Toru Kuwakubo Solo at Chigasaki City Museum of Art, Kanagawa

Toru Kuwakubo solo at Chigasaki City Museum of Art. 桑久保徹個展於茅ヶ崎市美術館

Toru Kuwakubo solo at Chigasaki City Museum of Art.

Toru Kuwakubo's Solo Exhibition is currently taking place at Chigasaki City Museum of Art. As he carefully depicts the famous artworks in art history and ruminates over the art masters’ thoughts and emotions, we see, in the reconstruction of space-time, a superimposition of the west and the east and reflection of art market, self-identity and art positioning. We are very excited to see Toru Kuwakubo's new works, where he once again interleaved art history and time with his contemplation.

Hsu Che-Yu Receives Han Nefkens Foundation - Loop Barcelona Video Art Production Award

Loop Barcelona Video Art Production Award is established by the Han Nefkens Foundation in collaboration with Loop Barcelona and the Fundació Joan Miró in 2018. The award is devoted to support Asia artists’ production in the video art field.

After receiving $15.000USD funding from Loop Barcelona Video Art Production Award for producing new work, which will be showing at public institution such as Fundació Joan Miró, Loop Barcelona, Centre d'Art Contemporain, Genève, Inside-Out Art Museum, Beijing, MOCA Taipei, ILHAM, Kuala Lumpur for the next two years.

Hsu Che-Yu states: “I’m honoured to be awarded the Han Nefkens Foundation - Loop Barcelona Video Art Production Award this year. Most of my works explore the relationship between individual and collective memories from Taiwan. I'm happy these efforts find positive reactions outside my hometown and looking forward to collaborating with Han Nefkens Foundation in the coming year.”

Kees Gouzwaard Solo Exhibition by Club Solo

Kees Gouzwaard solo exhibtion held by Club Solo. Club Solo 舉行之基斯‧古祖瓦德個展現場照

Kees Gouzwaard solo exhibtion held by Club Solo. Club Solo

Renowned Dutch artist initiative: Club Solo has puts the artist's work at the centre by organizing solo shows and cooperated with well-known Dutch and Belgian museums and curators, for example those of the Van Abbemuseum in Eindhoven and the museum of Contemporary Art in Antwerp. They regularly exhibit solo in the historical art space in Breda, southern Netherlands. Since 2014, 27 wonderful exhibitions have been held; the current 28th solo (from November 19, 2020 to January 10, 2021) is exhibiting Kees Gouzwaard.

Newly created works are shown in conjunction with works from the past fifteen years: an organically growing quest for ways of dealing with reality. "Colored fragments are tones. Linear and circular movement are relevant. The relation between grid and improvisation too." The artist once said.

Rona Pondick’s Work Exhibit at Kunstmuseum, Germany

New York artist Rona Pondick is now exhibiting her “Little Bathers” in exhibition “In Aller Munde (On Everyone’s Lips)” at Kunstmuseum. Moreover, this Rona’s signature piece from 1990s is invited to show on collaterals and outdoor ads as exhibition key visual. With the symbolic and metaphoric reading of teeth, “Little Bathers” lead us to examine and explore various dissents in response to agendas in our days.

Founded in 1994, Kunstmuseum has prominent collection of contemporary arts and often hosts exhibitions that reflect the environment in which it exists.

Information:
▎In Aller Munde (On Everyone’s Lips)
Duration: October 31, 2020 - April 5, 2021

Franziska Fennert is exhibiting at "ARTFEM Women Artists International Biennial of Macau"

Left Image | 左圖: ARTFEM Women Artists International Biennial of Macau|2020 ARTFEM第二屆國際女藝術家澳門雙年展 Right Image|右圖: Franziska Fennert|法蘭西斯卡.芬納特〈Mother Earth|大地之母〉2020, Used ironed plastic bags sewed on canvas, acrylic paint, spray paint, threads|熨燙舊塑膠袋並…

Left Image: ARTFEM Women Artists International Biennial of Macau
Right Image: Franziska Fennert, Mother Earth, 2020, Used ironed plastic bags sewed on canvas, acrylic paint, spray paint, threads, 90 x 120 x 7 cm|35.4 x 47.2 x 2.8 inches
Image Credit:Rangga Purbaya

The German artist Franziska Fennert, is currently showing her installations that reflect this globally relevant topic ─ the natural world, in ARTFEM 2020, the second edition of the International Women Biennial of Art of Macau SAR (until Dec. 13th, 2020), revolves around the theme Natura and acknowledges various acts of that have been or need to be practiced.The core messages both works strive to deliver is what Franziska Fennert said: “Nature is our extended body and therefore we need to renew our relationship from exploitation to cooperation.”

Information:
▎ARTFEM Women Artists International Biennial of Macau
Duration: September 30 - December 13, 2020

Jui-Chien, Hsu exhibiting at New Taipei City Arts Center

Left Image: Jui-Chien, Hsu and his latest work “Is It a Bathroom?”  Right Image: New Taipei City Arts Center current exhibition“To Martian Anthropologists” 左圖:徐瑞謙的最新作品《是浴室嗎?》|右圖:新北市藝文中心的當期展覽《給火星人類學家》

Left Image: Jui-Chien, Hsu and his latest work “Is It a Bathroom?”
Right Image: New Taipei City Arts Center current exhibition“To Martian Anthropologists”

New Taipei City Arts Center, Taiwan includes  New Taipei City Library, a performance hall, three exhibition rooms and the Huang Guei-Li Memorial Hall.  The center holds numerous exhibitions and activities, offering local communities a diverse space for art apperciation and viewing. 

To create his latest work “Is It a Bathroom?” Jui-Chien, Hsu melted 100 kg of soap then formed it into a huge soap cube. It looks like a three-dimensional canvas or a marble. But no matter what we see, the viewers can feel the transformation of the material in liquid and solid state, also the space and time condensed in the process of creation.

Information:
▎To Martian Anthropologists
Duration: August 4 - September 28, 2020

Words from Kees Goudzwaard

Image|圖:Dutch artist Kees Goudzwaard’s studio at home, located in Belgium due to the COVID-19.基斯.古祖瓦德因應疫情在比利時的家中設立工作室

Image: Dutch artist Kees Goudzwaard’s studio at home, located in Belgium due to the COVID-19

Under the circumstances of the worldwide lock down, we would to like to share how the artist is coping with you art lovers. The following is words from Dutch artist Kees Goudzwaard.

It is the fifth week of the lockdown here in Antwerp, where I live. As in most cities of the world, that means staying at home right now. I definitely need a haircut. But otherwise I feel alright. Normally I take the car as a real commuter every day to travel about 60 km to my big studio in the Netherlands. But now I can't cross the border. So I am forced to make a virtue out of necessity. That is why I immediately set up an improvised studio of modest dimensions at home. Nowadays, as soon as I get up in the morning, I can work in an area of ​​approximately 30 m2. Working from home means that I have to limit myself to small images. And I can only work on a limited number of pieces at a time. Sometimes that is difficult. But certainly not always. It has its own advantages and qualities. I am close to the images while working in this room, close to every detail. Would the life of a medieval scribe in a monastery look like this? The images are also closer together, in a literal and a figurative sense.

Instead of using oil on canvas like I usually do, I now paint with some kind of gouache on cardboard. It is a completely different way of working. This paint dries immediately. The material gives a matte paint skin. It resembles the surface of paper. It has its own finesse. And just like on the street outside, with hardly any traffic, the atmosphere in my workspace is a lot healthier because of the new painting material.

Since I can now work a little faster on the small works on cardboard, this may be the right time to reconsider my way of making choices. When developing my oil paintings I am used to taking the time to make final decisions, to make sure I am doing the right thing. This is also easy because oil paint is a slow medium. I have come to realize that it is important to me that each image has its own individuality, its own strength, not just another part of a series. But with that in mind, I often throw out a lot of alternative options, variants that might be just as valuable afterwards. I forget them or lose them on the way in the making process.

It seems to me that the lockdown situation invites me to explore the multiple options and implicit possibilities that every image I create can contain. Working in lockdown, in forced seclusion at home, with the works and with the new materials that are now available, reduces the pressure for me to do "the only right thing" and, as it were, allows the process to take place more casually, more directly. Apparently the change of setting makes me re-evaluate my work process. This may very well have a lasting effect on my way of working.

Rona Pondick's "Curly Grey" is Exhibited at Nunu Fine Art, B1

Image|圖片: Rona Pondick, Curly Grey, Pigmented resin, acrylic, and epoxy modeling compound 51.1 x 46 x 46.4 cm | 20.1 x 18 x 18.3 inches,2016-18|羅娜.龐迪克,蜷曲的灰, 著色樹脂、壓克力、環氧樹脂建模、化合物 

Image: Rona Pondick, Curly Grey, Pigmented resin, acrylic, and epoxy modeling compound 51.1 x 46 x 46.4 cm | 20.1 x 18 x 18.3 inches,2016-18

Artwork

Nunu Fine Art’s represented artist Rona Pondick has just won the American Academy of Arts and Letters’s Art Purchase Program. We can uncover the charm and the turning point of her artistic practice in the latest catalogue Rona Pondick: 2013-2018.
 
As a self-innovated searcher, Rona Pondick has the straightforwardness of following her instinct, the love for distinct media, and the ability of technical problem solving. All of these features mentioned above lead Pondick keep on pursueing the journey of wisdom. Also, the proclivity for experimentation makes her art connotes the varied quality and viewing angle.    

The latest catalogue brings the viewers Pondick’s brand new creation in the past five years. Our old friends who is familiar with Pondick may be asking this “Why do the works in these past five years are way deviates from the cast stainless steel sculptures she had been making for a decade and a half?” Although we can still see some familiar elements——human heads and hands melded with bodies of other species——yet the new works are made from resin , acrylic , and an epoxy modeling compound. They overtly present the traces of Pondick ' s hand clearly.
 
The Fall Destiny Variation: Take "My" body as the New Theme of Creating
 
In 2006, Pondick was diagnoses with cervical spondylotic myelopathy - compression of the spine. This made Pondick, a person who “thinks with her hands” devastated. A year later, through hard work and strength of will , her health has continued to improve. Still, the illness and surgeries changed Pondick' s life and work in significant ways. Today, as she moves around the studio, every move is choreographed to ensure she doesn't hurt herself. Learning how to use her hands again also redefined her relationship with herself and her art creation. At this point, her body is no longer an abstract idea. She says, "The body has been a subject in my work since the 80s, but now it ' s my body. "
 
The Leaping Main theme: Innovation of Media and Color in the New Works
 
Early in her recovery, Pondick realized that she needed to find a way to make sculpture without the commutes to the foundry and long and taxing days there that casting steel requires. In 2013, she stopped casting in metal and began to discover the techniques——epoxy——can be shaped like clay and dries like stone . Once it has dried, she can add to or carve it until it reaches her ideal state; Acrylic is for bases and enclosures. She has also figured out how to join these materials seamlessly. A conservator researches the properties of her materials and advises her on their use.  
 
Color also enhances the informality and approachability of Pondick' s new work. Her palette begins with the primary hues for photographic printing - magenta, cyan, and yellow - to which she adds green, blue, black, and white. Using these " impure " colors, as opposed to the more familiar primaries (red, yellow, blue), immediately shifts expectations. Pondick explores the transformation of color tone in resin and acrylic passionately; it further forms the feature and the display of the color itself.  
 
The Newborn of Rhythm: The Space and Tension in Pondick’s New Works
 
She wants her art to create its own sense of place. It means that a work creates its own particular world, apart from the room in which it is shown, a fantastic world that viewers can intoxicate in it. Take Sitting Yellow as example, it is planted on a beautifully proportioned base, which is integral to the piece and becomes its territory. As you walk around the strange and oddly sculpture, it looks like a suffered person, but when seen from the back, it becomes a poor- looking toddler. That recognition evokes a sympathy that overcomes the shock of the creature ' s mutant form.
 
The emotional qualities elicited by the new objects are darker in tone than in Pondick ' s earlier work, no doubt due to the physical difficulties she has faced in recent years. In Upside Down Yellow Green (2018), a human head with a golden sheen about the face and an ominous plug in place of its neck, hangs upside down from an aqua rectangle in what appears to be liquid. It could be a specimen in formaldehyde, but it seems likely that death came through more nefarious means. Pondick creates sense like moody crime atmosphere in drama work.
 
In Orange Pink Green Grey (2015- 18), a life - size pink head sits directly in front of an orange head on a watery aqua base; behind the orange head is its tiny froglike body. These mutant heterogeneous outcome that are too close to human, are like the world of nightmares we are living in. All of us are trapped in our bodies, limited by physical constraints that could become disabling at any moment. This is a hard fact that most of us are fortunate enough not to have to face. However, Pondick has confronted it directly and art is her response to never compromise.

Petah Coyne is Included in Publication "Great Women Artists" 

圖片來源|Image Credit: Phaidon 

Image Credit: Phaidon 

"Great Women Artists" is the most comprehensive female artist's book of all time, with over 400 fascinating artworks and showcases captivating female creativity for five centuries: Petah Coyne, Marina Abramović, Helen Frankenthaler, Agnes Martin, and Frida Kahlo are listed in this book. In the museums, art galleries, and art markets, female artists who have been neglected in the past are rising irresistibly and gradually gaining recognition.

The book not only introduces the artist's masterpieces, but also intersperses brief comments, revealing an appealing art history, and opening up the path of multiple voices in this era. As the New Yorker commented: "Real changes are upon us, and today one can reel off the names of a number of first-rate women artists. Nevertheless, women are just getting started." Nunu Fine Art joins you to witness the precious moment when women shine.

Congrats to Rona Pondick for Winning the American Academy of Arts and Letters’s Art Purchase Program

e2505ae8-1c20-40e2-992d-7635874e65e6.jpg

The Academy’s purchase program began in 1946 to place the work of talented, living American artists in museums across the country. Since the inauguration of this program, the Academy has spent nearly $5 million to purchase over 1200 works of art.

Nunu Fine Art is very honored to be able to present Rona Pondick’s sculptures in art fair, Taipei Dangdai, took p lace in the beginning of this year. Pondick’s winning work in the 2020 Art Purchase Program is currently on display in the “Invitational Exhibition of Visual Arts”, and will be shown in the “Ceremonial Exhibition: Work by New Members and Recipients of Awards”, which opens in late May.

Rona Pondick’s work, Head in Tree, is Exhibited in Nasher Sculpture Center

Head in Tree, 2006-2008, Stainless Steel, 266.7 x 106.7 x 94 cm|105 x 42 x 37 inches, Antonio Homem, Antonio Homem, Promised gift to the Nasher Sculpture Center

Exhibition

Rona Pondick was born in Brooklyn, New York in 1952. Since 1984 she has had many solo exhibitions of her work in museums and galleries internationally. Her sculptures have been included in over 200 group exhibitions. Her work is in the collections of many institutions worldwide including the Whitney Museum of American Art (New York); The Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York); Centre Pompidou (Paris) and others. One of her work, Head in Tree in 2006-2008, is exhibited by the Nasher Sculpture Center,  US recently. The Nasher Sculpture Center located in the heart of the Dallas Arts District, and is one of the finest collections of modern and contemporary sculptures in the world where featuring more than 300 masterpieces by Calder, de Kooning, di Suvero, Giacometti, Hepworth, Kelly, Matisse, Miró, Moore, Picasso, Rodin, Serra and more.


Rona Pondick's Selected Works Will Be Exhibited by American Academy of Arts and Letters

圖片來源|Image Credit: 羅娜.龐迪克官網 Rona Pondick's official website

Image Credit: Rona Pondick's official website

The American Academy of Arts and Letters was founded in 1898 as an honor society of the country’s leading architects, artists, composers, and writers. Early members include famous impressionist painter William Merritt Chase, Childe Hassam, sculptor Augustus Saint-Gaudens, writer Mark Twain, Edith Wharton and many more. The Academy seeks to foster and sustain an interest in Literature, Music, and the Fine Arts by administering over 70 awards and prizes, exhibiting art and manuscripts, funding performances of new works of musical theater, and purchasing artwork for donation to museums across the country.

From March 5 through Sunday, April 5, 2020, paintings, sculptures, video, photographs, and works on paper by 28 contemporary artists will be exhibited in the galleries of the American Academy of Arts and Letters on historic Audubon Terrace. The Exhibiting artists were chosen from over 150 nominees submitted by the members of the Academy. Nunu Fine Art’s represented artist Rona Pondick is very honored to be among the 28 artists. Besides catching the sight of the artist’s desires of pursuing the knowledge and understanding the universe, the visitors may also experience the experimental courage and the charming variety in her sculpture.

Rencontres Internationales Paris / Berlin 2020

Taiwanese Artist Hsu Che-Yu's "Single Copy" Exhibited in Rencontres Internationales Paris / Berlin 2020

圖|Image: 副本人 Single Copy,單頻道錄像、玻璃纖維雕塑Single channel video, FRP sculpture,                                                 21'17'',2019,1/6+2AP

Image: Single Copy, Single channel video, FRP sculpture, 21'17'',2019,1/6+2AP

This year's "Rencontres Internationales Paris / Berlin" will be held in the Louvre, the Grand Palace and the Pompidou Centre in Paris, France. As the European benchmark video art platform, "Rencontres Internationales Paris / Berlin" is dedicated to the contemporary practice and critical reflection of moving images. Filmmakers, contemporary / digital artists, scholars, guest curators, supervisors of cultural Institutions and of emerging organizations will gather together, using multiple forms of participation such as debates, round tables, forums, project-based creations, etc., in an attempt to construct a polysemous performance towards the educational turn, as a vagrancy of heterogeneous media which is open to the public. 

Hsu Che-Yu, the Taiwanese artist who won the ”HUGO BOSS Asia Art Award for emerging Asian artist” in 2019, is more honored to be invited to exhibit his work “Single Copy”. He hybridized the image projection with the sculptural form, and used his unique and ridiculous representational method to convey the alienated visual language, and further performed the open interpretation of social events and artistic events.

Peter Zimmermann’s Catalog is produced by Nunu Fine Art and Leopold-Hoesch-Museum

圖|Image: 彼得.辛莫曼的最新畫冊《抽象》Peter Zimmermann’s latest catalog “Abstractness”

Image: Peter Zimmermann’s latest catalog “Abstractness”

Nunu Fine Art cooperated with Leopold-Hoesch-Museum in Düren, Germany to produce our represented artist Peter Zimmermann’s latest catalog “Abtractness”.  In this catalog, we can see Peter Zimmermann started his art career by expressing how the images open up the access to the world but also limit our perception with his epoxy resin paintings of Michelin and Polyglott travel guides. Discovering on how the images form our relationship to art and how new representational possibilities shape our imagination, we may also get a glimpse on his reflection on the development of digital media and the associated multiplication in the early 1990s.

In order to create more opportunities for people getting the access to appreciate Peter Zimmermann’s works and to know the concept behind them, it is a delight for Nunu Fine Art to support Leopold-Hoesch-Museum producing this publication, which brings together Zimmermann ‘s early works and a selection of current productions.  

Petah Coyne is lecturing at the Frost Art Museum in Miami

Petah Coyne.1.jpg

The Patricia & Phillip Frost Art Museum is one of the largest academic art museums in South Florida, providing the community with free access to world-class art that spans cultures and time periods. The Frost Art Museum’s permanent collection includes over 6,000 objects with a strong representation of American printmaking from the 1960s and 1970s, photography, pre-Columbian objects dating from 200-500 AD, and a growing number of works by contemporary artists, especially from Latin American and Caribbean countries.

This is the 15th annual Breakfast in the Park, an official Art Basel Miami Beach event. Each year since 2004, the Patricia & Phillip Frost Art Museum has welcomed guests to enjoy a complimentary breakfast, a lecture by a noted sculptor, and guided tours of our Sculpture Park and exhibitions. Contemporary sculptor and photographer Petah Coyne will be the featured speaker this year. Known for her elaborately detailed assemblages that hang from ceilings and erupt from the floor, Coyne uses molten wax, silk flowers, sumptuous fabric, and pristine taxidermy to create works that evoke gothic narratives and the excess of the Rococo.

Coyne’s work can be found in numerous permanent museum collections, including MoMA, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Philadelphia Museum of Art, Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, and many more. She is also the recipient of numerous prestigious national awards, including The Rockefeller Foundation Award, three National Endowment for the Arts Awards, and The Pollock-Krasner Foundation Award, among others.

Ana Teresa Barboza will be in the Residence Program in Australian Tapestry Workshop

Established in 1976, Australian Tapestry Workshop is regarded as the most famous workshop and creating institution in the international hand-woven tapestry industry. Australian Tapestry Workshop is dedicated in promoting the art of woven tapestries. For the purpose of reserve and innovate the traditional textile culture, Australian Tapestry Workshop uses the same techniques employed since the 15th century, at the same time, it collaborates with contemporary artists, architects and designers actively, such as the architect of Sydney Opera House, Jorn Utzon, British abstract artist, Patrick Heron and the leading Australian painter, Arthur Boyd. Although the resurgence in the art of contemporary tapestry continues to grow worldwide, the Australian Tapestry Workshop remains deeply committed to its role as an international leader and produces exhibition in Australian. Furthermore, the tapestries that is produced by Australian Tapestry Workshop is collected by public and private institution, such as the National Gallery of Australia, Sydney Opera House, Arts Centre Melbourne and Parliament House and so on. The Peruvian artist Ana Teresa Barboza who is going to be in Nunu Fine Art's exhibition "Fear No More, Says the Heart: Female Artists Group Exhibition" in this month is invited to be in a residence program in Australian Tapestry Workshop. Barboza's works often combine traditional textile and other medias such as panting and photography. This creating concept happens to match with Australian Tapestry Workshop's development idea. Thus , the traditional textile is given the element of contemporary innovation.

Alfredo & Isabel Aquilizan's work, is Exhibited in Busan Biennale Sea Art Festival 2019

Busan Biennale Sea Art Festival 2019 establish a unique exhibition format over past years with its use of the sea—Busan's definitive natural environment—as its venue. The Sea Art Festival is going to look back on nature and ecology co-existing with humankind, attempting with its 2019 edition to reflect concerns about nature and ecology that have recently become major issues throughout the world. Busan Biennale Sea Art Festival 2019 will not only broaden the environmental issues into the realms of the individual, society, and humankind but will also examine the hidden scars underneath. 20 artists and artist teams from 12 countries will present 21 artworks. Including Filipino artists, Alfredo and Isabel Aquilizan, who are going to attend this art festival  with their unique installation art.

Rona Pondick's Work, Dog, is Exhibited in Remai Modern

Remai Modern are going to present The Sonnabend Collection on 5th October, 2019 to 22nd March, 2020. Developed through the vision of influential art dealer Ileana Sonnabend (1914-2007) her husband Michael Sonnabend (1900-2001), and their adopted son Antonio Homem, the Collection is among the most significant private holdings of modern and contemporary art in the world.


Through their galleries in Paris and New York, the Sonnabends established an international presence, fostering creative exchanges and new audiences for American artists in Europe and vice versa. Often, they championed artists early in their careers. They anticipated and influenced developments in art including Pop, Minimalism, Conceptualism, Nouveau Réalisme, Arte Povera, Neo-Expressionism, Neo-Geo, Photo Conceptualism and beyond. Above all, they believed deeply in artists.

The Sonnabend Collection at Remai Modern features over 100 works by 67 artists. Including the American artist, Rona Pondick, who once collaborated with Nunu Fine Art. Her work, "Dog" will be exhibited on the show. The Sonnabend Collection will exhibit artworks that spans seven decades of artistic production. This will be the Collection's first exposure in Canada, and its most comprehensive presentation to date in North America.  

Peter Zimmermann Solo Exhibition at Galerie Stadt Sindelfingen, Germany

Peter Zimmermann's latest work series is currently presented at Galerie Stadt Sindelfingen, Germany. As one of the representative contemporary artists, he often combines complex image algorithms with media such as epoxy, acrylic and oil paint. In fact, the abstract works are actually created with digital patterns, and then he emulates the patterns with hundreds of brushstrokes layer by layer. Zimmemann is also constantly trying new media. In addition to his highly recognizable epoxy paintings, this solo exhibition presents his animated piece of video art that illustrates the production process of all his works undergo. Besides, there is also a long frieze that looks like a 3-D wall object made from stickers running though the entire exhibition. The grand retrospective occupies a total of eleven gallery spaces, showing a variety of media and together constructs an overall creative conception.

Ari exhibits in Esplanade Theatres On The Bay, Singapore

〈臉|The Face〉,炭筆於紙|Charcoal on paper,130 x 150 cm|51 x 59 inches,2018

The Face, Charcoal on paper, 130 x 150 cm|51 x 59 inches, 2018

Montreal based Indonesian artist Ari Bayuaji is going to present ’Self Portrait' which is a commissioned project by 'Esplanade Theatres On The Bay' Singapore. The art installation constructed with the sculpture, drawing, and painting works located in 98 meters long tunnel that connected the main building with The City Link. The show will be opened on January 17, 2019.