Zolima Citymag | Review: Leelee Chan’s ‘Hybrid Palimpsests’ at He Art Museum

Ingrid Pui Yee Chu, Zolima Citymag, 2026年6月17日
“She sells seashells by the seashore” is a famous tongue twister which is often attributed to Mary Anning, the 19th century British palaeontologist who was considered “amateur” only as far as women could not study science professionally at the time. Nevertheless, Anning gained prominence through her skill at finding dinosaur fossils, including being the first to discover an extinct marine reptile Ichthyosaur skeleton when she was twelve years old. While much of Anning’s accomplishments can be attributed to the shores of Lyme Regis where a museum has since been built in her honour, the so-called “Jurassic coast” likewise served as the place Anning supposedly sold seashells to make ends meet.
 
Vestiges of the seaside appear in Hong Kong artist Leelee Chan’s sculptural work, too, as her solo presentation, Hybrid Palimpsests for the Young Artist Project series reveals at He Art Museum. As a site, the private museum holds a strong architectural presence within the Shunde district of Foshan, about 100 kilometres northwest of Hong Kong. Set within a lush sculpture garden, including three new outdoor pieces from Chan’s Blindfold Receptor series, the building boasts a circular, tiered, multi-level, shell-like exterior, resulting in what the museum describes as the “eye made quiet by the power of harmony, and the deep power of joy.”
 
Chan’s work — itself known for combining natural and industrial elements — is complimented by the building, conceived by Pritzker-prize winning architect Tadao Ando, in a design that formally echoes the circular layout of museums like the Guggenheim in New York. Inside are several lower-level galleries where the remainder of Chan’s first one-person museum exhibition traces her work over a seven-year time span. This includes her current research on the “secret life and curious afterlife” of seashells for works like “Shapeshifter (Volva)” (2025). As “the sculpted homes” protecting the mollusc animal species, seashells have their own internal logic systems which Chan applies to her artworks. Used to adorn both small and large-scale pieces, these function as “bellwethers of our impact on the natural world.”