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BublikArt Gallery > Blog > Artists > Hsin-Mei Lin: When History Moves Through the Body
Artists

Hsin-Mei Lin: When History Moves Through the Body

Irina Runkel
Last updated: 3 April 2026 15:22
Published 3 April 2026
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Hsin-Mei Lin: Immersive Practice Between Art, Education, and Future Generations

Lin’s broader artistic practice extends across immersive installation, moving image, and transnational curatorial work. She often positions projects between exhibition spaces, public environments, and educational systems, forming a hybrid approach that connects contemporary art with pedagogical exchange. International exhibitions throughout Europe and Asia have allowed her installations to circulate across diverse cultural contexts. Her academic research also informs this work. Lin recently completed a PhD in Culture, Communication and Media at the UCL Institute of Education, University College London, where questions of perception, learning, and cultural memory became closely intertwined with her artistic development.

Daily life in her studio reflects this combination of research and experimentation. Writing, teaching, and collaborative preparation frequently intersect with hands on exploration of materials, projection technologies, and spatial arrangements. Each project often begins with investigation into historical narratives or social conditions before gradually evolving into immersive form. Rather than focusing on isolated objects, Lin constructs environments that operate as experiential frameworks. These frameworks encourage participants and viewers to move, pause, and reconsider how physical surroundings shape emotional and intellectual responses.

Future projects continue to explore the relationship between younger generations and historical memory within an increasingly unstable geopolitical climate. Taiwan’s contemporary position in global politics creates an atmosphere where the possibility of conflict is frequently discussed in international media. Lin’s work responds to this condition by examining how anticipation and uncertainty influence everyday perception. New immersive environments will likely continue to investigate how space, light, and bodily awareness can reveal the subtle pressures that history exerts on the present. Through these evolving installations, Lin sustains a practice that connects artistic creation with collective reflection, offering audiences environments where history becomes something sensed through movement and shared experience.

Credits

Collaborators
The installation was developed in collaboration with Wang Luying, Song Yunai, Li Chunhui, Guo Fangtong, Huang Yingxuan, Wang Tingfeng, Lu Pinlun, Su Shizhen, Xie Xianghe, Yan Tinghan, Wu Boyou, Wu Bingrui, Shi Bingyi, Xie Yingwen, Luo Hongjun, Wu Zicen, Ni Xiangyun, Chen Liangqun, Peng Yuya, Cai Peiyu, Meng Yutong, Zhang Yunchen, Zeng Yuxin, Yang Muxuan, Liu Yanting, Zhu Yirui, Lin Boyuan, Hong Ziyue, Tang Chenkai, Cai Yixian, Du Jiayin, Lin Yijie, Gao Zhenyu, Chen Yujia, Liu Youyou, Wang Xinyue, Li Xinwei, Zhou Zhiyan, Liu Tingan, and Lu Yuting.

Photo Credit
Yang Quan-Cong.

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