Emanate by AIDS Concern

Emanate by AIDS Concern
Emanate by AIDS Concern

Emanate proposes an ethics of diffusion. Fragrances move without force; words travel across thresholds; gestures of hospitality accumulate. By aligning the exhibition with the structure of perfume, the curatorial design echoes the layered narratives of people living with HIV. Immediate encounters become deeper relations, then enduring commitments. It asks how care, memory and embodied experience diffuse – like scent – beyond their points of origin. Rather than invoking medical slogans, the exhibition attends to an intangible yet insistent presence that moves between bodies and spaces, dissolving stigma, easing fear and making room for intimacy. Scent provides the curatorial architecture. The language of perfumery, from top to heart to base notes, structures encounters that begin in the gallery and reverberate outward into public life. 


Emanate is conceived as a relay rather than an endpoint. AIDS Concern’s vision is that the spirit and resilience of people living with HIV emanate into communities, challenging perceptions, igniting mutual compassion and catalyzing transformations that reach beyond the exhibition frame. The measure of success is persistence: the trace that remains in the air after we depart, and the way that trace makes it easier, day by day, to breathe together.

Emanate
Exhibition
28 November - 7 December 2025
11:00am - 9:00pm

About AIDS Concern

AIDS Concern was founded in 1990 as the first charitable organization in Hong Kong dedicated to HIV/AIDS prevention, community health, and the promotion of diverse sexual health. Its mission is to improve the quality of life for people living with HIV and curb the spread of the virus. We firmly believe that to end AIDS, we must walk alongside high-risk communities, helping prevent them from becoming infected and providing appropriate support to those who are. 

The greatest obstacle in combating AIDS is society’s negative stigma and prejudice. This leads people living with HIV to avoid or deny their condition out of fear, directly affecting treatment outcomes and daily life. Therefore, in addition to focusing resources on high-risk groups, we also adopt an affirmative approach in serving the wider community, aiming to eliminate misunderstanding and discrimination toward people living with HIV—so that everyone can enjoy good sexual and mental health.