Hong Kong’s 2026 Venice Biennale pavilion wows the crowds to sleep
The theme of the Biennale was to slow down enough to hear ignored voices, but Hong Kong’s pavilion might have taken things too far

Koyo Kouoh, the late artistic director of the 2026 Venice Biennale who sadly died before the opening of the world’s most watched international contemporary art exhibition, left behind a set of profound curatorial cues.
She wanted “In Minor Keys”, the title of this year’s Biennale, to be a place where art slows you down enough to hear the voices of the ignored and the silenced, where differences can gather in “convivial collectivity” and views are not screamed combatively.
On the first public day of the Biennale, on May 9, I found three visitors mellowed to the point of dozing off in the dimly lit back room at Campo della Tana, the regular venue for Hong Kong’s collateral exhibitions.
This is where Kingsley Ng Siu-king’s Laundry Nocturne (2026) is being staged. Because Ng intended to create a rest lounge for the frantic Biennale crowd – complete with a padded floor and plenty of cushions – it is mission accomplished.