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Interview | Los Angeles-based Artist Shuai Xu
Shuai Xu (b. 1995, China; lives and works in California) examines the conditions of visibility, spatial arrangement, and scale through the construction of site-responsive situations. Utilizing structures as spatial devices, Xu’s work resists immediate consumption by cultivating unstable perception and partial presence. His investigations move beyond narrative, engaging the viewer in a slower form of looking where understanding is altered rather than resolved.
Xu holds an MFA from Claremont Graduate University and a BFA from the Tianjin Academy of Fine Arts. Solo exhibitions include Chaos Coordinate System (2023) at the Newhall Community Center, California. Selected group exhibitions include presentations at the UCLA New Wight Biennial (2024); Venice International Art Fair (2024); Alliance Française de Pékin (2024); and Sasse Museum of Art (2026, 2023). His practice has been critically recognized and featured by international media including CNN, Artsy, Fad Magazine, and Contemporary Art Issue.

‘M105’, 2026, Oil paint, pigment powder, wood, and metal, 24 x 24 in Can you tell us about your background and how you started your artistic journey?
I was born in Henan, China, and I am currently based in Los Angeles. My practice began with painting, but over time I realized that what I was interested in was not only the image itself, but also the conditions around it. I became increasingly attentive to how a work appears, how it is encountered, and how perception changes depending on distance, light, and movement. Because of this interest, my work gradually moved beyond painting. Some ideas require space, scale, or the viewer’s physical presence in order to exist. This led me toward installation, sculpture, and occasionally land-based works.
I usually do not begin with a clear narrative or message. Often the work starts from a small perceptual tension, something that feels present but difficult to name. The work develops slowly from that point.

‘OJ287’, 2025, Oil on canvas, 48 x 36 in You work across painting, land art, installation, and sculpture. How do you decide which medium fits an idea best?
The medium usually emerges from the situation that the work requires. If the idea can exist within a surface, painting is often the most direct form. When the work depends on scale, distance, or the movement of the viewer, it naturally becomes installation or sculpture. Land-based works appear when the surrounding environment itself becomes part of the structure. I rarely decide the medium first. The form of the work usually reveals itself through the conditions it needs.

‘4C+37.11’, 2024 You have shown work in both China and the United States. Has working between these contexts changed the way you think about space, audience, or artistic language?
Working in different cultural contexts has made me more attentive to viewers as individuals rather than as a fixed audience group. People bring their own experiences and ways of looking, and those differences are always present. In my process, the main adjustments usually happen in relation to materials and space. Each site has its own conditions, so I try to respond to those conditions in a direct way.
Conceptually, however, my approach has not changed very much because of cultural context. The core questions in my work remain the same.

‘HE0450-2958’, 2023, Oil on canvas, 80 x 80 cm What’s the most rewarding aspect of being creative in your experience?
One thing that always interests me is that an artwork does not stay fixed in its meaning. I find uniform explanations or a single interpretation of a work quite uninteresting. What I value more is how my own understanding of a work can change over time as my experiences grow.
I am also very grateful for the different interpretations that viewers bring to the work. Each person encounters it from their own perspective, and those responses become part of the life of the work. These changes that happen across time and space are difficult to fully define through text or language. They belong more to the realm of perception.
Personally, I have always been excited by visual situations that I can sense but cannot fully explain. Those moments often become the starting point for my work.

‘4C+37.11’, 2021 What has your participation in Time Lag meant to you personally or professionally?
Participating in Time Lag allowed the work to enter a new context and encounter a completely different audience.
This exhibition provided an opportunity for me to observe how some of my more recent works function once they leave the studio. Installed in a different space and arranged in a new way, the work begins to encounter viewers and develop its own presence. It becomes interesting to see how it operates within that new situation.
What do you hope people take away from your art when they experience it?
I do not expect viewers to arrive at a clear explanation. If someone slows down, looks longer than expected, or feels slightly uncertain about what they are seeing, then the work has already begun to function. I am interested in creating small moments where perception shifts and where the familiar feels slightly unfamiliar for a short time.
Text and photo courtesy of Shuai Xu

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

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

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

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

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

Website: www.phoebeli.net
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/phoebelii_/
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Interview | Los Angeles-based Visual Artist & Graphic Designer Yanwen Hang
Yanwen Hang is a visual artist and graphic designer specializing in the intersection of fine art and technology, with a focus on identity, social issues, and the relationship between humanity and technology. She earned a degree in Visual Communication Design from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and an MFA in Graphic Design from the Art Center College of Design.
Yanwen has received Typographic Excellence from the Type Directors Club and the Grand Winner award at the NYX Marcom Awards for her contributions to contemporary art and design. Her Cyberdada movement draws from Dadaism to critique technological reliance through multimedia works, including 3D objects, motion graphics, posters, and virtual exhibitions.

No U Turn, 2019, Artist book Can you tell us about your background and how you started your artistic journey?
I grew up in an environment steeped in art. My great-grandfather was a traditional Chinese painter, and my father is a photographer. As a child, I would often flip through my great-grandfather’s art collections and my father’s photography albums. Even though I didn’t fully understand them at the time, the light, shadows, and abstract expressions planted deep seeds of inspiration within me. I chose to study Visual Communication Design and later pursued an MFA in Graphic Design. For me, graphic design has always been more than just creating commercial value or serving corporate needs. I see it as a medium, akin to any form of art—a vessel that carries my understanding of the world. I identify myself as a visual artist, telling my story and expressing my perceptions through graphics.

Jouhatsu, 2019, Poster, fabiric What are the main themes or concepts you explore in your work?
My personal work often centers around identity, social issues, and contemporary topics. I am particularly intrigued by social phenomena and historical events, especially those rooted in Asian contexts. These elements serve as entry points for my exploration, where I distill core ideas into visually compelling and innovative materials like artist books. For instance, I have a project that delves into jouhatsu, the phenomenon in Japan where individuals vanish to escape societal pressures, creating a shadow economy of businesses that help them disappear overnight. I crafted an artist book for this project, using soft fabric as the cover to symbolize the act of packing up and leaving. All the posters for this project were printed on fabric and translucent materials, adding layers of meaning to the theme.

Jouhatsu, 2019, Artist book, Mixed material 
Jouhatsu, 2019, Artist book2, Mixed material What is your creative process like? Do you follow a routine or work spontaneously?
My creative process involves extensive reading and research, which are crucial before I start any project. This rigorous research approach permeates my other projects as well, forming a foundation for my work that deepens the narrative.







What are your thoughts on the use of technology and digital platforms in the art world today?
I have always valued and encouraged the exploration of new mediums. I believe that any emerging technology can have a positive impact on artistic expression. In my project Cyberdada, I played with the idea of enjoying the absurdities and playfulness that technology brings, rather than debating whether it propels or hinders human progress. I believe we should sometimes set aside our critical lenses and simply enjoy the new forms of creativity that technology enables. This perspective fuels much of my work and continues to inspire my explorations.

Cyberdada, 2022, Interactive screen, Prototype How has your artistic style evolved over time?
I have observed that my approach to my work has become more comprehensive over time. Initially, my projects might have been simpler, incorporating only a single 3D object. Gradually, I evolved to use multiple media—including 3D objects, posters, motion graphics, or even virtual exhibitions and related merchandise—to more fully articulate my arguments and ideas. This progression reflects my deeper, more cohesive way of thinking, allowing me to create immersive and multifaceted artistic experiences.
Cyberdada, 2022, Digital poster How do you stay inspired and motivated to create new work?
The best way to stay inspired and motivated is to maintain curiosity. Staying curious about the world ensures that new ideas keep flowing. I believe that approaching life with an open mind, constantly questioning and learning, helps fuel creativity. Being inquisitive about social, cultural, and technological changes keeps me engaged, and it is through this lens of curiosity that I find new perspectives and inspirations to shape my art.

Cyberdada, 2022, Interactive screen, Prototype 2 What projects are you currently working on, and what can we expect from you in the future?
AI has become a trending topic, and I plan to integrate it into my recent work on Cyberdada. This project critiques and plays with the intersections of art, absurdity, and technology, making it an ideal starting point for exploring the nuances of AI. I intend to merge the core ideas of Cyberdada with current AI trends, questioning and showcasing the impacts of artificial intelligence on human interactions and creativity. This direction will build on my existing exploration of technology’s role in art and life, paving the way for new, thought-provoking projects.
Text & photo courtesy of Yanwen Hang

Website: https://wenhang.info
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/wen_yhang/



