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Art & Photography

ArtReview Asia Magazine

4 issues per year   |  English
0 Reviews   •  English   •   Art & Photography (Art)
From $5.00 per issue
Founded in 2013 to cover art from the various perspectives at play across the world’s largest continent, ArtReview Asia is dedicated to challenging established views and exploring the contingent and contested in art. From eastern Turkey to eastern Japan (and everywhere up, down and in between), the magazine looks at gaps and blind spots, charting the ways in which artists are responding to local contexts and the evolving challenges of the present. At its heart, ArtReview Asia is both marking and shaping the pathways of alternative and non-Western art.
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ArtReview Asia

Spring 2026 In the Spring issue of ArtReview Asia, Travis Jeppesen profiles Li Yi-Fan ahead of the Venice Biennale, where Li will be presenting Taiwan’s collateral event, a project set to focus on AI and sure to feature the weaponised humour on view in the artist’s freewheeling, free-associative videos and performance lectures, which all seem to start from the position that ‘the machine is not our friend’. Max Crosbie-Jones reports from Bangkok, currently experiencing one of its regular waves of art-scene exuberance, and asks how well founded the excitement is. Anandi Mishra, recently relocated from Delhi to Gothenburg, Sweden, writes on the unexpected challenges and pleasures of being a reader in each of these cities. Adeline Chia explores Taiwan’s cultural ecology under the influence of a string of ambitious museum developments, including the Taichung Green Museumbrary complex. Artist Abdul Halik Azeez presents a project addressing some of the less visible forces behind development in Colombo’s Galle Face. Yuwen Jiang visits an exhibition in London featuring an eighteenth-century botany project that lays bare the complicated roots of colonialism. And Mark Rappolt annotates The Travels of Ibn Battuta, the latest entry in the magazine’s ‘Eternal Returns’ series. Plus exhibition and book reviews, and the word ‘justice’ – defined.


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ArtReview Asia issue Spring 2026

ArtReview Asia  |  Spring 2026  


In the Spring issue of ArtReview Asia, Travis Jeppesen profiles Li Yi-Fan ahead of the Venice Biennale, where Li will be presenting Taiwan’s collateral event, a project set to focus on AI and sure to feature the weaponised humour on view in the artist’s freewheeling, free-associative videos and performance lectures, which all seem to start from the position that ‘the machine is not our friend’. Max Crosbie-Jones reports from Bangkok, currently experiencing one of its regular waves of art-scene exuberance, and asks how well founded the excitement is. Anandi Mishra, recently relocated from Delhi to Gothenburg, Sweden, writes on the unexpected challenges and pleasures of being a reader in each of these cities. Adeline Chia explores Taiwan’s cultural ecology under the influence of a string of ambitious museum developments, including the Taichung Green Museumbrary complex. Artist Abdul Halik Azeez presents a project addressing some of the less visible forces behind development in Colombo’s Galle Face. Yuwen Jiang visits an exhibition in London featuring an eighteenth-century botany project that lays bare the complicated roots of colonialism. And Mark Rappolt annotates The Travels of Ibn Battuta, the latest entry in the magazine’s ‘Eternal Returns’ series. Plus exhibition and book reviews, and the word ‘justice’ – defined.
read more read less
Founded in 2013 to cover art from the various perspectives at play across the world’s largest continent, ArtReview Asia is dedicated to challenging established views and exploring the contingent and contested in art. From eastern Turkey to eastern Japan (and everywhere up, down and in between), the magazine looks at gaps and blind spots, charting the ways in which artists are responding to local contexts and the evolving challenges of the present. At its heart, ArtReview Asia is both marking and shaping the pathways of alternative and non-Western art.

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Articles in this issue


Below is a selection of articles in ArtReview Asia Spring 2026.

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