Twelve pioneering female artists transform indoor space in “Dream Room” – Huge

In the early 20th century, the concepts and roots of the Dadaist and Surrealist concepts and immersive experiments emerged in the late 1950s. Over the next few decades, this approach gained momentum, often revolving around a specific location’s response to the internal space. Takes many forms, installations sometimes combine light, sound, prediction, performance, and participatory or immersive elements.
“Although many of these works are made by women, the history of art has been
Positive to focus on male artists. ” A statement from M+ in Hong Kong said it is currently being displayed Dream Room: The environment for female artists in the 1950s, now. The show “solves this imbalance by proposing visionary contributions from female artists.”
Dream room There are 12 indoor scale installations created by artists from four continents. Originating in 2023, Haus der Kunst München In other spaces, The exhibition then heads to M+, where the artwork is reconstructed.
Some works date back decades, such as the “Red (Mosquito net shape)” by Yamazaki Tsuruko in 1956 and the “Spectral Paragraph” by Aleksandra Kasuba in 1975.
Three new works were commissioned by three Asian artists specifically for the exhibition. These include the “House Crash” of Pinaree Sanpitak, which was first conceived in 2017 and reimagined Dream room. Chiharu Shiota’s “Infinite Memory” has a cascade of the artist’s iconic red strings, while Kimsooja’s atmospheric “breath” consists of translucent films on windows that diffract light into prismatic patterns around the museum.
Dream room Continue until January 18, 2026. Find more information on the museum’s website. You may also like to explore more location-specific works by female artists Groundswell: Land Art Women.








