Situated within the evolving theoretical discourse on non-state cultural diplomacy, this article examines the unique spatial politics of corporate-led cultural exchange in a non-democratic context through an analysis of China’s K11 Art Malls—hybrid “retail-oriented museums” that fuse contemporary art exhibitions with luxury shopping, dining, and entertainment. As the first study to systematically analyze the spatial dimensions of non-state cultural diplomacy within an authoritarian environment, it investigates how K11 utilizes its hybrid art-retail spaces to perform a strategically depoliticized form of international engagement. The article employs a three-dimensional framework—conceptualizing the mall as a paradoxical Agora, a site of glocal mediation, and a stage for performative depoliticization—to uncover the mechanisms through which commercial and diplomatic objectives are negotiated. Methodologically, it combines critical document analysis with semi-structured interviews of K11 stakeholders, artists, and curators, applying thematic analysis to decode the politics of space in this alternative diplomatic model. The findings reveal that K11’s commercialized, apolitical facade enables it to navigate state pressures and global markets while promoting a national cultural agenda. However, this same corporate logic constitutes its central paradox: by privileging spectacle and consumption, it systematically diminishes the potential for critical discourse and meaningful cross-cultural exchange, ultimately undermining the transformative capacity of the cultural diplomacy it purports to advance. The article concludes that K11’s spatial strategy represents a sophisticated, complementary extension of state soft power, one that simultaneously enables and limits the possibilities of non-state agency in authoritarian systems.
Natalia Grincheva (Wed,) studied this question.