Sergey Piskunov (b. 1989, Ukraine) is a hyperrealist painter based in the Netherlands. His large-scale figurative works merge classical oil painting with symbolic and gold elements, reflecting precision, depth and a meditative dedication to the craft. Each work unfolds through hundreds of hours of detailed execution, inviting the viewer into a quiet, intimate encounter.
INTERVIEW | Mariia Pavlyk
Mariia Pavlyk is a Ukrainian designer working across fashion through sculptural textiles and environment-driven narrative. Raised in Kyiv, she shaped her aesthetic through Ukrainian culture, nature, and regional crafts, forming pieces that feel both intimate and elemental. Her practice navigates memory, culture, and resilience, weaving ancestral crafts into sculptural garments.
INTERVIEW | Andrea Ghidorzi
Andrea Ghidorzi, the mind behind Moan Studios, has created an artistic dimension where analogue and digital art converge through introspection, exploration and a look toward the future. Andrea's practice explores identity, perception and the evolving dialogue between the self and its environment. He approaches images, sound and mixed media as instruments for navigating inner transformations.
INTERVIEW | Natalia Oginskaya
Natalia Oginskaya (b. 1980, Moscow) is an artist and mosaicist. For her, mosaic is a medium that resists haste. Each “imperfection” becomes a sign of life. This slowness allows her to address themes of inner strength, resilience, and freedom. Her mosaics are meditations on human dignity: the right to imperfection, the beauty of fragility, and the value of a slower gaze upon the world.
INTERVIEW | Priyanka Pulijal
Priyanka Pulijal is a multidisciplinary artist based in Los Angeles and New York whose work explores imagined afterlives, cosmic states, and the unseen forces that shape human experience. Through large-scale paintings and immersive environments, she builds speculative worlds that merge surrealism, science fiction, and metaphysical inquiry creating sensory portals between the known and the unknown.
INTERVIEW | Samantha Lance
Samantha Lance is a Canadian curator and writer whose work fosters meaningful connections between artists and communities. As a curator, she sees herself as a listener, learner, collaborator, and conceptual engineer when it comes to working with artists and planning exhibitions. She gravitates towards voices that have not had the chance to share their narrative.
INTERVIEW | Ece Batur
Ece Batur is a London-based contemporary artist whose practice critically examines the entanglements of gendered violence, censorship, and cultural memory as they are inscribed upon the body and the domestic sphere. Working across performance, installation, sound, and text, her practice mobilises materials imbued with domestic and intergenerational feminist symbolism.
INTERVIEW | Syona Cheng
Syona Cheng is a visual artist and photographer who merges fashion, fine art, and surreal digital collage. She transforms familiar gestures into psychological landscapes, revealing how identity and emotion are continually shaped by connection, memory, and space. Her ongoing series Torn and Reconstructed forms part of a broader visual trilogy exploring the cyclical process of fracture and renewal.
INTERVIEW | Haochen He
Haochen He is an architectural and visual designer whose work explores the intersection of ecological systems, human perception, and technological mediation. Working across architecture and visual art, he translates analytical methods into aesthetic inquiries, seeking to reveal how data, atmosphere, and material converge to form new narratives of coexistence.
INTERVIEW | Yi Wang - Yione Studio
Yi Wang is a licensed architect based in New York and the founder of Studio Yione, recognised for its innovative engagement with space, materiality, and historical context. Yi explores how design can bridge collective memories and visions, integrating art, technology, and sustainability to shape public perception and urban experience. Her latest jewelry series is titled Body-as-Site.
INTERVIEW | Hao Wu
Hao Wu is a designer and artist with a background spanning architecture and interior design. Design is not only Hao Wu’s career but also his lifestyle. As a designer, he resists rigid definitions, choosing instead to explore whatever inspires him. When he draws through the lens of an interior designer, he reconstructs images in his mind and creates a dreamlike world shaped by imagination.
INTERVIEW | Shu Wang
Shu Wang is an internationally renowned interdisciplinary artist specializing in jewelry design and wearable sculpture. Her practice centers on the body as a site where emotion, structure, and social tension converge. Through interaction, movement, and physical proximity, she investigates how objects function as living media, activating sensory experience, mediating social expectations, and generating shared perception between wearer and viewer.
INTERVIEW | Marta Ornelas Monteiro
Born in Lisboa and shaped by a global curiosity, Marta Ornelas Monteiro is an architect turned multidisciplinary artist whose creative journey is grounded in a profound dialogue with nature. Each piece becomes a living testimony to nature's resilience, memory, and transformation. Her latest work, Layers of Life, Layers of Body, Layers of Nature’s Reality, explores the unseen strata of existence.
INTERVIEW | Randong Yu
Randong Yu's work investigates the tension between fragility and assurance, and how belief, reliance, and ontological security surface through material presence. As thresholds and limitations grow porous, his practice illuminates the friction between play, logic, and emotion, tracing the fragile architectures that hold tangible perception and intangible faith together.
INTERVIEW | ChingKe Lin
ChingKe Lin is a bamboo artist rooted in material philosophy, expanding the contemporary possibilities of bamboo. Rather than reproducing traditional craft, he approaches bamboo as an explorer, studying its tension and resilience to seek a deeper bond between nature and human experience. His work grows from the essence of the material, turning bamboo weaving into a fluid spatial language.
INTERVIEW | Yuying Herr
Yuying Herr is a multidisciplinary visual artist whose practice moves between digital worldbuilding, expanded illustration, and speculative image-making. Working at the intersection of technology, memory, and emotional perception, she constructs immersive visual architectures that question how human experience is reshaped in increasingly hybrid realities.
INTERVIEW | Anna Moskalets
Anna Moskalets is a contemporary Ukrainian artist, independent curator, and social activist. Born in Romny (Sumy region, Ukraine), she is now located in London, UK. Her work confronts urgent themes: displacement, resilience, and the search for identity. Her practice explores the paradox of belonging, more urgent than ever, despite dislocation.
INTERVIEW | Danielle Feldhaker
In recent years, her works address notions associated with the haphazardness, demarcated territories, or transient shelters in the context of acute global issues concerning the future and integrity of our planet. She creates site-specific installations and sculptural objects, using ready-made and man-made materials.
INTERVIEW | Fabio Alves
Fabio Alves is a Brazilian visual artist graduated in Psychology, and a person with a disability, a characteristic he likes to reinforce in his life, and his way of seeing the world. Through black-and-white photography, he creates meditative images. He is currently developing a project that explores disabled women’s corporeality and self-image.
INTERVIEW | Wei-Fang Chang
Wei-Fang Chang is a video designer and creative technologist from Taiwan, based in Los Angeles. With extensive experience in projection design, motion graphics, and interactive programming, particularly in live experiences, she shapes her visual language through video design in theatre, dance, and interactive installations.

















