Echoes Carried by Images
Yezi Lou creates art from the charged space between what is remembered and what can no longer be fully reached. Based in New York, she works as a visual artist and writer, shaping a practice that considers painting as a method of image making rather than a simple act of representation. Her work moves through belonging, cultural nostalgia, absence, and the unstable nature of memory, drawing from personal photographic archives, films, found images, and cultural symbols. Through these sources, Lou studies how images carry emotional weight across distance, especially when people, places, and histories become altered by migration and time. Her paintings do not present images as replacements for reality. Instead, they treat images as active counterparts to lived experience, shaped by the ongoing exchange between what has happened and how it is later seen, stored, altered, and recalled.
Lou’s background in Wenzhou continues to shape the emotional and visual structure of her work. Growing up in a city marked by rapid industrial growth and China’s wider economic transformation, she witnessed how objects could become markers of status, desire, and social position. In that environment, material goods were never neutral. They influenced relationships, reflected ambition, and carried social meanings beyond their practical use. This early awareness of objects as cultural signals remains central to her practice. In her paintings, images and things often become containers for memory, longing, and the friction between personal history and collective change. Rather than treating nostalgia as softness or sentiment, Lou approaches it as a layered condition shaped by distance, class, migration, and the complicated emotions attached to cultural inheritance.
Her work is also guided by daily perception. What she sees, touches, tastes, and encounters in ordinary life becomes part of the visual field from which her paintings emerge. In a world saturated with circulating images, Lou searches for traces of the self within that constant flow. Painting becomes a way to reconsider what has been seen, forgotten, or partially remembered. Her use of figurative language, subtle distortion, artificial color, and layered imagery creates scenes where recognition and estrangement appear together. These works may feel familiar at first, yet they resist fixed meaning. Instead, they hold fragments of personal and collective history in suspension, allowing memory to appear as something visual, unstable, and always changing.
