Wednesday, 1 April 2026
Tuesday, 31 March 2026
Brief Encounters: Actor, model and Personal Trainer James Wong's Fitness Routine
Multi-hyphenate James Wong [@jameswnc] is a multifaceted talent from London. Well, UK bred, Hong Kong based fit-fluencer: a successful model, actor, and certified personal trainer whose tips on wellness--be it physical, mental, diet, or emotional -- have helped him garner a fantastic following of fans, friends, haters and debaters. One doesn't rack up that many numbers without the odd misanthrope chiming in with his/her two cents...
As a model and actor, he has appeared in campaigns and projects while maintaining a strong physique that appeals to both fitness enthusiasts and the fashion world. He is also recognized as a KOL (Key Opinion Leader) and influencer across the board with brand deals and partnerships that highlight, health, wellness with a shot of humour.
Now a family man with a wife and child, Wong continues to inspire through his posts on training, cardio, and balancing life. His approachable style and dedication make him a leading figure in Hong Kong’s fitness scene.
Image courtesy of Sam AlliottWardrobe: Calvin Klein, CK jeansGrooming and MUA: Gloomy from KarenYiu.com
Monday, 30 March 2026
From Theatre Icon to Canvas: Lindsey McAlister’s Electrifying Art Central 2026 was Staged Beautifully. Pun Intended.
The founder of Hong Kong Youth Arts Foundation channels decades of stage energy into bold, spiritually charged paintings — and collectors are taking notice.
Words: P.Ramakrishnan
Images: Courtesy of the Artist.
As the dust settles after the whirlwind of Hong Kong’s art fairs last week — Art Central, Art Basel, and Edible Art — where scale, spectacle, celebrity on occasion eclipses substance, it was a pleasure to run into Lindsey McAlister as she stood by her canvas, a quiet force of convergence. A prominent figure in the city’s theatre scene for more than three decades — founder of the Hong Kong Youth Arts Foundation, OBE recipient, and tireless champion of youth creativity — the young at art McAlister has, in recent years, unfurled a parallel life as a visual artist.
At 65, she playfully describes herself as an “older emerging artist,” a label she wears with defiant relish. Her paintings, alive with rhythmic colour, layered texture, and an almost performative pulse, translate the electricity of the stage into canvas.
Last week, at Art Central 2026, exhibiting with The Spectacle Group, McAlister found the fair’s energy particularly resonant. “It’s been an incredibly energising week… the best Art Central experience I’ve had,” she says. “This is my second year and I felt more relaxed! The fair had a real buzz, and being there with The Spectacle Group gave my work a beautiful platform to be seen, talked about and properly engaged with.” Collectors, curators, and visitors responded with striking enthusiasm.
Many lingered before her canvases, sensing the theatre in the paint. “People were very interested in the way my performing arts background feeds into the paintings,” McAlister notes, “how stage energy, movement and emotion are translated into colour, rhythm and texture on canvas.” Visitors often remarked that they could “feel” that live energy emanating from the work. Several collectors spoke of a deeper pull: “a sense of connection and ‘divine’ energy in the pieces, that idea of something larger linking all living things.”
For McAlister, the most profound validation came from those who left feeling transformed. “The most meaningful feedback came from visitors who said they felt uplifted after spending time with the work – that’s exactly the kind of impact I hope my practice can have.”
McAlister never abandoned theatre; she simply reopened a long-dormant channel. Trained at art school more than 40 years ago, she set painting aside as life filled with directing, youth work, and the beautiful chaos of productions. Then came a quiet pivot. “Two years ago, when I got Covid and was stuck at home, bored and restless, I picked up a paintbrush almost on a whim… and the moment I started, I remembered how much it made my heart sing!”
She describes the shift not as reinvention but reconnection. “Theatre will always be something I create; it’s like breathing for me. It was more like discovering a second creative channel that runs alongside it.” Now the practices nourish each other: stage movement and emotional storytelling surge onto the canvas in bold acrylic layers. Her technique favours speed and intuition. “My works are primarily acrylic on canvas rather than oil,” she explains. “Acrylic really suits my spontaneous way of working (and I am really impatient… so I need something that dries fast!). It lets me move quickly, layer intuitively!”
She works in a former classroom at “The Kungers,” a refurbished school-turned-community space in Sai Kung, where large-scale pieces can breathe and wait their turn for exhibition.
McAlister’s visual language draws from a rich lineage. Gustav Klimt remains a lodestar for his opulent patterning and emotional depth. “I’m drawn to his rich use of pattern, ornament and repeated motifs, and the way he balances decorative beauty with deep emotional intensity.” The Pop Art movement supplies bold colour and graphic immediacy, while Wassily Kandinsky and Abstract Expressionism shape her belief in colour and form as carriers of spiritual vibration — echoing her fascination with an unseen “divine energy” that binds all living things.
A more immediate inspiration is contemporary Australian artist Naomi Hobson, whose work she encountered in person at Art Central with Rebecca Hossack Gallery. “I’m deeply inspired by how clearly her culture, land and community flow through her work.”
In personal taste, McAlister gravitates toward art that registers viscerally. “I’m drawn to art that feels alive in my body first — bold, bright colour, graphic impact and a sense of movement or performance.” She respects but struggles to connect with “very cold, ultra-minimal or purely cerebral contemporary work where I need to read a long text to feel anything. My taste leans toward art you feel in your gut and heart first and only analyse afterwards.”
The strong current balancing her worlds requires no rigid timetable. Theatre — especially the forthcoming YAF musical Falling Awake, about a teenage girl who escapes online bullying by slipping into a surreal “Innerverse” — runs on structure: call times, deadlines, the machinery of production. When she has precious time off, painting occupies the cracks, instinctive and free. “It doesn’t feel like juggling, they definitely feed each other, but in practice it’s more like two tides coming in and out than a neatly planned timetable.”
Her representation with The Spectacle Group and gallerist Jaime Lau feels like an artistic homecoming. After returning to painting, McAlister methodically emailed Hong Kong galleries for months. “I basically wore a few of them down until they replied and Jaime was the person I met who truly saw me, not just as an artist but as a human. We connected deeply. Resilience and persistence really paid off.”
She contrasts Art Central’s approachable buzz with the more austere atmosphere of Art Basel. Edible Art, which she attended, delighted her with its playful blurring of visual art, food, and experience. As 2026 unfolds, McAlister embraces expansion with characteristic verve. Falling Awake demands focus, yet fuels the storytelling impulse at her core. In visual art, she eyes new markets with fearless momentum: a group show in Manila this June, conversations with galleries in Paris and New York, and ambitions for London representation.
“At 65, as an ‘older’ emerging artist, I honestly feel like that’s my USP, I have lived experience, stamina and zero interest in playing small, and I’m quite committed to exploiting that, in the best possible way, in the years ahead! I’m planning on living to at least 100 so I have still loads of time. Ha!”
McAlister’s practice refuses diminishment, as her canvases do not merely depict energy — they channel it, offering viewers a visceral reminder that art, like theatre, can awaken something larger than the self. In Hong Kong’s crowded cultural arena, that transmission feels both rare and urgently needed. As a multi-hyphenate behind the scenes, McAlister hasn't left the stage, her new work's just taken centre stage.
Thursday, 26 March 2026
Designer Barney Cheng mulls over diamonds, lost lovers and lost watches
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| Portrait by Chris Yau |
For the first in our series of Robb Report’s set questionnaire, we knocked on the doors of the designer’s eponymous studio.
Wednesday, 25 March 2026
First Look: Art Central 2026 opens Eleventh Edition at Central Harbourfront
Art Central returned yesterday for its eleventh edition, anchoring Hong Kong Art Month with 117 galleries and more than 500 artists from over 50 countries and regions. The fair runs 25 to 29 March at its signature Central Harbourfront location.
Vox populi often state that Art Central is the humbler cousin of Art Basel, which seems to get the odd celebrity sighting, large scale pieces and price-tags that touch 7-8 figures but as we roamed around Art Central, noted some significant pieces (Dali! Kusama!!) with equally breath-taking price tags too.
First impressions and post impressions... the usual mix of the great and the gaudy (people watching is so much fun at these events), all the pieces that caught our eye were notable Chinese artists where the art looks like... art. Classic oil paintings, Asian scrolls, 3-D effect paintings, frames and sculptures with a touch of humour... all good fun.
In the vernacular of youngspeak, "mad props" to those who dressed in all their multi-hued, fabric flowing, statement necklace wearing, parrot-earring-studded, vintage, every-colour-of-the-rainbow caftan wardrobe. We are all for the artists and the eccentrics who let their freak flag fly at events like Art Central where dressing the part is highly encouraged.
The Highlights.
The headline addition for 2026 is Central Stage — a new curated platform spotlighting artists with recent, current or upcoming presence in major international exhibitions, biennales, or significant museum acquisitions. Six presentations have been selected:
- Arahmaiani (Yogyakarta) — a pioneering Indonesian artist whose performance and installation work has addressed politics, gender, and cultural commodification since the 1980s.
- Marta Frėjutė (Vilnius) — working across installation, sculpture and research-driven images that probe how fiction and memory shape everyday life amid shifting histories.
- Elnaz Javani (Tehran/Colorado) — textiles, sculpture and drawing that tangle personal and cultural memory, migration and identity.
- Esther Mahlangu (Mpumalanga, South Africa) — celebrated for bold geometric abstractions drawn from Ndebele traditions and brought into contemporary dialogue.
- Arno Rafael Minkkinen (Helsinki/Massachusetts) — pioneer of black-and-white self-portraits exploring the human body in nature.
- SIDE CORE (Tokyo) — the collective founded in 2012 that folds street culture and urban subcultures into contemporary art.
Areté Space (Beijing, 2023), Astra Art (Shanghai, 2023), BOUNDED SPACE (Beijing, 2014), Kimreeaa Gallery (Seoul, 2008), Meno Parkas Gallery (Kaunas, 1997), MJK Gallery (Tokyo, 2022), NoSugar Gallery (Wuhan, 2021), The Gallery by SOIL (Hong Kong, 2012), V&E Art (Taipei, 2018) and Wolf & Nomad (Miami, 2018).
Yi Tai Sculpture and Installation ProjectsFive new large-scale works extend beyond the booth format. Hong Kong artists feature prominently: Silvester Mok’s The Digital Fossiliser (Touch Gallery), OrangeTerry’s Found Faith (Square Street Gallery) and Alexis Wong’s Sunken Echoes (Yiwei Gallery). Also on view are Jeong-A Bang’s Oliver Stone’s Swimming and The Space Between Us (Gallery MAC, Busan) and Elnaz Javani’s The Fate (RARARES Gallery, Dubai).
Curated by Zoie Yung, the creative strand examines how digital life reshapes social and virtual experience.
Hong Kong new-media artist Kaitlyn Hau (b. 1999) presents the commissioned installation Recursive Feedback Ritual 0.01 (2026). Using motion-capture data in a recursive loop, the work maps psychiatric symptoms as cycles of repetition and dissociation, reclaiming bodily agency through generative movement and image.
The daily performance series ‘Endless Night and Midnight Sun’ uses polar extremes of light and darkness as a metaphor for AI-altered time. New commissions come from Jiaming Liao (IYKYK (ON AIR)), Chaklam Ng (Shadow Work), Isabella Isabella (I see blood in the sky.) and Susie Au (Memory In Motion – Walk-In-Cinema).
Video art programme ‘Reading the Room’ reflects on human nuance versus AI’s limitations in grasping subtext and tone. Highlights include Liang-Jung Chen’s UK Indefinite Leave to Remain Application Fee, Yifan Jiang’s One Sunday Morning, Jon Rafman’s Cloudy Heart – Strawberry Moon, and Adrian Wong’s With Love from Hong Kong and With Hate from Hong Kong.
Talks bring together artists and curators for conversations on Southern Chinese art, MV as art form, the Hong Kong Artist Commission, and art-tech ecologies.



Partner ProjectsUOB marks a decade as Lead Partner with Hong Kong artist Ling Pui Sze’s largest installation to date, White Mirror – The Vista of Inner Worlds (2026). The immersive ink-and-paper sculptural garden draws on cellular imagery and Cambridge research, evoking a cosmic Zen space that echoes the Daoist idea of “Everything as One.” Additional showcases feature 2025 UOB Art in Ink Awards winners and the UOB Painting of the Year Regional Showcase. Workshops with established Hong Kong ink artists are open for pre-registration at uobartacademy.com.hk/ws2026.
Sands China debuts at Hong Kong Art Month with a presentation of three Macao artists — Lei Ieng Wai, Leong Chi Mou and Dor Lio Hak Man — alongside aesthetic references to the city’s historic firecracker industry. Nice to see our friendly island neighbours represented.
MTN Seni Budaya (Indonesia) presents ‘Rising Currents’, a constellation of eight Indonesian galleries mapping the multiple currents in contemporary Indonesian art today.
Chance AI, the Innovation Partner, launches Chance LIVE — its “Visual Agent” technology — offering real-time on-site interpretive insights into works at the fair.Eat, Drink, ConnectBlack Sheep returns for the third year with an expanded Eat Central featuring Ho Lee Fook, Artemis & Apollo, Jean-Pierre, FALCONE and Messina gelato, complete with exclusive new dishes, but good luck standing in line waiting for paper cups.
Soho House Hong Kong set up its pop-up bar against a mural by local French artists Faustine Badrichani and Elsa Jeannedieu, serving classics like the Picante and the new Highball Fifty. After all that walking in the Ikea-maze of the exhibits, put your feet up if you can find a chair. While we were waiting in line for the obligatory champagne, a lot of wheeling and dealing was overheard; one of the Dali sculptures sold within the first few hours; prices range from HK$300,000-HK$450,000. None too shabby.
Kronenbourg 1664 created The Blue Perspective lounge, inspired by the liminal blue hour and 1664 Blanc. Easy to find, there's always a slightly bored looking model trying to muster enthusiasm while pointing to the direction of the keg. Or whatever they have going on backstage. Great beer.
illycaffè brings the latest John Armleder Art Collection, with shimmering cup-and-saucer designs that echo his light works.
All in all, I highly recommend. Got my 16,000 steps in.
Tickets are available now at artcentralhongkong.com/tickets.Fair dates: 25–29 March 2026
Venue: Central Harbourfront, 9 Lung Wo Road, Hong KongHong Kong, 24 March 2026
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