The groundswell is undeniable. In March this year, collector Qiao Zhibing opened the Tank Shanghai Museum – a privately-owned arts hub of more than 60,000 square meters housed in five gigantic disused oil tankers. This was the latest of many hero projects boosting Shanghai’s contemporary art profile. Then there’s the impressive 2018 Shanghai Biennale, and Photofairs which have run every September since 2014. For the past five or six Novembers, ‘Art Week’ has drawn a flood of industry insiders who travel far and wide to attend Art021, WestBund Art & Design fair, and copious satellite events. There’s wheeling, dealing, musing, networking, and plenty of parties. In the midst of the perpetual clinking of champagne glasses, Shanghai feels electric.

The city’s art boom did not occur by pure happenstance. The government had set an initiative to extend Shanghai from glossy commercial cityscape to a cultural, creative heavyweight. For example, the Power Station of Art is China’s first state-run contemporary art museum, opened in 2012 and has over 440,000 square feet of space. Often likened to the Tate Modern, it also hosts the Shanghai Biennale.

Also significant is the relatively new and flourishing WestBund Art District, a former industrial site that’s now fertile ground for sprouting new galleries and major museums, collectively sprawled leisurely along the Huangpu River. The WestBund waterfront is home to Tank, Yuz Museum, Long Museum, the Shanghai Center of Photography, ShanghART Gallery and Edouard Malingue Gallery. Dynamic institutions, both private and state run, have quickly emerged in the last five to eight years, with Chinese billionaires playing a pivotal role in funding the projects.

“If we look at the WestBund as a test case for the developing arts scene and market in Shanghai, there’s highly competent government officials and bureaucrats who have done extensive research and seem to be executing a coherent strategy versus in other cities. The efforts in Beijing and other Chinese cities seems less co-ordinated than in Shanghai.”

Despite the impressive speed and scale of its art boom, Shanghai still has a ways to go to catch up to competitor cities like Hong Kong and Singapore, which were earlier to the game. But always quick to adapt, this October the city opened the new Shanghai International Artwork Trade Center, which specifically aims to smooth out the wrinkles of the local art sales system and encourage more trade.

The stakes are high in the city’s ambitions as a rising arts hub. Massive permanent venues have redefined a new skyline. Shanghai’s November ‘Art Week’ is already a key event on the Asia’s arts calendar, and that will not change anytime soon. Tastes are moving from art that is solidly commercial to the more experimental, a sign of a maturing market. Growth will remain steady as public curiosity for the arts flourishes, while patrons and new collectors continue to emerge in China.