S.E.A Focus 2026: Curated by John ZW Tung
The Humane Agency
In times of unsettling change—of borders, climates, and belonging—it is not simply these shifts that define us, but how we choose to respond. The Humane Agency traces the quiet force of artists who, through image and material, act not as chroniclers of crisis but as participants in the difficult, necessary work of compassion.
Here, the person is neither subject nor symbol, but a site of relation. Across a range of artistic media, the upcoming edition of S.E.A. Focus draws together practices that resist detachment. Instead, they insist on proximity: to histories unsettled, to environments imperilled, to lives in motion. The presentation emerges at the intersection of three global currents: the persistence of conflict and the longing for peace; the intensifying ecological crisis; and the movement of peoples across and beyond nation-states. Art, in this context, becomes a mode of attention— slowing perception, deepening feeling, and reanimating our capacity to care.
What binds these works is not a single message but a shared ethic: that empathy is neither ornamental nor optional. It is method. It is urgency. It is the first step toward imagining futures less estranged, less extractive, more entangled.
The humane, then, is not a theme but a horizon. And the artist—through acts of making, sensing, and remembering—becomes not only witness to the world, but a vital agent in its refiguring.