Installation view ©MMCA

As an institution central to Asian contemporary art, the MMCA has been organizing the Asia Project focusing on Asian contemporary art since 2017. The exhibition How Little You Know About Me (7 April–8 July 2018), held as the first edition of this project, proposed Asia as more than a geological identity and as a new and critical perspective on the world.

Dew Kim X Hkason, Kiss of Chaos, 2020 ©MMCA

Deploying the concept of “family” to represent social solidarity, this year’s second-edition exhibition Looking for Another Family presents Asia as a public platform on which to discuss and share diverse issues concerning the Asian territory. In this scheme, the museum serves as an open space for discussion, gathering people of all generations and socioeconomic statuses for artists and audiences to envision “another form of a family”—a fluid platform for empathy and solidarity.

Featured in this exhibition are 15 teams of artists from eight Asian countries—Korea, China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Japan, Indonesia, Malaysia, and the Philippines—who depart from contemplation on their own identities to explore wider realms of consciousness: their own communities, societies, countries, and eventually, the world. The artists also offer opportunities for viewers to involve themselves in active communication not only through artworks comprising performances, photographs, and videos, but also through workshops in the forms of a snack cart, farming, an investment booth, a music video screening, a newsroom, and a roundtable discussion.

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