[8] In 1996, Chiu collaborated with a group of Asian Australian artists, performers, filmmakers and writers to establish Gallery 4A, a nonprofit contemporary art center devoted to promoting dialogue in the Asia-Pacific region.
[18] The 2017 exhibition of “Yayoi Kusama: Infinity Mirrors” attracted nearly 500,000 visitors and set new attendance records, as well as bringing new attention to the artists work.
Alongside host Dometi Pongo, in each episode Chiu visits with the artists in the studio as they are preparing their works and provides a critique before consulting with the other panelists to determine the winner.
Architect Hiroshi Sugimoto, who had previously led the renovation of the museum's lobby, was commissioned to redesign the garden.
[24] In 2010, Chiu joined the Sunday Arts television show on PBS WNET to conduct a series of interviews with cultural leaders.
Interview subjects have included William Kentridge, Shirin Neshat, Yoko Ono, Tan Dun, Chuck Close and Antony Gormley.
[1][failed verification] She was the speaker at the National Gallery of Australia's inaugural Betty Churcher Memorial Lecture in 2022.
[29] In September 2015, The Washington Post reported that Genocchio had edited the content of Chiu's Wikipedia entry in order to remove negative commentary about her work at the Hirshhorn and to add laudatory statements.