If you only make time for one show at M+ this summer, make it this one. The Lee Bul exhibition at M+ — titled From 1998 to Now — has become the most talked-about exhibition in Hong Kong right now, and for good reason. It is the first major survey in the city of one of Asia's most influential living artists, a sweep of shimmering cyborgs, biomechanical bodies and crumbling utopias that fills the museum's largest gallery. Whether you follow contemporary art closely or simply want one genuinely unmissable cultural outing this season, here is exactly what to expect and how to plan your visit.

The short version: "Lee Bul: From 1998 to Now" runs at M+ (West Gallery, L2) from 14 March to 9 August 2026. The survey gathers 200+ works spanning the late 1990s to 2024 across three sections — her famous Cyborg sculptures, the sprawling Mon grand récit installations, and an artist's-studio room of sketches and maquettes. Special exhibition tickets are HK$190 adult / HK$100 concession. Get there on the MTR via Kowloon or Austin Station.

In This Guide

  1. Why everyone's talking about it
  2. Who is Lee Bul?
  3. What you'll actually see
  4. Dates, tickets & opening hours
  5. Getting to M+
  6. How to do it well
  7. FAQ

Why everyone's talking about it

Hong Kong sees a lot of art. Between Art Basel, the West Kowloon galleries and a packed commercial scene, a show has to do something special to dominate the conversation. This one does.

From 1998 to Now is the most comprehensive survey of Lee Bul ever staged in the city, co-organised by M+ and the Leeum Museum of Art in Seoul. It debuted in Seoul in September 2025, where it drew roughly 105,000 visitors before travelling to Hong Kong. After M+, it tours on to Europe and North America — so this is a rare window to see it in Asia.

The pull is partly the work itself, which photographs beautifully and rewards a slow walk-through, and partly the timing. Lee Bul's themes — bodies fused with machines, the seductive shine of technology, the wreckage of grand utopian dreams — feel pointed in an age of AI and automation. That mix of spectacle and substance is why it keeps surfacing across social feeds and culture pages alike.

"Lee Bul's cyborgs and crumbling utopias feel less like history and more like a mirror held up to our own age of machines."

Who is Lee Bul?

Lee Bul (born 1964) is one of the most prominent contemporary artists to emerge from Asia in recent decades. The Seoul-based South Korean artist made her name in the 1990s with provocative performance and sculpture, then with the Cyborg series that first brought her international acclaim.

Those works — sleek, headless, partly human and partly machine — drew on critical theory, art history and science fiction to ask hard questions about figuration, gender and beauty in an increasingly technological world. Since then she has built large-scale, mirrored architectural installations that turn whole rooms into glittering, disorienting environments. Her practice runs from the intimate to the monumental, which is exactly what a survey of this scale sets out to show.

What you'll actually see

The exhibition unfolds in three sections that span the artist's career, and M+ has staged it across the museum's cavernous West Gallery. Here is how it is organised, according to the museum.

1. The utopias: Mon grand récit

You open into an immersive landscape built from Lee's Mon grand récit series (2005–ongoing) — complex architectural installations that meditate on the grand narratives of the modernist project and what she calls "the aesthetics of failed utopias." This section also folds in two-dimensional works from her Untitled (Willing To Be Vulnerable—Velvet) and Perdu series, with their mother-of-pearl shimmer.

2. The cyborgs: Cyborg and Anagram

The second chapter is the one many visitors come for: the groundbreaking Cyborg and Anagram works from the late 1990s and early 2000s. Combining references from critical theory, art history and science fiction, these striking sculptures explore entwined ideas of the body, gender and beauty. They are the pieces that built her global reputation, and they remain genuinely arresting in person.

3. The studio: drawings and maquettes

The final section evokes an artist's studio, gathering a constellation of drawings, sketches and maquettes. It is the quietest room and, for many, the most revealing — a look at how Lee conceptualises and realises work that can otherwise feel almost impossibly polished. In total the survey brings together more than 200 works dating from the late 1990s to 2024.

For context on how M+ fits into the wider city, our guide to the best art galleries in Hong Kong 2026 maps the museum against the commercial scene, and our round-up of the best public art installations in Hong Kong covers the free, outdoor work you can pair with a ticketed visit.

Dates, tickets & opening hours

This is a special exhibition with a fixed run, so there is a real deadline — it closes on 9 August 2026. The full details are on the official M+ exhibition page, but here are the verified essentials.

DetailInformation
Exhibition dates14 March – 9 August 2026
LocationWest Gallery, Level 2, M+
Adult ticketHK$190 (special exhibition)
Concession ticketHK$100

M+ — Visitor Essentials

M+ 視覺文化博物館 · West Kowloon Cultural District
Address38 Museum Drive, West Kowloon Cultural District, Kowloon
Nearest MTRKowloon Station (Exit C1/D1) or Austin Station (Exit B4/B5)
Opening hoursTue–Sun from 10am, late until 10pm Fridays; closed Mondays
Special exhibitionHK$190 adult · HK$100 concession
GalleryWest Gallery, Level 2
Free guided toursTue–Sun, multiple slots (10–15 mins)

Note: M+ occasionally adjusts hours for special events and public holidays. Confirm opening times and book your slot via M+ Plan Your Visit before you travel.

The special exhibition ticket also admits you to the wider M+ galleries the same day, so it is good value if you make an afternoon of it. M+ guides run free 10–15 minute talks in the gallery from Tuesday to Sunday for ticket-holders, which are a quick, low-commitment way into the work if you are new to Lee Bul.

How do you get to M+ for the Lee Bul show?

M+ sits on the harbourfront in the West Kowloon Cultural District, and the easiest approach is by train. Take the MTR to Kowloon Station and leave via Exit C1 or D1, or use Austin Station, Exit B4/B5; from either it is a walk of roughly 10 to 15 minutes through the district to the waterfront. The Airport Express also calls at Kowloon Station, which makes the museum an easy stop straight off a flight.

Once you are there, the cultural district rewards lingering — the Art Park, the harbour promenade and the Xiqu Centre are all within a short stroll, and the M+ Cinema programmes arthouse and repertory screenings if you want to round out the day. Our guide to the best art house cinemas in Hong Kong has the details on what's showing.

How to do it well

A survey of this size deserves more than a quick lap. A few practical notes to get the most out of it.

Visiting Tips

Before You Book

This is a ticketed special exhibition with a hard closing date of 9 August 2026, and popular shows at M+ sell timed slots that fill up at weekends. Buy through the official M+ website rather than third-party resellers, double-check the date and opening hours on the day you plan to go, and remember that the museum is closed on Mondays. If you are visiting from out of town, line it up with the rest of the West Kowloon district to make the trip across the harbour worthwhile.

If contemporary art is your thing, build it into a bigger cultural weekend: our look at the biggest events in Hong Kong this summer has the wider calendar, and the Hong Kong street art walking guide takes the conversation out of the museum and onto the city's walls.

Frequently Asked Questions

When is the Lee Bul exhibition at M+ and how long does it run?
"Lee Bul: From 1998 to Now" is on view at M+ from Saturday 14 March to Sunday 9 August 2026, in the West Gallery on Level 2. It is a special exhibition with a fixed season rather than part of the permanent collection. Visit on a weekday morning to avoid the busiest periods.
How much are tickets for the Lee Bul exhibition at M+?
Special exhibition tickets are HK$190 for adults and HK$100 for concessions (students, seniors aged 60 or above, and people with disabilities and their carer). The ticket also covers the wider M+ galleries that day. Book through the official M+ website to guarantee entry at busy times.
How do I get to M+ by MTR?
M+ is at 38 Museum Drive in the West Kowloon Cultural District. Take the MTR to Kowloon Station (Exit C1/D1) or Austin Station (Exit B4/B5), then walk through the cultural district to the waterfront — about 10 to 15 minutes. The Airport Express also stops at Kowloon Station.
Who is Lee Bul?
Lee Bul (born 1964) is one of the most prominent contemporary artists to emerge from Asia in recent decades. The Seoul-based South Korean artist is best known for her shimmering Cyborg sculptures, biomechanical forms and large-scale architectural installations exploring the body, technology and the failure of utopian ideals.
Is the Lee Bul exhibition suitable for children?
Yes. The work is sculptural, immersive and visually striking, which younger visitors often respond to, and M+ runs family drop-in activities tied to the show. There is no graphic content, though some themes around the body and technology are pitched at adults. The galleries are fully accessible for prams and wheelchairs.

See It Before It Closes

"Lee Bul: From 1998 to Now" runs only until 9 August 2026. Plan your visit, then let YumChaNow keep you ahead of the next big show in town.

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