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Interview | London-Based Artist Jingshan Ding
Jingshan Ding (b. 2000) lives and works in London. She received her Bsc in Biology from Imperial College London and MA in Fine Art from University of the Arts London.
Her practice focus on traces formed from interactions between natural life and built environments. Working through continuous cycles of accumulation, disruption, and renewal, she reconsiders how painting can physically embody the dynamics of coexistence and confer subtle traces weight and eternity, inviting viewers into a world of heightened perception of overlooked presences and underlying relations.
She was shortlisted for Winsor & Newton x Paul Smith’s Foundation Art Prize 2025 and National Portrait Gallery Herbert Smith Freehills Award 2025, and selected for Grand Union Gallery Residency 2025 in Birmingham and Fitzrovia Quarter Studio Residency 2026 in London. She has exhibited in Apsara Studio (Burgundy), Purist Gallery (London), Royal Watercolour Society (London), Koppel Collective (London), SUHE HAUS (Shanghai), 13B Gallery (Seoul), BayArt (Cardiff).

Dermis 33, 2025, Acrylic on linen, 74 x 60 cm Can you tell us about your background and how you started your artistic journey?
I received my Bsc in Biology from Imperial College London and my MA in Fine Art from University of the Arts London.
Growing up in an environment where art was not considered a serious career, I had to actively find my own space for drawing and painting alongside academic expectations.
This changed during my undergraduate years in London. Being surrounded by rich artistic resources and a more open atmosphere around individual growth, I decided to develop my practice with fulltime focus and professional standards.
Although I did not have a conventional academic training in art, through years of self-directed study and copying hundreds of works by artists including Albrecht Dürer, Michelangelo, Hans Holbein the Younger, Ingres, Edgar Degas, Georges Seurat, Vincent van Gogh, Wayne Thiebaud, and David Hockney, I build myself very solid technical capacities and very strong artistic sensitivities.

Salt, 2026, Oil and acrylic on linen, 26 x 36 cm Your work seems to explore life, transformation, and process. How did these themes become important in your practice?
My interdisciplinary experience in biology and art gives me a sharpened sensitivity to the processes of life, especially how natural life and built environment interact and co-exist with each other. I focus on traces such as animal footprints and plant cracks, approaching them as condensed records of the encounter between organisms and surroundings.
In my practice, I see painting as a living process in which I re-imagine and re-enact the formation of traces. Through continuous cycles of accumulating, disrupting, and reactivating paint, meticulous textures recalling scars, wrinkles, and weathered stones gradually emerge.
Thus, painting operates as a site where processes of interaction and coexistence unfold materially, not optically. And the works become a solid material presence that confers subtle traces weight, intimacy, and eternity. My practice reconsiders how painting can embody and revitalize the continuous negotiations between living forces and external conditions.

Run!!, 2026, Oil and acrylic on linen, 41 x 88 cm What’s the most rewarding aspect of being creative in your experience?
I have always experienced images very intensely; I feel they already exist in my mind before I bring them into physical paintings. What drives me to paint is the strong desire to see these images in real life, and to discover what my paint, my painting process, and myself can create together.
I am deeply curious about what kind of presence a painting will eventually become — not as the execution of a preconceived image, but as a living individual that grows and transforms vividly in the process.
When I feel that my work is gradually moving closer to the image I want to see, and when the painting finally becomes an independent presence, I feel a deep sense of satisfaction and excitement.

Run!!!!, 2026, Oil and acrylic on linen, 80 x 170 cm How do you stay inspired and motivated to create new work?
I have never struggled with a lack of inspiration. Many small things in everyday life can hold my attention: a tiny crack, a line of footprints, or a pool of water.
For me, the challenge is not finding motivation, but having enough time to fully develop all the ideas I want to paint.

Run!!!!!!!!, 2025, Acrylic on linen, 41 x 88 cm Has your practice changed over time? If so, what has shifted the most?
I am currently shifting from the Shed series which was the focus of last year towards the Run series. These two series are actually different perspectives of the same inquiry – the traces formed when natural life and built environments interact.
The Shed series focuses more on growth, rupture, and regeneration, exploring how living forces sustain the existence of organisms within environment. The Run series centres more on movement, contact, and negotiations, investigating how living beings persist their presence and interactions in their surroundings.

Shed 0, 2025, Acrylic on linen, 58 x 48 cm How do you hope viewers respond to or spend time with your paintings?
My paintings are not designed to be recognised or understood immediately through direct depiction or narrative. I want to invite viewers into a world of heightened perception of overlooked presences, underlying relations, and layered temporalities.
Text and photo courtesy of Jingshan Ding

Website: https://jingshandingco.com
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/shanshanshan_333_333/
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Interview | Beijing and London-based Artist Luka Yuanyuan Yang
Luka Yuanyuan Yang (b. 1989, Beijing) is a visual artist and filmmaker based in Beijing and London, working across documentary film, video art, photography and performance. Through weaving documentary and archival materials, she explores themes of identity, migration, and memory, challenging conventional historical narratives and amplifying overlooked voices.
She has held solo exhibitions at High Line Art, New York (2025); Flowers Gallery, Hong Kong (2024); ARTiX3, Tokyo (2023); OCAT Shanghai (2020); and AIKE Gallery, Shanghai (2019). Her work has been exhibited at major institutions including New Taipei City Art Museum, Taiwan; Centre for Heritage Arts & Textile, Hong Kong; Rockbund Art Museum, Shanghai; Power Station of Art, Shanghai; Times Art Center Berlin, Germany; Espacio de Arte Contemporáneo, Montevideo, Uruguay; and Three Shadows Photography Art Centre, Beijing. She was an artist-in-residence at Art in General in New York, supported by the Asian Cultural Council, and at Museum Forward in Indonesia, supported by British Council Indonesia.
Her debut feature documentary Chinatown Cha-Cha was selected for the Hidden Dragon section at Pingyao International Film Festival, the Main Competition at Hawaii International Film Festival, Cleveland International Film Festival, and CAAMFest, among others. The film had a nationwide theatrical release in China in 2024 (Douban rating 8.4/10). Her short films have been featured in The New Yorker and screened at New Orleans Film Festival, Atlanta Film Festival, Camden International Film Festival, and Asian American International Film Festival.
Yang is a recipient of the BAZAAR Art Awards – Cross-Cultural Creator of the Year (2024), the BVLGARI Avrora Award (2023), and the ART POWER 100 Award (2019). She has received support from the CHANEL Culture Fund and has collaborated commercially with brands including BVLGARI, Arc’teryx, and 1436. Her works are in the collections of Power Station of Art, Kadist Art Foundation, and FENIX Museum of Migration.

Chinatown Cha-Cha-1, 2024, Feature documentary, 85 mins Can you tell us about your background and how you started your artistic journey?
I grew up in Beijing in the late ’80s and ’90s. When I was fourteen, I fell in love with music, film, and literature, and didn’t want to be a traditional “good student” anymore. Rock music was not mainstream in China back then — I’d find expired copies of rock magazines in supermarkets and spend hours on BBS forums discovering new bands, watching Japanese cult manga and art-house films. One thing would lead to another: a name on an album sleeve would send me down a rabbit hole into philosophy or cinema. That’s how I learned — not linearly, but by following my curiosity wherever it pulled me.
In high school, I found some college students on Douban and we started a band called “Dissolving Tomorrow.” We played at legendary Beijing venues around that time — D22, Old What, Yugong Yishan. It was the golden era of Beijing’s underground music scene, right around the Olympics. Rock music taught me what art could be: not a lifestyle choice, but a worldview, a stance. We weren’t performing for recognition. It was about expressing how we saw the world.
Around the same time, my father — an avid photography enthusiast — gave me my first camera. The moment I held it, something clicked. It was as if the camera allowed me to see the world more carefully, and to find echoes of my inner world in reality. I decided to go to art school and left for London to study photography. The UK education system was formative — it taught me independence and gave me the freedom to develop my own creative language. I’m still digesting things I absorbed during those teenage years. The writers I loved then, I still love now.
I don’t really believe in “talent” in the conventional sense. I believe in seeing — in developing a deep awareness of the world. Only through that kind of understanding can you make work that truly resonates with people.

Chinatown Cha-Cha-4, 2024, Feature documentary, 85 mins How do you approach working with archival materials as a way of rethinking or reshaping historical narratives?
My approach has always been driven by a fundamental question: Why have we become the way we are? — as human beings, as communities. I try to look for answers in histories, particularly in the stories of migration, displacement, and the formation of cities. The world today feels increasingly fractured — islands drifting apart. I believe we need to look for the forgotten connections between cultures and nations, the bonds buried in the cracks. I always believe we need to look at our existence on a longer timeline, from a more holistic perspective.
I’ve never trusted grand, singular narratives. In school, I often felt that the history we were taught was only one version. I believe all history is ultimately composed of individual lives — and the ones that interest me most are the lives that have been overlooked or silenced.
When I work with archives, I don’t approach them like a scholar. My process is more intuitive, almost like an explorer entering a cave and following whatever glimmers of light I find. For At the Place of Crossed Sights, a project I made in Porto Alegre, Brazil in 2015–2016, I wandered the city as a photographer, asking myself what kinds of photographers might have passed through this place across different eras. I ended up creating five fictional immigrant photographers and a novelist — all alter egos of mine — and wove their stories together using real historical threads and fabricated narratives. The result was a hybrid of photography and fiction that questioned the boundaries between document and imagination.
With Dalian Mirage, I was drawn into a century of hidden history through a Japanese anti-war writer who had grown up in colonial Dalian and could never call it home again after the war. I found a fan translation of his memoir online, and the translator and I became friends — both of us explorers in the same dark cave, discovering beautiful things independently and then finding each other. That project became a kind of “spatial montage,” where characters from different eras move through the same city spaces, and the question “Where is home?” echoes across a hundred years.
With feature film Chinatown Cha-Cha and its companion book Dance in Herland, the archival dimension became even more central — and more personal. The project began in 2018 when I was on a fellowship with the Asian Cultural Council in New York. I was researching Chinese women in twentieth-century overseas entertainment — starting with Anna May Wong, one of the rare Chinese faces in early Hollywood, and then Esther Eng, an even rarer figure: a Chinese American woman director who made eleven films, nine of which are now lost. Fascinated by Esther Eng, I followed in her footsteps, visiting Cantonese opera stages, film sets, and nightclubs across Chinatown, trying to reconstruct pieces of her vanished world.
It was through that archival trail that I encountered the living women who would become the heart of the film — Coby Yee, Cynthia Yee, and the dancers of the Grant Avenue Follies. I found them not in an archive but on Facebook, and then in person on a stage in Las Vegas. What struck me was that these women were not relics of history — they were still dancing, still performing, still fully alive. The archive led me to the present, and the present breathed life back into the archive.
Dance in Herland, the book, allowed me to hold all the layers that a ninety-minute film couldn’t contain. It includes oral histories from the dancers, historical photographs and documents from the golden age of Chinatown nightclubs, Coby’s and Cynthia’s more complete life stories, reflections on Orientalism and the gaze placed on Asian women performers, and my own writing about the six-year journey of making the film. There are also stories from figures like Esther Eng whose traces first drew me into this world. For me, the book is where the research lives and breathes — all the peripheral narratives, the archival discoveries, the conversations that didn’t make it into the final cut but are essential to the full picture.
For me, archives are not dead materials. They are seeds. When you bring them into dialogue with the present — with living people, with contemporary spaces — they bloom into something new. The archival and the personal, the historical and the fictional, are always in conversation in my work. I think that’s what allows these forgotten stories to breathe again.

Chinatown Cha-Cha-2, 2024, Feature documentary, 85 mins Working across film, video art, and photography, how do you think about the differences in how each medium carries narrative and emotion?
The impulse to create has been constant since I was fourteen — first through drawing, then photography, then books, installations, and eventually film. The forms change, but the core stays the same: I’m always telling stories, always trying to understand people and the worlds they inhabit.
Photography, for me, is about a very pure kind of attention. I still miss the feeling of walking through a city with a camera, like a hunter — not looking for anything specific, just looking, and being ready to capture what reveals itself. It’s a solitary, almost meditative practice. A single photograph can hold enormous narrative tension, like a frozen moment full of possible interpretations.
Books are another love. I make an artist’s book for almost every project. A book allows you to gather what doesn’t fit into the final artwork — research, interviews, peripheral stories — and give it a home. It’s also a way of preserving memory in its most intimate, tactile form. I even made two photobooks for my daughter’s first and third year as her birthday gifts,
Chinatown Cha-Cha is my first feature film. Film was the medium I always loved but never tried before. Unlike video installations, which can be experienced in fragments, cinema demands that an audience sit in a dark room and travel with you from beginning to end. That’s incredibly powerful and terrifying. When I started filming Chinatown Cha-Cha, I had no formal training. But the moment I reviewed the first day’s footage in Havana — we had brought over a dozen elderly Chinese American women to Cuba to perform with Cantonese opera singers in Havana’s Chinatown — I knew: this is a film, and I can do this. What I’ve learned is that each medium finds its own stories. Some stories demand the sustained intimacy of cinema; others need the stillness of a photograph or the layered structure of a book. I try to stay open and let the story tell me what form it needs.

Chinatown Cha-Cha-11, 2024, Feature documentary, 85 mins Who or what are your biggest influences, both artistically and personally?
Musically, my teenage years were shaped by everything from Fishmans to Boris and Bob Dylan. I chose the name “Luka” at fourteen after hearing Suzanne Vega’s song — partly because it’s a name that could be male or female, Eastern or Western. That ambiguity felt right. It still does.
In cinema, I’m deeply moved by filmmakers who blur the line between documentary and fiction, between the personal and the epic. Jim Jarmusch’s Night on Earth, Todd Haynes’ Velvet Goldmine, Agnès Varda’s The Gleaners and I, Wayne Wang’s Smoke, Kore-eda’s After Life, Kon Satoshi’s Millennium Actress— these are films I return to again and again. Varda showed me that a film could be at once rigorous and playful, deeply researched and deeply personal. Kon Satoshi blew my mind with how he collapses time. In photography, Jeff Wall’s theatrical staging of everyday moments influenced how I think about constructing images.
But the most profound influence in recent years has been the women I filmed — especially Coby Yee. Watching a 92-year-old woman live with such fearless vitality — still sewing her own costumes, still dancing, still loving — changed something in me permanently. When I was going through cancer treatment in 2023, I kept thinking of her: If Coby can live like that at 92, I can get through this. She taught me that persisting in what you love, even as everything around you fades, is in itself a form of resistance against the passage of life.
And then there’s my daughter. Becoming a mother shifted my entire perspective. Children live completely in the present — no phones, no social obligations, just pure immersion. That state of being reminded me of Coby in her later years, and it made me realize: Isn’t this the most essential way to be alive?

Chinatown Cha-Cha-18, 2024, Feature documentary, 85 mins What challenges have you faced as an artist, and how have you overcome them?
There have been many. Chinatown Cha-Cha took six years to complete — from the first research trip in 2018 to its theatrical release in China in November 2024. During that time, my father passed away in early 2019 — I had to put the film down for months because I simply couldn’t function. Then COVID hit and I couldn’t return to the US to continue filming. Then in 2020, Coby passed away suddenly — she had been dancing just a week before. A week after that, I discovered I was pregnant. Life and death, intertwined.
In 2023, I was diagnosed with lymphoma. Six rounds of chemotherapy, a tube running from my arm to my heart for half a year. Reading was painful, looking at a screen was painful. But I finished the film’s color grading before my first chemo session, and every time I was discharged, I’d immediately settle everyone’s wages. My producer kept worrying about me, but I couldn’t stay idle — I was probably the busiest patient in the ward.
What got me through was something I learned from Coby and the dancers: they were fighting against the disappearance of life itself. At their age, you’re constantly losing — physical strength, mobility, the perfection of your performance. But they kept showing up, kept dancing. That persistence is extraordinary.
After chemo, I flew to Japan within a month. People thought I was crazy. I said: A hymn to life! I can finally go outside! I don’t care if I have no hair — I’m free.
I’ve also faced the more structural challenge of being a non-film-school-trained artist entering the world of cinema, and of making a niche documentary viable for theatrical release in China. We almost gave up on getting the dragon seal — the theatrical distribution license — and considered just showing it at international festivals. But the overwhelming response to our trailer in China convinced us to push forward. A story about life force and intergenerational connection among overseas Chinese — why shouldn’t it be seen? The film went on to score 8.4 on Douban, was nominated by the China Film Directors’ Guild for its annual honors, and won Best New Documentary at the 14th China Documentary Academy Awards. When the Grant Avenue Follies dancers came to China for the screenings, audiences cheered for them every single time. Even at screenings where the dancers weren’t present, groups of women would get up and dance in the aisles afterward, sharing their own stories. Those moments confirmed that the film had become something larger than itself — a bridge, which is what I always hoped good work could be.

Chinatown Cha-Cha-19, 2024, Feature documentary, 85 mins What projects are you currently working on, and what can we expect from you in the future?
I just published my book Dance in Herland (《她乡舞曲》), a companion publication to Chinatown Cha-Cha. It contains oral histories, archival photographs and documents from the golden age of Chinatown nightclubs, more complete life stories of Coby, Cynthia, and the other dancers, as well as reflections on Orientalism and the Chinese diaspora. The book also traces the research journey that led me to these women — from Anna May Wong to Esther Eng to the living dancers of the Grant Avenue Follies. For me, every project deserves a book. It’s where the research, the outtakes, and the stories that didn’t make it into the final work can find their place.
I also recently directed a documentary for ARC’TERYX’s Tune in Out There series, called She Goes With the Flow (《她 顺流而上》), which follows two female athletes — a high-altitude mountain guide training under the most rigorous international certification program, and a sixteen-year-old rock climber — exploring the concept of “flow state” in outdoor sports. It was my first time working on a sports-related film, and it opened up an entirely new world for me. Filming in the ice caves of Chamonix was one of the most beautiful natural experiences of my life — a place my usual creative path would never have taken me to. As someone without an outdoor sports background, I hope this film can serve as a bridge for audiences who aren’t outdoor enthusiasts, opening a door toward nature.
I’m currently working on a new project related to the Indonesian Chinese diaspora. After several years focused primarily on filmmaking, this project marks a return to the art world — I’m developing multi-channel video and textile works that continue my long-standing exploration of migration, memory, and identity, but through new materials and forms.
Beyond all of this, the most important thing in my life right now, alongside creation, is being a mother. My daughter has taught me more than I could have imagined. Through her open, curious gaze at the world, I feel like I’m growing up again alongside her. Many parents feel they’ve given their child the gift of life; I feel the opposite — being her mother is something I should be grateful for.
I hope to keep standing on a longer timeline, telling stories about people that transcend national borders and fixed frameworks. I want to carry a certain worldview — one that is fluid, inclusive, and boundary-crossing — into everything I make.
Text and photo courtesy of Luka Yuanyuan Yang

Website: https://www.lukayangworks.com
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lukayang/
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Interview | London-Based Artist Freya Fang Wang
Freya Fang Wang (b.Beijing) is a London-based Chinese artist. She holds an MA in Painting from the Royal College of Art, London (2023), and a BA in Mural Painting from the Central Academy of Fine Arts, Beijing (2010).
Wang was a finalist for the Luxembourg Art Prize (2024), a runner-up in the STUDIO WEST NOW Introducing Open Call (2023), and was longlisted for the VAOEmerging Artist Prize (2023). She pariticipated the residency with the Good Eye Project in London (2024), and in A Brief History of Women in Art, an International Women’s Day event hosted by Pillsbury and Artfeed in London (2025).
Her forthcoming projects include: : Night Cafe gallery, London(2026); The Roamer Project , La Colección Aldebarán, Spain (2025). Wang’s paintings are held in both private and public collections across the UK, Spain, Mainland China, and Taiwan.
Her work has been featured in group exhibitions by galleries and curatorial projects including: Good Eye Project 2026, Saatchi Gallery, London(2026); Terra 2025 Focus – Freya Fang Wang, Apsara Studio, London, (2025); Terra 2025, Apsara Studio, France(2025); LBF Contemporary, London (2025) ; Thom Oosterhof Project, Taiwan(2025); Tiderip Gallery, London (2025); STUDIO WEST, London (2024); Chilli Art Projects, London (2024); STUDIO WEST, London (2023); Silian Gallery, London (2023); The Crypt Gallery, London (2023); Mandy Zhang Art, London(2023); The Art Pavilion, London, (2022) and Soho Revue, London (2022).

Whispering Summer, 2024, Acrylic, acrylic marker, oil pastel, oil stick on canvas, 120 x 100 cm (H x W) Can you tell us about your background and how you started your artistic journey?
I was born and raised in an art-oriented academic family in China. My father is apainter and my mother is a doctor. Growing up in this environment felt, in hindsight, like being placed in fertile soil—it quietly shaped how I began to perceive the world from a very early age. Before I could consciously understand it, I was already immersed in art and culture, and this naturally guided me toward the path I am on today. Everything unfolded quite organically, almost through osmosis.
I completed my BA at the Central Academy of Fine Arts in China. After graduation, I did not immediately define myself as an artist, but instead moved through several years working within cultural and design-related fields. During this period, I found myself increasingly drawn to more fundamental questions around perception, consciousness, and human experience.
Alongside this, I began to read widely — from Jung and integrative psychology to Chinese traditions such as Zen Buddhism and Taoist philosophy. Rather than forming a linear progression, this became an ongoing process of inner exploration and reflection. Gradually, I also developed a deeper sensitivity toward existential questions around life and nature, which opened up an inner necessity for self-inquiry.
Over time, I came to realise that painting was the most natural way for me to continuethis path. It offered a language that could hold both thought and sensation, as well as the subtle movements of inner experience. It was not a decision in a conventional sense, but a recognition.
From that moment on, I understood painting not simply as a practice, but as a way of being—a lifelong commitment and a continuous space for exploring the relationship between self and world.

Pan, 2024, Acrylic, acrylic marker, oil pastel, oil stick on canvas, 167.6 x 152.4 cm, 66 x 60 in (H x W) Your work often reflects on the connection between humans, nature, and other living beings. How do these ideas shape your approach to painting?
These ideas sit at the core of how I understand painting itself, not only what I depict. I sense human beings as inseparable from the wider field of nature, and from the invisible forces that move through all things.
My thinking is deeply shaped by Chinese philosophical traditions, especially Taoist thought, where life is understood as a continuous unfolding of energy—where all forms exist in relation, as part of a larger, living wholeness. Everything is already in motion, already co-existing within the same flow.
From this perspective, painting is not a way of representing the world, but a wayof entering it. My work grows out of a desire to remain close to this sense of interconnectedness, and to soften the boundary between perception, presence, and the wider field of life.
When I paint, the canvas is experienced as a living field rather than a surface of depiction. It becomes a space where relationships can briefly surface, breathe, and be sensed.
Gesture, rhythm, and layering become a way of listening to this field. The image is not constructed, but gradually revealed—like a resonance already present beneath the surface.
In this sense, painting is not about describing connection. It is about entering it—moving within the same flow in which all things are already quietly held.

Blaze Euphoric, 2025, Acrylic, acrylic marker, oil pastel, oil stick, pencil on canvas, 100 x 85 cm (H x W) What is your creative process like? Do you follow a routine or work spontaneously?
I describe my approach as a form of meditative painting. My process is guided by intuition and the subconscious. I do not begin with a pre-planned image; instead, I allow the painting itself to lead.
When I begin, I enter a state of focused attention and trust, allowing the work to unfold without forcing direction. Working primarily with acrylic and oil pastel, I build layers that gradually form an energetic field across the canvas.
Each gesture responds to what is already present. The painting develops through this ongoing exchange — movement, layering, and adjustment —rather than a fixed composition or predetermined outcome.
The process unfolds over time. Each return to the canvas involves re-enteringits rhythm, sensing its structure, tension, and internal relationships, and continuing from within that field.
At certain moments, the boundary between myself and the work becomes less distinct. The painting is no longer separate, but formed within the same unfolding process.
As the work approaches completion, I listen closely. The end is not imposed, but recognised—when the elements settle into coherence and the painting begins to hold itself.

Odyssey, 2025, Acrylic, acrylic marker, oil pastel, oil stick on canvas, 160 x 300 cm Diptych (H x W) Who or what are your biggest influences, both artistically and personally?
Informed by Chinese philosophical thought, to which I am deeply connected through its long continuum of ancient wisdom, my work is grounded in the culture I come from. From this ground, my practice initially emerges, and continues to shape howI understand perception, presence, and the continuous relationship between self and the world.
Within a contemporary art context, I find strong resonance in artists such as Helen Frankenthaler and Mark Rothko. Frankenthaler ’ s intuitive and open approach to painting—particularly her emphasis on gesture, flow, and material responsiveness—closely aligns with my own working process. Rothko’s large-scale color fields and the powerful sense of atmosphere they generate have remained a lasting source of fascination.
In my early years, reading Italo Calvino shaped how I began to perceive the world from within, rather than seeking answers externally. Alongside this, the teachings of Jiddu Krishnamurti opened an important space of reflection, while Carl Jung’s work introduced a pathway into psychology and the unconscious, initiating a deeper process of self-inquiry. These experiences gradually formed an inner orientation toward perception, consciousness, and the relationship between inner and outer worlds.
Painting has become inseparable from this process. Over time, I have come to understand it as a kind of channel—both a way of speaking inwardly and a way of engaging with the world. It is not only an artistic practice, but also a continuous method of inner investigation.

Wonderland, 2024, Acrylic, acrylic marker, oil pastel, oil stick on canvas, 160 x 150 cm (H x W) What do you hope people take away from your art when they experience it?
I hope viewers can enter a different kind of attentiveness when they encounter my work—something slower, more open, and receptive.
My paintings are not intended to deliver a fixed message, but to create an open field or atmosphere that people can inhabit in their own way. This field can hold whatever may arise, allowing each viewer’s experience to unfold differently. Within it, I hope they might sense a connection — between themselves, the natural world, and something larger and more fluid that is difficult to name.
Perhaps there is a moment of pause, where perception becomes more porous and awareness quietly expands. Some may find themselves staying longer than expected, gradually entering the painting without fully knowing why—an experience of quiet immersion in something alive and expansive.
From there, I hope the work opens toward a deeper awareness of interconnectedness, where the boundaries between the self and the surrounding world become more fluid. In that moment, there can be a subtle sense of flow, oneness, and shared presence, while each viewer remains free to form their own interpretation.

The Noiseless Myriads, 2023, Acrylic, acrylic marker, oil pastel, plaster, salt, pigment on canvas, 165 x 145 cm (H x W) What challenges have you faced as an artist, and how have you overcome them?
One of the ongoing dimensions of my practice is the presence of uncertainty, which is inseparable from an intuitive way of working that unfolds over time. Each painting develops gradually over weeks, without a fixed outcome at the beginning, requiring me to remain within a shifting and responsive field.
Over time, this has evolved into a continuous organic negotiation between control and surrender. It has become a condition I work with — a deeper mode of awareness, where the impulse to control is recognised, held, and gradually transformed within the process itself.
In this sense, my practice has formed a self-sustaining organic cycle. Through repeated engagement, release, and return, the work develops its own internal continuity. What once appeared unstable has become a structure of ongoing transformation, where uncertainty is not an obstacle, but part of its generative logic.
Each work evolves through repeated returns over time, where I re-enter its state and continue from where it previously left off. This rhythm allows the painting to accumulate and unfold within its own logic, rather than following a linear trajectory.
My practice is therefore less about overcoming internal tension, and more about a sustained, naturally emerging state of awareness — where control, surrender, and perception coexist and continuously transform each other. Through this process, painting and self-exploration remain deeply intertwined, entering a deeper dimension, no longer separate but part of the same evolving system.
Text and photo courtesy of Freya Fang Wang

Website: https://freyafangwang.com
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/freyafangwang
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Interview | London-Based Artist Ziyao Lin
Ziyao Lin (b. 1999) is an artist and researcher working across installation, moving image, and AI-based artistic practice. Her work explores how technological systems can both alleviate and intensify the scarcities of contemporary life. Combining autoethnography with media experimentation, she is interested in what is missing, neglected, or emotionally impoverished in a world shaped by acceleration and technological abundance. Her work does not offer solutions, but asks: in a world rich in technology, what becomes scarce?

Archive, 2023, Installation Can you tell us about your background and how you started your artistic journey?
I am an artist and researcher whose practice spans installation art, moving image, and AI-based artistic practice. My work moves between artistic creation and critical inquiry. I see art as a way of thinking through the contradictions of lived experience: visibility and erasure, technological abundance and scarcity, narrative and silence, among others.
I studied Digital Media Art at the Central Academy of Fine Arts in China for my undergraduate degree, and later completed a master’s degree in Digital Media at Goldsmiths, University of London in the UK. I am currently a PhD candidate working in the field of art and technology.

Archive, 2023, Installation Who or what are your biggest influences, both artistically and personally?
I think different artists and scholars have influenced me in different ways, to varying degrees. For me, it is not really a matter of having one single greatest influence. Rather, each person and each experience has its own distinct qualities and contributions. It is the accumulation of these different inspirations that has shaped who I am today.
From some artists, I have learned from their formal approaches. From others, I have been influenced by their ideas and conceptual frameworks. From certain scholars, I have learned ways of thinking critically, while others have shown me particular angles from which to approach a problem. These influences are diverse and layered.
On a personal level, lived experience has also had a profound impact on me. My background has made me especially sensitive to questions of scarcity, absence, and structural inequality. Personal experience often becomes an entry point through which I explore broader social and cultural contexts.

Drifting Poetry, 2025, Installation Autoethnography plays a role in your practice. How does your personal experience become a site of research within your work?
In my work, personal memories, emotions, and everyday experiences often serve as research material. They help me explore how larger structures are internalized and felt. This means that many of my artistic and research inquiries begin with myself. Sometimes, individual experience feels like a stone, and making art is like throwing that stone into the lake of society, creating ripples and generating resonances with others. It begins with the self, then extends outward toward relationships with others, with the world, and with society. It is a process of expansion from the inside out.
What interests me is not self-expression for its own sake, but the way personal experience can reveal broader social conditions that are otherwise difficult to grasp. For me, autoethnography is one possible method of transforming lived experience into a critical perspective.
One work in which I very explicitly adopted an autoethnographic methodology is Archive 2023. This project began with the idea of an AI archive, which I documented over the course of several months. I tried to present my daily conversations, practices, and life with ChatGPT through visually rich informational imagery. These fragmented records reveal both the possibilities and the potential problems of artificial intelligence. AI may appear to be a vast and coherent system of intelligence, yet it is manifested through the lives and experiences of countless separate and seemingly insignificant individuals.
The archive intertwines memory and truth, blurs the boundary between the private and the public, and reflects on AI as one of the defining topics of 2023. It examines how AI gradually entered public visibility, began to shape people’s behavior, and raised questions about how human beings may coexist with AI technologies in the future.

Drifting Poetry, 2025, Installation You describe your work as engaging with what is missing or emotionally impoverished. How do you approach and explore these forms of absence within your practice?
I am often interested in what produces these forms of absence, or what causes our sense of impoverishment. In the process, I usually try to begin with something small, and then allow it to reflect a larger condition.
For example, I have a work titled Drifting Poetry. It began with a long-term feeling of drifting in both life and society. I connected this feeling to a sense of groundlessness and rootlessness. Later, I created a two-meter installation using visual elements associated with floating as a metaphor, in order to express and respond poetically to this kind of directionless drifting.
There is also an earlier work titled Love Letters Without the Recipient. It is a machine that generates love letters in vain, telling a story about how people project their emotions onto generative AI.
What I often pursue is tension rather than resolution. I am drawn to what remains incomplete, damaged, or difficult to articulate, and I want to explore what this incompleteness can tell us about the world that produced it.

Love Letters Without The Recipient, 2024, Installation What challenges have you faced as an artist, and how have you overcome them?
I think the challenges I have faced as an artist have come from many different directions. Some involve how to balance the time and energy required for both practice and theory within research. Some are very practical, such as how to find a place for myself as an emerging artist. Then there are also more familiar questions: how to face failure, how to deal with rejection, how to live with self doubt, how to develop a visual language, and how to build a research framework.
I would not say that I have fully overcome these challenges. Much of the time, I am simply trying to live and work alongside them. I have gradually come to accept that difficulty and challenge are inevitable parts of the process.
Perhaps uncertainty and failure can themselves become meaningful conditions for both artistic practice and research.

Love Letters Without The Recipient, 2024, Installation What role do you believe art plays in social and cultural change?
I do not believe that art, by itself, can directly or effectively change society. However, I do believe that art can change the ways people perceive, feel, and understand the conditions in which they live. It can make structures visible, and it can give form to what is usually overlooked, ignored, or left unnamed.
For me, art matters because it can create disturbance and open up a space in which dominant narratives become less stable. It can slow down what has already been normalized, produce friction within systems of representation, and allow other kinds of experience to enter public visibility. This is especially important in an age when technological systems increasingly shape what people see, feel, and remember.
The power of art lies in the fact that it not only depicts social issues, but also shapes the perspective through which we encounter them.
Text and photo courtesy of Ziyao Lin

Website: https://www.ziyaolin.net/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ziyao0/
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Interview | London-Based Artist Feng Chao
Feng Chao (b. 2000), a native of Huzhou, Zhejiang Province, obtained a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in Painting from Xi’an Academy of Fine Arts in 2023, and a Master’s degree in Painting from Camberwell College of Arts, University of the Arts London in 2025. He currently works and lives in London.
Feng Chao’s artistic practice focuses on ‘hyper-narrative’ and the ‘rights of digital images’. Nurtured by screen media experience, he selects traffic images such as ‘video games’, ‘memes’, and ‘animations’, and uses mediums including spray guns and acrylics. He ‘graft’ these images into a special comic narrative structure to create a series of absurd and complex hyper-narrative works.
He emphasizes the independent rights of digital images and opposes the discipline and hegemony brought by the worship of online images. He advocates freeing images from instrumentalization, rejecting fixed narrative directions, and letting the meaning of the works depend entirely on the viewer’s visual experience. By breaking the constraints of fixed narratives and image worship, he realizes the liberation of narrative and the revolution of image rights.
Exhibitions and Honors: “Guardian Art 100 Annual Exhibition of Young Artists 2024″, Guardian Art Center, (Beijing, 2024);”Integration · 100 Youth Art Season”, Rong Space, (Beijing, 2024);”Focus Art Fair”, Saatchi Gallery, (London, 2024);”Post Industrial Poetry” Group Exhibition, One Art Gallery, (Beijing, 2025);MA Painting Show, A&B Gallery, (London, 2025);Millbank Tower Fine Arts Show, UAL CCW, (London, 2025);Camberwell MA Show, UAL, (London, 2025);Camden OAG Group Show, Camden Open Air Gallery, (London, 2025);”Not to Be Prognostic” Group Exhibition, Purist Gallery, (London, 2025).

It should be to the left, 2025, Acrylic on canvas, 30 x 40 cm Can you tell us about your background and how you started your artistic journey?
I was born in Huzhou, Zhejiang Province in 2000. In 2023, I obtained a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in Painting from Xi’an Academy of Fine Arts, and in 2025, I earned a Master of Fine Arts degree in Painting from Camberwell College of Arts, University of the Arts London. Currently, I work and live in both London and Hangzhou.
During my university studies, I accidentally came into contact with the spray gun as a creative medium. Having been fond of video games and animations since childhood, I immediately felt a strong resonance with this medium when I first used it. After repeated attempts and in-depth exploration, I finally chose to combine acrylic painting with spray gun techniques, through which I express my unique understanding and interpretation of internet culture and narrative.

Before the escape, 2025, Acrylic on canvas, 160 x 200 cm What are the main themes or concepts you explore in your work?
My practice explores hyper-narrative and the rights of digital images. In my work, I organically recombine and recontextualise diverse digital images to break their original narrative boundaries, creating what I describe as narrative-rich empty-shell images. When an image’s fixed original content is stripped away, it becomes an open carrier of multiple meanings, allowing the inherent rights of the image itself to gradually gain freedom.

once a move is made, there’s no turning back, 2025, Acrylic on canvas, 20 x 30 cm How do the images you collect and reorganize influence the narratives that emerge in your work?
In my view, all visible visual symbols can be defined as images,including icons, dialogue boxes, foreign text, and lines. I merge these elements from different fields, each carrying distinct original meanings, to form layered assemblies of visual references. Within this creative logic, the final narrative of a work is not determined by my original intention, but shaped by the viewer’s personal visual experience and cultural background. This gives my art strong narrative diversity and interpretive freedom

How to find the murderer, 2025, Acrylic on canvas,160 x 200 cm Can you describe how meaning is created—or perhaps dissolved—through your approach to narrative?
During my creative process, I intentionally remove the fixed meanings and emotions embedded in the original images, while dissolving “meaning” as a rigid, predetermined value. I aim for my works to present pure imagery and atmospheric narrative sensation, rather than guided, definitive storytelling. This approach lies at the core of my practice: releasing image rights and liberating visual symbols from fixed interpretation.

Hasn’t it been passed yet?, 2026, Acrylic on canvas, 80 x 100 cm How do you balance artistic integrity with commercial considerations, if applicable?
I prioritise academic integrity, creative purity, and personal artistic intuition before considering any commercial aspects of my work.

Attacker, 2026, Acrylic on canvas, 20 x 30 cm What projects are you currently working on, and what can we expect from you in the future?
I am currently deepening my research into the rights of digital images and further developing my concept of the organic hyper-narrative machine. This year, I plan to create sculptural works alongside larger-scale paintings, expanding beyond two-dimensional boundaries to develop narrative expression within three-dimensional space. My goal is to explore image rights across more diverse mediums.
Text and photo courtesy of Feng Chao

Website: https://chovenchoven.com/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chovenchoven/
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Interview | London-Based Artist Eunjo Lee
Eunjo Lee is an artist and filmmaker based in London and Seoul. In building complex worlds using gaming-graphics software, her practice explores the interconnectedness of various entities, ranging from humans and nature to objects and concepts. Lee is represented by Niru Ratnam gallery, London.
She graduated from the Ruskin School of Art, University of Oxford in 2024 with an MFA, where she was awarded the Mansfield-Ruddock Art Prize, having completed a BA in Fine Art and History of Art at Goldsmiths, University of London (2023). Following an online residency with LAS Art Foundation and Google Arts & Culture, her newly commissioned work is set to launch this June. Recent solo presentations include a commission by Hervisions at Shoreditch Arts Club (2026); Focus, Frieze London (2025); Before the Shadow Taught the Sun at Goldsmiths CCA (2025); and When Forgiving the Sunlight at Niru Ratnam (2025). Her work has been screened widely, with highlights including the Film-Architecture Forum, London (2025), Modern Art Oxford (2024), and the Seoul International NewMedia Festival (NeMaf; 2024). Selected pieces are held in the collections of the Ruddock Foundation for the Arts, the Palanga Collection, and Mansfield College, University of Oxford.

Still from ‘Before The Shadow Taught The Sun‘, 2025, 3D Experimental Animation, 4K, 25 min Can you tell us about your background and how you started your artistic journey?
Having a complex perspective on the country where one was born and raised is likely not an experience unique to me. Based on my own observations I would describe South Korea as a society that has been intensely preoccupied with collective development. Since the 1950s Korea has undergone an unprecedentedly rapid economic transformation and this period of growth has deeply instilled a community ethos of passionate devotion to survival and progress across generations. Even now an underlying principle of doing one’s absolute best in every moment permeates many areas of the society I have experienced. I cannot deny that I was formed within this environment and it continues to serve as a driving force for my work.
A culture that prizes achievement naturally fosters an environment where results carry significant weight. Even when I was drawn to the arts education in the UK for its emphasis on process and concept at Goldsmiths University, I often found myself reverting to deeply ingrained habits. I would frequently push myself to complete a finished piece even for presentations where a final output was not required. Since moving to London, I have often been described as hard-working and I am sometimes surprised that this aspect of my work ethic is noticed more than I expected. This leads me to reflect on the origins of the standards I have internalised and how they continue to shape my working methods. It is interesting to note that this disposition formed even within my relatively free upbringing. My parents chose an alternative school for me instead of competitive institutionalised education which allowed me to enjoy immense creative freedom. Despite leaving primary school early and skipping middle school to travel or write fiction, the grand narrative of the typical life model pursued by Korean society still exerted a significant influence on me. I have come to realise the structural weight of those universal expectations which define the communal landscape and direct individual lives in a society where specific outcomes are highly valued.
This environment prioritising achievement and speed often fails to provide sufficient space for the slow and non-linear process of digesting sorrow. This specific background aligns with the core themes of my work namely mourning and hospitality, which are rooted in the particular context of Korea. During my youth I witnessed heartbreaking deaths involving my peers as well as various social tragedies. These events occurred within a society moving at great velocity and the traces of those losses seemed to be passed over quickly in the name of efficiency. My work begins as a resistance to this context where the need to pause and remember is easily volatilised for the sake of collective progress. This sense of resistance naturally connected to my twenties, which were filled with the act of persistently staying by the side of that which is absent. Facing the repeated deaths of my dear friends who chose to leave this world, I chose to hold onto the vivid gaps left by those losses rather than following advice to forget. I held memorial services and tended to their gravestones with remaining friends. Carrying the cold void left in the place where a loved one once stood felt like tending a garden so I came to believe that true mourning is not simply letting them go but allowing them to continue living within the garden of my heart.
Those who departed always returned to my thoughts in new forms. This journey has at times felt like a quiet overnight vigil for losses that the surrounding world has not fully digested. I find a deep resonance in the words of Derrida stating that the only successful mourning is a failed mourning because true mourning must never have a definitive end. This perspective became the origin of my creativity. I remember making small graves for dead insects or cats when I was very young and talking to them to honour their existence. Looking back at the age of thirty I see that my past decade has been occupied with the act of remaining beside the absent.
What deeply moved me during this process was the wondrous universality of the emotion of mourning. The tragedy of having to endure the absence of another is the fate that all of humanity must eventually face regardless of time or place. The fact that this overwhelming grief visits everyone equally came to me as an existential weight yet it also provided a strange sense of relief that we can be connected through such common failures and losses. We are not isolated islands in the face of loss but rather connected beings who deeply understand one another by grieving and failing together. This common sensibility has been embedded in myths and the archetypal unconscious throughout human history.
In truth I have little interest in my own micro narrative. Instead I focus on sublimating these archetypal emotions that have passed through my personal experience to address the vast layers of sensation shared by humanity. The almost obsessive attempt to keep the dead alive within myself is a challenge against the impossible which cannot be achieved by human power alone. However, this persistent effort paradoxically blurred the binary boundary between death and life in my mind. The manifestation of this archetypal unconscious where a story begins where life ends and where existence is discovered in the inanimate became a major turning point in my work.
This reasoning naturally led to my master’s graduation project and the formal beginning of my practice which tells the story of a child trying to revive a lifeless stone. The pure intention to breathe life into the impossible became the foundation for my research into digital animism which breaks down the walls between the organic and inorganic as well as between physical reality and the digital virtual. This aligns with neo-materialist thought that expands the consciousness of matter and is an attempt to extend the scope of life beyond human centred definitions. In the process of re-establishing the limits of life and providing a new material home for absent entities, mourning inevitably becomes hospitality for me. By embracing the lives of others and allowing them to continue as new beings within the digital world, I build I am formally welcoming those who have departed back into my world.
Still from ‘The Lullaby of the Ruins‘, 2024, 3D Experimental Animation, 4K, 21 min Your work explores consciousness in humans, non-human entities, and even machines. How do you define “life” or “agency” in the digital worlds you create?
To me life is not a fixed state determined by the presence of an organic body or biological breath. I define life as a vitality that transcends the boundaries of anthropocentrism and as a movement that is remembered, connected and continuously revived. As seen in my early work, which tells the story of a child sensing the death of a stone and travelling to restore its life, my practice has long explored the scope of life in realms beyond the human. Based on neo-materialist thought that dissolves the barriers between the material and the immaterial, I believe that from a broader philosophical perspective, even the individual bits of data and pixels within a digital virtual world can possess their own consciousness and life force. In this light, the digital world is not merely a replica of physical reality but a place of hospitality where absent entities find a new material home to begin breathing again.
The agency I address in my work arises from a web of relationships between different beings rather than being an independent power held by a single entity. This aligns with Jane Bennett and her concept of vibrant matter, yet I seek to capture this within the realm of sensibility and intuition rather than through rational logic. Many of the ecological and social crises we face today arise from the conviction that certain species or groups stand above others in a rigid hierarchy. Breaking this pattern requires the power to imagine agency where we have been taught to see only passivity in minerals, plants and machines. The digital world is the site where such imagination is realised. Digital animism, which summons entities facing the physical limit of death into a digital environment to break down the walls between the organic and inorganic, is in itself a powerful act of agency. When data and pixels take on autonomous movement within a virtual space to comfort someone and perform the process of mourning together, they transcend being simple tools and acquire agency as subjective companions.
In this context the arrival of artificial intelligence did not feel like an alien force from the outside but rather like a mirror held up to our collective unconscious. I believe that as the way people relate to machines begins to resemble human relationships, a more expansive way of thinking can take root. However, a deep unease coexists with this technological optimism. While I dream of a hospitality that blurs boundaries through the digital world, actual algorithms often trap humans in echo chambers that fragment our shared sense of reality and accelerate division. Technological development driven by capital that prioritises speed over all else risks damaging the very value of meaning as well. No matter how many texts are produced, I think a work lacking careful intention and resonance can never become a masterpiece because meaning itself cannot be mass produced.
Ultimately, life and agency in the digital worlds I create are the outcomes of an obsessive attempt to make the impossible mourning possible. True digital life is born when the traces of loss that could not be fully digested in physical reality transform into new forms of existence through digital channels. For me art is the act of making these invisible connections visible and creating a ritualistic yet technical stage where the scope of life is infinitely expanded so we may reunite with those who have departed. Through my work I intend to continue proving that the boundaries we rely on are far more porous than we imagine, and that under the name of life, we are all strangely and closely connected as subjects worthy of respect.
Installation View, Goldsmiths CCA, Photo by Rob Harris How do you think VR, AI, and digital media uniquely allow you to explore spirituality or relational vitality compared to traditional art forms?
To me art is not so different from spiritual practice because both are attempts to understand the world. Especially, digital media becomes a modern stage for a séance that transcends the limits of the physical world and allows us to reunite with those who are absent. If traditional art forms preserve the objects of loss as static figures or invite us to contemplate them from a distance, VR and digital media offer the unique possibility of entering directly into that space of loss to feel the weight of absence in three dimensions. Just as Lukas Brasiskis compared cinema to a device for summoning the traces of the dead, digital images possess inherently spectral qualities that vibrate between presence and absence. In a VR environment, the viewer does not simply look at a work but walks into a garden of the heart where forgotten beings dwell to experience a synaesthetic immersion as if breathing the same air, and this journey blurs the disconnection carved by death and restores a relational vitality that is an ongoing present rather than a frozen past.
This spirituality becomes even more vivid in incidental residues like noise, glitches, or digital tears rather than in seamless perfection. I often leave unexpected glitches that occur during the working process untouched because they feel less like mechanical flaws and more like scars of light or spiritual events left by the collision of two different realities. The momentary movement of data and pixels floating on a screen without a physical body, appearing and then vanishing, reflects the fundamental flickering of existence and creates a deep spiritual tremor. Three dimensional animation also becomes a powerful ritualistic act that tests the boundaries of existence by breathing life into the lifeless and giving a pulse to what has no heartbeat, thereby summoning impossible beings into the visible world.
Furthermore artificial intelligence and digital media provide a flexible arena for making visible the unique agency of non human entities. This is a process of converting the previously mentioned vitality of matter into concrete sensations, allowing abject materials such as blood, entrails, or ruins – which we often push away as being too close to death – to move autonomously and respond to human emotions within a digital environment. Interacting with these unfamiliar entities allows the viewer to sense a new dimension of connection beyond traditional hierarchical orders. This is not an attempt to humanise the non human but rather to loosen the fixed concept of subjecthood and infinitely expand the scope of life.
Ultimately the uniqueness of digital media lies in the paradox that it creates a more vivid sense of reality and spirituality through its very immateriality. Although the physical body has vanished, entities rewoven with digital pixels and code gain a permanent life force free from the constraints of time and space. While traditional art focuses on recording and preserving loss, digital media transforms those traces of loss into a process of hospitality, returning absent beings to us as relational subjects that are alive and moving in the present. For me this technical stage is the most powerful means of resistance and hospitality that connects severed worlds, restores the spiritual connections we have lost, and proposes a way of being where nothing is entirely inert or separate.
Still from ‘Before The Shadow Taught The Sun‘, 2025, 3D Experimental Animation, 4K, 25 min In what ways do you think the art world has changed since you started your career?
It has been about a year since I began practicing professionally in the art scene following my postgraduate studies, which I entered immediately after completing my undergraduate degree. Therefore rather than claiming to have witnessed long-term changes, it would be more accurate to describe the art scene as it appears to me now from the perspective of an emerging artist. As I begin my career, it is heartening to see the art scene in Seoul, where I grew up, expanding rapidly in recent years particularly around Frieze Seoul and KIAF. As an artist currently based in London observing this vibrant energy, I hope to continue expanding my artistic connections within Seoul and across Asia as well.
The recent art scene I am currently experiencing in London is a place where digital video, VR and gaming aesthetics are naturally integrated into the grammar of contemporary art, and compared to the past, these media are being recognised for their aesthetic and commercial value as well as for their substantial contribution to contemporary art discourse. While works utilising virtual worlds or game engines were once regarded as experiments confined to specific genres, with the advent of artificial intelligence, it seems that the physicality and spatial experiences generated within them are now being accepted as an inevitable expansion of contemporary art. Accordingly, I sense that commercial sales models for digital media works are becoming more firmly established in the market. Furthermore, the various metrics generated in the digital environment allow me to identify where my work operates effectively within society and serve as useful indicators that help me examine the direction of my practice by objectively understanding audience interaction.
Discursively, I find the active discussions regarding artificial intelligence to be highly intriguing. I profoundly agree with the critical perspectives concerning its creativity, autonomy and copyright, and I have great concerns about the environmental impact caused by the immense energy consumption required for its operation. At the same time from another perspective, I am also focusing on a view that perceives artificial intelligence as a manifestation of the human unconscious. The process by which AI learns vast amounts of data and outputs imagery reflects fragments of a collective unconscious that humans have not consciously perceived, much like a mirror. In this light, artificial intelligence becomes a conduit through which we encounter non-human consciousness that has long been overlooked. Moreover, as it opens up heterotopian alternative realities through the lens of new materialism – a discourse long debated within the art world – I believe that this era more than any other, provides an exceptionally open and intriguing landscape for my practice.
Ultimately, the current art world is a site that opens up infinite possibilities to expand the scope of existence and welcome those who are absent through technology. Within these changes, I believe an artist should go beyond being a mere producer of new images to become a mediator who captures the junction where human unconsciousness and non-human consciousness meet, reweaving severed relationships. Within this shifting art scene, I intend to persistently continue my attempt to restore a spirituality that is both deeply human and yet far beyond the human by paradoxically returning to the most fundamental questions through technology.
Still from ‘The Lullaby of the Ruins‘, 2024, 3D Experimental Animation, 4K, 21min What challenges have you faced as an artist, and how have you overcome them?
The most profound challenge I have faced as an emerging artist has been navigating the gap between the dominant methodologies of contemporary media art and the cinematic language I pursue. I have observed that many media artists often adopt a documentary attitude or a form of conceptual realism, where they reassemble fragments of reality to reveal social layers. Others focus on the visualisation of information simulations through generative visuals. However, my own desire lies not in the representation of reality or the visualisation of data, but in constructing an entirely different ecology from within a world – what is called magical realism or digital mythopoetics. When my work was once described as ‘too cinematic’ during my time at Oxford, it confirmed that my imagery stands at a significant distance from the mere appearance of reality.
This aesthetic dissonance brought a sense of isolation in the early stages of my career. Fortunately and with much gratitude, I was given opportunities to present my work through several solo exhibitions in galleries last year, however as an artist, I still struggled with an internal sense of uncertainty wondering if I ought to anchor myself more firmly in one field or the other feeling caught between the freely accessible critical space of the gallery and the narrative expectations of the film festival circuit. However, I sought to turn the uncertainty of this boundary into the driving force for building my own hybrid ecology. By employing cinematic aesthetics while approaching reality through consciousness, myth and symbolic structures, I am striving to elevate the work into a field of ontological reflection rather than a mere video. In particular, by combining the rhythmic circulation of the gallery’s loop structure with the immersive scale of cinema, I am trying to find my own hybrid rhythm that allows viewers to engage with the world at any point. Ultimately for me, overcoming challenges has not been about conforming to mainstream discourse, but about inhabiting the liminality between cinema and art discovering the joy in a practice where the boundaries between worlds become meaningless.
Alongside this aesthetic dissonance, the technical struggle of teaching myself vast software such as Unreal Engine, Blender and ZBrush while having to shoulder every stage of production alone was a substantial barrier. It required a long period of persistence, often involving the endurance of looking at my own early works which felt subpar at the time. I tried to sustain this period of uncertain refinement with the attitude of an alchemist, and a significant turning point came when I began to accept failure and error as the fundamental starting point of creation. Once I started to find joy in the arduous process of troubleshooting itself, technical challenges became a form of creative play. Of course this remains a difficult and taxing process and perhaps it is closer to a form of psychological self-persuasion to keep myself going.
Another distinct challenge was the unconscious internalisation of industry standards during the self-taught process. When following online tutorials, there is a risk of adopting the technical limitations and aesthetic norms of the commercial industry, which can stifle artistic imagination. However, it was also a period where I physically sensed that only by mastering the basics and gaining technical freedom could I truly build my own world. Consequently, in the 3D realm where anything is possible, I now consciously attempt to deviate from the conventional grammars of physical implementation, accurate lighting and standard rendering to establish my own atypical visual language.
Still from Hervisions Commission, 2026, 3D Experimental Animation, 4K, 11 min What projects are you currently working on, and what can we expect from you in the future?
I am currently working on an online residency for the LAS Art Foundation and Google Arts & Culture, which involves integrating Google’s AI within Unreal Engine. While maintaining my established practice of constructing entire worlds and designing animations within the engine, I am introducing a process of importing images derived via AI as assets into these virtual realms. This is an attempt to explore the manifestations of non-human unconsciousness by incorporating visual fragments generated by the technological ecosystem into my own world-building. It questions whether the digital environment can function not merely as a passive archive, but as an independent ontological space that thinks and dreams for itself.
The core focus of my practice is World-building. Beyond generating images, the process of creating a complete world-view and overlapping it with multiple realities is the central engine of my work. I strive for these constructed virtual worlds to function as alternative realities that coexist with our physical reality – a form of Multiverse where different possibilities reside together – and my wish is to invite people into these strange and fascinating territories to explore them.
This exploration transcends the screen, evolving into complex installation environments where the logic of the virtual world intersects with the physical order. In this regard, I intend to pursue two artistic paths with equal significance. I plan to manifest the assets I have designed in the virtual world into physical sculptures experimenting with the transitional materiality that occurs when digital data is transformed into physical substance. I will also leverage the computational power of game engines, VR and interactive elements as another core pillar of my work. By balancing the sculptural practice of establishing a physical presence between the virtual and the real with the creation of an independent simulation system that reacts to audience interaction in real-time, I aim to multidimensionally reveal the layered facets of my world-building.
Ultimately, I intend to consolidate these medial experiments and the underlying narratives into a book that weaves together this world-building, and furthermore, to produce a feature film that integrates live-action performances by actors with 3D animation to capture the temporal depth of the multiverse I have constructed. Through cinematic breathing, I hope to establish my digital mythopoetics as a robust narrative system, expanding this world-building into another multiverse that anyone can access online and sharing the collective vision emerging within that space with the world.Text and photo courtesy of Eunjo Lee

Website: https://www.eunjolee.studio/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/eunjo.lee/
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Interview | Los Angeles and London-based Artist Matthew Chung
Matthew Chung (b.1996) is a Korean American multidisciplinary artist working across image-making, printmaking, and sculpture. Born and raised in Los Angeles and currently based between the USA and the UK, his practice engages with both traditional and emergent technologies to explore new material and conceptual outcomes.
Rooted in a spirit of experimentation, Chung treats his studio as a space of continuous tinkering where analog processes like film photography and printmaking meet digital tools, coding, and computational systems. His work often draws from personal histories, Catholic iconography, and the entangled legacies of Korean and American culture, offering poetic reflections on identity, memory, and belonging.
Chung’s practice is research-led and iterative, often unfolding through processes of documentation, assemblage, and transformation. He approaches materials and media with a systematic curiosity and aims to reimagine how we perceive, process, and share experiences in a rapidly evolving world.
Chung holds an MA in Information Experience Design from the Royal College of Art, where he advanced his interdisciplinary practice through research-led methodologies. His work there focused on the translation of abstract ideas into experiential forms, investigating how information can be articulated through spatial, material, and sensorial strategies.

Star Spangled Banner, 2023, Denim frabic, gesso, cyanotype, metal wire, 127 x 89 cm Can you tell us about your background and how you started your artistic journey?
My artistic journey wasn’t straightforward, but if I had to pinpoint a beginning, it would be the moment I discovered my dad’s old Fujica 35mm film camera, collecting dust behind a pile of forgotten things. Around the same time, I had enrolled in a high school art class, an elective I took just to fulfill graduation requirements. By chance, the classroom had a small, long-unused darkroom tucked away in the corner. I asked my teacher if I could use it, and she enthusiastically agreed to show me how to develop and print black-and-white film. After a few lessons, I was off and running, shooting with my dad’s camera and developing prints in that dim, red-lit space on my own.
That was where I first truly felt connected to art, not just with photography, but with the creative process. With failure. With chance. I learned to experiment, to trust what materials could teach me, and to find value even in what went wrong. That early experience shaped how I still approach making: through patience, curiosity, and quiet transformation.
For a long time, I didn’t think an artistic life was possible. Raised in a family of medical professionals, I believed I was meant to follow that path too. I studied biology and marine ecosystems before slowly shifting course, inspired in part by my younger sibling’s acceptance into art school. I switched majors to business management with a focus on the apparel industry, a compromise between practicality and creativity.
That decision led me into fashion design and garment construction, where I again felt a creative drive, this time with fabric. The act of cutting, shaping, and stitching became another form of storytelling, sculpting soft forms from blank canvases.
After some time working in the fashion industry, I returned to study full-time, earning an MA in Information Experience Design at the Royal College of Art. There, I explored new ways of working and thinking, blending technology, research, and material practice. Though I now work across mediums, from digital tools to found objects, I often return to textiles, drawn by their familiarity and quiet intimacy.
Today, I balance my studio practice with work in product development and project management, weaving together creative and practical worlds to sustain both my life and my art.

Life Passes By, 2016-2023, Archival photography print, 480 x 80 cm How do you stay inspired and motivated to create new work?
My biggest challenge often lies in the tangle of too many ideas. I’m easily swept into starting new projects, each one pulling at my attention, and sometimes they remain unfinished. Still, I believe in the importance of materializing fleeting ideas before they slip away; even if it’s just a quick note or a doodle in a sketchbook. Translating abstract thoughts into the physical world, no matter how small, is always the first step.
When inspiration runs dry, I turn to movement. A walk through the city, a bike ride at dusk, or even a slow drive without destination helps loosen my mind. I let my eyes drift, watch the way light touches surfaces, or how strangers carry their stories. The world never stops offering.
Photography has always been a useful companion in these moments. It keeps me present and tuned in. Holding a camera pushes me to search for compositions, textures, gestures, and so much more; I’m constantly reminded that beauty often hides in the ordinary. It forces me onto my feet and into my surroundings, helping me stay sharp, curious, and aware of moments I might otherwise overlook.
That habit of wandering often becomes searching. Since I was a child, I’ve been drawn to objects like stones with strange textures, bits of fossils, and forgotten things. I would pocket them not just for their beauty, but because they felt like evidence of something quiet and real. That instinct to scavenge still lingers in my work. Found objects carry histories I could not invent. They offer me new directions, new materials, and a grounding presence when I feel lost in abstraction. Perhaps a poetic way to justify my hoarding habits.
Inspiration, for me, comes not in flashes but in fragments. I notice them, gather them, and hold onto them until they begin to take shape.

Chasing Cheese, 2025, Metal wire & resin, 16 x 12 x 11 cm, Photo Credit @yu_hao_studio What are the main themes or concepts you explore in your work?
I’ve never been much of an open book. I tend to keep things to myself, often hiding my feelings without fully knowing why. Maybe it’s something I inherited; a kind of masculinity that teaches you to view vulnerability as weakness. For a long time, I believed that the safest way to move through the world was by staying guarded.
When I first began making art, I leaned into scientific or philosophical ideas. I thought if I kept things conceptual, I wouldn’t have to reveal too much of myself. Those frameworks gave me a way to speak without exposing too much. But the more I created, the more I found myself drawn to the emotional undercurrents; the quiet, personal threads that ran just beneath the surface. I began to understand that my work didn’t need to shout to say something meaningful.
Sometimes, it just needed to be honest. I’ve realized that the work that stays with me, the pieces that feel most alive, are the ones rooted in personal experience.
Now, I see my practice as a way to reflect on what it means to be human; to understand the experiences, contradictions, and emotions that shape us. I’m interested in memory, in identity, in the complexity of family, in the quiet rituals of everyday life. Art allows me to process these things at my own pace, and to offer fragments of understanding to others.
While not all of my work is autobiographical, it’s all personal in some way. I’m trying to make sense of where I come from and where I’m going. Maybe, in doing so, I can open up space for others to do the same.

Come And Take It, 2023, Rice & metal, 43 x 26 x 23 cm, PhotoCredit @paristexas84 What challenges have you faced as an artist, and how have you overcome them?
One of the greatest challenges I’ve faced as an artist is the quiet voice that says I don’t belong. I came to art later than some, and that doubt lingers. There’s this constant feeling that I haven’t earned my place, that I’m still catching up. I’ve never been one to take up space easily. Shyness runs deep in me, and stepping into the light has never felt natural.
At the same time, my mind rarely rests. Ideas arrive like waves, one after another, each more urgent than the last. I begin projects in bursts of energy, only to be pulled toward the next thing before the last is finished. There’s a kind of beautiful chaos in it, but also a weight; the pressure to make something new, something meaningful, something no one has seen before. That longing can be paralyzing. It’s easy to get lost in the sauce.
What’s helped is learning to be gentle with myself. To remember that there’s no single way to be an artist, no checklist to follow. I’ve stopped waiting for confidence to arrive. I’m learning to build confidence not by waiting for it, but by doing: by making, by sharing, by stepping into discomfort. I’ve found that honesty is its own kind of compass. I try to remind myself that I’m only human, and so is everyone else. If I can be true to what I feel, what I’ve lived, then I can offer something real. Not perfect, not polished, but ultimately mine.

Are You From North Or South, 2023, Fabric & waxed, 95 x 125 cm (each) What do you hope people take away from your art when they experience it?
I don’t expect everyone to understand my work in the same way, but I do hope they feel something. A flicker of recognition, a memory stirred, a question they didn’t know they had.
Maybe even a quiet laugh. If my work can prompt someone to pause and reflect, then I’ve done my part.
I’m not interested in offering answers or instructions. I’m more curious about what happens in the space between the viewer and the work, the kinds of personal interpretations and emotional responses that I could never fully predict. If someone leaves feeling a little more connected to themselves, to others, or to this strange human experience, then I consider that a success.
In the end, I make work because it helps me process the world and my place within it. Sharing that feels like a way of reaching out and if even one person feels seen, moved, or understood through it, then that’s more than enough.

America Needs Jesus Now More Than Ever, 2023, Brass, silver & plastic beads, 40 x 9 cm How do you approach exhibiting your work? What are your goals when showing your art in public spaces?
When I exhibit my work, I think carefully about how it can be experienced beyond just being looked at. I’m interested in creating moments that feel immersive where the space, the senses, and the viewer are all part of the conversation. I often consider how to engage not just sight, but also touch, sound, smell, and even taste when it makes sense.
Interactivity is something I value, especially in public spaces. I want people to feel like they can enter the work, not just observe it from a distance. My goal is to create an environment that invites reflection, connection, and maybe even dialogue; a shared experience that lingers in memory, even in small ways.
Ultimately, I see exhibitions as opportunities to extend the life of a piece, letting it meet people where they are and open itself to new interpretations.
Text & photo courtesy of Matthew Chung

Website: https://meingeist.com/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chungmatthieu
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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 | Seoul and London-based Artist Sooin Huh
Sooin Huh is an artist based in Seoul and London. She received her BA in Fine Art from Goldsmiths, University of London, and her MA in Sculpture from the Royal College of Art. She observes objects through their contexts, relationships, and the narratives accumulated within them. Each object exists where multiple layers of meaning such as social, cultural, and historical codes intersect. She focuses on how objects are rediscovered and interpreted through an archaeological lens, observing how they are continuously redefined and reinterpreted within relationships beyond a linear sense of time. Through this process, she aims to reveal how the classificatory and hierarchical systems we encounter in daily life are provisional and incomplete. In her work, the movements of objects that traverse the boundaries between center and periphery, visibility and invisibility reveal that they are entities negotiating and repositioning themselves within social networks of meaning. Through this process, she also reflects on her own mode of existence and articulates her position toward it.
Her major exhibitions include the solo show Collected Connection (Keep in Touch, Seoul, KR, 2023) and group exhibitions Assemble/Fall (Somers Gallery, London, UK, 2025), Festus (Hangar Gallery, London, UK, 2024), and Flash of Light (Nonscaled, Seoul, KR, 2024). In 2025, she received the Gilbert Bayes Award from the Royal Society of Sculptors (UK) and the Chunman Art for Young Award presented by the Chunman Scholarship Foundation (KR).

What I Saw While Wandering and Biting, 2025, Mixed media, variable dimensions Can you tell us about your background and how you started your artistic journey?
I have always been drawn to the physical presence of the objects that surround me in everyday life. I became fascinated by how these objects interact with one another and shape the environment around us. This curiosity gradually developed into an exploration of how objects respond to each other’s movements and form particular relational states. Through this process, I realized that every relationship is shaped through a sense of negotiation and adjustment, which became the starting point of my practice. Living in Seoul and London, two cities that are complex and organically intertwined, I became aware that the relationships between objects extend beyond their material dimension and are deeply connected to social realities. Within this environment, my desire to understand the world naturally evolved into my artistic practice and the visual language I use today.

Flowing Ground, Traced Remnants, 2025, Mixed media, variable dimensions Are there any particular mediums you prefer working with? Why?
I mainly work with found objects, which include everyday items familiar in our surroundings as well as architectural materials and other elements that construct the spaces we inhabit. I choose found objects for their anonymous quality, which allows me to reconsider how existing systems of authority operate. I also use architectural components to stage the theatrical process through which spatial orders are reorganized. Within this process, I focus on the temporary states that emerge when an object’s past time and context enter the present and its relationships become entangled. This state appears at the point where an object attempts to be rewritten within new relationships while simultaneously being held in place by the realities it already belongs to. The two opposing forces interrupt each other, and in this moment of suspension, the object resides in a time where expansion and stillness coexist. In this suspended equilibrium, objects remain unmoving yet continue to function as active entities. Through actions such as overlapping, tilting, imitation, and adaptation, I explore the relational nature of these materials and experiment with how they transition within the systems that shape our world.

Collected Connection, 2023, Sound based installation, mixed media, variable dimensions What are the main themes or concepts you explore in your work?
Exploring the transformation of objects is a way of examining the structure of relationships and, ultimately, observing how different entities perceive and adjust to one another. This relational tension naturally leads to the question of difference and coexistence. What my work ultimately seeks to address is the form of coexistence in which different beings can continue to exist while transforming one another. Although each object carries a distinct origin, these differences are reconfigured within the context of relationships. Through this process of transformation, the objects renew each other, and the meaning of coexistence is continuously redefined. Through my work, I aim to expand the sculptural conditions of coexistence as fluid and open-ended, searching for new languages of relation.

Collected Connection, 2023, Sound based installation, mixed media, variable dimensions How do your personal experiences and identity influence your art?
My personal experiences and identity are closely connected to the sense of existing as an individual within institutional structures. These experiences shape my perspective on how I interpret the world. Objects function as both a language that mediates between myself and the world, and as devices that reflect the identity of the individual formed within systems. The personal or speculative narratives that emerge in my work develop into hypothetical propositions that momentarily twist or reconstruct the order of given environments. Through this process, I explore points of rupture and possibility where change can occur even within fixed structures.

Beyond a transverse axis, 2024, Mixed media, variable dimensions Can you describe a recent project or artwork that you are particularly proud of?
In my recent work What I Saw While Wandering and Biting, I constructed a private space of an imaginary figure using objects layered with different temporal and cultural histories. This space functions as a point where emotional memory and otherness intersect, and as a self-portrait realized without a physical body. Old still-life paintings and anonymous landscapes blur the boundaries of authorship, history, and cultural authority, revealing a process in which meanings shift and are translated into new contexts. Through this, the work critically examines how structures of identity and value are formed and transformed within relationships where the boundaries between self and others become entangled.

Archaeology of Three Moons, 2020, Mixed media, variable dimensions What role do you believe art plays in social and cultural change?
The change that art generates ultimately lies in questioning what is accepted as reality. Art makes the familiar unfamiliar, prompting us to pause and reconsider the orders and structures we take for granted. This unfamiliarity is not merely a visual disruption but a moment of reflection that reconfigures the systems of language and perception through which the world is understood. I believe that art’s contribution to social change does not reside in directly overturning institutions or norms. Rather, it operates within existing systems, revealing the gaps and residues that those systems fail to perceive, and from there, it experiments with new possibilities of relation. Through this process, art reconstructs the very structures that sustain social reality. I believe that art serves as a field of thought that gently unsettles reality, and that change begins within those subtle disturbances.
Text & photo courtesy of Sooin Huh

Website: https://www.sooinhuh.com/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/sooin_huh/
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Interview | London-Based Artist Vanessa Liem
Vanessa Liem (b. 2002, Singapore) is currently based in London. She received a BA from the University of the Arts London in 2025. Liem’s work has been exhibited internationally, including a solo exhibition, For The Time Being, at Cuturi Gallery and group exhibitions such as Art SG at Sands and Expo Convention Centre in Singapore and Coalesce at Copeland Gallery and Before Now, After Then at Bargehouse Gallery in London. For her work, Liem received the UOB 38th Painting of the Year Emerging Artist Gold Award and was named one of Prestige’s 40 under 40 in 2024.

Grippers, 2023, Oil on canvas, 210 x 130 cm Can you tell us about your background and how you started your artistic journey?
I was born and raised in Singapore and moved to London in 2022 to pursue an art degree. Now I’m painting full-time in a studio at Herne Hill, South London. I started my artistic journey in primary school, when I first discovered YouTube. That was my introduction to painting. I remember watching painting tutorial time-lapses at 0.5 speed, pausing every few seconds to try my best to copy what the artist was doing. My fascination with painting and art began there.
Underground Feeders, 2025, Oil on canvas, 200 x 160 cm What are the main themes or concepts you explore in your work?
My work stems from my mental health and branches out into ideas of perception, observing and being observed, power and performance. Through the interplay of the surreal and real, the figures I paint are always hyper-aware of the audience’s gaze and how their own bodies occupy a certain space. Whether they reject, embrace, are unconcerned or are simply immobilised by this gaze, I try not to pigeonhole these women into being one thing. That’s perhaps an entry point to view my work. Painting for me is a stage to navigate but also play, it becomes a space where the psychological and physical awareness of the body, mine and others, intensifies.
The House is a Body, 2025, Oil on canvas, 200 x 160 cm How has your artistic style evolved over time?
My work used to be very explicitly sci-fi inspired. I would create these shiny aliens that would inhabit other worlds. These worlds felt entirely detached from humanity, it was their own alien universe. That was during COVID-19, when I was in a very isolated headspace. But now, mywork feels more rooted in everyday life; the settings I place my figures in exist in my personal life. My childhood home, my bathroom, the park I walk through every day to my studio, elements of them come out in my work. I also see the body quite differently as I have grown older, the body to me now encompasses not just human form but also the environment it inhabits. The space around them becomes a body as well, it becomes a sentient being with emotions. That’s how I tend to approach a painting, seeing each whole painting as a soul and an extension of the self, with warmth and coldness unfolding within, in between and around body and space.
Lightbath I, 2024, Oil on canvas, 152.5 x 122 cm How do you balance visual aesthetics with conceptual depth in your artworks?
I would have a central theme that umbrellas everything. I don’t really think too much about what each painting specifically means in the beginning. I tend to go for a specific vibe or mood, and maybe two or three keywords that I associate with the piece.
Visuals usually come first, and I let them fester in my mind for a bit, letting them grow and change how they want to. I have always believed that a specific image will demand a way to be painted, and you just gotta let it do its own thing; it’s a way of allowing my subconscious to tell me things instead of trying to control everything.Once the clearer image forms, specific ideas and concepts flow in and out. During the painting process, the image and concept would develop simultaneously, sometimes at different speeds but they would slowly align themselves with each other in the end. Sometimes, it could take a few days or up to many many months after a painting is finished, and then it just clicks – I finally understand what the painting, or I guess myself, is trying to tell me.
But even so, the concepts of my work change over time. For me, a painting has multiple lives. Depending on when or what is happening in your life, you can see the same image in a whole other way, so I see a lot of my work as pretty open-ended, it doesn’t always have to end the same way it started.
The Only Thing that Comforted Me was the Water Turning Warm, 2024, Oil on linen, 40.5 x 30 cm What challenges have you faced as an artist, and how have you overcome them?
The art world can be very polarising, the process of making art versus the selling, exhibitions, networking, competition, and actually trying to make it can be quite disorientating. Especially moving to London, where everything is everywhere, everyone is always doing something, and there are millions of artists fighting to make it, everything is always moving very quickly. When you place something as intimate, slow, tedious and introspective as art making into an industry of speed, it can make you feel like you’re never doing enough, and that you’re somehow running out of time, and I’m only 23. And in my experience, this self-doubt can creep into my studio work without even me realising it. Thankfully, I have supportive people around me to snap me out of it. I am still trying to overcome this. I try to set smaller goals for myself to celebrate, like finishing a painting or bringing myself to the studio even when I don’t feel like it at all. But, really, the best thing for me is talking to the ones I love, it forces me out of my own head.
From Blue to Yellow, From Yellow to Pink, 2024, Oil on linen, 180 x 155 cm Are there any new directions, collaborations, or concepts you’re excited to explore next?
I’m currently working on my solo show set for May 2026, with Cuturi Gallery in Singapore. I’m excited to consolidate my developments over the past few years and work towards a cohesive body of work. One of the main focal points of this show is light. How different types of light can imply different things in the context of my work. For example, natural light versus artificial light, external light sources versus light illuminated from within.
I recently went to an exhibition by Eva Helene Pade at Thaddaeus Ropac, where she mentioned how oil paint is not only a medium to render flesh but to dissipate it equally. This really resonated with me. As I grow older, experience the life I’m living, you know, see more things, feel more things, the idea of the female body for me will never stop developing and changing with different ideas of how it can be perceived through painting.Text & photo courtesy of Vanessa Liem

Website: https://www.vanessaliem.art
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/vnesliem/



