Aki Hassan

Kai Khidir Hassan (fka Aki Hassan) is a Glasglow based Singaporean artist, researcher, and organiser who primarily works with expanded sculpture and self-publishing. He sees his practice as a tool to locate strengths, resistance, precarity, and imbalances within relational exchanges. Through material explorations and process-driven methodologies, they create work that examines ideas around care and asymmetrical forms of dependencies.

Alvin Ong

Alvin Ong is a Singaporean painter based in London. His surreal, fluid figurative works explore identity, nostalgia, and the body. Defined by a tension between pleasure and pain, his "grotesque" figures dissolve into their backgrounds, mirroring the absurdity and intimacy of contemporary life in a hyper-connected world.


 

Bunga Yuridespita

Bunga Yuridespita is an Indonesian artist based in London. With a background in architecture, her practice merges geometric abstraction with spatial narratives. Her work explores how space shapes identity and memory, often using mirrors and optical illusions to transform flat paintings into immersive, three-dimensional configurations and wearable installations. 

Daniel Devela

Daniel Devela is a Filipino curator based in London, currently pursuing an MFA in Curating at Goldsmiths, University of London (2025-2026). His practice investigates the narrative potential of contemporary art through exhibition adaptations and transmedia methodologies. Previously Deputy Director at the Metropolitan Museum of Manila, he bridges institutional operations with research into global cross-cultural exchange.
 

David Kam

David Kam is Malaysian-born movement artist, educator, model and bodyworker based in London. David shares embodied practices to move communities and institutions towards queer diasporic joy, care and collective liberation. He has co-written a forthcoming book on ESEA presence and activism in the UK, due for publication in May 2026.
 

Duong Thuy 
Nguyen

Duong Thuy Nguyen is a Vietnamese interdisciplinary artist and writer whose work explores memory, displacement, and environmental change. Working across sculpture, installation, and text, she reflects on shifting landscapes and cultural histories.
 

Erika Tan

Erika Tan is a Singaporean artist and researcher based in London. Her practice uses moving image and installation to explore postcolonial history and archival artifacts. By reanimating "forgotten" subjects and contested heritage, she challenges institutional narratives and examines the transnational movement of objects, people, and ideas. Tan is currently a Reader and Course Leader of MA Fine Art at Central Saint Martins, specialising in global art histories and curatorial research. 

Evi Pangestu

Evi Pangestu is an Indonesian visual artist based in London, UK. Her work explores the tension between order and interruption through grids and structures. Using the square as a fundamental measure of control, she deconstructs and restores materials to highlight moments of repair. Her work reflects how individuals navigate power systems, adapting and challenging structures within personal and social contexts.

 

 


 

Faris Nakamura

Faris Nakamura is a Singaporean artist based in London, known for his architectural sculptures and installations that explore the psychological and sociological dimensions of space. His work frequently examines how people navigate, attach to, or detach from built environments, focusing on themes of liberation, concealment, and the politics of space.

 

Haffendi Anuar

Haffendi Anuar is a Malaysian artist based in London. His practice investigates post-colonial legacies and urban architecture through sculpture and painting. By deconstructing cultural iconography, Anuar explores personal memory and inherited histories, employing material processes to transform monumental forms into intimate, social narratives that challenge systemic power.

Hidhir Badaruddin

Hidhir Badaruddin is a Singaporean photographer based in London whose work explores queer Southeast Asian identity, masculinity, and representation. 

Hoa Dung Clerget

Hoa Dung Clerget is a Vietnamese-French artist based in London. Her sculptural and installation-based practice explores the labour and social realities of immigrant women, often through the lens of nail art subculture. Using everyday materials like UV gel polish, she reimagines diasporic identity and cultural negotiation

Jereh Leung

Jereh Leung is a Singaporean movement artist and performer based in Manchester. His multidisciplinary practice merges body, sculpture, and sound to reevaluate patriarchal gender identities. Trained in Singapore and Salzburg, he creates visceral landscapes exploring social performativity and queer liberation through the deconstruction of cinematic and domestic spaces. 

Jennifer Ng

Jennifer Ng is a Singaporean-born interdisciplinary artist based in the UK. Working between traditional Chinese painting and contemporary performance practice, she explores the complex relationship between ‘being’ and ‘place’ through a semi-autobiographical lens. She is particularly interested in evoking deep, embedded emotions that resonate through attentive viewing.

Jerrold Yam

Jerrold Yam is a Singaporean poet and corporate lawyer based in London. His work explores themes of identity, socio-political relationships, and religion. Yam is the author of three poetry collections: Intruder (Ethos Books), Scattered Vertebrae (Math Paper Press) and Chasing Curtained Suns (Math Paper Press).

Joseph Gabriel

Joseph Gabriel is a Filipino visual artist based in London. Working across drawing, sculpture, and installation, he uses fragile materials like porcelain and experimental glazes to explore themes of land, memory, and origin.

Kelvin Atmadibrata

Kelvin Atmadibrata is an Indonesian-born visual artist who works primarily with performance. His practice challenges masculine meta through eroticism and transhumanism. Drawing on ideologies and narrative designs of RPG video games and pop culture, he attempts to navigate personal fantasy and social narratives. 
 

KV Duong

KV Duong is a Vietnamese-British artist based in London. Originally trained as a structural engineer in Canada, his multidisciplinary practice explores themes of displacement, war trauma, and queer identity. Through expressive painting and body-integrated performance, he reconciles his heritage as a South Vietnamese immigrant with his contemporary experience.

Matina Mavraganni

Matina Mavraganni is a Greek-Filipino costume designer based in London, currently pursuing an MA in Costume Design at Univesity of the Arts London (2025–2026). Building on an extensive background in film, she is now evolving her practice towards experimental costume. Her work explores storytelling through innovative materiality, blending international industry experience with a research-driven, performative approach.

Michelle Limbong

Michelle Florida Limbong is an Indonesian art professional and researcher currently based in Norwich. She is a Master’s student in Cultural Heritage and Museum Studies at the University of East Anglia (2025-2026).

Nicholas Ong

Nicholas Ong is a Singaporean artist based in London and Singapore. His practice navigates the juncture between perception and reception. Employing light as paint to challenge the boundaries of installations and paintings. His creations embody an interplay of form and substance, inviting viewers to contemplate the evocative fusion of environmental effects and material dispositions, simulating a dynamic dialogue between the observer and the observed.

R. Yuki Agriardi

R. Yuki Agriardi is an Indonesian artist and a PhD researcher at the University of Leeds (2023-2027). His practice explores human-animals relationships, particularly with the birds. Using  drawing, he investigates speculative habitats and animal life to examine themes of environmental coexistence and memory.

Rajinder Singh 

Rajinder Singh is a London based Malaysian-Irish artist and poet whose work begins with the body, how it is held, directed, and reshaped by land, systems, and memory. Through gesture, image, and surface, he traces tension and hesitation, attending to the quiet negotiations through which the body learns its limits.

 


 

RJ Fernandez

RJ Fernandez is an artist based in East Sussex whose practice is a study of temporal friction—the grinding together of ancestral time, colonial residue, and global industrial demand. Spanning photography, film, and co-creation— her work is rooted in personal history, heritage, and the geographic realities of the Philippines. Her practice is an act of making visible the labor and the lives that are frequently obscured by systemic power. 

Sean Cham

Sean Cham is a London based Singaporean artist and historian working across photography, performance, and sitespecific intervention. Through a research-led practice, he examines the construction of power and historical narratives. Cham holds a PhD in History of Art. He lives and works in London, and is currently a Tutor (Research) at the Royal College of Art.

Sinta Tantra

Sinta Tantra is a British-Balinese artist based in London and Bali. Her multidisciplinary practice—spanning monumental murals, canvas paintings, and ritual-based installations—explores the interplay of colour, light, and geometric form. Blending Balinese heritage with Western formalism, she creates sensory, meditative environments that examine identity, architectural scale, and post-colonial narratives.

Vanessa Liem

Vanessa Liem is a Singaporean artist based in London. Rooted in mental health, her work emerges from a desire to understand how observation, both observing and being observed, affects our mental state, bodily awareness, and sense of agency. To Liem, her surreal and biomorphic worlds become a stage for exploring the nuances of vulnerability, visibility, and performance.

Will Pham

Will Pham is a London based British-Vietnamese artist working across video, performance, painting, and socially engaged practice. His work explores intergenerational care, cultural inheritance and community, drawing on archival material and lived experience to examine memory, diaspora and refugee narratives through collaborative, participatory and research-led forms and processes.

 

Xiuching Tsay

Xiuching Tsay is a Thai artist based in London. Her practice develops through assemblage to build narratives around domestic context, belief, and personal and collective memory entangled with political and spiritual conditions. Through sculpture, painting, and writing, the work reveals the strangeness within familiar forms, where those conditions meet lived experience and remain open to being reimagined.
 

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