The American-born long-time Beijing resident will also take on the role of deputy director, working with Timothy Calnin, director of Tai Kwun Arts, across all artistic disciplines, including performing arts and heritage programmes at the Hong Kong Jockey Club-backed arts complex in Central.
Under Tinari’s leadership, UCCA has transformed from a single site in the Chinese capital’s 798 Art District into a national entity with multiple centres, presenting large-scale surveys of modern Western artists such as Pablo Picasso and Henri Matisse, as well as solo exhibitions of living artists such as Cao Fei, Maurizio Cattelan, William Kentridge, Xu Bing, Yang Fudong and Anicka Yi.

The Tai Kwun appointment comes at a transformative time for Hong Kong’s cultural sector. In recent years, it has come under more direct government control both in terms of the vetting of content deemed a threat to national security, as well as broader cultural policies led by the Culture, Sports and Tourism Bureau, established in 2022, that stress the city’s role as a site of cultural exchange between China and the rest of the world.