A Qing prince in a European wig hunting a tiger; a sceptre carved from a single block of Burmese jade; a teapot made in Japan that copies European silver. These are not random curiosities — they are the threads of a single, sweeping story. "The Forbidden City and the World", the Hong Kong Palace Museum's new thematic exhibition, argues that imperial China was never a closed box but a place that traded, borrowed and argued with the wider world for more than 600 years. It opened on 3 June 2026, and it is the most ambitious new show in West Kowloon this summer.
In This Guide
Why this show matters
The Hong Kong Palace Museum (香港故宮文化博物館) opened in 2022, and ever since it has leaned on its partnership with the Palace Museum in Beijing — the institution inside the actual Forbidden City. This exhibition, known in Chinese as 「紫禁城看世界」, is the first of four new thematic shows the two museums are mounting together in 2026, and it is designed as the doorway to the rest.
The framing is the clever part. Rather than parade treasures for their own sake, curators position the Forbidden City as "a vital platform for dialogue between China, other parts of Asia, and Europe." The objects are chosen to prove a point: diplomacy, trade, science, philosophy and craft all flowed both ways. It is a timely argument for a city that has always sold itself as the place where East meets West.
It also lands in West Kowloon's busiest cultural summer yet. A short walk away, M+ is showing its acclaimed Lee Bul survey, while upstairs the same museum is hosting blockbuster loans — our guide to the best art exhibitions in Hong Kong this summer shows just how crowded the calendar has become.
What's on show in The Forbidden City and the World?
The exhibition gathers more than 130 artefacts from three institutions — Beijing's Palace Museum, the Hong Kong Palace Museum (with the Chris Hall Collection) and the Museum of Islamic Art in Doha — anchored by 18 grade-one national treasures. It runs across four themed sections, each with its own colour scheme and mood.
1. Routes of Exchange — Marco Polo and Zheng He
The opening room maps China's growing contact with the world in the Yuan and Ming, from the overland Silk Routes to the sea lanes sailed by the Ming admiral Zheng He (d. 1433) on his seven great voyages. Among the oldest pieces is a mosque lamp inscribed with a verse from the Qur'an, from the late Yuan or early Ming — proof of a long exchange of objects and ideas with West Asia.
2. Imported Treasures — Ming Court Art and New Knowledge of the World
This section follows the rare goods — gemstones, materials, ideas — that flowed into China from South and Southeast Asia, and how the court absorbed them. Two grade-one national treasures sit at its heart: a ruyi sceptre shaped like a lingzhi fungus, carved from a single piece of Burmese jadeite, and a glittering sapphire pendant.
3. East Meets West — Artistic and Scientific Exchanges in the Qing Dynasty
The Qing emperors were curious magpies. A geometric polyhedron model shows the Kangxi Emperor's appetite for European mathematics, while a painting of the future Yongzheng Emperor — in a Western wig and European dress, spearing a tiger — captures a court fascinated by the foreign and the exotic.
4. The Emperor's Southern Treasury — The Canton Customs and the World
The final room turns to Guangzhou, which from 1757 was the only port open to foreign traders, with business funnelled through the licensed merchants of the Thirteen Factories. Tea is the star commodity here — the trade that gave Europe its tea habit — alongside curiosities such as a singing-bird automaton and a pair of adjustable spectacles.
One practical note that rewards repeat visits: the museum rotates a number of light-sensitive objects roughly every three months, with each display showing about 80 of the 130-plus pieces. Paintings and textiles, in particular, will change over the run.
Treasures not to miss
With well over a hundred objects on show you could linger for an hour, but a handful are worth seeking out first. These are confirmed highlights from the museum's own object list.
The Must-See Five
- Ruyi sceptre in the form of lingzhi fungus — a grade-one national treasure, carved from a single piece of Burmese jadeite and one of very few of its kind to survive.
- Sapphire pendant — a second grade-one treasure, evidence of how South and Southeast Asian gemstones reached the imperial court.
- Copy of Jiang Tingxi's Album of Birds — a richly illustrated encyclopaedia commissioned under the Qianlong Emperor; a leaf showing a kingfisher from Siam (Thailand) is on display for three months only.
- "Fighting tiger" from Yinzhen's Amusements — the future Yongzheng Emperor painted in European costume and wig, hunting a tiger.
- Iris-decorated kettle — a Meiji-period (1868–1912) Japanese piece that deliberately echoes European silverware, closing the loop on the show's East–West theme.
For a sense of where the Palace Museum sits within the city's wider scene — from blue-chip dealers to public museums — our guide to the best art galleries in Hong Kong 2026 maps it all out.
Beyond the cases: the digital bits
This is not a show of static glass cases. The design uses colour and space to lead you through — red and column-like structures for the imperial opening, deep blue for Guangzhou's maritime finale — and it folds in a suite of multimedia stops that genuinely add something.
A digital "Qianlong Garden" brings rare creatures to life against the emperor's perspectival wall paintings; an interactive station asks "What Did the Kangxi Emperor Study?"; and an animation of the Thirteen Factories lets you play an 18th-century European tea trader, haggling and weighing crates on the Guangzhou docks. There is also a free 20-track audio guide in Cantonese, Putonghua and English, plus Palace Academy talks, tours and workshops rolling out across the year.
Dates, tickets & opening hours
Because the show sits in Gallery 1, it is one of the rare blockbuster-scale displays you can see on a standard General Admission ticket — no separate special-exhibition fee required, though a Special Exhibition ticket also gets you in. The full details are on the official Palace Museum tickets page, but here are the verified essentials.
| Ticket type | Adult | Concession |
|---|---|---|
| General Admission (Galleries 1–7) | HK$70 | HK$35 |
| Children aged 6 and under | Free | |
| Special Exhibition ticket (also admits Gallery 1) | Higher tier — see official site | |
Concessions cover children aged 7 to 11, full-time students, seniors aged 60 and above, people with disabilities and one companion, and CSSA recipients. There is no announced closing date — as a long-run thematic exhibition with rotating objects, it is built to stay open well beyond the summer, so there is no hard deadline to race.
Hong Kong Palace Museum — Visitor Essentials
Note: the ground-floor ticket office closes one hour before the museum. Confirm hours and book a timed slot via the official plan-your-visit page before you travel.
How do you get to the Hong Kong Palace Museum?
The museum sits at the western tip of the West Kowloon Cultural District, and the train is comfortably the easiest way in. Take the MTR to Kowloon Station (Tung Chung Line or Airport Express) and leave via Exit C1 or D1, then follow the signs through the ELEMENTS mall and across the Artist Square Bridge — about 10 to 15 minutes on foot. Alternatively, Austin Station (Tuen Ma Line) Exit B4 or B5 brings you in via ELEMENTS in roughly 15 to 20 minutes.
Prefer not to walk? From Austin Station Exit D2 you can hop on the wheelchair-accessible Cultural Express (CX1) minibus, and there is paid parking on site at 8 Museum Drive. Once you arrive, the whole district rewards lingering: the Art Park, the harbourfront promenade and M+ are all a short stroll away. If you are pairing the museum with summer plans, our overview of the biggest events in Hong Kong this summer sets it against the rest of the season.
How to do it well
It is a substantial show in a popular museum, so a little planning pays off. A few practical notes to make the visit smoother.
Visiting Tips
- Book a timed slot online. Same-day tickets are sold at the door while stocks last, but weekends and holidays get busy — reserve ahead through the HKPM or WestK websites.
- Start in Gallery 1. The show is designed as the museum's orientation exhibition, so it makes a logical first stop before the other Palace Museum galleries.
- Use the audio guide. The 20-track guide (Cantonese, Putonghua, English) draws out the cross-cultural back-stories that make the objects sing.
- Go on a weekday morning. The museum opens at 10am and the first hour is calmest; Friday and Saturday run late to 8pm if you prefer an evening visit.
- Consider a return trip. Light-sensitive paintings and textiles rotate roughly every three months, so a second visit later in the year shows different objects.
- Pack light. Bags larger than 55 × 35 × 20cm are not allowed inside, and there are lockers near the entrance.
Before You Book
The museum is closed on Tuesdays (except public holidays) and on the first two days of the Lunar New Year. Buy through the official Hong Kong Palace Museum site or the WestK platform rather than unofficial resellers, and double-check opening hours for the day you plan to go. In a black rainstorm or Typhoon Signal No. 8, the museum closes — keep an eye on the forecast during our typhoon-prone summer.
Already been to the museum's headline summer loan? Our guide to Ancient Egypt Unveiled covers the blockbuster special exhibition under the same roof, and the Met's Treasures of Global Jewellery show makes a natural pairing on a single visit.
Frequently Asked Questions
Plan Your West Kowloon Day
"The Forbidden City and the World" is the perfect first stop in a museum-packed district. Book your Palace Museum slot, then let YumChaNow keep you ahead of the next big show in town.