CFCCA is unique in Europe — the only gallery dedicated entirely to Chinese and East Asian contemporary art. It sits on Thomas Street in the Northern Quarter, a modest frontage that opens into a proper gallery space with changing exhibitions throughout the year.
The programming bridges Chinese and diaspora artists with international contemporary practice. You’ll see painting, video, installation, photography and sculpture from artists working across China, East and Southeast Asia and the global Chinese diaspora. The work is often political, frequently challenging, and consistently interesting. This isn’t a cultural heritage centre — it’s a contemporary art gallery that happens to focus on a specific and underrepresented area of global practice.
Manchester’s Chinatown connection matters here. The city has one of the oldest Chinese communities in Europe, and CFCCA grew out of that relationship. The gallery runs education programmes, artist residencies and community projects alongside the exhibition schedule. Events include talks, film screenings and workshops that dig into the themes of current shows.
Entry is always free. The Thomas Street location puts you in the thick of the Northern Quarter — cafes, record shops and bars on every side. The gallery space itself is clean and well-lit, a calm contrast to the busy street outside. Opening hours are standard gallery times, closed Mondays. Worth seeking out even if Chinese contemporary art isn’t something you’d normally look for.