Iranian-American artist's cloth works reflect identity at Art Central

Iranian-American artist Elnaz Javani is displaying six distinctive coats at Hong Kong's Art Central festival, inviting reflection on themes of memory and Middle East conflict. Javani told the South China Morning Post that her work serves as a meditative space for Hongkongers amid rising global geopolitical tensions. The artwork is on show at Central Harbourfront until Sunday.

Elnaz Javani, an Iranian-American artist born in Iran in 1985 and now living in the United States, is showcasing a series of cloth artworks featuring six coats with distinctive features at the Art Central festival in Hong Kong. The pieces invite Hongkongers to reflect on themes of memory and conflict amid the ongoing war in the Middle East.

Javani told the South China Morning Post that her work also serves as a meditative space for Hongkongers at a time of rising global geopolitical tensions and represents her own past struggles with identity. “My ideas draw from personal memory but transform it into imagined narratives rather than direct documentation,” she said.

“I hope audiences take away a sense of the emotional complexity of lived experience; the ways memory, displacement and personal history are carried through the body, objects and materials.”

The artwork is currently on display at Art Central, which runs until Sunday at Central Harbourfront.

Mga Kaugnay na Artikulo

Runway models showcasing Jacques Wei and Yirantian Guo's innovative Fall 2026 womenswear collections at Shanghai Fashion Week.
Larawang ginawa ng AI

Jacques Wei and Yirantian present Fall 2026 collections in Shanghai

Iniulat ng AI Larawang ginawa ng AI

Designers Jacques Wei and Yirantian Guo unveiled their Fall 2026 collections during Shanghai Fashion Week, showcasing unconventional silhouettes and multifaceted womenswear. Wei drew inspiration from icons like Cher and emphasized weird proportions, while Guo categorized her looks for businesswomen, modern housewives, and freelancers. The shows took place at Xintiandi tents and the Labelhood hub.

Overseas galleries at Hong Kong's Art Central are considering keeping their artworks in the city for months after the fair due to soaring shipping costs from the US-Israeli war on Iran. Fuel surcharges have risen by as much as four times, gallerists told the South China Morning Post. The fair opens at Central Harbourfront on Wednesday and runs until Sunday.

Iniulat ng AI

An exhibition of 151 Iranian artifacts at the Inner Mongolia Museum in Hohhot has drawn growing attention since the Middle East conflict began. Iranian media reported damage to Tehran's Unesco-listed Golestan Palace during US-Israeli strikes. The display underscores China's role as a safe haven for vulnerable global heritage.

American novelists Ken Liu and Rebecca F. Kuang were the undisputed stars of the annual Singapore Writers Festival last month. They represent a new breed of Chinese-American writers incorporating elements of Chinese culture into their work in new ways. Their transcendence of politics and ideology marks a departure from the previous generation.

Iniulat ng AI

Artist Henrike Naumann has died at the age of 42 following a late-diagnosed cancer in Berlin. She had recently been selected as co-designer for the German Pavilion at the 2026 Venice Art Biennale. The Institute for Foreign Cultural Relations mourns the loss of a significant figure in contemporary art.

Mai Serhan's memoir 'I Can Imagine It for Us: A Palestinian Daughter’s Memoir' was published in October 2025 by the American University in Cairo Press, taking the form of letters to her late father, a Palestinian from Acre expelled during the 1948 Nakba. The book explores exile and family memory through imagination and recollection. Serhan, raised in Cairo, Abu Dhabi, and Beirut with a Palestinian father and Egyptian mother, seeks to reconstruct her lost heritage.

Iniulat ng AI

In Hong Kong, a group of dancers including wheelchair users is rehearsing for Wayfaring Beyond, a collaboration between the Hong Kong Dance Company and the China Hong Kong Para Dance Sport Association. The barrier-free performance, offering free admission, will take place at Tai Kwun in Central on February 28 and March 1. It forms part of the inclusive arts festival No Limits.

 

 

 

Gumagamit ng cookies ang website na ito

Gumagamit kami ng cookies para sa analytics upang mapabuti ang aming site. Basahin ang aming patakaran sa privacy para sa higit pang impormasyon.
Tanggihan