Mingyong Cheng, originally from Beijing and now based in California, is an interdisciplinary artist working at the intersection of AI, generative art, and environmental research. Working across generative animation, performance, real-time systems, and immersive installation, she develops hybrid environments where nature, data, and memory converge through machine vision and embodied experience.
INTERVIEW | Angelina Voskopoulos
Angelina Voskopoulou is a multidisciplinary artist whose work traverses sculpture, experimental filmmaking, and screen dance, often exploring themes of human existence, impermanence, and the unseen forces that shape identity. Through hybrid forms and ephemeral gestures, her art invites viewers into liminal spaces, where the natural and artificial blur and become a site of philosophical inquiry.
INTERVIEW | Maxim Frumkin (Max Naum)
Maxim Frumkin is an award-winning visual artist based in Canada, working across experimental video, art photography, and mixed media. His practice investigates the fluidity of identity, how we perform, reshape, or resist ourselves to be seen, to belong, or to disappear. He creates flexible, unstable narratives where meaning loops, blurring the lines between memory, persona, and authenticity.
INTERVIEW | Zeyang Xu
Zeyang Xu has a strong interest in sustainable fashion and is committed to exploring eco-friendly materials to make a positive impact on the industry. She is also attuned to contemporary trends, seamlessly blending both Eastern and Western aesthetics into her works. She is committed to expanding her creative practice, blending diverse mediums and cultural influences.
INTERVIEW | Clara Grabowiecki
Clara Grabowiecki is an Argentine visual artist, born in Buenos Aires in 1983. Her work is a journey into an interior cosmos. Passing through the figurative to the abstract, the images construct cosmologies of the imagination. Her images are recognisable by a confident colour palette of tropical tones and metallic glimmers that connect to a collective unconscious cultural psyche.
INTERVIEW | Mingxuan Zhang
Mingxuan Zhang's artistic practice centres on the fluidity and de-symbolisation of the body, exploring the complex relationship between the body, space, and gaze through distortion and absence. She creatively incorporates ready-made fabrics from the real world into her paintings, capturing the transition between the “virtual” and the “real.” She currently lives between London and Hong Kong.
INTERVIEW | Ruoyu Gong
Ruoyu Gong is a New York-based painter. His work delves into the complexity of the human psyche in the theme of personal symbolism. Ruoyu sees painting as a way to uncover the veiled tensions within his psyche. Through this distillation process, he navigates the labyrinth of his psychological landscape that often lies dormant beneath the surface of daily life.
INTERVIEW | Jie Chen
Jie Chen is a Chinese illustrator and fashion designer. She specializes in interdisciplinary storytelling, seamlessly blending fashion, illustration, bookmaking, and 3D digital fashion design to create immersive narratives. Her project NEO·GENESIS reimagines creation, replacing traditional notions of divine design with chaos and accident.
INTERVIEW | Mahta Salehi
Mahta Salehi is an Iranian artist currently living in the US. In her recent paintings investigate psychological transformation and the tension between confinement and freedom by combining abstraction and figuration and using symbolic imagery. In her work, she uses experimental techniques and layered compositions to encourage viewers to interact with the shifting nature of psychological landscapes.
INTERVIEW | Hou Guan-Ting
INTERVIEW | Robert Claus
An emerging photographer with a background in translation and music, Robert Claus has been exploring drawing, composition, and theatre since an early age. He tends to draw on still life for his subjects, but has also explored both urban and rural landscapes, as well as portraiture. He has produced several book-length curated projects ranging from theatre work to abstract still-life compositions.
INTERVIEW | Yuyang (Lily) Wei
Yuyang (Lily) Wei is a Chinese-New Zealander artist currently living and working in London. Drawing on her own experiences growing up between New Zealand and China, a topic that concerns Yuyang's artworks is the identity crisis of Third-Culture Kids. Paintings in this section depict Yuyang's personal feelings of being part of a diaspora.
INTERVIEW | Mosaz (Zijun Zhao)
Mosaz (Zijun Zhao)'s work is based on her understanding of traditional culture as an Asian individual—an understanding shaped by what she has heard, seen, and deeply felt since childhood. She focuses on symbols, imagery, and rituals embedded in cultural memory, reconstructing them through a personal lens. This is how she expresses the complexity of her inner spiritual world.
INTERVIEW | Rafael de la Noceda
Noceda is a contemporary mixed-media artist whose work is based on elements of abstract expressionism, minimalism, and conceptual art. His strong foundation in graphic arts, together with a deep fascination with anthropology and philosophy, shaped his unique artistic voice. Drawing from this multidisciplinary background, Noceda crafts compositions that challenge viewers' preconceptions, pointing out established dualities.
INTERVIEW | Chu Ling-Jung & Tang Zi-Xian
Chu Ling-Jung & Tang Zi-Xian are both Taiwanese artists. They are both based in Taipei, where they live and work. Their collaborative project, Clearing the Text, describes the dyslexic patient's intense desire to comprehend text, the despair of being unable to read, and the attempt to regain the ability to read by integrating their body into the text through various methods.
INTERVIEW | Filip Moszant
Filip Moszant's work is an intuitive rebellion against imposed socialization. At the core of his practice lies a deep engagement with form, texture, and movement. His paintings pulse with energy, shaped by unseen forces. Colours collide violently or dissolve into meditative softness, creating a balance between control and chaos. His acrylic markers and felt pens generate rhythmic gestures.
INTERVIEW | Marcus Brown
Marcus Brown is a sculptor, painter, inventor, musician, and educator. Brown developed a form of painting called Electro-sonic Painting in which the artist paints with sound/data-producing instruments. HIs mission is to create artworks that educate the public about important issues while transcending both media and societal boundaries.
INTERVIEW | Anastasia Egonyan
Anastasia Egonyan is a visual artist of Ukrainian and Armenian descent based in Berlin. With over a decade of experience in photography, she has expanded her practice to incorporate textiles and found objects, creating a dynamic interdisciplinary approach. Her art reflects a journey of reconciling fragmented ancestry and nomadic experiences in the search for "home" and identity.
INTERVIEW | Hanqi Li
Hanqi Li is a practice-based media artist based between London (UK) and Shenzhen (CN). Her work primarily engages with interactive art, narrative films, generative art, and 3D rendering, while her research explores media archaeology, speculative fiction, and the intricate relationship between nature and technology, with a focus on environmental issues.
INTERVIEW | Anna M. Masiul Gozdecka
Anna M. Masiul Gozdecka reates abstract and realistic compositions, sometimes full of colour and optimism, sometimes in grayscale with an accent, to honour all colours at their noblest. Her work is inextricably linked with nature and its perfection - the multitude of forms, textures, connections, the diversity of the landscape and the game light and shadow.