Sharon Cheuk Wun Lee: Possibly, Here Exhibition Walkthrough




Artist-led Walkthrough with Curator at Harper’s Chelsea
February 15, 2026




Special thanks to
Harper’s







Speakers


Sharon Cheuk Wun Lee
Artist

Sharon Cheuk Wun Lee (b. 1992, Hong Kong, China) received an MFA from Columbia University in 2025; she has participated in numerous artist residencies at institutions, including Tiger Strikes Asteroid/Transmitter Gallery, Brooklyn; Keramikkünstlerhaus, Neumünster, DE; and Taipei International Artist Village, TW. Lee’s work has been the subject of presentations at Kyoto Art Center, JP (2023); and Lumenvisum, Hong Kong (2017). Most recently, her work was included in group exhibitions at Galerie du Monde, Hong Kong (2025); Below Grand, New York (2024); SK Gallery, New York (2024); WMA, Hong Kong (2024); 1A Space, Hong Kong (2023); Tai Kwun Contemporary, Hong Kong (2022); and Karin Weber Gallery, Hong Kong (2021). Lee’s work has appeared in publications such as ArtAsiaPacific, Corridor8, and Hong Kong Free Press. She currently lives and works in New York City.


Kelly Ma
Curator

Kelly Ma is an arts curator and writer based in New York. She held various curatorial and leadership positions at Asia Society Museum, New York (2013–2025); M+, Hong Kong (2024); and Para Site, Hong Kong (2021–2024). She has also organized exhibitions and educational programs internationally to broaden historical narratives, including at Queensland Art Gallery, Brisbane; Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art, Doha; Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; and Taipei Fine Arts Museum. A bilingual writer and editor, she has been published in periodicals such as ArtAsiaPacific and ARTCO, contributed to artist monographs and anthologies, including Hidden Realms: Korean Artists Today (ArtAsiaPacific, 2024) and Great Women Painters (Phaidon, 2022), and edited Assuring Our Cultural Legacy in the 21st Century (Asia Society, 2016), among others. She received a BA in visual art and history of art and architecture from Brown University.



Video edited by
Erika S. Urano




Video Archive


Sharon Cheuk Wun Lee: Possibly, Here Exhibition Walkthroguh




Artist-led Walkthrough with Curator at Harper’s Chelsea
February 15, 2026




Special thanks to
Harper’s









Speakers

Sharon Cheuk Wun Lee
Artist

Sharon Cheuk Wun Lee (b. 1992, Hong Kong, China) received an MFA from Columbia University in 2025; she has participated in numerous artist residencies at institutions, including Tiger Strikes Asteroid/Transmitter Gallery, Brooklyn; Keramikkünstlerhaus, Neumünster, DE; and Taipei International Artist Village, TW. Lee’s work has been the subject of presentations at Kyoto Art Center, JP (2023); and Lumenvisum, Hong Kong (2017). Most recently, her work was included in group exhibitions at Galerie du Monde, Hong Kong (2025); Below Grand, New York (2024); SK Gallery, New York (2024); WMA, Hong Kong (2024); 1A Space, Hong Kong (2023); Tai Kwun Contemporary, Hong Kong (2022); and Karin Weber Gallery, Hong Kong (2021). Lee’s work has appeared in publications such as ArtAsiaPacific, Corridor8, and Hong Kong Free Press. She currently lives and works in New York City.

Kelly Ma
Curator

Kelly Ma is an arts curator and writer based in New York. She held various curatorial and leadership positions at Asia Society Museum, New York (2013–2025); M+, Hong Kong (2024); and Para Site, Hong Kong (2021–2024). She has also organized exhibitions and educational programs internationally to broaden historical narratives, including at Queensland Art Gallery, Brisbane; Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art, Doha; Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; and Taipei Fine Arts Museum. A bilingual writer and editor, she has been published in periodicals such as ArtAsiaPacific and ARTCO, contributed to artist monographs and anthologies, including Hidden Realms: Korean Artists Today (ArtAsiaPacific, 2024) and Great Women Painters (Phaidon, 2022), and edited Assuring Our Cultural Legacy in the 21st Century (Asia Society, 2016), among others. She received a BA in visual art and history of art and architecture from Brown University.





Video edited by

Erika S. Urano




VIDEO ARCHIVE