• Interview | Shanghai-based Artists Ji Wenyu and Zhu Weibing

    Interview | Shanghai-based Artists Ji Wenyu and Zhu Weibing

    Climbing Up the Mountain, 2009, Thread, cloth, wood, metal hoop, wadding, 1813 x 94 x 20 cm x 2 puppet

    Can you tell us about your background and how you started your artistic journey?

    Ji Wenyu: Before 2004, I primarily worked in easel painting, while my wife Zhu Weibing was in clothing design. I was quite lost in my painting practice at that time, the biggest issue was that there were no more issues. Whatever I wanted to do, the result was predictable. There was no novelty, no anticipation, and no new possibilities. It was a big crisis for me. One day, I was talking to Zhu Weibing about art. She told me she also felt lost in clothing design and wanted to transition into contemporary art, though she still kept a strong passion for fabric. We both felt that fabric might be an excellent starting point for our future creations, even though we both had a great different opinions about it. Fabric to me is stubborn. It doesn’t obey me, it’s contrary, it has its own material qualities. But that’s exactly what opened up new possibilities for me. From then on, we became a duo, and we’ve continued ever since.

    Zhu Weibing: I studied clothing design, but I’ve always dreamed of making art. Back in 2003, during a conversation with Ji Wenyu, we instantly hit it off. We decided to use the fabric as a material we familiar with to experiment with it and making art. 

    People Holding Flowers, 2007, Velour, steel wire, dacron, lodestone, cotton, synthetic polymer paint on resin, 17 x 11 x 102 x 400 cm

    How do you stay inspired and motivated to create new work?

    Ji Wenyu: Over the past thirty years, China has underthrough tremendous changes. We’ve constantly been learning from the outside world, while also continuously drawing inspiration from our own culture. We’ve witnessed transformations in our society, lifestyle and people’s mindsets. Every one of these changes compels us to feel, to experience, and to reflect. Our artistic practice is simply an attempt to express those sensations as accurately as possible.

    Zhu Weibing: I believe that creativity stems from the subtle perceptions of everyday life, and from the urge to express and connect. I often feel a strange sense of doubt or illusion about my current life circumstances. Maybe it’s that restless mindset that pushes me to explore the unknown. And art happens to be a form of expression that I’m both good at and genuinely enjoy!

    Compromise failed, 2018, Artificial whool, cloth, wadding, 227 x 108 x 84 cm

    How did you both start working together as a team?

    Ji Wenyu: We discuss everything together, and sometimes we argue with each other. When we really can’t reach an agreement, we just set it aside for a while and revisit it later. Once we come to a shared understanding, we think about how to turn it into a piece of work. During the process, disagreements still pop up, so we keep adjusting. That’s how we’ve continued working together until now. Sometimes we even interpret the same work differently, but we’re still able to complete it together as a unified piece.

    Zhu Weibing: As a married couple, we share many perspectives, but we also have many different opinions. There’s a saying in Chinese: “seeking common ground while reserving differences.” I think the friction and mutual adjustments we go through are actually a process of growing together.

    Rebuild the wall by using the cotton rope, 2018, Cotton rope, 1840 x 450 cm

    Is there a particular piece of work that feels especially meaningful to you? Why?

    Ji Wenyu: Every work for us carries its own significance, it’s hard to rank them. But there’s one project I’d like to talk about. In 2018, under the national push to preserve tulou (earthen architecture) and promote the “New Countryside” initiative, we were invited to Nanping, Fujian, to create a site-specific piece. With the acceleration of urbanization, many rural residents had left for the cities to work, and some had permanently relocated. What remained was a landscape of rural desolation. I stood in front of a crumbing earthen house, its roof and interior wooden structures had completely disappeared. Nearly half the walls had collapsed, and the wild grass had grown waist-high. In the glow of the setting sun, the scene felt like the end of a ruined world.

    The proposal was as follows:

    The collapsed sections of the walls would be “restored” imaginatively using white cotton ropes (1 cm in diameter). Within these rope-based reconstructions, we would maintain doorways and windows scaled to the human body. At first glance, it would appear to be a restoration. One half of the structure would remain as the original, solid earthen wall; the other half, a ghostly reconstruction made of lightweight rope. The contrast between the heavy structure and the fabricated rope both highlight the act of rebuilding and subtly reveal the site’s abandonment. 

    The work aimed to explore the tension and interplay between natural decay and human intervention. In doing so, we hoped to prompt reflection: What does it mean when a ruin stands? And what does it mean when we attempt to “restore” it? It was also meant to imply the importance of preservation.

    In the end, the rope walls only lasted two weeks. The government stepped in and funded to reconstruct the site, and brought the former relocated villagers back to rebuild the house. In a way, we felt a sense of pride as the projec revealed the essense of the place.

    Zhu Weibing: Most of our works are not created for specific projects, they usually arise from a spontaneous emotional impulse. So many of our pieces are expressions of how we felt at a certain moment in a specific context. Take our 2013 piece “Climb, Upward” as an example. At the time, the broader social atmosphere was energetic, ambitious that everyone seemed to be striving upward. We were also at a stage in life when we were full of energy. But then one day, we suddenly realized that we had been taught to be successful and wealthy was the definition of a positive life. Everyone was climbing upwards, but what is the next step when you climed to the top? Thats when things started to feel confusing and disorienting. This work came directly from the specific emotional state, and i do not think this confusion was just personal. Its probably a question relate to the entire generation that we have not really figured out.

    Climb, Going Upward, 2013, Cloth, foam, wire, 330×40×45cm

    What challenges have you faced as an artist, and how have you overcome them?

    Ji Wenyu: As I mentioned earlier, before 2004 I was focused solely on easel painting. My work was quite popular at the time, but I began to experience a personal crisis. I felt like I was producing art for clients every day, and there was no longer any sense of creative excitement. If I continued down that path, I feared both my spirit and my artistic language would wither. Most importantly, I felt I had lost the sense of new possibility.

    Then one day, I had a conversation about art with my wife. We started talking about fabric, and gradually I became excited by the material. Fabric is soft, resistant to shaping, and even when you manage to shape it, it’s hard to reproduce the same form again. For someone trained as a painter, this presented an obvious challenge. Its unpredictability defies control, yet that unpredictability can bring unexpected surprises. It demands the artist’s sensitivity to fully grasp its potential. Its flaws, in fact, are what make its character stand out. In some ways, it’s anti-sculptural. You can fill it with cotton and make it a solid three-dimensional form, or you can remove the stuffing, or only partially fill it, so it slumps and softens. You can drape it over a chair, a table, or any object, and it will conform to the object’s form while still asserting its own presence. It can completely envelop another shape and draw attention not just to what it covers, but to the beauty of the fabric itself. You can also hang it, and under the influence of wind or other forces, it floats, curls, sways. It’s casual, adaptable, warm, but not easy to manipulate. It has its own temperament, its own personality. It blends all of these traits together and emits endless possibilities. That was when I felt my crisis relieved. It was also the beginning of my collaboration with my wife, Zhu Weibing.

    Zhu weibing: In the beginning, the biggest challenge for me in our artistic practice was how difficult it was to control the material. Even though I came from a background in clothing design, art-making is a completely different process. I had to find new ways of working that aligned with our conceptual approach. Some of the techniques I knew from clothing and toy-making gave me initial inspiration, but they weren’t enough for what we wanted to express. I didn’t want to be confined by those conventions. So early on, we made a rule for ourselves: the work must not look like a toy, must not look like a craft object, and must not look like folk art.

    Another challenge was the fact that, as a female artist, I was often overwhelmed by daily responsibilities. I had to learn to cut out the unnecessary demands of everyday life whenever possible, and to regularly reflect inward and adjust my mindset. I believe this kind of inner work has been deeply helpful to my artistic process.

    Enough food for these fish, 2018, Cloth, gauze, wadding, foam, wire, thread, wooden frame, 146 x 114 x 86 cm

    What advice would you give to emerging artists trying to establish themselves?

    Ji Wenyu: Consistently produce strong works that resonate with the times, continually communicate their artistic vision and ideas to their audience, and keep holding exhibitions so that audiences and collectors can better understand the work, and allowing more people to appreciate both the artists and their art.

    Zhu Weibing: Genuinely love creating art. Make what you love, make what others might love, and share just enough of yourself to let people in.

    Text & photo courtesy of Ji Wenyu and Zhu Weibing

    Website: www.jizhu99.com
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jiwenyu_zhuweibing/


  • Interview | New York-based Artist Qianying Zhu

    Interview | New York-based Artist Qianying Zhu

    Qianying Zhu (b. Shandong, China) is a New York-based artist whose practice revolves around artistic jewelry and personal expression. Her work explores the interplay of diverse materials and combines traditional metal fabrication and 3D printing methodologies, capturing moments of harmony, balance, and transformation. Zhu believes that every contemporary jewelry piece embodies the distinctive characteristics of its time, a pursuit she consistently explores through playful elements, humor, and whimsical expressions. 

    Zhu holds an MFA in Metalsmithing from Cranbrook Academy of Art (2024) and a BFA in Jewelry Design from Savannah College of Art and Design (2021). Her recent exhibitions include Solo Exhibition: The Second that Twitched, New York (2025) Animalia, New York (2025); Dining on The Stars, New York (2025); Romania Jewelry Week, Romania (2024); I DON’T SHINE, I HAVE SOMETHING TO SAY, Venice (2024); VIII Contemporary Goldsmithing, Madrid (2024); and Milano Jewelry Week Artistar, Milan (2023). Zhu’s work has been featured in publications such as Art News of China (2024), Artistonish Magazine (2024), and IFINE ART (2023). Her practice has garnered attention through numerous interviews with platforms including Klimt02, Lost in Jewellery Magazine,33 Magazine, Trend Privé Media, and Goddess Arts Magazine.

    PRETZEL, Necklace, 2025, Sterling silver, flocking, 4.5 x 3.5 x 1.5 inches (4.5 x 17 x 1.5 inches with chain)

    Can you tell us about your background and how you started your artistic journey?

    I was born and raised in China in a family that values art—my grandfather is a traditional Chinese painter, and I grew up surrounded by creative practices like drawing, sculpting, and experimenting with materials. These early experiences sparked my passion for expressing emotions and ideas through handcrafted objects.

    I received my BFA in Jewelry Design from the Savannah College of Art and Design and later earned my MFA in Metalsmithing from Cranbrook Academy of Art. Through years of study and hands-on practice, I gradually moved from learning about contemporary jewelry to truly loving it and choosing it as the core of my professional path.

    Today, my work has become a way for me to understand myself and engage with the world around me. I’m especially drawn to subtle, often overlooked details in daily life, which I translate into playful and emotionally resonant jewelry pieces. Blending traditional symbols—such as the Chinese zodiac—with modern materials and techniques, I aim to create works that carry both cultural depth and a sense of humor, reflecting the tension and tenderness of everyday life.

    Candies, Brooch & Necklace, 2025, Sterling silver, copper, resin, steel wire, 28 x 2 x 1.7 inches

    How has your artistic style evolved over time?

    My creative journey has always been as much about self-discovery as it is about making objects. In the early years, I was primarily focused on mastering materials and techniques—exploring metalworking, enamel, resin, and 3D-printing processes. As I grew more confident in these methods, my work shifted from technical experimentation to a deeper, more reflective practice: each piece became a way to clarify my thoughts and anchor myself in the present moment.

    Over time, I’ve embraced what I call a “toy-maker’s mindset.” I started introducing miniature scenes, whimsical forms, and unexpected juxtapositions—playful nods to the absurdities of daily life. This toylike, humorous approach isn’t just for fun: by wrapping thoughtful ideas in an approachable, smile-inducing package, I invite viewers to pause, laugh, and perhaps see their own routines and memories in a new light. In every iteration, my style continues to balance precision with spontaneity, formality with humor, and tradition with surprise—always guiding me toward fresh perspectives on both my practice and myself.

    Chicken Box, Brooch, 2024, Sterling silver, resin, thread, steel wire, 0.8 x 4.8 x 1 inches

    Can you walk us through a recent piece—from concept to final creation?

    One of my recent works, Tennis, was inspired by a simple, carefree afternoon—the sun was bright, the breeze just right, and time seemed to pass in soft, rhythmic bounces. That quiet, fleeting sense of ease became the emotional core of the piece. Rather than marking time through numbers or structure, I wanted to express it through motion—through a drifting, weightless rhythm that reflects the way certain moments just feel.

    In this piece, two Chinese zodiac animals—the Pig and the Rooster—are reimagined as tennis balls. I often use the zodiac not just as a cultural reference, but as a way to explore time in a more personal, fragmented manner. In Tennis, these animals are no longer fixed symbols, but moving forms: playful vessels that carry the weight of a moment and then let it bounce away.

    To express this, I used flocked textures similar to the surface of real tennis balls, adding a tactile quality that contrasts with their usual rigid presence. Through deformation, coloration, and surface textures, I reshaped the zodiac figures into tennis-like forms that feel energetic, in-motion, and lighthearted.

    This series also includes two pendats: Chicken Ball and Pig Ball, each continuing the visual and conceptual play around motion, character, and material transformation. Together, they explore how symbolic creatures can become emotional timekeepers—shifting from ancient archetypes to fragments of lived, present-day experience.

    The chain and clasp for the pendant were also thoughtfully considered. Instead of a traditional metal chain, I used an elastic cord that adds a sense of tension and bounce—echoing the physical feel of a tennis rally. The clasp was also designed in a toylike style to align with the whole concept and reinforcing the whimsical tone and inviting interaction, almost like a childhood object reimagined in precious form.

    Ultimately, Tennis is a quiet meditation on time, play, and lightness. It invites the wearer to carry a bit of that unhurried joy with them—to move gently through the day, just as the ball drifts through the air.

    Oops, Necklace, 2024, Sterling silver, resin, thread, cotton cloth, 9 x 11 x 1.6 inches

    What challenges have you faced as an artist, and how have you overcome them?

    Like many artists, I’ve faced creative blocks—moments when ideas feel stuck and everything I make feels forced or disconnected. Over time, I’ve learned that rest is not a distraction from creating, but a necessary part of the process. Taking a step back, allowing my mind and body to relax, often helps me return to my work with a fresh perspective and renewed energy. Inspiration tends to appear when I stop chasing it too hard.

    Beyond creative blocks, I also struggle with internal doubt and the uncertainty of the future. These feelings can be exhausting, and sometimes they challenge even my love for making art. But I’ve found that turning these emotions into material can be healing. For example, in my piece Oops, I captured a chaotic moment—the instant a box of popcorn is knocked over. It’s a playful yet honest response to frustration, anxiety, and life’s little accidents. By translating these uncomfortable moments into tangible forms, I reclaim them and give them space to be seen differently. Creating Oops helped me confront frustration and imperfection with a lighter heart. It reminded me that even confusion and discomfort can be transformed into something meaningful.

    I believe being an artist requires not only passion, but also persistence, emotional resilience, and the ability to cheer yourself on when no one else is watching. Trusting the process, staying open to change, and making thoughtful plans for growth all help me move through uncertainty and continue evolving with my work.

    Flowing Memories, Brooch, 2025, Sterling silver, fine silver, enamel, stone, crystal, gemstone, steel wire, 4.2 x 2.5 x 0.5 inches

    What do you hope someone feels when they wear or interact with one of your pieces?

    I hope they feel a spark of connection—whether it’s with a memory, a part of their identity, or simply a moment of joy. My work often draws from personal emotions and cultural elements, especially the Chinese zodiac, which I reinterpret in playful, unexpected ways. I want my pieces to feel like small companions—intimate objects that carry stories, spark reflection, and bring a smile.

    There’s a quiet humor and toylike quality in many of my works, which helps soften complexity and create space for light-hearted contemplation. Beneath that playfulness, though, I hope people also sense something deeper—a reminder to pause, to focus on the present, and to find meaning in everyday moments.

    At the same time, I see my jewelry as a bridge between tradition and contemporary life. Through wearable forms, I hope to gently pass on cultural symbols in a way that feels fresh, approachable, and personally resonant—inviting each wearer to find their own connection within it.

    Text & photo courtesy of Qianying Zhu

    Website: https://www.qyzhu-jewelry.com/
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/qyz_zhu/


  • Interview | Ibaraki-Based Artist Kazuhito Kawai

    Interview | Ibaraki-Based Artist Kazuhito Kawai

    Kazuhito Kawai (b. 1984, Ibaraki, Japan) graduated BA Fine Art at Chelsea College of Arts (UAL) in 2007. After studying contemporary art in London, he encountered his new medium which was ceramics and experienced the liberation of his creativity allowing him to find a breakthrough. Kawai then graduated at Kasama College of Ceramic Art (Ibaraki) in 2018 and is currently working in Ibaraki. His ceramic works, characterized by dynamic colors and shapes, show various expressions such as irregularity, ugliness, grotesqueness, and fragility, and express his inner self drawn out by the materials in a multilayered manner. The piled-up lumps of clay reflect the time axis of a dialogue between the clay and himself. He has been exhibiting in Japan and overseas such as Hong Kong, Brussels, Los Angeles and more.

    Our Seven Days War, 2025, Ceramic, H 34.0 x 29.0 x 21.0 cm

    Can you tell us about your background and how you started your artistic journey?

    I was born in Kasama City, Ibaraki, Japan—a town known for its ceramics. Growing up, I was fascinated by fashion, especially through magazines. At that time in the late 90’s and early 2000’s, the thriving Japanese fashion magazine scene provided a window not only on style, but on a larger worldview and cultural perspective that transported me beyond the countryside where I lived and into the thriving subcultures of Tokyo and beyond. I was drawn to fashion, but found the strictly structured rules-based approach to studying art and fashion adopted in Japan too stifling. That’s what initially drew me to London, where I was planning on studying fashion at a school like Central Saint Martins. At my interview for the foundation course, the interviewer recommended I enroll instead in the BA program at the Chelsea College of Arts, so that is what I did. That is where I shifted toward contemporary fine art.

    At Chelsea, I worked mainly on conceptual installations and video works—very structured, logic-driven pieces. But eventually, I burned out. I struggled with alcoholism and had to step away from art altogether. I returned to Japan for rehabilitation, and worked as a salaried employee for a while, but it didn’t suit me. I felt lost, unsure of my future, until I stumbled upon a ceramics school back in Kasama. At first, I thought I might open a pottery shop or curate others’ work—I didn’t expect to become a maker myself.

    On entering the ceramics school, I discovered their curriculum was unexpectedly tilted towards contemporary ceramics, and I found myself re-engaging with art. I hated the rigid education style at first, especially after the freedom I’d experienced in London. And, in the process of trial and error of engaging with the clay and glazes and firings, at first I struggled, battling these materials that wouldn’t behave in lockstep with my thinking and do as I wanted. But somewhere in my reflections along the way, I looked things over and realized that these ceramic pieces were actually truthfully expressing something about myself.

    I began to see that the intuitive, hands-on expression that working in clay and ceramics uniquely makes possible could reveal something essential about myself.

    My work today blends that spontaneous, tactile approach with the conceptual foundations I learned in London. Ceramics are a part of everyday life deeply rooted in Japanese culture. That familiarity helps break down the barriers people often feel toward contemporary art. I think that’s where my voice lies: using humble materials to explore personal stories and cultural narratives in a way that feels grounded and accessible.

    Polo Ralph Lauren, 2025, Ceramic, H 34.0 x 30.0 x 27.0 cm

    How do you stay inspired and motivated to create new work?

    For me, staying motivated is rooted in a constant process of research, experimentation, and self-reflection. I don’t wait until everything is conceptually clear before I start working—instead, I create in order to understand. When I encounter a technical or aesthetic failure, like not achieving the color I imagined, that becomes a challenge I want to solve. There’s a tension between accepting accidents and still wanting to realize my original intention. That gap is incredibly generative.

    Curiosity plays a big role. I’m always asking myself: Is this really true? Even when I finish a work and explain my intentions, I question whether I truly understood myself—whether that piece is really the answer I think it is. That’s why making art becomes a kind of self-excavation. I dig into my own psyche, sometimes drawing from counseling sessions or conversations, and that inner search and constant questioning becomes the seed for future work. I treat each new piece as a chance to explore a slightly deeper or different perspective.

    Motivation also comes from making note of contradiction—when things don’t add up. Those inconsistencies push me to keep going, to find new answers. I’ll revisit unresolved ideas from previous works and allow them to transform across time. This process generates an evolving loop of deepening, clarifying, and re-evaluation that drives me to create new work.

    Ultimately, making art helps me grow and explore. With each piece, I see things in a new way, and that shift in understanding becomes the motivation for the next one. I don’t believe in arriving at a final truth—I believe in staying in motion, responding to uncertainty, and trusting that the process itself will lead me somewhere meaningful.

    Impression, Sunrise, 2025 , Ceramic, H 48.0 x 45.0 x 48.0 cm

    How did you first choose the medium you work with, and how has your relationship with it evolved over time?

    I didn’t set out to work with ceramics from the beginning. I was originally drawn to fashion as a teenager growing up in rural Japan—specifically, through magazine culture, which was a form of escape for me from the conservative countryside environment I felt alienated from. I moved to London to study fashion but eventually found myself in the fine art department at Chelsea College of Arts. I explored installation and video work there, creating highly conceptual pieces with strict internal logic. It was all very reasoned and controlled.

    After returning to Japan, I went through a difficult period—physically and mentally—eventually stepping away from art entirely and working regular jobs, including in advertising sales. It didn’t fit. Needing to regroup, at around 30, I returned to my hometown, Kasama, a city long associated with ceramics. I enrolled in a local ceramics school, not initially to become an artist again, but more to consider running a pottery shop or working in curation. I thought I wasn’t dexterous enough to be a maker—but something changed.

    At that school, the curriculum was oriented toward contemporary ceramics, and though I initially resisted, I found myself pulled back in to making art. I discovered that the clay became something I could use to communicate internal truths. Unlike painting, where I could control every detail, ceramics introduced unpredictability. Kiln firing, cracks, collapses—things happened I couldn’t plan. At first, I was frustrated. But over time, I realized that this loss of control, this collaboration with the material, was meaningful. The clay expresses something I can’t articulate any other way.

    Now, clay feels like the perfect medium. I’ve come to accept that art doesn’t need to be fully explained or perfect—it just needs to feel true. Working with clay allows me to explore imperfection, contradiction, and even failure as creative forces. This shift—from demanding control to learning to trust, from imposing intellectualizations to working on instinct—embracing dialogue—is how my relationship with my medium has evolved.

    I for You, 2025, Ceramic, H 27.0 x 25.0 x 23.0 cm

    How do you balance artistic integrity with commercial considerations, if applicable?

    To be honest, I don’t consciously think about how my work will sell when I’m making it. I don’t create with the market in mind. My process is driven by personal vision and intuitive authenticity—what feels necessary or interesting to me in that moment. 

    But at the same time, I do want my work to be understood. 

    I see the role of the artist and artistic creation as a form of communication with society—creating dialogues between people—not just personal expression for the sake of personal expression. If it were purely for myself, like a private diary, I wouldn’t even need to show it. But because I exist in society as an artist—adopting the social role as a contributor to society I think an artist must fulfill as a requirement of the profession—I believe there’s a responsibility to connect with others through the work.

    That doesn’t mean I compromise my ideas. I always start with what I genuinely want to do. But I am aware of how people receive it. I think about how an exhibition flows, how accessible the presentation is, and whether I can guide viewers into my world—even through something like wall text. I’ve learned that communication doesn’t mean compromise or commercialization; it means helping others engage with what I’ve created.

    I don’t chase commercial success, but I do feel encouraged when my work resonates with people and attracts their attention. That kind of response gives me energy to keep going. It’s a reminder that the work isn’t just for me—it’s a bridge. In that sense, “selling” isn’t the goal, successfully communicating is. And, this meaningful communication is then what leads to the work’s value being recognized, including its commercial or financial value. So rather than thinking in terms of artistic purity versus commercial appeal, I try to stay sincere in what I make while ensuring it reaches people—and that balance feels natural to me.

    Aoiro 7, 2025, Ceramic, H 27.0 x 23.0 x 25.0 cm

    What challenges have you faced as an artist, and how have you overcome them?

    One of the biggest challenges I face as an artist is communicating my vision to others. Especially with installations presenting my work, I often have a clear image in my mind from the beginning, but others can’t see it until the setup is complete. So, I’m constantly having to justify costs, materials, and decisions to galleries or collaborators. People might say, “Can’t you use cheaper materials?” or “Do you really need this?”—and I have to patiently explain why the choices are essential to presenting the work. Gaining trust has been key. When people see the finished product and understand my intention in hindsight, that builds credibility. Over time, a history of successful work helps others believe in the next project.

    Another deep challenge has been internal—struggling with low self-esteem and self-doubt. I think many artists deal with this contradiction: being sensitive or insecure, yet needing to publicly present and defend very personal narratives. It’s hard to be assertive about something you’re not entirely sure about yourself, or are still working through in your own mind. And, this struggle is compounded by the difficulty of putting into words others can understand the visions you have in your mind. In London, for example, when trying to bring together the teams needed to realize conceptual installations, I found myself struggling to effectively communicate my vision to others. In the end, the struggle was often too great, and I found myself more often than not painting alone. 

    As I established my practice, at first I thought that being recognized by the gatekeepers of the art world would solve this issue with confidence and self-esteem. But, I’ve come to realize that confidence can’t rely on this kind of external recognition from within the art world. Critics and gallerists and the like are all part of a system. Everyone has their own agendas, which are subject to change. This recognition by figures in the industry is brittle, not something you can trust or rely on to be stable or genuine. Instead, I’ve learned to rely more on private, trusted relationships—with friends, counselors, or a few people who truly understand me and my practice.

    Ultimately, I’ve found that overcoming these challenges means building long-term trust with others while also learning to trust myself. Confidence doesn’t come all at once; it’s something I develop piece by piece, project by project, as I continue to make work, reflect, and surround myself with people who offer honest support rather than surface-level praise.

    Anal Sex, 2025, Ceramic, H 53.0 x 42.0 x 35.0 cm

    What advice would you give to emerging artists trying to establish themselves?

    If I had to give advice to emerging artists, I’d start by saying: don’t rush things. Don’t be in too much of a hurry to gain recognition or success. I know how tempting it is to want to be seen or to make your mark quickly—I’ve been there myself. But in my experience, rushing often leads to compromising your vision or aligning with the wrong people. I’ve exhibited in places that didn’t honor the value of my work, and looking back, I realize those mistakes came from trying to move too fast.

    Instead, be sincere. Be honest with yourself and with your art. Ask yourself why you’re making what you’re making, and stay true to that. Don’t chase trends or success for the sake of it. Integrity to your art matters. You might not see results immediately, but if you keep going with authenticity, the right opportunities and recognition will come in time.

    That said, being an artist is not just about expressing yourself in isolation. Art is a social act. To call yourself an artist means, in a way, to take responsibility for presenting your vision to society. You must think about how your work exists in the world—how it’s understood, received, and valued. That means considering not only what you’re saying, but how and where you’re saying it. Don’t just throw your work into the world carelessly. Be thoughtful about its context and presentation.

    Also, take care to assess and understand your art’s value. Before sharing your work, step back and ask yourself if it’s something truly worth showing right now, worth making right now. Be objective: Is it meaningful today? Does it communicate something relevant to society, something sincere and culturally meaningful? If the answer is yes, then take the time to present it in a way that aligns with what your work is about —through the right channels, in the right context.

    Lastly, believe in what you’re doing. The path can be confusing, and your confidence will be tested. But through patience, sincerity, and care, you’ll be able to build something real—a meaningful life as a practicing artist.

    Text & photo courtesy of Kazuhito Kawai

    Website: https://www.kazuhitokawai.com
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/kazuhitokawai/


  • Interview | Shanghai-based Artist Fanglu Lin

    Interview | Shanghai-based Artist Fanglu Lin

    Fanglu Lin is a Chinese artist working with fiber and textile-based sculpture. She holds both a BA and MFA from the Central Academy of Fine Arts in Beijing, and has studied at the Karlsruhe University of Arts and Design and Tokyo University of the Arts.

    Her practice draws from the material traditions of ethnic minorities in China, particularly the Bai and Dong communities. Through extensive field research and hands-on learning, she reinterprets endangered techniques such as Bai tie-dye and Dong “liangbu” cloth into contemporary artworks that explore memory, identity, and resilience.

    Lin has exhibited at major exhibitions and institutions including the Venice Homo Faber (2024), LOEWE: Crafted World, NGV Triennial, Musée des Arts Décoratifs in Paris, and the Power Station of Art in Shanghai. Solo exhibitions include It’s All About Her(2025) and She’s Body (2023). In 2021, she received the LOEWE Foundation Craft Prize. Her work is held in collections such as the Victoria and Albert Museum, Musée des Arts Décoratifs, and the National Gallery of Victoria.

    She’s Fiery Love No.1, 2023

    Can you tell us about your background and how you started your artistic journey?

    I was born in China and received both my BA and MFA in Artistic Design from the Central Academy of Fine Arts in Beijing. During my studies, I also had the opportunity to participate in exchange programs at the Karlsruhe University of Arts and Design in Germany and the Tokyo University of the Arts in Japan. These experiences broadened my view of material practices across cultures and shaped my understanding of textile as a form of visual and conceptual expression.

    My artistic journey truly began when I started traveling to rural regions in China, particularly in Yunnan and Guizhou, to learn traditional textile techniques practiced by ethnic minority communities. I spent extended periods studying these endangered crafts—such as the Bai women’s tie-dye and the Dong people’s liangbu fabric production—through direct observation, hands-on practice, and immersion in the local environments. These experiences became the foundation of my current practice, in which I independently create fiber-based artworks that reinterpret these ancient techniques in a contemporary artistic language.

    She’s Earth, 2024, Commissioned by Loewe Foundation, Exhibited at Crafted World

    How do you select and prepare your materials, particularly natural fibers and dyes, to achieve the desired textures and forms in your pieces?

    I often work with natural fibers such as handwoven cotton or linen, which I source carefully to align with the traditional materials I encountered during my research. I also use natural dyes—indigo in particular—not only for their visual qualities but for their historical and cultural significance.

    The preparation of these materials is a meditative and labor-intensive process. I bind, twist, wrap, and layer fabrics repeatedly, creating densely textured surfaces that embody both fragility and strength. While the techniques I use are rooted in tradition, I approach them through a contemporary sculptural sensibility, often pushing their physical limits to explore volume, pressure, and form.

    How has your artistic style evolved over time?

    My style has gradually shifted from two-dimensional explorations to large-scale sculptural installations. In earlier years, I was more focused on patterns and surface manipulation. Over time, however, my practice became more spatial and physical—I began to think of fabric not only as something to look at, but as something that can hold space and weight, and interact with the body and architecture.

    This evolution also reflects my deeper engagement with slowness, repetition, and manual labor as conceptual frameworks. My current works often embody long durations of solitary making, where each stitch, knot, or fold becomes a record of time and intention.

    She’s Bestowed Love, 2025, Commissioned work by the Penninsula Hotels, Collected by the Victoria and Albert Museum, Photo credit to the Peninsula HotelsHotels

    What are some of the key themes or emotions you try to express through your art?

    Resilience, silence, and the layered presence of history are recurring themes in my work. I am especially interested in how materials carry cultural memory—how the way we dye, bind, or fold a piece of cloth can become a form of storytelling.

    There is often a tension between softness and strength in my work. Many pieces may appear delicate, but they are the result of physically demanding and repetitive labor. This paradox reflects my exploration of identity, femininity, and the embodied experience of making.

    What challenges have you faced as an artist, and how have you overcome them?

    One of the biggest challenges is working with slow, handmade processes in a fast-paced, productivity-driven art world. Much of what I do takes weeks or months to complete, often in solitude. It requires mental and physical endurance, and sometimes the patience to let a work unfold organically.

    Another challenge is the misunderstanding that traditional techniques belong only to the past. I’ve had to assert that these methods are not static—they can evolve, transform, and speak powerfully to contemporary concerns. Through my work, I hope to challenge the divide between craft and art, and to show how the act of making can be both personal and political.

    She’s Four Seasons, 2023, Commissioned and Collected by the National Gallery of Victoria

    What advice would you give to emerging artists trying to establish themselves?

    Trust your instincts and your pace. It’s easy to feel pressure to fit into certain trends or markets, but real growth comes from listening to what moves you and staying committed to it.

    Also, don’t be afraid to go deep into something specific. Research, travel, practice—whatever it takes to build your own vocabulary. For me, going to remote villages to learn textile techniques wasn’t part of a plan—it was just something I felt drawn to. That path ended up becoming my language.

    Text & photo courtesy of Fanglu Lin

    Website: https://www.linfanglu.com
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/linfanglu_lulu/


  • Interview | Seoul-Based Artist CHA Hyeonwook

    Interview | Seoul-Based Artist CHA Hyeonwook

    CHA Hyeonwook (b. 1987) has continued a distinctive painting practice that explores the themes of memory, temporality, and personal identity through the acts of collecting and reconstructing. CHA collects personal experiences and memories—both direct and indirect—through constant interaction with the surrounding world, reconstructing them into visual images. For him, memory does not restore events as they were, but rather reappears distorted and condensed according to emotional and circumstantial filters, and is reborn on the surface of his paintings. These fragments of memory accumulate in his works like layers of sediment, forming landscapes. In particular, recurring motifs such as trees and clouds serve as symbols of memory and emotion, reflecting the artist’s sense of being an outsider shaped by his movements across different regions. Memory is not simply a mechanism for preserving the past, but a living fragment that connects the past and present while constructing new futures. Grounded in the materials and techniques of traditional Korean color painting, CHA experiments freely across the boundaries of Eastern and Western painting, developing his own visual language. His work skillfully merges linear expressions derived from the rules of traditional Korean landscape painting with the spontaneity and unpredictability often found in Western painting. By repeatedly layering dry brushstrokes on hanji (traditional Korean paper), he creates surfaces where colors accumulate, leaving behind mark-like traces, while intentionally preventing deep absorption of moisture. Utilizing anchae (water-based pigment made by mixing mineral powders with glue and natural starch) and hobun (white pigment derived from crushed seashells or lime), both traditional Korean painting materials, the artist nevertheless embraces a free and experimental approach in the arrangement of colors and forms. Through this unique method, CHA blurs the boundaries between Korean landscape painting and Western landscape traditions, establishing a painterly language in which landscapes become containers for memory.

    CHA Hyeonwook studied Korean painting at Kyungpook National University and completed his M.F.A. at Korea National University of Arts. His major solo exhibitions include Arario Gallery Seoul (Seoul, Korea, 2024), Gallery Playlist (Busan, Korea, 2023), Art Space Euisikju (Seoul, Korea, 2022), Daegu Culture and Arts Center (Daegu, Korea, 2018), and Cheongju Art Studio (Cheongju, Korea, 2015). He has participated in numerous group exhibitions at Kumho Museum of Art (Seoul, Korea, 2022), Daegu Art Factory (Daegu, Korea, 2020), Jeonnam International Ink Biennale (Jeonnam, Korea, 2018), Daegu Art Museum (Daegu, Korea, 2017), among others. He received the “Young Artist of the Year Award” (Daegu Culture and Arts Center, 2018) and the Excellence Award in the “4th Gwangju Hwaru: 10 Artists” (Gwangju Bank, 2020). His works are included in the collections of the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Korea; Daegu Art Museum; Seoul National University Museum of Art; and others.

    Wandering Tree, 2025, Powdered color pigment on hanji, 80.3 x 65.2 cm, ©CHA Hyeonwook, courtesy of the Artist and Arario Gallery

    Can you tell us about your background and how you started your artistic journey?

    I was born in Busan, a port city in South Korea. However, I didn’t grow up near the sea. In the neighborhood where I was raised, there was the wide Nakdong River instead of the ocean, and since the area hadn’t been heavily urbanized at the time, it was surrounded by beautiful natural scenery. I lived there with my father, who was an artist, and my warm and loving mother. My father’s studio and his fellow artist colleagues exposed me naturally to art, and for me, drawing became a part of everyday life—almost like a favorite game.

    In that way, drawing became my most enjoyable pastime and a daily habit. However, in my late teens, there was a period when I lost interest in drawing. This was largely due to the college entrance exam preparation process for art school, during which drawing came to feel like a mere “means to an end.” I developed a sense of resistance, as it felt like my drawings were being used as tools for a specific purpose.

    Then one day, I happened to visit a studio for traditional East Asian painting and encountered sumuk-danchehwa (ink-and-light-color traditional Korean painting), which introduced me to an entirely new way of drawing. That moment led me to decide to major in Korean traditional painting, and I began drawing once again.

    After entering university, I studied traditional ink painting and color painting. Among these, I found myself especially drawn to sumukhwa (traditional ink painting), particularly sansuhwa (traditional landscape painting). What fascinated me was that it wasn’t merely about depicting nature—it was also about how people viewed nature, and more broadly, how people in the past understood and represented the world they lived in.

    After completing my military service and returning to school, I went through a period of doubt about my future as an artist, primarily due to the practical need to make a living after graduation. I began studying traditional architecture with the goal of obtaining a certification as a cultural heritage restoration technician. Though I found architecture study engaging, what intrigued me even more was learning how people in the past embraced and utilized what we now call “tradition.” Rather than simply adhering to established styles, they constantly experimented and sought innovation in their architectural practices.

    It was during this process that I thought back to ink landscape painting. I didn’t want to merely imitate historical styles and stay confined within them—I wanted to depict the world I live in and experience, using my own visual language

    Chasing, 2024, Powdered color pigment on hanji, 73 x 117 cm, ©CHA Hyeonwook, courtesy of the Artist and Arario Gallery

    How do you stay inspired and motivated to create new work?

    I find motivation through the stories of people who, like me, observe and explore the world. I’m deeply inspired by the working methods and attitudes of novelists, poets, and painters—their unique ways of seeing the world resonate with me and leave a lasting impression.

    Lately, I’ve also been drawn to the ways of thinking found in Buddhism, the humanities, and the sciences. At the intersection of these disciplines, I find a common focus on the human experience. Listening to the diverse ways in which people explore the world makes me feel as though I am part of an ongoing conversation—as if I’m piecing together fragments of their stories with fragments of my own memory. This process becomes a joyful time of imagination and reflection for me. Even when I haven’t lived through their experiences directly, I feel my own life naturally interwoven with their stories, especially since they often touch on people and nature.

    Recently, I happen to hear about a self-reflective writing by a former humanities scholar and former politician who began studying science later in life. I was deeply impressed by this because for me, connecting pieces of someone else’s story with my own memories is a form of solidarity—it’s a communal act and a way of understanding both the world and myself. Through this ongoing process, I continuously encounter new questions, which I express through my paintings.

    Enigmatic Entities, 2024, Powdered color pigment on hanji, 170 x 142 cm, ©CHA Hyeonwook, courtesy of the Artist and Arario Gallery

    How has your artistic style evolved over time?

    In the early stages of my career after graduating from university, I focused on sumukhwa (ink painting). In 2013, my early works depicted fragments of natural landscapes. Rather than pursuing realistic representation, I expressed the emotions evoked by nature through abstract lines and forms.

    However, around 2017, while living in an environment increasingly removed from nature, I began to question whether continuing this approach was still meaningful. In response, I turned my attention to the events and places in my immediate surroundings and began depicting them through sumukhwa. What intrigued me most was portraying nighttime scenes—not the daylight filled with brightness, but the “night roads” I walked after finishing work and heading home. In the darkness, I experienced deeper emotions and, through expressing unseen shadows, I rediscovered the freedom of drawing.

    As I continued to follow the theme of darkness, I eventually began observing the night sky beyond Earth’s atmosphere through a telescope. What fascinated me was that the images emerging from this darkness were often rooted in my past memories.

    After my solo exhibition in 2018, I decided to pursue graduate studies and moved to Seoul. Having worked alone since completing my undergraduate degree, I had begun to feel a sense of limitation, and I wanted to gain a new perspective through study before it was too late. At that time, I made a conscious decision: “It doesn’t necessarily have to be a traditional Korean painting program—what matters is finding a place where I can seek answers to my questions.” This naturally narrowed down my options within Korea, and I was drawn to the Painting Department at Korea National University of Arts.

    Another reason I chose to enter the painting program was that I wanted to find my own answers to a few recurring questions I had been asked since the beginning of my practice: “How long will I continue painting in ink?” “Why don’t I use color?” “Why do I insist on using hanji (traditional Korean paper)?” For me, the tonal gradations of ink already contained a richness of color, and the material qualities of hanji and ink—precisely because they don’t overtly emphasize physicality—were more compelling. So I had always dismissed these questions as self-evident. However, one question lingered: “If I were to use colors beyond those found in ink, how can these be applied as an artist?”

    I also wanted to directly engage with the theoretical discourse happening in the contemporary art scene. Through that engagement, I began to reconsider traditional East Asian painting within the context of contemporary painting. In this era where the boundaries between East and West are increasingly blurred, I believe that understanding and reinterpreting each other’s modes of expression remains a highly relevant and infinitely promising area. This belief also aligns with my personal approach to life: rather than being bound by convention, I aim to persuade myself through my own vision and language.

    Through this process, I began to step away from ink painting and experiment with color painting. In terms of technique, I started building multiple layers while ensuring the physical thickness of the paint remained invisible. I also explored ways of impressing marks into hanji using pressure rather than paint alone. Gradually, I came to the realization that “memory”—in all its imperfect uniqueness—can collapse the boundaries between past, present, and future. I continue this practice today, one that brings tradition into the present while simultaneously reaching toward the future.

    Wandering Things, 2025, Powdered color pigment on hanji, 73 x 117.4 cm, ©CHA Hyeonwook, courtesy of the Artist and Arario Gallery

    In what ways do you see your practice as a dialogue between Eastern and Western painting traditions?

    My work unfolds at the intersection of traditional elements and contemporary sensibilities. It reflects a pursuit of greater freedom from formal conventions, influenced in part by Western art, while simultaneously retaining aspects of East Asian painting—particularly in the way I depict subjects through specific landscape forms and emphasize distinctive lines found within them.

    This dual tendency constantly interacts within my practice, transforming and overlapping to generate new forms. Through this ongoing process, I aim to explore and express how we understand and relate to the present moment. As a result, I see my work as resembling the landscape of Korea itself—a space where tradition and modernity coexist, producing both harmony and dissonance, always poised on the boundary between the two.

    Between Day and Night, 2023, Powdered color pigment on hanji, 53 x 41 cm, ©CHA Hyeonwook, courtesy of the Artist and Arario Gallery

    What challenges have you faced as an artist, and how have you overcome them?

    Living as an artist can sometimes feel like knocking on a massive stone wall. Society’s values and systems are not designed with the artist at their core. The art world is no exception, and it took me a long time to fully grasp and accept that reality.

    Perhaps because of my inherently individualistic nature, I’ve also sometimes struggled with human relationships, both significant and minor. At times, I’ve found myself unsure whether these challenges stemmed from my profession as an artist or from my own personality. Maybe that’s why I feel drawn to nature, why I seek it out and observe it so closely.

    Nature doesn’t offer answers to my worries or cries, nor does it demand anything from me. It simply, quietly—like the sound of the wind—reminds me to “listen to your own voice.” And so I often return to it, carrying those landscapes within me, and finding courage there.

    There is also someone who always helps me reflect on myself: my spouse. The conversations we share, and her gentle attention, are like both a mirror and a safe haven for me. Through her, I’m able to see my own thoughts and emotions more clearly.

    Lastly, the unconditional love and support I’ve received from my parents has given me the strength to face the many hardships that come with being an artist—without wavering, and with quiet resolve. The presence of my family, the silence of nature, and the time shared with the person I love are my greatest sources of comfort and resilience.

    A Full Night, 2018, Ink on hanji, 200 x 145 cm, ©CHA Hyeonwook, courtesy of the Artist and Arario Gallery

    What advice would you give to emerging artists trying to establish themselves?

    I’m not sure I’m in a position to offer advice, knowing full well the dedication and intensity of their efforts. But these are words I continue to remind myself of even now, so I’d like to share them.

    It’s important to stay attuned to the currents of the times. Admiring and aspiring to be like the artists who receive attention is perfectly natural. However, at the center of that precious time—marked by inevitable trial and error—I hope you always place your own voice. Critique yourself, praise yourself, and observe with care and affection how you grow and change over time.

    Text & photo courtesy of CHA Hyeonwook and Arario Gallery

    Website: https://www.chahyeonwook.com
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/huc_works/


  • Interview | Beijing and New York-based Artist Hu Shasha

    Interview | Beijing and New York-based Artist Hu Shasha

    Hu Shasha is visual artist (painter) who lives and works in Beijing/ New York. In 2022 she receive her MA degree in illustration at MICA. Hu has already been included in various important exhibitions including “Wish you were here” at LeRoy Neiman Gallery, New York; Art Utopia, Ullens Center for Contemporary Art, Beijing; China-Korea Group Exhibition, Sungkyunkwan University, Seoul;In between the tangible reality, Object MometÓ, Shanghai; Rock Color Painting Exhibition, Heilongjiang Art Museum, Harbin and solo exhibition in EGG gallery Beijing. In 2018 her works has been selected in John Mores Painting Prize China, Minsheng Museum of Modern Art.

    Pink Mountain, 2024, Oil, acrylic on canvas, 40 x 30 inches

    Can you tell us about your background and how you started your artistic journey?

    I was born in a northern oil city in China, where industrial landscapes coexist with traditional culture. From an early age, I was immersed in the world of traditional Chinese painting, which laid the foundation for my artistic sensibility. In middle school, I began formal training in gouache, watercolor, and sketching, and later attended an art college to further develop my technical skills.

    My artistic journey also gave me the opportunity to work in contemporary art galleries and museums in Beijing’s 798 Art District, where I was exposed to a wide range of artistic voices and practices. Seeking broader perspectives, I pursued further studies at the University of the Arts London and Columbia University in New York, and earned a master’s degree from the Maryland Institute College of Art. These international experiences have profoundly shaped my artistic vision and expanded my understanding of art and its possibilities.

    Seafood Baltimore, 2022, Acrylic on canvas, 16 x 20 inches

    What is your typical process when starting a new piece?

    Painting is a tool for expression, and I treat it as a form of visual diary. I construct the overall composition through analysis, deconstruction of imagery, and collage.

    I don’t plan the composition or color relationships in a strictly analytical way. Instead, these elements emerge intuitively—shaped by years of training, aesthetic instinct, muscle memory, and emotional response. This process provides a genuine and spontaneous foundation for the work, allowing me to engage more deeply as the piece evolves.

    BC factory 003, 2019, Acrylic on canvas, 30 x 40 cm

    How has your artistic style evolved over time?

    In the beginning, I lived and worked in the Caochangdi Art District in Beijing, an area close to the international airport and the well-known 798 Art District. Many prominent contemporary artists lived there. However, it didn’t last long—government-led demolitions and evictions forced many of us to leave. During that period, I created many works featuring bones and darkness.

    I later moved to the HuanTie Art District and several other places in Shunyi. Some of my paintings were damaged in the process of relocating. Over time, I realized that those dark expressions had little effect on the reality around me. I began to reflect on the meaning of human existence, and my work gradually became more positive and abstract—as a way to resist my own anxiety and fear.

    What’s the most rewarding aspect of being creative in your experience?

    As long as we’re alive, we have a need to express ourselves. For me, the most rewarding aspect of being creative is the way it allows me to better understand others—and, just as importantly, to understand myself. Through the act of making, I find clarity, connection, and meaning.

    BC factory 002, 2019, Acylic on canvas, 30 x 40 cm*2

    What projects are you currently working on, and what can we expect from you in the future?

    I am currently preparing for a solo exhibition in upstate New York, where I hope to offer the local community a new visual experience—one that encourages people to reconsider their everyday surroundings and reflect on our relationship with space. The exhibition will be held in a public library, a place my two-year-old daughter often visits, which gives the project special personal significance for me.

    Since moving to New York, I’ve found that art resources are readily accessible—museums and galleries provide constant opportunities to see outstanding work. However, in China, aesthetic education is still not widely popularized. I hope that through my art, more people can integrate art into their daily lives and live with it.

    Blue Mountain, 2023, Oil, acrylic on canvas, 40 x 30 inches

    How do you hope your art resonates with diverse audiences across different cultures?

    Much of Chinese wisdom lies in simplifying what is difficult and complex, and I hope my work can embody that idea. I believe everyone is an artist—anyone can use painting as a form of expression.

    In the age of artificial intelligence, as more and more forms of human labor are replaced by automation, many people may begin to feel a growing sense of meaninglessness. That’s why I believe it’s especially important now to reconnect with our inner lives and the world around us. Chinese philosophy—particularly its reflections on the relationship between humans and nature—has had a profound influence on my thinking.

    My work often enters into a dialogue with nature and space, aiming to offer a more mindful and nourishing experience of life. Through art, I hope to convey a sense of calm, balance, and presence—an experience that can transcend cultural boundaries, encouraging viewers to slow down and reflect on what it means to live well.

    The moon, shadow and me, 2023, Oil, acylic on wood, 12 x 14 inches

    Text & photo courtesy of Hu Shasha

    Website: https://www.hushasha.com
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/shashahushasha/


  • Interview | Osaka-Based Artist Arisa Kumagai

    Interview | Osaka-Based Artist Arisa Kumagai

    Arisa Kumagai was born in Osaka, Japan in 1991. She received her B.A. in Oil Painting and M.A. in Mixed Media from Kyoto University of the Arts. Her work has been recognized with several awards, including the Excellence Award at the university’s graduation exhibition, the Akira Asada Prize, and selections for The Ueno Royal Museum Prize and Shell Art Award. She was also a designated scholarship recipient of The Sato International Cultural Scholarship Foundation, The Sato Art Museum, and The Japan Arts and Culture Foundation. 

    Kumagai currently lives and works in Japan. She works primarily in oil painting with mixed media. Kumagai explores the emotional and psychological dimensions of intimacy, memory, and domestic life. Her installations and images, often drawn from personal objects and fragmented narratives, create delicate yet unsettling environments that blur the line between inner experience and external reality. Her work has been exhibited widely across Japan and internationally, including at Powerlong Museum in Shanghai, Marugame Genichiro-Inokuma Museum of Contemporary Art, and The National Art Center Tokyo.

    Say yes to me, 2023, Oil on panel, 97 × 195 cm, Diptyque
    Say yes to me, 2023, Oil on panel, 97 × 195 cm, Diptyque

    Can you tell us about your background and how you started your artistic journey?

    My name is Arisa Kumagai. I was born in Osaka, Japan, and went to an art high school. I graduated from Kyoto University of the Arts in oil painting and completed my master’s degree in comprehensive design at the same university.

    My grandparents ran a small boutique specializing in Italian high fashion. My father and mother were both fashion designers, and met and married at the same company, and later took over my grandparents’ boutique.

    My family relationships were complicated, but my cultural capital was very high, and I grew up surrounded by fashion, movies, manga, and literature. I was very introverted child, and I loved to stay at home and draw, but I was in an environment that respected that.

    When I was in kindergarten, I won the top prize in a small painting competition. Looking at it now, it’s not a special painting that anyone would see as having obvious talent. It’s a childlike, adorable painting. But it was enough to make me, as a child, aspire to become a painter in the purest of ways.

    Self-poetry book (letterpress), 2023, Gold chain, cloth, reproduction of a sacrament table

    How do you stay inspired and motivated to create new work?

    My inspiration always comes from my own experiences and emotions. Getting the news from around the world on my smartphone, giving and receiving flowers from loved ones, feeling intense anger towards social and political injustice, visiting religious facilities and praying, appreciating and discussing all kinds of artworks, sleeping well…all of these are extensions of my daily life, and they are my experiences and emotions, and they are all my inspiration and motivation.

    she, 2022, Oil on panel, 21 × 29.7 cm, Diptyque
    she, 2022, Letterpress printing on paper, framed, 15.3 x 21.4 cm, Diptyque

    How do your personal experiences and identity influence your art?

    My work as an artist started from my own family history. As mentioned above, my family had high cultural capital, but at the same time, it was a dysfunctional family.

    The family boutique was located right behind the red light district, and many of the children living in that town had complicated family backgrounds. My father had mental illness and repeatedly attempted suicide in front of us and beat us. A particularly big event was when I had just finished graduate school, my father’s decomposed body was discovered. My father was still young, in his early 50s. He lived alone in his house, and died alone in the winter, and no one found him until the smell came out in the spring.

    He was that poor and lonely. From there, my iconic series, the “Single bed” series, began. These are paintings the size of a life-size single bed. There is always a memento mori lying in this single bed, and within it there is a very personal love and hate, as well as a strong criticism of the social problem of loneliness that goes beyond the individual.

    Once I became clearly aware that the issues my family faced were not closed problems, but were strongly connected to social issues, my creative awareness as an artist expanded greatly.

    Singl bed, 2018, Oil on panel,197 × 97 cm

    Can you elaborate on your decision to employ a highly realistic painting style in your work?

    In university, I was captivated by modern and contemporary art, and my creative practice focused on abstract expression.Jackson Pollock, Mark Rothko…I still love those artists.

    However, the true origin of my artistic expression and the one that has never left me is the religious paintings of the Baroque period by Caravaggio and Velasquez, which I saw when I was in high school. I was so moved by their paintings that I chose to express myself in oil. I was also surrounded from birth by Christian art-inspired fashions, such as Gianni Versace’s, which was also a significant factor in my choice.

    After a long search for a way of expression, I returned to my roots in order to paint my family history. It was necessary for me to face the motifs for a long time in order to sublimate the unbearable love and hatred that I have. In order to create a realistic expression, it is necessary to observe the subject in detail, and then, with my interpretation and direction, make it appear as a painting. I interpret this as a kind of violence and obsession.

    In addition, I do not complete a painting in one piece, but rather, I often use diptychs and triptychs, and I also focus on textual expression such as poems. I want to expand the narrative power of my work.

    In each solo exhibition, I aim to create an intimate and introspective viewing experience. Just as there are religious paintings in churches or huge Buddha images in temples, I want my work to be like that.

    You or I, 2022, Oil on panel,195 × 97 cm, Diptyque
    You or I, 2022, Letterpress printing on paper, framed, 15.3 x 21.4 cm, Diptyque

    What challenges have you faced as an artist, and how have you overcome them?

    My production takes a long time for each piece, and I spend a lot of time working in solitude and seclusion. Therefore, I am aware that it is easy to fall into a narrowing of thought and perspective.

    Each time this happens, I think I am able to face the challenges of the moment by going out and meeting and talking with real people, and by being willing to dive into communities of interest as much as possible.

    I believe that everything is difficult to overcome completely, and I find it enriching to continue to have challenges.

    we’re, 2023, Oil on panel, 33.5 × 33.5 cm

    What advice would you give to emerging artists trying to establish themselves?

    Meet many people and their works. Be influenced and challenged by many new ways of expression and ideas. But never forget your original experiences. Remember what you truly believe is beautiful and what you want to believe. Growing taller will help you grow, but do not lie to yourself. Being true to yourself and to others is the most important thing for an artist.

    Text & photo courtesy of Arisa Kumagai

    Portrait Photo Credit: Sadaho Naito

    Website: https://arisakumagai.com
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/arisakumagai_art/


  • Interview | Beijing-Based Artist Xue Ruozhe

    Interview | Beijing-Based Artist Xue Ruozhe

    Xue Ruozhe was born in Jiangsu Province. After graduated from the Oil Painting Department of China Central Academy of Fine Arts, they continued their study in the Painting Programme of Royal College of Art, and obtained their master’s degree in 2015. They are the award winner of the Neville Burston Prize, Gordon Luton Prize for Fine Art, and the Tom Bendheim Prize, also the recipient of China National Scholarship. They were shortlisted for the Sovereign Asian Art Prize in 2022. Xue currently lives and works in Beijing and Guangzhou.

    Using painting as their main artistic approach, Xue’s works explore the re-contextualization and re-enchantment of figurative painting in contemporary media ecology, in the rift between painting and imagery, painting and its own history. Underneath the restrained pictorial narrative are Xue’s hints about what has yet to be presented or is about to happen. Working with a highly restricted methodology, Xue pushes the psychological density of their paintings to the limit, the reality is then distorted by constant subtraction until the paintings reach a state of suspension and stagnation.

    In recent years, their works focus on exploring the boundary of reality.

    Atlas of Rhapsody on the Luo River Godness-Part 1, 2024. Oil on linen, 250 × 400 cm

    Can you tell us about your background and how you started your artistic journey?

    I started my BA at the Central Academy of Fine Arts in Beijing, followed by the postgraduate course at the Royal College of Art in London. Shortly after graduating, I was fortunate to have my first solo exhibition with Beijing Art Now Gallery, marking the beginning of my career.

    How do you stay inspired and motivated to create new work?

    I am aware of things around me, and I keep learning.

    Hold, Tear, 2019, Oil on linen,145 x 190 cm

    How has your artistic style evolved over time?

    My artistic practice initially focused on conceptual art, which later evolved into conceptual painting. Over time, I transitioned to my current approach on discussion around painting.

    What’s the most rewarding aspect of being creative in your experience?

    To suddenly get an idea that I like, and be able to realise it.

    The Imagined Imagery, 2024, Oil on linen, 230 × 130 cm

    What challenges have you faced as an artist, and how have you overcome them?

    Every new painting is a challenge, not sure if I have overcomed them, I like to raise questions, not to solve them.

    In what ways do you think the art world has changed since you started your career?

    Some people disappeared and some people appears.

    Text & photo courtesy of Xue Ruozhe

    Website: http://www.xueruozhe.com
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ruozhe/


  • Interview | Seoul-Based Artist Yoona Love Kim

    Interview | Seoul-Based Artist Yoona Love Kim

    Yoona Love Kim is fascinated by the artistry and purity of the work created by children, and meets her childhood imaginary friend Rabbit character again, she create the world currently experienced from a child’s perspective. Finding random images on paper, such as games, natural beauty, and the Internet, without planning, is the joy and surprise that appears in the process. “Let’s go back to our childhood and hop around the world of imagination”

    Handkerchief tied in peace, 2021, Mixed media, beeswax on paper, 45 x 45 cm

    Can you tell us about your background and how you started your
    artistic journey?

    When I was around 26, I worked as a designer at an animation company. Looking back on that time, I was emotionally numb, filled only with a dull, negative energy. It even felt like I had forgotten how to draw—something I had loved most since childhood. That’s when I finally realized something was wrong in my life. I began to reflect on what I truly wanted and what kind of life I should be living. Eventually, I decided to leave Seoul and dedicate myself to a life of drawing.

    Reincarnation of Geranium, 2023, Mixed media on panel, 100.5 x 80.5 cm

    How do you stay inspired and motivated to create new work?

    Everything in my daily life inspires me—the bluish purple of violets I come across on walks, my imaginary rabbit friend, various images from games and animations, and even the pain of the world, like environmental issues. I bring all of these inspirations into ‘YOONA WORLD’ and absorb them as parts of my own kingdom. Playing joyfully in this imagined world is both my creative process and a way to express who I am. That’s why I always try to keep my ears perked up like a rabbit, my eyes wide open, and my nose twitching—to fully experience both the sweetness and bitterness of life.”

    Bunny_s Rest Bonfire, 2022, Mixed media on paper mache, 36 x 48 x 64 cm + 26 x25 x 32 cm

    How has your artistic style evolved over time?

    The very first things I drew were the grass, trees, and flowers on a small hill near my home. I wasn’t trying to create anything with deep meaning—I was simply drawn to how life bloomed and coexisted in harmony within that small space. I kept drawing similar scenes for a year, and eventually held a solo exhibition. Looking back at the collection, I thought, “Maybe I could approach this more freely, more playfully.” That led me to recall my younger self and draw with that spirit in mind. Gradually, that’s how my current style began to emerge. Rather than trying to maintain a specific aesthetic or texture in my work, I try to express my feelings and moods just as they are in the moment. Like life itself, my art is constantly changing.

    Journaling duvet, 2024, Mixed media on panel, 81 x 100 cm

    How do your personal experiences and identity influence your art?

    I believe personal experiences are a vital element that adds individuality and story to an artist’s work. Even when we look at the sky, we’re all seeing the same sky, but the images and imagination it evokes are different for each person. In the same way, whenever I encounter something beautiful in life, I either record it in my heart or capture it in a drawing. These little emotional notes and memories naturally find their way into my work later on, and that’s how my unique pieces come to life.

    Even the changing seasons influence me deeply—the color tones in my drawings are noticeably different between spring and winter. And when I fall in love with someone or go through a breakup, those emotions often show up vividly in my artwork as well.

    I became a mountain while waiting for you here and my tears be source of life, 2021, Mixed media, beeswax on paper, 86 x 45 cm

    What challenges have you faced as an artist, and how have you overcome them?

    Since the moment I decided to live as an artist, I’ve been constantly growing and learning. That’s why every moment I spend working is truly joyful. Of course, there are times when I feel a bit of regret—when I have to let go of parts of my vision due to spatial or time constraints. But after realizing that even within limitations, there’s joy in making new discoveries, I’ve started to find a balance and try new approaches along the way!

    I am Loved, 2021, Mixed media, linen thread beeswax on paper, 130 x 128 cm

    What advice would you give to emerging artists trying to establish themselves?

    First, I’d say it’s important to take the time to genuinely explore what it is you truly want. To do that, try spending time alone and getting in touch with yourself. There are many paths in art, and sometimes, you might have to discover something entirely new along the way. That kind of journey requires a sincere love for what you’re doing. But it’s hard to truly love something if you don’t understand it well. So my advice would be: start by nurturing a real love for the kind of art you want to pursue.

    Text & photo courtesy of Yoona Love Kim

    Website: https://yoonalove.ju.mp
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/yoonalovekim/?hl=en


  • Interview | Vadodara-Based Artist Dhruva Mistry

    Interview | Vadodara-Based Artist Dhruva Mistry

    Dhruva Mistry was born in 1957, Kanjari. Mistry studied at the Faculty of Fine Arts, M. S. University of Baroda, India, from 1974-81, and progressed to the Royal College of Art, London, on a British Council Scholarship. He became Artist in Residence at Kettle’s Yard, with a Fellowship at Churchill College, University of Cambridge in 1984-85. In 1991, he was elected a Royal Academician. In 1992 he was appointed sculptor of the Victoria Square, Birmingham. Invited to become a Fellow of the Royal Society of Sculptors in London in 1993. In 1994, He represented Britain at various international art exhibitions. Won Third Rodin Grand Prize Exhibition, Japan (1990) and was selected for the solo show ‘Asian Artists Today – Fukuoka Annual VII’, by the Fukuoka Art Museum, Japan in 1994. He has held over 25 Solo exhibitions in India and abroad. After a period of ill health since 2008, Mistry resumed work with stainless steel in 2014 and continues to display his sculptural forms using AutoCAD technology to create works, breaking the 3D forms into a set of flat steel planes which allows use of brilliant colors. Mistry was awarded a CBE in 2001 for his contribution to British art. He received an Honorary Doctorate from University of Central England in 2007. In 2020 Kailas Lalit Kala Award of Chitrakutdham, Mahua and Kalidas Samman of the Bharat Bhavan, Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh Government. 

    Reading Recline, 2004-2019, 304 Stainless Steel, Life Size, Photo Credit: Akara Contemporary, Mumbai

    Could you share a little about who you are and what kind of art you create?

    I was born and brought up in a green, rural and progressive region of Central Gujarat. My father was a draughtsman. I learnt Sculpture at the Faculty of Fine Arts, The M.S. University of Baroda 1974-1981 and The Royal College of Art in London 1981-1983 on a British Council Scholarship. Then, I was a freelance sculptor until 1997 before moving to Vadodara. My interest in the Indian arts, crafts, culture, drawing, painting, photography and nature nurtures and inspires figurative explorations as self expression. Figure as a form in actual space and pictorial image offers lyrical abstractions. My familiarity with conventional media like clay, plaster, wood, stone and use of metals allow me the freedom of forms. My interest in drawing led me to digital drawing of shapes to laser cut stainless steel to assemble my works. The rust proof material seems better suited for the Indian climate and environment. I am curious about visual arts of a variety of cultures and civilizations.  

    ALoC: The Object, Variation, 1997-2023, 304 Stainless Steel, 65 x 22 x 30 inches, Photo Credit: Akara Contemporary, Mumbai

    How has your artistic style evolved over time?

    I focus upon exploring quality of the form with the economy of materials for compatible scale. My sculptural challenges use available materials and skills in the given space, time and environment since the 1970s. My skepticism makes me wary of evolving a visual signature style. My sculptural reliefs and works in the round of 1970s and early 1980s remain formal with naturalistic figuration. In the 1980s, my interest in myths offered images of human dichotomy and hybrid creatures. In the 1990s figurative abstraction of forms in space called Spatial Diagrams, were modeled with linear structural forms which kept me busy with fiberglass, bronze and stainless steel in the 1990s-2005. Stainless steel pieces of round bars and laser cut stainless steel sheet metal shapes to assemble works has kept me busy till today. 

    Doodledom, 2014-2019, 304 Stainless Steel, Hand painted, 19.5 x 29 x 31 inches, Unique variation

    What role do you believe art plays in social and cultural change?

    My work reflects subtle socio-cultural and political changes that affect me. There are personal and collective challenges of the time, like nudity and sensuality of figurative forms. Self expression in the arts can be an individual challenge for the artist. I minimize use of machine tools to maintain an immaculate quality of spatial images. I had no machine tools in the 1970s. Gradual use of machine tools reflected economical, infrastructural and technological development of the information age. There were millennial changes in the lives of the people. 

    Little B, 2008-2020, 304 Stainless Steel, 63.5 x 41 x 25 inches, Unique Variation

    Are there any mediums you prefer working with? Why? 

    An inert beauty of earthly clay offers possibilities of textures and forms of intent. Fragility of materials like raw and cooked clay and plaster is much better than stone, wood and works of metals. I like to use clay, plaster, fiberglass and resin, wood, stone, and cast metals apart from assembling stainless steel forms since 1999. Sometimes beauty and scope of material inspires me, be it clay, chalk, stone or metal. Actual work results from coming together of my interest and energy using suitable materials for the forms in space appropriate for the environment.

    A Spatial Metaphor, 2015-2024, 304 Stainless Steel and epoxy paints, Unique Variation, Large, Photo Credit: Akara Contemporary, Mumbai   

    What challenges have you faced as an artist, and how have you overcome them?

    Pursuit of Sculpture is a precarious and difficult thing for a working artist. Apart from Financial and material resources for sustenance I need space to live as well as  work which is not so easy. My concern about living and working space after the college environment has continued to concern me since my early days. I had no choice but to work and explore my ideas and forms hoping to overcome difficulties of time, space and personal limitations. My perseverance to do my work regardless of success may have attracted external interest and resources to help me achieve visual impact with monumental scale and relatively permanent, even classical materials like stone and bronze. 

    Untitled, 2020, 304 Stainless Steel, 27 x 38 x 42 cm, Unique Variation

    What do you hope people take away from your art when they experience it? 

    A contemplative mind opens up enduring forms and images. Forms of visual expressions reflect an enigma of life which can arouse corresponding feelings, sensations, ideas and concepts in the minds of onlookers. Viewing art is an invigorating activity where references can enliven ideas of being human.

    Text & photo courtesy of Dhruva Mistry

    Website: https://dhruvamistry.tumblr.com
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dhruvakumar.mistry