Hong Kong Palace Museum's Egyptian exhibition to be most profitable yet

The Hong Kong Palace Museum has announced that its current exhibition of ancient Egyptian artifacts will be its most profitable show since opening three years ago. Director Louis Ng Chi-wa revealed that 76,000 visitors attended in the first four weeks, with expectations of 700,000 over the nine-month run.

The Hong Kong Palace Museum announced on Thursday that a display of hundreds of ancient Egyptian artifacts will be its most profitable exhibition yet since opening three years ago. The show, titled 'Ancient Egypt Unveiled: Treasures from Egyptian Museums,' features pieces carefully selected from 700 presented in Shanghai earlier this year.

Director Louis Ng Chi-wa said: 'We expected it would be popular, but it is even more popular in terms of both visitor numbers and demand for related merchandise. It will be the most profitable show at [the museum] since we opened three years ago.' About 76,000 people had visited in the first four weeks of its run, and management expects around 700,000 over the nine-month period.

The costs for staging the exhibition, including insurance and logistics, are the highest to date for the museum. It is managed by the West Kowloon Cultural District Authority, whose operating deficit widened by 33 percent to HK$769 million (US$98.84 million) in the financial year ending March 31.

The museum also revealed that nine other shows are in the pipeline for next year, aiming to bolster its cultural offerings amid financial pressures.

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A major exhibition of more than 250 sets of Han dynasty relics, with over 95 per cent shown in Hong Kong for the first time, has opened at the Hong Kong Heritage Discovery Centre in Tsim Sha Tsui. Titled “The Majestic Han: A Golden Age of Vigour and Cultural Integration”, it runs until September 20 with free admission. Development chief Bernadette Linn Hon-ho called it a “sequel” to last year’s Tang dynasty showcase.

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The “Hong Kong Story” permanent exhibition at the Hong Kong Museum of History reopened on Wednesday after a major revamp emphasising the city's roots in Chinese culture, with visitors expressing mixed reactions. It has been reduced from two storeys to one floor but expanded from eight to 10 galleries, featuring more than 2,800 exhibits. The exhibition's preface states that “shifting tides across China’s vast territory” have “inevitably affected” Hong Kong.

Minister of Tourism and Antiquities Sherif Fathy announced a 15.6% increase in inbound tourist arrivals to Egypt during the first quarter of 2026 compared to the same period last year.

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Shangri-La hotel group chief executive Kuok Hui Kwong said Hong Kong holds enormous potential for cultural tourism as a bridge between mainland China and the world.

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