Site 9

Ho‘omaluhia Botanical Garden

Phase 3: Opening September 2025

Wood Sculpture

Title

TBD

Artist

Kaili Chun

ON THIS PAGE

Hoʻomaluhia Botanical Garden

Site 3

Ho‘omaluhia Botanical Garden

Phase 3: Opening September 2025

Wood Sculpture

Title

TBD

Artist

Kaili Chun

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Image of Artist Kaili Chun

Collaborators

Ka‘imina‘auao Kahikina
Daniel Kauwila Mahi

Kaili Chun

Raised in Honolulu, Hawaiʻi, Kaili Chun draws deep inspiration from her Hawaiian heritage, using her art to explore the interconnectedness of people, place, and time. Her diverse training began with an A.B. in Architecture from Princeton University, where she studied under renowned ceramicist Toshiko Takaezu, a mentorship that had a profound influence on her approach to form, materiality and installation. Chun also apprenticed under Wright Elemakule Bowman, Sr., a Master woodworker and canoe builder, where she learned traditional Hawaiian woodworking techniques, further grounding her practice in the cultural traditions of her ancestors. She later earned a Master of Fine Arts degree from the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, where she is Assistant Professor of Native Hawaiian Visual Art.

Chun’s artistic practice spans an array of mediums, including installations and sculptures. Her work is characterized by an integration of traditional Hawaiian forms and practices with contemporary design elements, resulting in site-specific installations that evoke contemplation on the relationship between humans and the environment. Through her work, Chun engages with Hawaiian values such as mālama ʻāina (care for the land), hoʻōla (healing), and kuleana (responsibility), encouraging viewers to reflect on sustainability, cultural resilience, and the preservation of indigenous knowledge.

Her installations have been exhibited in Honolulu; New York; Brisbane, Australia; Kassel, Germany;  Hong Kong; Stuttgart, Germany; and in exhibitions across the United States and other international venues.

Getting here

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Once completed in Phase 3 (September 2025), the art installation will be located at Hoʻomaluhia Botanical Garden.

  • From Waikīkī:

    • Head west on Kalākaua Avenue.
    • Turn left on Saratoga Road and then right on Kālia Road.
    • The museum will be on your left, just before the entrance to Fort DeRussy Beach Park.
  • From H1 Freeway:

    • Take the Punahou Street exit (Exit 23) and head makai (toward the ocean).
    • Turn right onto Kalākaua Avenue.
    • Turn left onto Saratoga Road, then right onto Kālia Road.

Paid parking is available at:

  • Fort DeRussy Parking Lot (2071 Kālia Rd) – the closest lot, located just across from the museum.
  • Hale Koa Hotel Parking Garage (located off Maluhia Rd, next to Fort DeRussy Park).
  • Limited metered street parking on Kālia Road.
  • TheBus provides convenient access to the museum.
  • Bus routes stopping nearby:
    • Route 2 & Route 20 (stop at Saratoga Road & Kālia Road).
    • Routes 8, 13, 19, 42 (stop along Ala Moana Blvd, a short walk to the museum).
  • Check TheBus website or the HEA app for real-time schedules.
  • Biki stations are available at Fort DeRussy Beach Park and Saratoga Road, within walking distance of the museum.
  • If you are staying in Waikīkī, the museum is a short walk from Kalākaua Avenue.
  • Follow Saratoga Road to Kālia Road, where the museum is located inside Fort DeRussy Park, across from the Hale Koa Hotel.