Shows
Now Open | Isamu Noguchi at White Cube Hong Kong

Isamu Noguchi
A Feeling
Until 18 October 2025
White Cube Hong Kong, 50 Connaught Rd Central, Central, Hong Kong
For this exhibition, ‘A Feeling’, White Cube presents the first solo exhibition in Hong Kong by Isamu Noguchi (1904–1988), exploring the profound influence that Chinese master painter Qi Baishi (1864–1957) had on his artistic development.
Noguchi first encountered the work of Qi Baishi during a visit to Beijing in the early 1930s. At the time, Qi was renowned as a pioneering artist who was bringing Chinese ink painting to a global audience. The two struck up a friendship, and, following Qi’s guidance, Noguchi created the ‘Peking Brush Drawings’—expressive, figurative ink-and-brush works.


Installation view of ISAMU NOGUCHI, ‘A Feeling’ at White Cube Hong Kong, 12 September – 18 October 2025 © The Noguchi Museum / ARS, photo by © White Cube (Kitmin Lee). All works by Qi Baishi on view in the exhibition are loaned by Sun Museum, Hong Kong. Credit to: Yitao Collection ⼀濤居, Hong Kong.

A selection of these early large-scale drawings from the collection of The Isamu Noguchi Foundation and Garden Museum, New York, will be exhibited at White Cube alongside original works on paper by Qi himself.
The exhibition also traces the lasting impact of calligraphic forms on Noguchi’s sculptural practice, culminating in a selection of constructed bronze plate works from the late 1980s. Highlights include A Feeling—from which the exhibition takes its title—and Richard (both 1988), exemplifying Noguchi’s innovative late-career engagement with bronze. These works will be shown in dialogue with two iconic Akari, a series of light sculptures designed by the artist, which he began in 1951.


Installation view of ISAMU NOGUCHI, ‘A Feeling’ at White Cube Hong Kong, 12 September – 18 October 2025 © The Noguchi Museum / ARS, photo by © White Cube (Kitmin Lee). All works by Qi Baishi on view in the exhibition are loaned by Sun Museum, Hong Kong. Credit to: Yitao Collection ⼀濤居, Hong Kong.