If It’s Creative And Collectible, It’s At Alibaba Design Week

Alibaba’s five-day signature event is set to gather contemporary artists, collectible retailers, and museum stores in a celebration of creativity.

A decade ago, Alibaba began hosting an informal gathering of designers in its home city of Hangzhou. Known as Ucan, it has grown in size and scope alongside the tech giant itself. In 2020, organizers made all courses and roundtable discussions freely available online. This year’s iteration sees the event reimagined as Alibaba Design Week, which will run from May 14 to 18, and is billing itself as the most important connector of business and design.

What is Alibaba Design Week?

What began life in 2012 as a narrowly focused meeting place for Chinese designers has grown into a spectacle encompassing seemingly all creative industries.

Front and center is the Ucan Design Conference, which connects leaders from the design and business communities with high-profile speakers (Kashiwa Sato, IDEO’s Tom Kelley, Adobe’s Eric Snowden). Utoo offers a deeper dive, informal setting for high-level and more technical discussions on design. Usee is a consumer-facing art and design exhibition, expected to draw 30,000 visitors.

Why it matters

Beyond the sheer scale of expansion, Usee is the most notable development of Alibaba’s signature event held at the Hangzhou International Expo Center. Aimed at the general public, it ties into the trend of cultural IPs (broadly known as wenchuang) that have boomed in popularity with China’s post-80s and post-90s audiences over recent years.

On the artist side, popular contemporary creatives including Takashi Murakami, Daniel Arsham, and Damien Hirst will stage mini exhibitions and offer visitors the chance to purchase limited-edition collectibles. In addition, many of China’s leading art and design stores will be present, including How Art Museum’s store, Beijing’s UCCA Store, and new contemporary art and collectibles retailer CHOCO1ATE.

At a moment in China when the line between high-art presented in cultural institutions and mass-produced collectibles meant to be taken home is blurring, Alibaba’s five-day event promises to bring the key drivers of this trend under one roof. Continue to read the full article here