In Becoming
Unfinished Perceptions, Ever-Becoming Selves
Bringing together artists from Taiwan and Kazakhstan with diverse artistic and professional backgrounds—including design, fine art, Indigenous culture, and law—the exhibition presents a dialogue between different ways of seeing and understanding the world. Through drawing, painting, ceramics, mixed media, and participatory installation, each artist offers a unique perspective on what it means to be constantly evolving rather than fixed.
Rather than presenting artworks as finished objects, In Becoming invites visitors to become active participants in the exhibition. Audience interaction is an essential part of the project, encouraging visitors to leave a drawing, a word, or a personal reflection as part of a growing collective artwork. Throughout the exhibition, these individual contributions gradually become a shared visual record of human connection.
The exhibition also includes a series of blind portrait drawing projects and short cross-cultural interviews documenting encounters between people from different backgrounds. These conversations and creative exchanges explore how perception can connect us beyond language, nationality, and profession.
More than an exhibition, In Becoming is an evolving space for dialogue, participation, and cultural exchange, where every encounter becomes part of the artwork.
Featured artists
Stacey Chao-Hua Huang(Curator / Taiwan × Denmark)
A curator and multidisciplinary designer with two decades' experience across interior, product, brand and graphic design.
Inspired by life between Denmark and Taiwan, her work invites reflection on identity, memory, perception, and human connection.
Wan-I Lai(Taiwan)
After graduating from high school, Wan-Yi studied and worked in design in the United States. She currently works as an interpreter at TSMC while continuing her artistic practice, exploring identity through delicate portrait drawings.
Ning-Shiuan Huang(Taiwan)
A third-year MFA candidate in Fine Arts at Tainan University of Technology.
Her mandala-inspired paintings investigate inner landscapes, meditation, and the relationship between emotion and visual rhythm.
Zi-Ying Li(Taiwan)
A third-year MFA candidate in Fine Arts at Tainan University of Technology.
Through woven structures and repetitive forms, her work reflects on human connection, memory, and the invisible networks that shape our lives.
Yabun R.C.(Taiwan)
An Atayal Indigenous artist from Taiwan, as well as a former stage scenic painter, tattoo artist, and surfing enthusiast.
Inspired by hunting culture, Indigenous traditions, and years of travel, her work explores the relationships between people, land, memory, and cultural identity.
Kamila Comminal(Kazakhstan)
A lawyer from Kazakhstan based in Denmark with a passion for art and intercultural dialogue.
Joining the exhibition as an Art enthusiast, she explores human connection through collaborative blind portrait drawing.