Featuring
Artists
00 Zhang
(CN/UK)
Website Instagram
00 Zhang is a Chinese-born London-based emerging artist who is gaining a reputation with her innovative explorations of a sensibility she terms ‘a double-sided exile’ – entwined feelings of dislocation and connection. Thematically, her practice investigates the potential of a new form of collective imagination to transcend the borders of national identity, gender, and religion. Her multifaceted practice, which includes numerous collaborators, spans sculpture, installation, CGI animation, and interactive digital game environments.
00 Zhang is a Chinese-born London-based emerging artist who is gaining a reputation with her innovative explorations of a sensibility she terms ‘a double-sided exile’ – entwined feelings of dislocation and connection. Thematically, her practice investigates the potential of a new form of collective imagination to transcend the borders of national identity, gender, and religion. Her multifaceted practice, which includes numerous collaborators, spans sculpture, installation, CGI animation, and interactive digital game environments.
Shan Wong (Flyingpig)
(HK)
Instagram
Shan Wong (Flyingpig) is an artist-researcher exploring human-urban dynamics within capitalist transformations across physical and digital spaces. Her latest initiative, Foreseen Property Agency, employs speculative fieldwork and co-creation to examine the property presale market. As director of SATA (Society Art Technology Asia), an artist-led platform, she investigates the intersection of art, technology, and society in Asia. Additionally, as part of the artist duo Foreseen Agency with Kachi Chan, she explores art-technology narratives. Their project Hello World Home, developed during a 2024 residency at the National Asia Culture Centre in Gwangju, examines digital capitalism in Korea and continues to explore the project during their artist residency at Diriyah Art Futures in Saudi Arabia. She is currently an assistant professor at Hong Kong Baptist University’s Academy of Visual Arts.
Shan Wong (Flyingpig) is an artist-researcher exploring human-urban dynamics within capitalist transformations across physical and digital spaces. Her latest initiative, Foreseen Property Agency, employs speculative fieldwork and co-creation to examine the property presale market. As director of SATA (Society Art Technology Asia), an artist-led platform, she investigates the intersection of art, technology, and society in Asia. Additionally, as part of the artist duo Foreseen Agency with Kachi Chan, she explores art-technology narratives. Their project Hello World Home, developed during a 2024 residency at the National Asia Culture Centre in Gwangju, examines digital capitalism in Korea and continues to explore the project during their artist residency at Diriyah Art Futures in Saudi Arabia. She is currently an assistant professor at Hong Kong Baptist University’s Academy of Visual Arts.
Line of Piers
(KR)
Website • Instagram
Line of Piers is an artist collective founded in 2023 by Sanghee and Seonghun. They have collaborated on the interactive VR works Oneroom-Babel, Worlding···, and the conversational game Bugs of Nostalgia. All three works explored spaces that are inscribed with shared emotions and stories. The collective was formed to expand their research on the physical sensation of space, and the spatialisation of the body. They also seek to reference subcultures that accelerate the imagination of interactivity. In addition to exhibiting interactive works, they continue to question which parts of our bodies and senses are stimulated as exhibitions are created.
Interview with Line of Piers
Line of Piers is an artist collective founded in 2023 by Sanghee and Seonghun. They have collaborated on the interactive VR works Oneroom-Babel, Worlding···, and the conversational game Bugs of Nostalgia. All three works explored spaces that are inscribed with shared emotions and stories. The collective was formed to expand their research on the physical sensation of space, and the spatialisation of the body. They also seek to reference subcultures that accelerate the imagination of interactivity. In addition to exhibiting interactive works, they continue to question which parts of our bodies and senses are stimulated as exhibitions are created.
Interview with Line of Piers
Jo Ho
(SG)
Website • Instagram
Jo Ho is a media artist working with digital installations and generative systems to examine how technologies shape and often distort our understanding of the body, memory, and meaning. Her practice centers on the concept of digital corporeality, treating the digital not as immaterial but as deeply embedded in systems of flesh, code, and material. Through speculative image-making, she works with fragmentation, reassembly, and visual ambiguity to reflect on how meaning is abstracted and reshaped in increasingly automated environments. Jo Ho teaches creative coding at the University of the Arts Singapore and has a background in Architecture, and a Master’s degree in New Media Design.
Jo Ho is a media artist working with digital installations and generative systems to examine how technologies shape and often distort our understanding of the body, memory, and meaning. Her practice centers on the concept of digital corporeality, treating the digital not as immaterial but as deeply embedded in systems of flesh, code, and material. Through speculative image-making, she works with fragmentation, reassembly, and visual ambiguity to reflect on how meaning is abstracted and reshaped in increasingly automated environments. Jo Ho teaches creative coding at the University of the Arts Singapore and has a background in Architecture, and a Master’s degree in New Media Design.
Priyageetha Dia
(SG/NL)
Website • Instagram
Priyageetha Dia is a Singaporean artist working with time-based media and installation. Her practice braids Southeast Asian labour histories, speculations of the tropics, and ancestral memory meeting machine logics. Through archival and field research, she explores nonlinear forms and practices of refusal against dominant narratives. She is currently pursuing a Master’s at the Royal Academy of Art (KABK) in The Hague, Netherlands. Her recent projects have been exhibited at the Aichi Triennale (2025); 4th Bangkok Art Biennale (2024); Manifesta 15, Barcelona (2024); 60th La Biennale di Venezia, Venice (2024) and Diriyah Biennale, Saudi Arabia (2024).
Priyageetha Dia is a Singaporean artist working with time-based media and installation. Her practice braids Southeast Asian labour histories, speculations of the tropics, and ancestral memory meeting machine logics. Through archival and field research, she explores nonlinear forms and practices of refusal against dominant narratives. She is currently pursuing a Master’s at the Royal Academy of Art (KABK) in The Hague, Netherlands. Her recent projects have been exhibited at the Aichi Triennale (2025); 4th Bangkok Art Biennale (2024); Manifesta 15, Barcelona (2024); 60th La Biennale di Venezia, Venice (2024) and Diriyah Biennale, Saudi Arabia (2024).
Debbie Ding
(SG)
Website • Instagram
Debbie Ding is an artist-scholar working across the intersection of artistic research, technology and game studies – currently Assistant Professor of Practice (Digital Art) at Singapore University of Technology and Design. Her work was shortlisted for the President’s Young Talents 2018 and Impart Art Awards 2020 and is collected by the Australian War Memorial and Singapore Art Museum. Notable exhibitions include Ars Electronica, “Radical Gaming” at HeK Basel, “Worldbuilding” at Julia Stoschek Foundation Dusseldorf, “Wikicliki” at Singapore Art Museum, “Radio Malaya” at NUS Museum, “Construction in Every Corner” at NTU Museum, Kochi Biennale, and the Singapore Biennale. Her practice-based PhD research explores psychogeography in virtual worlds, and games in contemporary art practice.
Debbie Ding is an artist-scholar working across the intersection of artistic research, technology and game studies – currently Assistant Professor of Practice (Digital Art) at Singapore University of Technology and Design. Her work was shortlisted for the President’s Young Talents 2018 and Impart Art Awards 2020 and is collected by the Australian War Memorial and Singapore Art Museum. Notable exhibitions include Ars Electronica, “Radical Gaming” at HeK Basel, “Worldbuilding” at Julia Stoschek Foundation Dusseldorf, “Wikicliki” at Singapore Art Museum, “Radio Malaya” at NUS Museum, “Construction in Every Corner” at NTU Museum, Kochi Biennale, and the Singapore Biennale. Her practice-based PhD research explores psychogeography in virtual worlds, and games in contemporary art practice.