
The Hong Kong Museum of Art (HKMoA) opened applications on 12 January for six coveted internship positions that will take successful candidates to the 61st Venice Biennale from May to November 2026. The interns will spend six weeks on site supporting Hong Kong’s collateral exhibition, working with artists Kingsley Ng and Angel Hui on curation, visitor engagement and daily operations.
Although the programme sits within the cultural sphere, it has clear global-mobility dimensions: participants gain practical experience living and working in the Schengen Area, grappling with Italian work-permit formalities, accommodation sourcing and cross-cultural project management. Previous HKMoA cohorts have leveraged the experience into roles at auction houses, galleries and corporate-art consultancies, making the internship popular among graduates in the creative-industries visa category.
The museum will provide pre-departure training covering logistics, health insurance and EU tax obligations. Selected interns will travel on Hong Kong SAR passports under Italy’s “mission visa” process, which has a five-day turnaround when coordinated through accredited cultural bodies—a reminder that specialised visa channels can be significantly faster than standard Schengen business visas.
Navigating those consular requirements can be daunting, but VisaHQ’s Hong Kong office simplifies the process by arranging online applications, appointment scheduling and document checks for Italy’s mission visas as well as regular Schengen categories. Their team helps applicants avoid common paperwork errors and keeps timelines on track; full details are available at https://www.visahq.com/hong-kong/.
For employers, the programme offers a low-risk pipeline to internationally seasoned talent. A recent survey by the Hong Kong Arts Development Council found that 68 % of companies in branding, design and luxury retail value candidates with hands-on overseas project experience, citing problem-solving skills and network access as prime benefits.
Applications close on 30 January; HR teams looking to sponsor staff on unpaid educational leave are advised to start internal approvals early, as travel arrangements must be finalised by mid-April to meet Biennale accreditation deadlines.
Although the programme sits within the cultural sphere, it has clear global-mobility dimensions: participants gain practical experience living and working in the Schengen Area, grappling with Italian work-permit formalities, accommodation sourcing and cross-cultural project management. Previous HKMoA cohorts have leveraged the experience into roles at auction houses, galleries and corporate-art consultancies, making the internship popular among graduates in the creative-industries visa category.
The museum will provide pre-departure training covering logistics, health insurance and EU tax obligations. Selected interns will travel on Hong Kong SAR passports under Italy’s “mission visa” process, which has a five-day turnaround when coordinated through accredited cultural bodies—a reminder that specialised visa channels can be significantly faster than standard Schengen business visas.
Navigating those consular requirements can be daunting, but VisaHQ’s Hong Kong office simplifies the process by arranging online applications, appointment scheduling and document checks for Italy’s mission visas as well as regular Schengen categories. Their team helps applicants avoid common paperwork errors and keeps timelines on track; full details are available at https://www.visahq.com/hong-kong/.
For employers, the programme offers a low-risk pipeline to internationally seasoned talent. A recent survey by the Hong Kong Arts Development Council found that 68 % of companies in branding, design and luxury retail value candidates with hands-on overseas project experience, citing problem-solving skills and network access as prime benefits.
Applications close on 30 January; HR teams looking to sponsor staff on unpaid educational leave are advised to start internal approvals early, as travel arrangements must be finalised by mid-April to meet Biennale accreditation deadlines.






