painting is a way of descending into her own inner topography and registering what she finds there — meeting familiar faces, finding new patches of ground, driving a stake to mark that she has been. It is, in her words, an act of “understanding why I am myself.” That journey, by its nature, opens into the viewer’s own — into the self, and into its relationships with others, with society, with the natural world.

To learn more, click here.

Seizan_FutureFair
Miné Okubo, Untitled (Girl with Flower), 1973, 54 x 44 in (137.16 x 111.76 cm)

Future Fair
May 13 – 16, 2026
VIP Preview: Wednesday, May 13, 2026
Booth U10
Chelsea Industrial, 535 W 28th St, NYC

Seizan Gallery is also pleased to announce its participation in Future Fair, on view May 13–16, 2026, at Chelsea Industrial. The presentation brings together works by Marina Berio, Miné Okubo, and Asako Tabata, offering a dynamic dialogue across generations and practices.

To learn more, click here.

 

Seizan_GroupInstall
Installation view, Spring Group Show

SPRING GROUP SHOW
Closing Saturday, May 9, 2026
525 West 26th Street, NYC

Don’t miss your final chance to see the Spring Group Show before it closes on May 9. Featuring nine distinguished artists from Japan, the exhibition brings together practices grounded in tradition yet pushing boldly into contemporary explorations of materiality and perception.

To learn more, click here.

• • •

Whispers of the Unseen: In Resonance Closing Soon at Alisan Fine Arts

Alisan_WhispersInstall

Installation view, Whispers of the Unseen: In Resonance

Whispers of the Unseen: In Resonance
Closing Saturday, May 9, 2026
120 East 65th Street, NYC

There’s still time to experience Whispers of the Unseen: In Resonance at Alisan Fine Arts before it closes on Saturday, May 9! Featuring three Macau-born artists—Wong Weng Cheong, Rusty Fox, and Heidi Lau—the exhibition brings together distinct practices in printmaking, photography, and ceramic sculpture. Though their approaches differ, each artist shares a quiet, introspective sensibility that whispers rather than declares. Belonging to the same generation and shaped by similar cultural landscapes, their artistic languages diverge, yet the spiritual undercurrents of their works resonate within a shared field.

Wong Weng Cheong, widely recognized for his large-scale digital installations, is represented here by an earlier body of traditional copperplate etchings. These works possess a markedly introspective tone, unfolding like a series of epistolary poems addressed to his younger self. Originally conceived digitally and later translated onto copper plates, the images allow ephemeral electronic forms to acquire the tactile gravity of the etching process. Within these compositions, time and space appear suspended; elongated figures evoke a liminal, dreamlike atmosphere. This series serves both as a projection of the artist’s psychological boundaries and as the conceptual point of departure for the installation he later presented at the Macau Pavilion of the 2024 Venice Biennale.

Similarly rendered in monochrome, Rusty Fox’s photographs turn away from interior psychological spaces and instead attend to overlooked scenes within the urban landscape. Moving through the city like a nocturnal flâneur, Fox centers his compositions on trees, constructing images that recall the uncanny atmosphere of classical Chinese zhiguai tales. Twisted trunks assume anthropomorphic qualities, as if reclaiming the city after nightfall. In his work, the documentary authority of photography subtly shifts. Through deliberate framing and selection, perception is quietly reoriented, allowing multiple layers of reality to unfold: the physical world reshapes the senses, the senses reshape our imagination of familiar spaces, and imagination itself may constitute another form of truth.

While these prints and photographs explore the tensions and distortions of perception on a two-dimensional plane, Heidi Lau condenses memory, myth, and interiority into three-dimensional form. Working primarily with clay, Lau draws upon the elemental properties of the material to explore the expression of indistinct memories, mythologies, and visual experiences. The deformation of clay and the merging of glazes allow emotional memory to settle into matter, resulting in forms that hover between abstraction and figuration. By infusing a historically laden medium with her own embodied experience, Lau transforms ceramics into a distinctly contemporary visual syntax.

Resonance does not imply similarity; rather, it describes how different frequencies respond to one another. Across their varied media, the works of these three artists reveal collisions between embodied experience and urban memory. Together, they illuminate layers that are often overlooked, concealed, or forgotten, while their quiet murmurs continue to reverberate.

To learn more, click here.

• • •

Space 776 Debuts its Latest Exhibition: ////

Space776_IIII exh

Song E Yoon; Courtesy Space 776

////
May 1 – 26, 2026
37-39 Clinton Street, NYC

Space 776 is pleased to open “////,” a group exhibition bringing together four key Korean artists—Jeoung Keun Chan, Song E Yoon, Sunjoo Jung, and Beom Jun—featured in the gallery’s recent program. The exhibition explores the idea of intervals as active, generative spaces, where distinct artistic trajectories unfold in parallel rather than converge.

Each body of work sustains its own formal and temporal logic, creating a dynamic field of tension in which relationships remain open, contingent, and unresolved. Rather than offering a singular narrative, “////” presents a set of coordinates—inviting viewers to navigate the shifting perceptual space that emerges between four independent yet interconnected practices.

About the Artists:

Jeoung Keun Chan (b. 1965) develops monochromatic abstract paintings through repetitive gestures and the accumulation of material. Subtle variations within restrained color fields register the density of time, while the surface holds a quiet yet persistent rhythm and tension. In 2026, the artist participated in Asia Week New York, situating his work within an international context.

Song E Yoon (b. 1983) moves fluidly between painting and installation, focusing on the sensory properties of material and the invisible dimensions that underlie it. Her practice traces the emergence and dissolution of form, attending to the flows of energy that accumulate in between. The question of how the invisible might become perceptible remains an ongoing undercurrent in her work. In 2026, she was invited to participate in a collateral event of the 61st La Biennale di Venezia, marking a significant expansion of her international presence.

Sunjoo Jung (b. 1969) engages materiality, memory, and the aesthetics of the everyday through the use of mother-of-pearl. The reflective and iridescent qualities of the material produce subtle shifts in perception, transforming familiar surfaces into perceptual fields that change with light and viewpoint. Her work reconfigures the sensory and temporal layers embedded in ordinary objects. In 2025, she participated in SCOPE Miami Beach.

Beom Jun (b. 1985) constructs layered compositions in oil painting, where waves and mountainous forms overlap to create a dynamic sense of movement. Through repeated brushwork, the surface becomes a site where multiple temporalities and rhythms intersect. Landscape, in his work, is not a fixed image but a fluctuating field of energy and perception. In 2026, he participated in EXPO Chicago.

To learn more, click here.

• • •

Kawai Kanjirō: House to House Documentary Premiere at Japan Society

JapanSociety_KawaiiDoc

Courtesy of Kawai Kanjirō’s House

Kawai Kanjirō: House to House Documentary Premiere
Screening and Panel Discussion
Thursday, May 7, 2026 at 7pm
Tickets: $25 Non-members; $20 Seniors/Students; $15 Members

The Japan Society warmly invites you to the world premiere of the documentary film Kawai Kanjirō: House to House on May 7.  The film chronicles the making of their spring exhibition, Kawai Kanjirō: House to House, the first US solo exhibition of the renowned folk potter, poet, and artist Kawai Kanjirō (1890–1966), and the first time Kawai’s personal collection has been shown outside of Japan. In celebration of the milestone exhibition, the documentary features views of the Kawai Kanjirō House (the artist’s home, studio and climbing kiln) in Kyoto, scenes of the neighborhoods surrounding both the Kawai House and Japan House (home to Japan Society), glimpses of curatorial meetings, interviews with young potters in Kyoto and New York, and footage of the opening events at Japan Society.

After the screening, join the exhibition curators, Michele Bambling, Japan Society Gallery Director, and Tamae Sagi, Curator, Kawai Kanjirō House, for a panel discussion. They will be joined by special guest Monika Bincsik, Diane and Arthur Abbey Curator for Japanese Decorative Arts, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, and curator of the exhibition The Infinite Artistry of Japanese Ceramics (open through August 8, 2027). The three curators will discuss Kawai Kanjirō’s pioneering work and enduring legacy.

To learn more and purchase tickets, click here.

• • •

Journey Through Zhang Xiaoli: Traveller 旅者 at Fu Qiumeng Fine Art

FQM_Traveller

Zhang Xiaoli: Traveller 旅者
May 5 – June 13, 2026
Opening Reception: Thursday, May 7, 5-8pm (kindly RSVP)
Artist Talk: Saturday, May 9, 10:30-12pm (kindly RSVP)

Artist-led Fan-Painting Workshop: Saturday & Sunday, May 16-17, 2:30-4:30pm (ticketed)
65 East 80th St., Ground Fl, NYC

On May 5, the story unfolds at Fu Qiumeng Fine Art on Manhattan’s Upper East Side. Here, a theater built from LEGO® bricks takes shape, and you are its protagonist: a traveller on horseback. For this moment, step out of everyday life. Welcome to Zhang Xiaoli’s world.

This exhibition is structured as “theatre,” and centered on the idea of “play.” It unfolds in four sections. In the Prologue, the grammar of Chinese landscape painting is translated into a LEGO®-based visual order, establishing the rules of this world. In the Scenes, the traveler moves through shifting landscapes, wandering across time and space. In the Open Rehearsal, viewers are brought behind the stage. Over the course of a week, the artist works on-site, and the making of a distinctly “Zhang Xiaoli” work gradually comes into view. In the final act, Into the Play, LEGO® bricks are placed in your hands. The moment you begin to assemble, you become part of the story.

Alongside the exhibition, join a special artist talk and an artist-led fan painting workshop with Zhang Xiaoli, inviting participants to engage directly with the artist’s playful reinterpretation of pictorial traditions through hands-on experience. To learn more and reserve tickets, click here.

To learn more, click here.

• • •

Tina Kim Gallery Presents Pacita Abad: Door to Life

TinaKim_Abad

Pacita Abad (1946–2004), Door made of straw I (detail), 1998, oil, acrylic, printed cloth, dyed canvas stitched on straw mat, 89 x 53 1/8 in. (226 x 135 cm)

Pacita Abad: Door to Life
April 30 – June 20, 2026
Opening reception: Thursday, April 30, 6–8pm
525 West 21st Street, NYC

Tina Kim Gallery is pleased to present Door to Life, its third solo exhibition of works by the visionary artist Pacita Abad (1946–2004). The exhibition centers on a remarkable body of work inspired by Abad’s trip to Yemen in the spring of 1998—a journey that profoundly shaped her practice in the years that followed. Drawing from the country’s architecture and decorative arts, Abad created works across a range of scales and media that reflect her deep engagement with local visual traditions.

Bringing together the Door to Life series in its entirety for the first time, the exhibition also marks the debut of Abad’s never-before-seen qamariya paintings, inspired by the intricate stained glass windows of Sana’a. On view are both intimate and large-scale trapunto paintings, alongside works from her Door Made of Straw series, in which she painted on woven mats and incorporated textiles. The qamariya works, painted on collected stencils, extend her dialogue with regional craft practices.

Together, these works underscore Abad’s enduring commitment to centering cultural materials and artistic traditions beyond the frameworks of Western art markets and institutions, offering a vibrant and deeply considered vision of global interconnectedness.

Abad was a pioneering artist known for her rigorous political engagement and radical embrace of global arts and crafts practices, which she encountered throughout decades of extensive travel. Born to a politically-active family in Batanes, the northernmost province of the Philippines, Abad came to the United States in 1970 where she studied at Lone Mountain College in San Francisco before embarking on her decades of nomadic travel to 62 countries across Asia, Southeast Asia, the Middle East, the Caribbean, and Africa. Although she took courses at The Art Students League and the Corcoran School of Art, Abad stated, “Traveling for me is my art school.” Abad’s practice was distinctly porous, accumulating layersof material, technical, and formal influences throughout her 32-year-long career. Her practice was profoundly influenced by the artisans, seamstresses, craftspeople, journalists, and everyday people she met across her travels. Abad considered her practice to be global rather than defined by any single artistic style or national identity.

To learn more, click here.

• • •

Oliver Forge and Brendan Lynch Ltd. Celebrate Islamic Week in London

ForgeLynch_ Birth of Krishna

FOLIO FROM A DISPERSED BHAGAVATA PURANA SERIES, The birth of Krishna, Kangra, Pahari Hills, circa 1780, opaque pigments with gold on paper, black and white rules with blue border, 10 1/3 by 7 4/5 in. (27 by 20 cm) painting; 11 2/5 by 8 2/3 in. (29 by 22 cm) folio

Islamic Week
April 27 – May 1, 2026
Mon-Wed & Fri, 10am-5pm; Thur, 12-5pm
16-17 Pall Mall, London

In celebration of Islamic Week, Oliver Forge and Brendan Lynch Ltd. is delighted to present a special exhibition of paintings at their London gallery.

Now on view, the exhibition offers a rare opportunity to engage closely with these evocative works in an intimate setting. They warmly invite you to visit and experience the collection firsthand!

To learn more and view the works, click here.

• • •