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Interview | Hong Kong-based Artist Ailsa Wong
Ailsa Wong (b. 1997)’s practice spans across paintings, videos, image-making, games, and installations. Wong explores ways to connect consciousness with primitive emotions to fill the vacuum of belief. Wong’s means of communication draw inspiration from fractured life experiences, wherein meaning is repeatedly dissolved and re-established.
Wong’s solo exhibitions include “1” at DE SARTHE (Hong Kong, 2025), “Disembody” at Cattle Depot Artist Village (Hong Kong, 2025), and “00:00” at Yrellag Gallery (Hong Kong, 2024). Wong participated in duo solo exhibition “This Bitter Earth” at Gallery Exit (Hong Kong, 2019), joint exhibition “I Don’t Know How to Love You Teach Me to Love” at Das Esszimmer (Germany, 2024), and “Ways of Running and Embracing” at Floating Projects (Hong Kong, 2023).
Wong currently lives and works in Hong Kong.

Ant Mill, 2025, 3D video game Can you tell us about your background and how you started your artistic journey?
I’ve enjoyed drawing since I was a child, and during my secondary school years, I was particularly drawn to illustration. My practice began to expand more significantly when I studied Fine Arts at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. There, I developed a strong interest in working across different media, including painting, digital formats, image-based works, and installation.
After graduating, I have some opportunities to exhibit my work. Some projects came through invitations, while others were self-initiated or developed collaboratively with others through funded exhibitions. I just continue making work by responding to opportunities as they arise, allowing my practice to evolve naturally.

Antigora, 2025, 2D Visual novel game What are the main themes or concepts you explore in your new media art? Are there any particular media you prefer working with? Why?
My new media practice revolves around three closely connected themes: techno-animism, the relationship between virtual worlds and human consciousness, and artificial intelligence as both a material and a collaborator. I am interested in how contemporary technologies shape belief systems, perception, and inner spiritual experience, especially in a time when traditional frameworks of belief feel fragmented.
I don’t have a fixed preference when it comes to medium. I work with paint, rust, fabric, metal, clay, electronic devices, AI-generated images, 3D models, sound, readymade objects… Each medium carries its own texture, character, and material presence. I’m interested in bringing these different textures together to construct a world within the exhibition space that viewers can experience as a whole rather than as separate elements.

Caves, 2025, 2D Visual novel game Can you describe a recent project or artwork that you are particularly proud of?
That would be my recent solo exhibition at DE SARTHE, which took place from May to July 2025. The exhibition transformed the gallery into an immersive, cave-like environment inspired by the interior of an ant nest, bringing together interactive video games, sound installation, moving sculptures, and mixed media works.
Through this exhibition, I explored ideas of techno-animism and collective existence, using the ant colony as a metaphor for interconnected systems of living, mechanical, and digital entities. Works such as the interactive games Antigora and Ant Mill invited viewers to navigate fictional belief systems and closed feedback loops, while sound and sculptural elements functioned almost like ritual objects within the space.

Embryos, 2025, Clay, epoxy, photo transfer on canvas, 160 x 210 cm I was particularly satisfied with how the exhibition worked as a unified experiential system rather than a display of individual artworks. It allowed me to fully integrate digital media, physical materials, and spatial design to create an environment that visitors could inhabit, reflecting my ongoing interest in belief, consciousness, and technology as living systems.

Millipede, 2024, Second hands, quartz clock movements, clay and sand, Size variable Who or what are your biggest influences, both artistically and personally?
I would say Mark Rothko. I learned his work during my university studies, and it fundamentally shifted how I understand art: not as an imitation of the existing world, but as the creation of a new experiential reality.
A few years ago, I visited Rothko Chapel in Houston and it felt almost like a religious experience. The relationship between the space, the paintings, and the viewer created an intense sense of emotional resonance. Since then, I’ve become much more attentive to how exhibition environments shape perception and feeling, and how space itself can function as an integral part of the artwork.

Rope, Flash and Rock Wall, 2024, Mixed media on fabric, 77 x 68 cm What is your creative process like? Do you follow a routine or work spontaneously?
My creative process varies depending on the medium, but it is mostly intuitive and spontaneous. I don’t follow a fixed routine, and I often allow the material I’m working with to guide the process.
For painting, I usually have no drafts, approaching it almost like automatic drawing. For my rust paintings, for example, I apply chemical liquids onto metal plates and allow the natural rusting process to unfold unpredictably. I then respond to the forms that emerge, and further develope the composition.

Sleek/Keels, 2024, Mixed media on metal, A series of two, 40 × 40 cm each When working with games, such as my 2D visual novel game Caves, my process becomes more curatorial. I generate a large volume of AI-produced images, then select and categorize them, pairing them with text and narrative fragments. Meaning emerges through this process of selection, association, and sequencing rather than from a fixed plan.
For installations, I usually begin with a rough draft, but the work evolves through discussions with technicians with technical considerations. The final outcome often differs from the original idea.

1, a solo exhibiton by Ailsa Wong at DE SARTHE What projects are you currently working on, and what can we expect from you in the future?
I am currently developing a new game project that draws on research into cosmology, archaeology, and paleontology, as well as creation myths from Eastern and Western traditions. I’m interested in exploring how ancient narratives about the origin of the world can be reinterpreted through contemporary digital systems through this project.
Looking ahead, I plan to keep working across different media and continue to develop my research around virtual worlds as inner landscapes, artificial intelligence as a form of collective consciousness, and techno-animism.
Text & photo courtesy of Ailsa Wong

Website: https://ailsaw.com/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ailsa.ww/
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Interview | Hong Kong and London-based Artist Yvonne Feng
Yvonne Feng (b.1989) lives and works between Hong Kong and London. She completed her MA at the Royal College of Art in 2014 and her practice-led PhD, Tracing the Unspeakable: Painting as Embodied Seeing, at the Slade School of Fine Art, UCL, in 2020. She is an Associate Lecturer at Camberwell College of Arts, UAL, and formerly Senior Lecturer in Fine Art Painting at the University of Brighton.
In her painting practice, Feng takes possession of life and societal events, infusing them with her own imaginary and subjective experiences. Through playful experimentation with figural forms and painterly gestures, she searches for representations that defy singular narratives and predefined meanings of events, making visible the intricate human condition within the midst of these occurrences.
Feng received the William Coldstream Memorial Prize (2017) from the UCL Art Museum and the Excellence in Drawing Award (2015) from The Arts Club. She has exhibited internationally, including at Goethe-Gallery, Hong Kong; HART Haus, Hong Kong; The Supper Club with HART Haus, Hong Kong; Rabbet Gallery, London; The Salon by NADA & The Community with Current Plans, Paris; The Koppel Project, London; Daniel Benjamin Gallery, London; A.P.T Gallery, London; and the Freud Museum, London, among others. Her work is held in the UCL Art Museum Collection and various private collections worldwide.
Impulse, 2025, Acrylic and oil on canvas, 160 x 200 cm, Courtesy of the artist Can you tell us about your background and how you started your artistic journey?
I was born in Guangdong, China and moved to Kent, UK in my teens. Growing up, I didn’t see “artist” as a real profession, since there were no museums or art scene in my hometown, but I always found myself drawn to the school art room. It became a place where I could breathe, a refuge from the rigid, academically focused curriculum of Chinese schooling, and a space where I could create and express myself.
Following that instinct, I went on to study Fine Art at the Slade School of Fine Art, UCL. During my undergraduate years in London, I immersed myself in museums and galleries, seeing art in person for the first time and learning art history and contemporary practice
from tutors, visiting artists and peers. I absorbed everything like a sponge, trying to discover my own voice as an artist.
During my Master’s studies at the Royal College of Art, the sudden incarceration of a family member became a turning point. I felt an urgent need to process, question and find my agency through drawing, painting and writing. That experience solidified my commitment to art making as a way of thinking through life events and as a form of self- empowerment.
Index of Lost Words, 2024, Acrylic and oil on canvas, 50 x 60 cm, Courtesy of the artist What are the main themes or concepts you explore in your work?
My recent work explores the notion of ‘Docile Bodies’ in a trilogy of exhibitions that approaches the theme through barrier, gesture and sight. Through a synthesis of bodily symbolism, pandemic-inflected motifs and fluid painterly gestures, I probe embodied memory and the ongoing negotiation between control and agency. I set up the canvas as a stage, incorporating symbolic boundaries and confined spaces that become a backdrop for contemplating how bodies conform to or resist predetermined rules, structures and restrictions. In doing so, I explore the intricate entanglement between the body and the spaces it inhabits.
The imaginary figure or the recurring motif of the hand, bare or gloved, serving as a performative agent, for negotiating the inextricable relationships between the individual and the external crisis, the inner self and the collective, navigating the thresholds between
self‐indulgence and restraint, autonomy and authority, performing a delicate choreography of mutual regulation. By situating the body in familiar yet dislocated environments, or by embodying existentially entrapped situations, I question whether the body is controlled or autonomous, disciplined or free.
Exhibition view of Möbius Loop (2025), Courtesy of the artist and HART Haus How has your artistic style evolved over time?
The style of my work has evolved in response to my ongoing search for communicative and representational strategies, especially as the themes I explore shift over time. I am constantly looking for new ways to represent past events that have become overly familiar through mediated images, sometimes so familiar that we stop questioning them or feeling anything toward them. I seek forms and gestures that can evoke shifting, ambiguous meanings and hold multiple layers of reference. As a result, one series may focus more on bodily gestures, while another leans into symbolism.
What remains consistent is the presence of drawn and bodily elements. My process always begins with drawing, drawing receptively. The body is not only a recurring motif but also a medium I paint with. Through it, I allow its imaginary contours to open up, and I experience, in a corporeal way, the pains, pleasures and struggles of both myself and others.
Mobius Loop, 2023, Oil on canvas, 180 x 100 cm, Courtesy of the artist In what ways do you think the art world has changed since you started your career?
The art world has become more inclusive and globally interconnected since I began my career. When I was an undergraduate student, I encountered very few Asian tutors, and it was rare to see exhibitions by Asian women artists in London. I am glad to see that the landscape has diversified, and I feel honoured to have worked as a lecturer myself, witnessing students from many cultural backgrounds having their work exhibited and recognised.In the summer of 2024, I began working between Hong Kong and London. I have been struck by how vibrant the Hong Kong art scene is, from international galleries to grassroots project spaces. I once believed I needed to be in major art centres like London to build a career as an artist. London still offers a great deal, but places like Hong Kong are thriving too. Being there has opened up new conversations with audiences and allowed me to reconnect with my heritage in meaningful ways.

Automation, 2022, Oil on canvas, 150 x 150 cm, Courtesy of the artist What challenges have you faced as an artist, and how have you overcome them?
It often takes a long time to turn ideas into artworks and then have the opportunity to exhibit them. I remind myself to trust my intuition and to have faith in myself and the work.How do you stay inspired and motivated to create new work?
I stay inspired by seeing exhibitions that intrigue me and by staying attentive to what is happening socially and politically around me. I question what I see, what remains unspoken or is forced into forgetting, and I seek out shared feelings and memories.Text & photo courtesy of Yvonne Feng

Website: https://www.yvonne-yiwen-feng.com/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/yvonne.ywfeng/
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Interview | Hong Kong-based Artist Xie Chengxuan
Xie Chengxuan, born in Guangzhou in 1997, graduated from the Department of Fine Arts at the Chinese University of Hong Kong in 2020 and completed an MA in Painting at the Royal College of Art, London, in 2023.
He works primarily in acrylic and mixed media on canvases and papers. His practice is grounded in deconstruction: objects are reduced to their elementary visual units—points, lines, planes, colour blocks, textures— then reassembled. Because each viewer’s cultural and personal lexicon differs, the resulting images resist a single reading. The independent elements continue to interact in the finished work, keeping the surface in unresolved dialogue.
The act of painting is digestion. Influences—political, social, intimate—are taken in, broken apart, and reconstituted through repeated returns to the canvas. Each layer records a shift in thought; closure is refused. Prettiness is avoided; the visible struggle is the point.
Works by Xie Chengxuan are held by the Ashmolean Museum (Oxford), Shanghai Outbound Museum, X Museum (Beijing), and private collections.

Jump Ship, 2025, Acrylic charcoal on canvas, 100 x 80 cm Can you tell us about your background and how you started your artistic journey?
Two kindergartens, three primary schools, two secondary schools. Guangzhou, Auckland, Hong Kong. Art degree at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. A year in South Carolina. Painting master’s at the Royal College of Art.
My mother was pregnant with my brother when the one-child rule said no. We left for Auckland with four suitcases, one way. In school there, older kids read to younger ones after lunch. My reader liked pop-up books—dinosaurs jumped, houses opened. I waited for that moment every day. When it was my turn to read, I gave the same book to a white boy. He looked at me and said to his friend, “It’s a Chinese.” I didn’t know the word then, couldn’t even write it. Later they sent us back to Guangzhou to learn.
Now I see I never belonged anywhere—and that is good. Flags do not touch me.
At university, Hong Kong burned. The biggest revolt ever. We shouted in the streets—Chinese or Hong Konger—but my New Zealand self fit neither side. I wanted truth, found only noise. In the end, I kept one thing: I am human. That is all.
Why paint? Every move killed friendships before they began. There was no one to talk to, so paint talked for me. Loneliness makes artists. It made me.
Moving taught me to drop ideas fast. Better ones came, I took them. My first real start was a summer in Chongqing: sketching with teachers, copying masters, drawing the model, learning to look.
Copying is not copying—it is living inside another man’s hand. To know Picasso, I must stand where he stood. Many fear influence and guard a small self. But the self is only what it steals; I steal from the best.
Why keep painting? Because things stolen must be digested. Painting digests. You watch me digest—that is the picture.

The Rush, 2023, Mix media on synthetic paper, 62 x 78 cm What are the main themes or concepts you explore in your work?
Human nature. The phrase sounds empty, but I am sick of the post-Duchamp game of sticking clever labels on pictures. No human being is that simple, yet the world shoves us into tick-box lives. War news always comes in two slants; the only fact is that the slant shapes us.
Our job is to chew the slant and see what remains. That chewing is where human nature shows.
I wrestle on the canvas, and the scars of that wrestle become the picture. I look into war, then women’s rights, then children—more and more—but all are only carriers. I give no final verdict; I show the argument as the painting progresses. To paint war with planes and blood would be false—and an insult to the dead. The “human nature” I show is only mine.
Zen has taught me to be here, now. Walking meditation drops the destination; the walk itself is the point. In art, this means that the act of making must matter more than the finished thing. The process is the reflection on life.
Subjects? Private moments, public scandals, war, petty daily satire. Art must not float above life. Tied to life, it cannot repeat itself—human nature has too many faces.

Tinned Kiss: make the expiry date little longer, 2024, Mix media on canvas, 180 x 170 cm How has your artistic style evolved over time?
From the start, I distrusted the factory routine: sketch, fill, texture, finish. A nude model, two minutes of line—that is the picture. Later tracing and colouring only prettify and kill the sense.
Modernism forced every canvas to answer: not what you paint, but why you paint so, and what the act means. I was once asked, “Why is painting called painting?” The word keeps the gerund even as a noun. The picture is still arguing with itself.
Line, plane, and colour do not cooperate—they talk. The canvas stays unresolved because it mirrors the argument in the room. We move from A to B to C; the subject may shift—no matter. You do not remember every day of your life, yet every day has made you. A stroke now answers everything that ever touched me. Months later, a new thought arrives; I repaint, and the picture turns.
This endless argument is closer to how people actually are—full of doubt, revision, and contradiction.
Bruce Lee broke something open for me. Early on, I sketched outdoors, then turned sketches into studio pieces—a ladder aiming at an imagined end. But combat is give and take; a planned routine is not art. I tried to smash the ladder: workshops, rubbings from stone and bark, answering outdoor textures indoors. Soon I saw that this caught only the skin of things.
Lee said a punch is the whole space answering back—even the bird on the branch. Later, answers came from culture, family, history. Studying Derrida’s deconstruction welded all these answers into what I do now.

Childrenland III, 2024-2025, Mix media on canvas, 230 x 140 cm Can you describe a recent project or artwork that you are particularly proud of?
Every canvas gets everything I have. Larger ones take longer, grow denser, but I am not proud of any.
Take Childrenland III as an example. It looks at what birth-planning did to women. “Did to” already turns them into objects; the shame goes on.
On the left side: women in a birthing machine. One head is a transferred image of Guanyin, the female Bodhisattva. Below, the date of the one-child rule—when second pregnancies were dragged to abortion. On the right: red characters quote the Chairman, now urging three children. My mother said it was too raw and asked me to destroy it. I painted crosses instead, letting some words bleed through—another mark of the argument.
The same local offices that once hauled women to abort now knock on doors begging for babies. On the top left are two men’s heads; on the right, a giant hand toasting them with a glass. At the centre stands a woman stepped out of the machine, glaring at us. Beneath her are ghosts of earlier paintings—old arguments showing through.
The five Childrenland canvases grew together, back and forth. They began with war, moved to a children’s hospital bombed in Ukraine, then to child welfare, and finally to women. One argument, still moving.

After Party: Lan Kwai Fong, 2024, Mix media on canvas, 78 x 100 cm What role do you believe art plays in social and cultural change?
I stopped believing art can change society long ago. It may sting a few consciences or open a new window for some, but capital runs the show and art cannot touch it. We use art to ask where we fit in this machine.
Friends and I joke that artists are parasites. How many farmers, workers, and drivers must give their hours so one man who adds nothing to survival can smear paint—simply because he refuses to be a cog? The question is not what art changes, but why it is allowed a meaning bigger than bread.
Remember Eden: Adam and Eve were told not to eat the fruit. The serpent came, the bite, the sin. With free will, they were bound to eat sooner or later. God knew, yet gave the gift. Free will matters more than happiness. Painting on is the search for that bigger meaning.
Art may nudge culture a little, but only within the cage of politics and money. Tang poetry reached its peak when eighty percent of people were illiterate and poets were officials. Literacy had to wait until the Qing collapsed. Art history is the story of the few who had patrons. Their work echoed through centuries but barely brushed the lives of their own time. Art is not a lever for social engineering. Humanity is too tangled; art looks at the tangle, finding meaning or amusement.

Pool: Vest Girl, 2024, Mix media on canvas, 90 x 70 cm How do you approach exhibiting your work? What are your goals when showing your art in public spaces?
A good picture must strike the viewer—make them think, make them gasp, but always bring them back to what it is to be human. The best place is the studio: mess, coffee rings, the fight in plain sight. Studios are pigsties, canvases block the light—impractical, yet the rawest truth lives there. Still, a solo show comes closest.
Many painters find a trick, repeat it, and call it style. One glance at an art fair and you know the hand: money, yes; surprise, no.
My view is simple—stop making pretty pictures. In Chinese we say “zhuo”: clumsy, unpolished. Strip ornament, strip polish. Prettiness smells of fear of the buyer’s eye. Raw marks come closer to the plain self, therefore to plain humanity.
Painters who freeze a manner turn factory. Drop the chase for beauty and the whole scaffolding of “style” wobbles. Ugliness is revolt; revolt is motion.
In public, I want people to see how I meet the world—chew it, spit it back. I want them to watch me wrestle on one canvas until they see a man and think of themselves. If someone leaves my show and says, “That fellow is worth knowing,” I have done my job.
Text & photo courtesy of Xie Chengxuan

Website: https://www.xiechengxuan.com/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/artjx/
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Interview | Hong Kong-based Artist Ticko Liu
Ticko Liu (b.1996) is a visual artist who has long focused on the intricate and delicate structures of the world. He excels at using surrealist painting to explore imagined nightscapes as well as the subtle poetry and fleeting beauty found in everyday experiences. His creative inspiration comes from a keen observation of nature, daily noise, and the sense of human existence. He is adept at transforming small and transient feelings into concrete images, guiding viewers to reflect on the harmony between private moments and the infinite in life.
Liu’s works blend oil painting with Eastern aesthetics. He believes that the meaning of existence comes from a sensitive appreciation of life, and he is dedicated to capturing those easily overlooked yet deeply enchanting moments on canvas—cultivating in viewers a greater appreciation for the subtle and profound connections that define the human experience.
Liu’s paintings have exhibitions at venues including Kunstraum Kreuzberg/Bethanien (Berlin), Yuz Museum (Shanghai), Gallery Exit and Square street gallery. He has been shortlisted for both the 2025 Sovereign Asian Art Prize and the 2020 Hong Kong Human Rights Art Prize. His works are included in the Yuz Foundation collection and private collections across Europe, Asia, and Australia.
The moonlight bright shiny and the wind is warm, 2022, Oil and oil pastel on linen, 40 x 50cm Can you tell us about your background and how you started your artistic journey?
I use painting to explore the connections between all things and the essence of life, weaving an imaginative world with the visual vocabulary of both Eastern and Western art.
I pay special attention to those subtle and fleeting sensations around me, especially sounds. When I was a child, my family wouldn’t let me play video games, so I would secretly play when they weren’t home. Over time, I developed super hearing—I could tell when they were about to come back just by hearing the elevator doors open, and would immediately hide the game. As I grew older, I started to notice more subtle details in life, such as the flowers and plants by the roadside or chewing gum stains on the ground. These everyday observations gradually became sources of inspiration for my creations, and are reflected in works like “An archive of a hundred sparrows” and “Archive of a hundred sparrow”.

Brick as a landscape 1, 2021, Oil, oil bar, oil pastel on canvas, 240 x 155 cm What are the main themes or concepts you explore in your work?
Hong Kong is a place rich in material things, but emotionally repressed, especially after the social movements and the pandemic. It feels like we have entered an era where “there are many things we cannot say.” The changes over these five years have made me feel confused and pressured as I grew up. During the pandemic, I spent most of my time in front of the computer, doing things like browsing YouTube, watching movies, playing games, or even just staring blankly at the toys on my desk. Spending so much time zoning out is a form of repression, but this immersion in my own imagination has also become one of my sources of creative inspiration in recent years.
In 2020, I created a piece called “An archive of a hundred sparrows”. At first, I simply wanted to document the birds that had died in 2019, because during the protests, the police fired large amounts of tear gas, and usually within two or three days after a protest, there would be a lot of dead birds and insects on the streets. Sometimes there were so many that I wondered if there would be no sparrows left in Hong Kong. One day, on my way to work, I saw a flock of sparrows playing on the grass, and when they noticed me, they all flew away together. That moment, so full of vitality, is something I will probably never forget. I even thought it was such a blessing that there were still sparrows in Hong Kong. As for the dead birds, most of them would return to dust and earth. When I began creating “Hundred Birds” based on newspaper photos of dead birds, I also discovered the various ways birds die in Hong Kong—some were hit by trams, some crashed into the glass of tall buildings, their bodies mangled. As I worked, I started to abstract and blur the birds, moving from their intact forms to later stages where some had become like rocks or mountains. That piece became not only an awakening to the laws of nature for me, but also the moment I realized my art should strive to capture the fleeting beauty of life.
When society began to figure out how to arrange work during the pandemic, I started returning to work, a process that felt like reconnecting with society after a period of isolation. After spending so much time staring at screens, I began to prefer putting down my phone during my commute and really looking at the scenery I passed each day. It was a kind of yearning for nature. Over time, I started to recognize the shapes and locations of the wild grasses along the highway that I saw every day. With each daily glimpse, these impressions accumulated, and one day, the thought arose in my mind: why not try painting nature? At that time, I didn’t just want to paint flowers and plants, but rather to use constant, repeated observations to record the natural laws that govern people and the world through my work.
Later on, in another piece titled “Brick as a landscape 1”, there were no exhibitions for an entire year due to the pandemic. I was fortunate to still have a job, but the repetitive nature of the work inevitably became monotonous, and I strongly felt that the rest of my life could end up repeating like this every day. Sometimes, when I saw Lion Rock from Kowloon Tong Station, I felt a sense of irony—this Lion Rock Spirit that has always been emphasized, could it just be a kind of tedious repetition? At the same time, I noticed that the platform at Kowloon Tong Station was much dirtier than those at other stations. I saw water stains, chewing gum marks, and grime accumulating on the platform, all evidence of daily repetition. Water drops would fall onto the same spots, creating stains; chewing gum, stepped on by countless people day after day, formed solid marks on the ground. That was when I realized this grime was actually proof of labor—the traces left by Hongkongers going up and down the platform every day.
In the painting, there are obvious grids symbolizing the platform tiles, with a black mountain in the center. What I wanted to depict was the summit of Lion Rock. Firstly, I wasn’t interested in painting a landscape that everyone already had a fixed image of; secondly, I wanted the image to be a blurred impression—a very vague Lion Rock peak, or even just an indistinct mountain. This reflects how our definition of the so-called Lion Rock Spirit is actually very vague, and how we face an uncertain and unclear future became the core of this work. Some of the grid lines in the sky are abstract and distorted, just like how puddles on the ground refract the straight lines above; there are also colors on the mountain that don’t exist in nature, especially high-chroma purples—perhaps because everyone’s awareness of hygiene was heightened during the pandemic, and these bright, strange colors reminded me of bacteria under ultraviolet light.Sometimes, I just hope for a space to escape, or to find a direction in which I can keep moving forward. So I often say to myself in my heart: “God, just point me to go somewhere”—and this is also reflected in the recurring motifs of the sun and moon in my works.

Orchid under the Moon, 2025, Oil on linen, 150 x 120 cm, Courtesy of Gallery Exit How has your artistic style evolved over time?
During my journey of learning art, Eastern aesthetics have had a profound influence on me. As a child, Japanese animation was often broadcast on Hong Kong television, so Japanese and Disney cartoons became the earliest forms of art I was exposed to. Later, when I was in university, I majored in oil painting. At the same time, in order to fulfill my credit requirements, I also started learning Chinese ink painting, using the Manual of the Mustard Seed Garden as a reference for practicing rocks and trees. This experience made me realize that there is an essential difference between specimens and painting manuals: specimens emphasize recording unknown plants and animals in a scientific and objective way, while the Mustard Seed Garden Manual focuses more on the artist’s interpretation of the essence of the subject, embodying a cross-generational artistic dialogue and heritage. This difference between rationality/emotion and science/inspiration became an important foundation for my creative thinking.
These experiences sparked my interest in the arts of other regions in the East and led me to research the cultures of other places, such as ukiyo-e and Hokusai Manga. Ukiyo-e has always been a significant reference for both modern and contemporary art in my practice, especially in terms of color usage and spatial composition, both of which offer much to learn from. Through this process, I began trying to break free from the limitations of ink painting, hoping to bring the spirit and brushwork of ink into my own oil painting practice.
Ukiyo-e has had a profound impact on my artistic practice. Firstly, in terms of visual language, ukiyo-e emphasizes flat compositions and the use of bold color blocks. This has made me pay more attention to the structure of the image and the coordination of colors in my own work, rather than simply pursuing realistic three-dimensionality. Secondly, ukiyo-e’s approach to space—such as the use of negative space, shifts in perspective, and the arrangement of visual layers—has inspired me to consider how to express complex ideas through simple means, allowing viewers to experience an infinite sense of imagination within a limited frame.
Moreover, the subjects of ukiyo-e often come from everyday life and natural scenery. This has prompted me to reflect on my own creative content, encouraging me to discover subtle feelings within ordinary things. The spirit of inheritance and reinvention in ukiyo-e has also helped me find connections between tradition and modernity, teaching me how to blend different cultures and techniques to form my own style. Overall, ukiyo-e is not just a technical reference for me—it has also brought new breakthroughs to my creative mindset and perspective.In my works, you can see elements such as Eastern perspective, the spatial segmentation of garden doorways, and the assembly of everyday fragments into imaginative spaces. In today’s fragmented era, information flows rapidly online in the form of reels and short videos. People are constantly surrounded by sensory stimulation, gradually becoming numb to the content itself, making it difficult to think deeply or truly feel. This phenomenon of diluted attention and scattered, fragmented thoughts is also reflected in my art—I cut and reassemble everyday details on the canvas, continually reflecting on the meaning of each fleeting moment. For me, this creative process is both a way to explore the connections between all things and a path to pursue the essence of life and art.

Gift to the Night, 2025, Oil on linen, 70 x 60 cm, Courtesy of Gallery Exit How do you approach exhibiting your work? What are your goals when showing your art in public spaces?
When planning the exhibition of my works, I place great importance on letting the artworks speak for themselves. Therefore, in the layout of the exhibition space, I try to give each painting more space, allowing viewers to focus on and appreciate the details of every piece. Each work contains many delicate elements that require the audience to take their time to experience. After setting up the exhibition, I also like to place a smaller painting next to a larger one, using the contrast in size to echo the theme of “fragmentation.” This arrangement not only highlights the resonance between the works, but also allows viewers to perceive the messages conveyed by the paintings from different perspectives.
Allegory of the Cave, 2025, Oil on linen, 200 x 180 cm How do you balance artistic integrity with commercial considerations, if applicable?
When it comes to balancing artistic integrity with commercial considerations, I believe the best way is not to balance them at all, but rather to insist on doing the work well. In every collaboration or creative process, I consider reputation, resources, and smooth cooperation as the three main factors. As long as two of these aspects can be achieved, I think the collaboration is worthwhile. To achieve the ideal result, I once worked on a brand collaboration where I revised and adjusted the design many times, ultimately producing 20 different versions before making a final selection. That was one of the happiest collaborations I’ve experienced, because both parties wanted to present the best possible work.
Whether it is art or business, the ultimate goal should always be to deliver the best outcome.
To me, these three aspects are actually interconnected and it’s difficult to separate which is the most important. If I must choose, I believe “smooth cooperation” is the most crucial. Only with a foundation of smooth collaboration can we build long-term partnerships, which in turn bring more resources and enhance personal reputation. A good collaborative experience not only leads to high-quality work, but also creates more opportunities for future cooperation. Therefore, I believe smooth cooperation is the core that drives everything forward.
Installation view of Ephemera, Courtesy of Gallery EXIT Can you describe a recent project or artwork that you are particularly proud of?
A recent work that I am particularly proud of is my solo exhibition“Ephemera,” held at Gallery Exit. This exhibition is especially meaningful to me because everything I believe in and strive for began to converge and take shape here.
During the creative process, I often reflect on how the world intricately weaves harmony and interconnectedness. When I paint, my mind is always filled with questions of “why” and “what if”; I see my art as a continuous pursuit of these questions.Text & photo courtesy of Ticko Liu

Website: https://www.tickoliu.com/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ticko.liu/
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Interview | Hong Kong-based Artist Lau Kam Hung
Lau Kam Hung graduated with an MAFA from the Chinese University of Hong Kong and RMIT University, specializing in painting. His artworks embody an intimate dialogue with nature, rooted in his contemplation of natural cycles—the blossoming and falling of leaves—which has offered him profound spiritual and emotional insights into the truths of life. In September 2025, Touch Gallery presented his second solo exhibition. His practice is distinguished by unique interpretations of landscape, realized through contemporary materials and innovative techniques.

Cherry Tree in Summer, 2024, Mixed media on silver-sprinkled paper, 100 x 70 cm Can you tell us about your background and how you started your artistic journey?
I studied art in Hong Kong. In 2016, I graduated from the Hong Kong Art School and the Chinese University of Hong Kong, majoring in Western painting. After graduation, I worked in art education while exploring my own artistic practice. Later, by chance, I saw a landscape painting by the Yuan dynasty master Wang Meng (Dwelling in the Qingbian Mountains,1366) at the Shanghai Museum and was deeply attracted by its rich brushwork. From that point on, I developed a strong interest in Chinese literati landscape painting. About five years ago, I began to re-explore the possibilities of literati landscape painting in terms of technique. I use graphite and spray paint combined with other ink materials to give the landscape painting a unique, contemporary quality, while my content focuses on modern scenes, interpreting the connection between the city and nature.

Grass Field, 2023, Mixed media on Silver-sprinkled paper, 60 x 40 cm What are the main themes or concepts you explore in your work?
When I focused on studying Chinese literati landscape painting, I discovered that it is not just about the differences in media or tools; more importantly, it lies in “how to observe nature” and “exploring the relationship between the self and the object.” In the history of Chinese literati painting, I am most drawn to the art of the Song and Yuan dynasties. This period represents a mature and abundant evolution in history, fully presenting the conscious relationship between people and things in visual form: the large and small, distant and close, moving and still, heavy and light, abundant and sparse, swift and slow, intricate and simple, informed and uninformed, rationality and sensibility, ideal and reality. I endeavour to express such essence in all of my artistic creations.

Silver Snow, 2022, Mixed media on silver-sprinkled paper, 160 x 120 cm What role do you believe art plays in social and cultural change?
On a personal level, artistic creation is a form of self-cultivation. It is a process of continuous exploration and questioning, and also a journey of self-awakening, similar to the spirit of a craftsman. On a broader social and cultural level, art produces aesthetic experiences that can enrich everyone’s spiritual life. This, in turn, generates cultural and artistic knowledge, contributing to the progress of human civilization.

Corona, 2025, Mixed media on silver-sprinkled paper, 100 x 70 cm What challenges have you faced as an artist, and how have you overcome them?
It is very challenging for every artist to find a subject (or issue) they truly care about; this is a question of sincerity. In my own story, after graduation, there was a period when I didn’t paint at all. At that time, I asked myself: Why do I paint? Why do I create? What should I paint, and what is the purpose of these works? I needed to find my own answers. Fortunately, when I encountered Chinese literati landscape painting, I discovered that the philosophies of ancient Chinese literati and intellectuals provided many answers worth referencing; their ideas are fully integrated into their art. This guided me toward a clear direction for my own work.

Pines on Tolo Highway, 2022, Mixed media on gold-sprinkled paper, 240 x 100 cm What projects are you currently working on, and what can we expect from you in the future?
I recently completed my second solo exhibition. Through this process, I realized that these traditional Chinese cultural thoughts, philosophies, and art forms (such as the writings of Zhuangzi, Daoist thought, and literati landscape painting features) feel very distant to modern audiences. This has further confirmed my commitment to promoting this cultural knowledge through my own artistic creations.
Text & photo courtesy of Lau Kam Hung

Website: https://laukamhung.com/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/laukamgg/
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Interview | Hong Kong-based Artist Carroll CW Tsang
Carroll CW Tsang (b.1965, Hong Kong) holds the Visual Art Intelligence Professional Certificate (DALA Decoupage South Africa), the Deco Clay Craft Academy Deco Clay Instructor Certificate from Japan, and the Certificate as Zentangle Teacher awarded by the Chinese Zentangle Association CZA. Member of the Hong Kong Artists Association and the Steering Committee of BIEAF (Busan International Environment Art Festival).
By slowly and repetitively painting with a calligraphy brush on paper, Carroll finds her own rhythm — one that feels as calming and natural as the rhythm in music. Each stroke is allowed to unfold at its own pace, and within these gradually formed marks, one can sense the heart unfolding as well.
The focus shifts to the tip of the brush; with every stroke, an inner self is revealed. This quiet, meditative process has been Carroll’s daily practice since 2018. Through it, she gently unwinds her emotions, connects with her feelings and thoughts, and re-establishes a sense of contact with her inner world — arriving at a place of safety, fulfilment, and self-understanding.
Ink Rhyme, Golden Blossoms.Quietly Blooming Heartlight, 2025, Ink and color on rice paper, 125 x 120 cm, Courtesy of the artist Can you tell us about your background and how you started your artistic journey?
I was born on a quiet island called Peng Chau, where life was relatively simple. Being one of several siblings and the eldest daughter, I had to help with household chores and contribute to the family income. There were many small workshops (commonly known as “mountain factories”) on the island. During school breaks and summer vacations, my mother would find jobs for me, like painting designs on porcelain, sewing gloves and shoes, or weaving rattan baskets after finishing my homework. Most of these tasks involved repetitive work. As a result, I developed a certain familiarity with and perhaps even an irresistible connection to repetitive labor, shaped by my living environment. While other children went out to play, I was helping support the family.
Perhaps because of this, I gradually developed the habit of engaging in self-dialogue and often observed the interactions between adults, which sparked a deep interest in the subtle and complex relationships between people. As I grew older, I became increasingly aware that people’s outward appearances often differ from their inner selves. They might seem happy on the surface, but behave differently when no one is watching.
This intrigued me, and I found myself constantly observing how people express themselves. Having been exposed to a variety of materials from a young age, I believe that experience has greatly benefited my artistic career. Whether through painting, mixed media, or installation art, these have become my primary modes of creative expression. I continually explore and practice ways to integrate my personal experiences, emotions, and observations of society into my work.
Ink in Flow.Contemplation in the Circle, 2021, Ink and color on rice paper, 200 x 200 cm, Courtesy of the artist What are the main themes or concepts you explore in your work?
My work typically revolves around several core themes, including inner emotions, human nature, interpersonal relationships, and identity. These themes are closely tied to internal and spiritual states. These subjects stem from my ongoing exploration of inner tension, emotional flow, societal imprints, spiritual awareness, and energetic connections. I aim to visually represent those subtle yet universal feelings found in everyday life through painting, text, and spatial installations, hoping to evoke resonance or reflection in the viewer.
My creations often originate from personal experiences, but I also strive to connect them to broader social contexts. Whether through figurative or abstract expressions, I hope my works can serve as a bridge, linking the individual and the collective, the past and the present, the inner world and the external reality.
Ink in Flow.Layered Mandala Realm, 2025, Ink and color on rice paper, 34 x 46 cm, Courtesy of the artist How has your artistic style evolved over time?
My artistic creation has always centered around spiritual healing. As I’ve accumulated more personal experiences and continuously explored artistic language and forms of expression, this direction has become clearer and more profound. In the early stages, I focused on learning basic painting techniques and attending mind-body-spirit courses. As my studies deepened, I gradually realized that form itself is not the ultimate goal, it is a vessel for conveying thoughts and emotions. While studying singing bowl therapy, I began contemplating how to use different mediums and forms to express complex inner emotions and observations of societal phenomena. Now, I place greater emphasis on the interaction between the viewer and the artwork. My style may be more free and diverse, but it always remains centered on the core question: “How can I express myself more authentically in this era?”
Blooms on the weapon, 2023, Ink and color on rice paper, 100 x 150 cm (each) , Courtesy of the artist How do you stay inspired and motivated to create new work?
My inspiration often comes from the subtle details of daily life, perhaps a brief exchange or conflict between people. I’m frequently moved by seemingly ordinary moments that are charged with tension. Beyond everyday life, I also draw nourishment from psychology, films, and the works of other artists. I enjoy reading and observing, especially content that provokes thoughts about human existence, emotions, and relationships. Conversations with others, especially fellow artists, friends, or audiences, often offer me new perspectives. Each creative process is, for me, an exploration and a dialogue with myself. That sense of the unknown and the possibilities it brings is what keeps my passion for creating alive.
Ink in Flow.Visions of the Heart, 2021, Ink and color on rice paper, 200 x 200 cm, Courtesy of the artist How do your personal experiences and identity influence your art?
My personal experiences and sense of identity have largely shaped my creative perspective and mode of expression. As someone who played a caregiving and contributing role within my family, I often unconsciously bring these backgrounds into my work. Having grown up without the freedom and playtime that most children enjoy, I often had to contribute to the family’s finances. While other kids were outside playing, I stayed home weaving rattan baskets to help make ends meet. Those solitary hours gave me a keen sensitivity to loneliness and space.
These experiences have made me more attuned to the relationship between individuals and their environment, one’s position within a group, and the tension between societal expectations and self-identity. My identity is both the starting point of my creation and the subject I continually reflect upon and seek to transcend. I hope that through my work, I can not only express myself but also allow viewers to see reflections of their own lives.
Ink in Flow.Flowing Order, 2021, Ink and color on rice paper, 80 x 80 cm, Courtesy of the artist What do you hope people take away from your art when they experience it?
I hope that when audiences engage with my work, they don’t merely “see” it, but also “feel” and “think.” I don’t aim for my pieces to have definitive answers. Instead, I hope they become open spaces that invite viewers to bring in their own experiences, emotions, and ideas. Perhaps they will find a hint of resonance in the work—about memory, loneliness, desire, belonging, or a re-examination of daily life. Or maybe they will be touched by a specific detail, a certain color, or a particular atmosphere, sparking an inner dialogue. My wish is for art to establish a subtle connection between people, allowing us to find moments of stillness, resonance, or inspiration in our fast-paced, high-pressure lives. Even if it’s just a brief pause—to feel, to question, to imagine. I believe that is the essence of art.Text & photo courtesy of Carroll CW Tsang

Website: www.carrollarto.com
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/carrollarto/
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Interview | Hong Kong-based Artist Mariah Solikin
Indonesia born, Singapore raised, Mariah has lived in Hong Kong for 25 years. Covid lockdown has rekindled her passion in painting. She is a self taught artist who uses acrylic and water colour to express her different styles, thoughts and emotions. Her current subject interests include word art, geometric shapes, lines, abstractions, Chinese characters and everyday objects to convey her perspective on connections, culture, humour, family and love.
Her styles are precision, pure colours, geometry, western and eastern influences which capture textures, emotions, patience, depth, effort and time. There is a poetry accompaniment for some of her paintings.
Her works are culmination of her self-discovery journey and her experiences living in 3 different countries. There are elements of contradictions and paradox in her works reflecting her personal feelings and her way of embracing both the complexity and simplicity of life.

Flow, 2023, Acrylic on canvas, 30 x 40 in Can you tell us about your background and how you started your artistic journey?
I am an Indonesian who was raised in Singapore and I have been living in Hong Kong for the past 28 years. My previous profession was in financial services.
It all started during pandemic lockdown when my kids’ screen time skyrocketed. Tired of the nagging, I began to paint: bold, loud colors and words that screamed for attention. An honest display and a chance for them to discover that any non-screen activities could also offer some joy. While I have limited success, I am rewarded with so much more. A personal artistic journey.

Surge, 2024, Acrylic on canvas, 76 x 102 cm How has your artistic style evolved over time?
I mainly paint acrylic on canvas and some water colours on paper. For acrylic, there are two themes: geometric shapes, word art, Chinese characters. These works reflect my experience in financial services and the part of me which craves precision, clarity and predictability. The other is more fluid: lines, movements and abstraction.
I describe my style akin to the double slit experiment in physics. In this experiment, light demonstrates wave particle duality. Why have one if you can have two? I also love colours. I think we humans are so fortunate to be able to perceive such a wide range of colour spectrum. As I gain more experience, I add complexity and different painting techniques to materialize the vision of the paintings I have in mind.

Glide, 2024, Acrylic on canvas, 30 x 40 in What are the main themes or concepts you explore in your work?
It’s essentially about life and existence. How perception of these changes when you view it from different angles. I was looking for answers in philosophy, physics and sacred texts. The paradox of eternal and fleeting; universal and individual, complexity and simplicity. Carpe Diem and Memento Mori exist simultaneously. How to reconcile and embrace these contradictions and irony, to live gracefully and truthfully. Some paintings have an accompanying poem. It’s strange, but words appear and flow at the same time as I paint.

Heart, 2025, Acrylic on canvas, 30 x 40 in How do your personal experiences and identity influence your art?
As we explore life and existence, you can’t escape from pondering about self and identity. Like many others who have lived in multiple countries, personal experiences tend to be richer and questions of identity might arise. While my works are the culmination of my life experiences living these countries, I go further from a physics point of view. There’s a super string theory which presumes that if we zoom into the infinitesimal, all existence is just waves of energy strings. So there isn’t really a question of identity.

Mahjong Series: Faat no. 1234, 2025, Acrylic on canvas, 16 x 20 in (each painting) What do you hope people take away from your art when they experience it?
My works are an invitation for people to dive deeper into themselves and the meaning of life. At the same time, to notice and treasure the lightness of everyday moments where true beauty lies. We all share universal experiences wrapped and delivered in different parcels.
Can you describe a recent project or artwork that you are particularly proud of?
‘Vision’ is one of the most recent works which is the largest at 40 x 40 inches. I was initially intimidated by the canvas size, but we became good friends. I’ve learnt so much more working in a bigger size. The feelings and the energy multiplied. So does the satisfaction. The theme is also one of the central themes about life. The infinite and limited, the endless and momentary existence, the fragments of totality, all combined into one.

Vision, 2025, Acrylic on canvas, 40 x 40 in Text & photo courtesy of Mariah Solikin

Website: www.mariahsolikin.com
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mariahsolikin/
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Interview | Los Angeles and Hong Kong-based Artist Li Shuo Phoebe
Li Shuo Phoebe (b. 2004) is an artist based between Los Angeles and Hong Kong. She is currently pursuing a Bachelor of Arts degree with a minor in Art History at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). Through installations, sculpture, and performance, her practice explores how societal frameworks mold and deform the body, treating it as a double-edged form that is fragile yet resilient. Her works exist between geometric rigidity and organic fluidity, dissolving and reconstructing the body to reveal the tension between structure and vulnerability.

Bae, you are such a good enduring horse, 2025, Resin, metal, cow leather, silicon, motor, 120 x 77 x 40 cm Can you tell us about your background and how you started your artistic journey?
I was born in China and moved to Hong Kong during primary school. Now I am pursuing my Bachelor of Arts with a minor in Art History at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). As part of Gen Z, I have encountered many questions and contradictions: the conflict of beliefs within my family, the shifting political landscapes between communities and nations, and the quiet sense of powerlessness when trying to orient myself in this world. Gradually, I came to see that these tensions could become material, something I could shape, question, and transform through my practice. Over time, my work has expanded into sculpture, installation, and performance, exploring how the body interacts with space and structure, how it bends, resists, and adapts. The journey is still unfolding, but I know with certainty that being an artist will be my lifelong path. It is the truest happiness I have found in this chaotic world.
Are there any particular mediums you prefer working with? Why?
I feel most connected to sculpture. Knowledge, for me, is corporeal and sensorial. They are not just ideas but experiences that live through the body. We use our materialized body to sense this materialized world, through rotating our eyeballs, through breathing with our nose, through touching. The sensations that move through us as we comprehend our world are what I try to translate into the form of my artistic practice. In sculpture, the tangibility of materials allows me to most directly transform my understanding into something physical. I am especially drawn to the interaction between metal and silicon. Their contrast between the rigid and the soft, give me the tension between resilience and fragility, control and surrender. By extracting the essence of my materials and placing it together in an interesting way, I build a bridge called metaphor. On this bridge, my audience can pass through it on their own feet, carrying their own interpretations to reach the other side. As an artist, my role is simply to build that bridge. To make a form solid enough that others can walk across it and feel something real.

See what you do to me, 2025, Metal, silicon, motor, wood, plaster, 175 x 180 x 35 cm What are the main themes or concepts you explore in your work?
My work explores how our bodies are reshaped by the world we inhabit. We use our materialized bodies to sense and move through this materialized society, yet the same structures that sustain us also press back, quietly molding our resilience. It is the resilience we build when facing a toxic workplace with a demanding boss, when enduring long hours in a crowded economy seat, when growing through the so-called adolescence, and beyond. Through sculpture, installation, and performance, I explore how individuals navigate, surrender to, or resist systems of control, envisioning the body as a form in flux, constantly melting, reforming, and hardening under pressure. In the end, I want to ask my audience: whether resilience is an act of adaptation or a quiet form of surrender.

What holds what hurts, 2025, Resin, 83 x 76 x 33 cm Can you describe a recent project or artwork that you are particularly proud of?
“Bae, you are such a good enduring horse.” It’s one of my most recent works I did in September this year. It draws from the Chinese meme “牛马,” or “cow-horse,” which describes people who labor endlessly, working like a dog and quietly sustaining the system that exhausts them. I was thinking about how, through constant impact and pressure, we become more and more resilient in the process of growing up, yet that same resilience is what keeps the machinery of oppression running. In the sculpture, soft silicone form keeps struggling against the sharp metal, pierced and stretched, yet still holding shape.
“It’s painful… but somehow still okay”
I see it as a portrait of our times, showing how we adapt, endure, and even find balance within the very forces that deform us. But I also want to push that idea further, to ask,
“Well…but it truly hurts! Are we supposed to bear it?”

Melting! But still sharp in somewhere, 2024, Resin, 100 x 55 x 50 cm How do you stay inspired and motivated to create new work?
Creation itself keeps me going. It’s the urge to give shape to what my mind insists on seeing. In a world where attention has been privatized by systems, where everything is categorized before it’s even felt, my way of resisting is simply to create. For me, it’s a return to the pure pleasure of working with materials, of sensing texture, weight, and movement coming together.
What do you hope people take away from your art when they experience it?
First, I hope my work can break people out of their usual ways of seeing, shake them from the numbness of the everyday, and make them pause for a moment to think, “Wow… that looks interesting.” Then, another thought follows: “Wait, this feels a bit like how the world treats me.” I want my work to open up a space to rethink what resilience really means, how our bodies endure, bend, and reshape themselves under pressure, yet keep adapting. Maybe in those shifting forms of my sculpture, people can recognize their own quiet strength, the kind of resilience we’re all forced to grow.
Text & photo courtesy of Li Shuo Phoebe

Website: www.phoebeli.net
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/phoebelii_/
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Interview | Hong Kong-based Artist Un Cheng
Un Cheng’s (b. 1995, Hong Kong) paintings invite viewers into intimate encounters with her psychological landscapes and personal reflections on urban life. Drawing inspiration from careful observations of quotidian life, fleeting exchanges with strangers, and quiet internal dialogues with her surroundings, her works function as a visual diary of her unique perspective on the city and its people. Through visceral compositions, Cheng reveals a deep yearning for intimacy and connection within an isolating metropolis.
Cheng graduated from the Academy of Visual Arts of Hong Kong Baptist University in 2017. Her works will be exhibited in “Painting Itself” touring Perth Institute of Contemporary Arts and The Australian National University Drill Hall Gallery in Canberra in 2026. Now, and Then? is Cheng’s first artist monograph, encompassing works from 2017 to 2025.
The Flowing Boat, 2017, Oil on canvas, 200 x 250 cm, Image courtesy of artist and Blindspot Gallery Can you tell us about your background and how you started your artistic journey?
I graduated from the Academy of Visual Arts at Hong Kong Baptist University in 2017. Shortly after my graduation, I collaborated with different galleries through group exhibitions. In 2018, I participated in a one-month long artist residency in Iceland, and in 2020, I took part in Blindspot Gallery’s summer artist residency program, after which I had my inaugural solo exhibition with the gallery. This marked the beginning of my artistic journey, which has become more comprehensive since then.

Boba, 2025, Oil on canvas, 44.5 x 56.5 x 4 cm (framed size), Image courtesy of artist and Blindspot Gallery What are the main themes or concepts you explore in your work?
My paintings invite audiences into an intimate encounter of my psychological landscapes and personal lens on the urban life I experience. The works mirror my observations of quotidian living in Hong Kong, the fleeting conversations I make with strangers, and the internal dialogues I have with my surroundings. The paintings function as a visual diary of my angle on the city and its people, carrying an ephemeral photographic quality. I morph my sentiments into my compositions, unveiling the heartfelt desire for intimacy and connection in an isolating metropolis.

Love Methadone, 2022, Oil on canvas, 18.5 x 31 x 3 cm, Image courtesy of artist and Blindspot Gallery How has your artistic style evolved over time?
My early works (2017-2019) primarily exhibited inner emotional expressions, featuring landscapes as a recurring subject matter. Rendered in candy-colored pastel palettes, these paintings often incorporated textual elements as semi-diaristic notations. At that time, I favored painting large-scale, populated landscapes with motifs—trains, boats, and airplanes—symbolizing the indirect connection between humans and nature. A deliberate absence of human figures reflected a sense of social detachment. In The Flowing Boat (2017), I wrote in its caption that “The ship is my inner world. Sometimes I flee from it but I return to the boat instantly, lingering repeatedly.” During my solo trip in Iceland in 2018, as part of my residency, I captured snow-blanketed, desolate streets and created a self-portrait, capturing a birthday spent alone.
Between 2020 and 2023, I started to focus more on observing external environments. Photography became my daily tool for capturing the streets, which in turn became the compositional foundations for my paintings. These works documented people and happenings in urban communities, changes in the environment, and interactions and dialogues I have with neighborhood personalities. During that period, I used brighter, more vibrant tones to depict complex sentiments, often incorporating striking contrasts with fluorescent hues. I would wield various tools and methods, such as scraping, brushing, grinding, and splashing, and incorporate mineral pigments and stickers, using implements beyond the mere paintbrush.
My paintings oscillate between abstraction and realism, depicting what I observe around me. My works completed in 2020 capture Hong Kong’s daily life amid social movements. In 2021, my works evolved into focusing on stories in Sham Shui Po’s neighborhoods during the pandemic. By the post-pandemic year of 2023, amidst economic uncertainty, I portrayed objects discarded in corners, taking them as metaphors for society’s transformations under invisible pressures.
My recent works have moved from observing external shifts towards encapsulating personal life experiences and reflections. They carry a consistency in color and tones. This inward turn in my works is accompanied by a more refined and mature approach to brushwork, composition, and themes that comes with experience as a painter. Moving away from vibrant colors, I now primarily use monochromatic tones to create a visceral and psychological ambience.

Drunk Dawn, Keys Gone, 2025, Oil on canvas, 44.5 x 56.5 x 4 cm (framed size), Image courtesy of artist and Blindspot Gallery Can you describe a recent project or artwork that you are particularly proud of?
I’m presenting my solo exhibition in Blindspot Gallery from 2 December 2025 to 31 January 2026. After nearly a decade of painting, I still hesitate to call myself a mature painter—yet these ten years of “back and forth” between materials, methods, and styles have led me to where I am. The works in this exhibition are sincere and intimate. I no longer shroud raw emotions in candy-colored hues. Instead, the works are more like a form of self-dialogue. A series of new small works in the exhibition brim with stories: they function as visual diaries that explore intimacy and separation. Drunk Dawn, Keys Gone (2025) and What did I puke? No Clue (2025) depict states of emotional incontinence, while Boba (2025) and Turned Out Like Skittles (2025) hint at relationships that are beyond repair. Large and medium-sized paintings in the exhibition portray landscapes, while other works feature indoor and outdoor still lifes, serving as a transition. Together, I believe this body of work represents a balanced and significant progression in the evolution of my artistic practice.

NO BARGAIN $10!, 2023, Oil on canvas, 52 x 42 x 3 cm, Image courtesy of artist and Blindspot Gallery What do you hope people take away from your art when they experience it?
As a painter, I always paint from my personal perspective, brimmed with emotions and thoughts. Sometimes I cannot clearly articulate what I want to convey. For me, painting is a way to document life as it unfolds. But once a piece is completed, it will create its own space for others to think and to imagine. Everyone brings their own understanding and feelings into seeing a work, shaped by their own experiences. If they find a resonance there—that would be good enough for me.
Text & photo courtesy of Un Cheng and Blindspot Gallery

Image courtesy of artist and Blindspot Gallery Website: https://www.ununcheng.com/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ah_uncheng/
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Interview | Hong Kong-based Artist Mizuki Nishiyama
Mizuki Nishiyama is a mixed-Japanese artist based in Hong Kong whose practice bridges Eastern and Western traditions to explore identity, ancestry, and the fragile human condition through the lens of the female experience. Drawing from her Japanese, Hong Kong, and Italian heritage, she creates a hybrid visual language that transcends cultural boundaries while remaining grounded in material and philosophical depth.
Her work integrates East Asian materials and aesthetics—sumi ink, ancestral soil, burning, cutting, and sewing with contemporary Western techniques, engaging concepts such as wabi-sabi (the beauty of imperfection), ura (the hidden or shadowed), and yūgen (mysterious, profound beauty). These methods form a dialogue between body, environment, and memory, where natural elements act as both material and metaphor. Ancestral soil, excavated from her family’s land in Japan and tied to histories of purification and ritual, is a recurring presence in her paintings and tapestries.
In painting, Nishiyama incorporates this soil into pigments and cuts through viscous oils with knives, balancing violence and tranquility. In textile works, she buries and revives fabrics through fire, soil, teas, and traditional distressing techniques such as Sashiko and Boro, enacting cycles of life, death, and rebirth. Her ongoing series, Bodies in Landscape, expands on Zen ink traditions and Daoist philosophies of interdependence, situating the female body within nature as a site of trauma, resilience, and transformation. Through this synthesis of material, philosophy, and cultural memory, Nishiyama’s work invites viewers into a poetic contemplation of impermanence, hybridity, and the enduring spirit of the human body in landscape.
Currently a PhD student at the Institute for Doctoral Studies in the Visual Arts (IDSVA), Nishiyama also holds an MFA from Central Saint Martins and a BFA from Parsons School of Design. Her solo exhibitions include Shunga (Whitestone Gallery, Hong Kong, 2020), An Exploration of Human Fragility: Love & Lust (Tenri Cultural Institute, New York, 2020), and 脆い Moroi: An Exploration of Human Fragility (Greenpoint Gallery, New York, 2019).

Ink Garden, 2025, Oil and Japanese ink on canvas, 172 x 219 cm Can you tell us about your background and how you started your artistic journey?
My name is Mizuki Nishiyama. I am half Japanese and half Chinese, and I grew up in Hong Kong. My parents spent a period of their lives in Italy, so Hong Kong, Japan, and Italy each carry a sense of home for me in different ways. Later on, I lived in New York, London, and Milan before returning to Hong Kong, where I am now based. I come from a family of artists, including painters, musicians, and traditional Japanese dancers. Creativity was always part of daily life, and I was encouraged from an early age to explore whatever forms of expression felt true to me. Over time, painting became the language through which I could articulate the emotions and questions I didn’t yet have words for.
Women in Noh, 2024, 1842 Noh play books, oil and soil on canvas collage, 91 x 123 cm How do you stay inspired and motivated to create new work?
I am currently exploring East Asian philosophies and aesthetics, weaving them into the figurative and abstract language I have developed over the years. There is still so much I do not know about Chinese and Japanese ways of thinking about life, beauty, and time, and that sense of curiosity keeps me moving. I often look into the past because I am deeply interested in memory, ancestry, and the continuity of time, but I am equally invested in imagining what these ideas could mean for the future, especially through a feminine perspective.I stay motivated through a very instinctive and primal urge to create. Even when a painting is finished, it might not feel finished to me internally. I may keep thinking about its narrative, its structure, its technical decisions. The work continues to live in my mind long after I stop adding to it physically. That constant dialogue keeps me inspired.

Crimson on Blue, 2025, Oil on canvas, 91 x 153 cm Who or what are your biggest influences, both artistically and personally?
My mother and my grandmother have been my greatest influences. They are both painters but work in completely different styles. My grandmother was a traditional Nihonga painter whose delicate still lifes and natural imagery taught me the beauty of subtlety and patience. My mother, who trained in Italy, paints landscapes that merge Chinese and Italian styles.
Being raised around such different artistic sensibilities taught me to stay fluid in my own way of working. In hindsight, I can see how aspects of both their styles at times surface in my paintings.
Moonlit Remedies, 2025, Charcoal, Japanese ink, gold foil, oil on canvas, 156 x 178 cm Are there any particular mediums you prefer working with? Why?
I am primarily an oil painter. I love the viscosity and depth of the material and the way oil paint holds light and color. It has a sensual and tactile quality that feels alive to me. Oil allows for both delicacy and intensity. I can build, scrape, soften, or rupture the surface. I work often with palette knives, using them to slice through layers or expose what lies beneath. Technically, this creates a rawness I am drawn to. Philosophically, it echoes my interest in memory, fragmentation, and how the body carries trauma. The surface becomes a place where rupture and repair coexist.
Poppies, 2025, Oil on canvas, 73 x 93 cm What challenges have you faced as an artist, and how have you overcome them?
I have experienced artist’s block many times. When that happens, I usually need to remove myself from the situation, the studio, or even the idea I am trying to force. There have been projects I abandoned midway or rejected completely because they no longer felt right. I am often in conflict with myself, which can feel difficult, but it is also part of why I became an artist. The work demands a kind of personal growth that can only happen through confronting that tension.
Yin Body, 2025, Chinese ink on Xuan paper, 59.5 x 82 cm What do you hope people take away from your art when they experience it?
My work explores the human experience, and while that is always subjective, I believe there is a shared emotional terrain we all encounter. Intensity, longing, grief, tenderness. I can in no way provide solutions or opinions. I only hope to influence a state of mind where viewers can seek their own reflections.Earlier in my practice, my work was very direct, with visceral bodies and deep reds and blacks that confronted the viewer immediately. Recently, I have been drawn to a more subtle approach. I am integrating ink with oil paint and exploring themes of transience, impermanence, and ideas like Wu Wei, or effortless action. This creates a different kind of tension, one that allows viewers to enter the work quietly and gradually. Ultimately, I hope people leave with the feeling that the painting met them somewhere honest and intimate.
Text & photo courtesy of Mizuki Nishiyama

Website: https://www.mizukinishiyama.com/
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