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Hong Kong artists show experimental works at art museum on the China-North Korea border

Tsang Kin-wah and Mark Chung are the first Hong Kong artists to exhibit at the cutting-edge contemporary Yalu River Art Museum in Dandong

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Part of Hong Kong artist Tsang Kin-wah’s exhibition “Alongsen ten ce” is seen at the Yalu River Art Museum in Dandong, China. Photo: Yalu River Art Museum
Cheung Hok-hang

This summer, Hong Kong artists Tsang Kin-wah and Mark Chung escaped their hometown’s stifling heat by heading up to Dandong, the mainland Chinese frontier city best known for its border crossing with North Korea.

Far-flung and with fewer than a million citizens, Dandong has become an unlikely magnet for contemporary artists and art lovers from all over the world.

The reason is the Yalu River Art Museum, perched on a resort island just 500 metres (0.3 miles) from North Korean soil.

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The museum was founded in 2006 by businessman Ji Dahai, a Dandong native now based in Hong Kong.

Over the years, the museum has built a solid reputation and is today considered one of the most cutting-edge contemporary art institutions in mainland China. Artists who have shown there include Beijing-based Song Dong, Robert Zhao from Singapore, and Swiss sculptor Katja Schenker.

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The two Hong Kong artists are the first from the city to exhibit at this singular institution, and they are creating some of their most experimental work there.

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