Songer Yang is a visual artist working across painting, graphic design, and narrative forms. Rooted in personal memory, her practice explores themes of family, femininity, and the emotional weight of domestic rituals. She is interested in how love lingers in the everyday, how repetition echoes absence, and how the body remembers through touch.
INTERVIEW | Ekaterina Shcherbakova
Ekaterina Shcherbakova is a Paris-based artist working across performance, installation, and painting. She develops work at the intersection of feminism, body politics, new materialism, and radical intimacies, combining performance and material research to explore the body as a site where personal experience and political structures converge.
INTERVIEW | Chloe Saron
Chloe Saron was born in Baltimore, Maryland. Through blurred forms and softness, the artist explores memory, interconnectedness, and stillness, inviting viewers into a quiet space of reflection and recognition. What is so exciting about Saron’s process is that it is an act of personal rebellion, going against everything she was trained to do.
INTERVIEW | Daniela Miranda – Antüpewma Rülkelme Mella
Daniela Miranda (Antüpewma Rülkelme Mella) is a photographer, ceremonialist, and cultural storyteller rooted in her Mapuche lineage. Her practice weaves ancestral memory, visual ritual, and cultural preservation. The series Whispers of the Amazon is a ceremonial act of remembrance, an offering to the Sapara Nation, whose language and ancestral knowledge stand on the edge of disappearance.
INTERVIEW | Abir Kobeissi
Abir Kobeissi is a Lebanese artist based in Munich. Her multidisciplinary practice explores value, authorship, and power through painting, sculpture, photography, textiles, and installation. Her work combines introspection with critical observation, creating spaces for reflection on contemporary power structures and the mechanisms that define worth and meaning.
INTERVIEW | Katia Shneider
Katia Shneider is an artist working with installation, sculpture, and video. Her practice focuses on exploring how the individual reconfigures the self and presence in the world amidst ongoing radical social, technological, and cultural transformations. In her practice, Katia explores the phenomenon of the nomadic identity of the contemporary individual.
INTERVIEW | Xiaohan Wu
Xiaohan Wu is a metalsmith and contemporary jewellery artist whose work explores the intersection of form, sound, and communication. Through horn-like and woven metal structures, she translates vibration into visual language. Her practice is rooted in her experience of navigating linguistic and cultural boundaries after moving across countries.
INTERVIEW | Chenglin Li
Chenglin (Clover) Li is a computational artist, designer, and entrepreneur working at the intersection of generative systems and contemporary visual culture. Using code, 3D printing, and emerging materials, she creates dynamic visual systems that evolve through algorithmic processes and interaction. Post-Human Bloom explore the relationship of emerging technologies with human and non-human life.
INTERVIEW | Lohrasb Bayat
Lohrasb Bayat (b. 1990, Tehran, Iran) is a self-taught artist based in Tehran. His practice delves into the dynamics of power, uncertainty, and resilience within socio-political and psychological landscapes. Working primarily with painting, Bayat explores the tension between vulnerability and defiance, often through figures caught in ambiguous or constrained situations.
INTERVIEW | In June Park
In June Park is a Korean painter currently based in New York. His paintings capture archived moments in our lives and are rendered on canvas in slow, acrylic layers. Ranging from religious icons to left-behind household items, his subjects are pulled out of their environment to engage with other works in the series, forming a collective narrative.
INTERVIEW | Alexandru Crisan
Alexandru Crișan is a visual artist interested in the existential complementarity of objective and nonobjective forms of expression. His latest series, FRAGMENTA DEORUM I, proposes a contemporary archaeology of the mythic body. In this series, Crișa constructs a visual language that fractures and reconstitutes the divine.
INTERVIEW | Wangkai Wei
Wei Wangkai is a Chinese photographer and artist whose practice moves between documentary observation, psychological inquiry, and personal narrative. Working across road-trip photography, landscape, portraiture, and diaristic image-making, Wei often focuses on the fragile relationship between people and the environments they pass through. His latest series is American Vacation.
INTERVIEW | Chu Ling-Jung
Chu Ling-Jung is an artist whose practice centres on feminism and the exploration of consciousness. Her practice centres on the shaping of the female body under patriarchy and the unease surrounding gender perception. Through deliberate bodily transformation, she addresses these themes across media, including performance, video, and found objects.
INTERVIEW | Laurent Guez
Laurent Guez is a Canadian-French artist whose practice bridges design, architecture, and ceramics. His work explores the tension between structure and organic growth, control and unpredictability. Working primarily with clay and porcelain, he approaches ceramics as both a material and a system, one that resists, transforms, and ultimately reveals its own logic.
INTERVIEW | Yulin Peng
Yulin Peng is the curator and director of Galerie de Nuage, a contemporary art gallery and cultural platform operating between New York and Hong Kong. A licensed architect with a Master of Architecture from Columbia University, her practice spans curation, design, and economic research. Her work bridges the creative and the quantitative, contributing to broader questions of how culture is shaped.
INTERVIEW | Svetlana Bakhareva
Svetlana Bakhareva is a visionary visual artist and performer, that lives and works in Barcelona. Key directions in her practice include embodied experience, the perception of environment as a living space, and engagement with the more-than-human. These vectors are unified through an exploration of experiences that extend beyond purely material perception.
INTERVIEW | Heejai Park
Heejai Park is a visual designer working at the intersection of design and technology. Based between San Francisco and Seoul, she explores how emerging technologies can shape new visual languages and human experiences. Her work combines brand identity, generative design, motion, and experimental installations.
INTERVIEW | Run Wu
Run Wu is a Chinese Australian interdisciplinary digital artist, filmmaker, and signed commercial director currently based in Paris and London. Drawing inspiration from his multicultural background and experiences across continents, Run's work often reflects themes of displacement, transformation, and the human condition.
INTERVIEW | Kjersti Ochsner
Kjersti Ochsner is a Seattle-based artist working in wall-mounted sculptural abstraction. Using recycled paper, she creates tactile, dimensional works focused on repetition, process, and visual rhythm. Her wall-mounted sculptural work explores abstraction through repetition, texture, and visual rhythm.
INTERVIEW | Julia Katolla
Julia Katolla is a mixed media artist, raised in Costa Rica and based in Bonn, Germany. She explores motherhood beyond idealisation, systemic aggression and the human urge to impose order on chaos. By mixing different media and intricate details, she analyzes emotions, violence, and ambivalence, creating small universes where randomness and precision intertwine.
















