Wallace Chan - Vessels of Other Worlds

Wallace Chan Vessels of Other Worlds
Long Museum (West Bund), Shanghai
18 July – 25 October 2026
Dual-Site Exhibition at the Chapel of Santa Maria della Pietà, Venice, and Long Museum, Shanghai (2026)
Renowned artist Wallace Chan will unveil Vessels of Other Worlds, his most ambitious and visceral project to date, in a landmark dual-site exhibition across Venice and Shanghai in 2026, coinciding with his 70th birthday. Curated by James Putnam, this major exhibition introduces a striking new series of monumental titanium sculptures, expanding both the spatial and conceptual dimensions of Chan’s practice.
Following the success of his three previous exhibitions during the Venice Biennale – Titans (2021) and Totem (2022) at Fondaco Marcello; and the Brian Eno-soundscaped Transcendence (2024) at the Chapel of Santa Maria della Pietà, which attracted over 30,000 visitors in just three months, Vessels of Other Worlds marks a bold new chapter in the artist’s oeuvre.
The first exhibition opens on 8 May 2026 at the Chapel of Santa Maria della Pietà, coinciding with the 61st International Art Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia. The second and parallel exhibition will open at the Long Museum, Shanghai, on 18 July 2026.
The exhibition in Venice will feature three titanium sculptures inspired by the Olea Sancta, the three sacred oils used in Catholic blessing rituals. Positioned on the altar of the Pietà Chapel, three video screens form a triptych, acting as a secret portal to reveal the monumental counterparts on view at the Long Museum. Symbolising the three stages of life – birth, growth, and death – these intricate, fantastical forms draw
inspiration from Hieronymus Bosch’s The Garden of Earthly Delights. Surrounding the three central works, a constellation of suspended titanium sculptures suggests oil drops in motion, imbuing the chapel with a sense of fluidity and transcendence.
At the Long Museum, Shanghai, visitors will encounter the same three vessels on a dramatically larger scale, standing at seven, eight, and ten metres high. The central sculpture will feature a doorway, inviting audiences to step inside and experience its kaleidoscopic interior, with mirrored apertures referencing Chan’s celebrated gemstone-carving technique, the Wallace Cut. Works from Chan’s earlier Venice exhibitions including the Brian Eno–soundscaped Transcendence, as well as Titans and Totem, will also be presented, creating a dialogue that connects the two cities conceptually and experientially.
Footage of the two exhibitions will be transmitted to both sites, offering audiences a portal to the vessels of the other world.
Wallace Chan says, “Both Venice and Shanghai are closely tied to water, its changing states, and its capacity to hold, reflect, and transform. Vessels of Other Worlds is my way of unfolding a tale of two cities through the reimagination of fluidity and form. I am grateful to my curator James Putnam and to the Long Museum for their confidence in and support of my work.
The Chapel of Santa Maria della Pietà, with its centuries of history, music, and prayer, offers the perfect setting in which to explore life’s most elemental mysteries. At the Long Museum, the vessels will rise to their full monumental scale, extending the conversation across continents.
These vessels are containers of memory, spirit, and transformation; sculpted and carved in the material closest to eternity, titanium. Like water, they hold what cannot be held -- moments, emotions, the passage of time. By placing them in two distinct spaces, I hope to create a dialogue between distant places and between our inner and outer worlds, inviting viewers to contemplate the cycle of birth, growth, and death, and to imagine that beyond these passages lie other worlds yet to be discovered.”
By connecting Venice and Shanghai, Chan extends the presence of his sculptures across space and time, creating an experience that is at once physical, spiritual, and transcendental.
Wallace Chan: Vessels of Other Worlds
Pieta Chapel, Venice
8 May – 18 October 2026
Long Museum (West Bund), Shanghai
18 July – 25 October 2026
About Wallace Chan Wallace Chan (b. 1956) is a Hong Kong-based, self-trained artist whose practice encompasses jewellery, sculpture, and carving. He has been carving gemstones since the age of 16, drawing his inspiration from nature and Chinese motifs. He developed his skills and learnt the art of Western sculpture by visiting Christian cemeteries and admiring the marble sculptures of saints and angels.
After six months of devoted monkhood in the early 2000s and having given up all his possessions, Chan found himself in the complete absence of artistic resources. However, his passion for sculpture compelled him to create works using affordable materials like concrete, copper, and stainless steel. After many years of careful research and experimentation, Chan developed a method of working with titanium, initially for his jewellery and more recently for his large-scale sculptures.
Chan’s works are in the permanent collections of the Shanghai Museum, Shanghai (2024), Victoria and Albert Museum, London (2024), Long Museum, Shanghai (2023), Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (2023), British Museum (2019), the Capital Museum of China (2010), the Ningbo Museum (2010) and more. He has had solo exhibitions at the Shanghai Museum (Shanghai, 2024), Pieta Chapel (Venice, 2024), Christie’s (London, 2023); Canary Wharf (London, 2022); Fondaco Marcello (Venice, 2021 & 2022); Asia House (London, 2019); Christie’s (Hong Kong, 2019; Shanghai, 2021), the Gemological Institute of America Museum (Carlsbad, 2011); the Capital Museum (Beijing, 2010); Kaohsiung Museum of History (Taiwan, 1999), and Deutsches Edelsteinmuseum (Idar-Oberstein, 1992) among others.
Chan has given lectures and speeches at prestigious institutions, including TEDxNYU Shanghai (Shanghai, 2025), Harvard University (Cambridge, 2017, 2023 & 2025), Central Academy of Fine Arts, Beijing (Beijing, 2024), Shanghai Museum (Shanghai, 2024), Victoria and Albert Museum (London, 2016 & 2023), The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (Hong Kong, 2022), DIVA Museum (Antwerp, 2021), Tongji University (Shanghai, 2021), Christie’s (Shanghai, 2020 & 2021), the De Maastricht Academy of Fine Arts and Design (Maastricht, 2020), the British Museum (London, 2019), the Royal College of Art (London, 2019), the University of Hong Kong (Hong Kong, 2019), Christie’s Education (Hong Kong, 2019), the Gemmological Association of Great Britain (London, 2018), the Sarabande Foundation (London, 2018), Sciences Po (Paris, 2018), Central Saint Martins (London, 2017), and Christie’s (Paris, 2014).