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Tuan Mami
Vietnam

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Tuan Mami is an interdisciplinary-experimental artist who constantly explores new mediums and methods of expression, using increasingly meditative experimentations with site-specific installation, video, performance and conceptual art. In recent years, he has begun to explore and observe the concept of how we are *human* on the move.

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Driven by first-hand experiences of migration and diaspora, the practice of Boedi Widjaja (b. 1975, Indonesia/Singapore) articulates subtle reflections on migration, memory, spatial relations and cross-cultural hybridities. Trained as an architect and with a background in graphic design, the techniques, materials and tools of drawing have become a defining element of Widjaja’s artistic practice. This is expressed through a broad range of media, from photography and new media to architectural installations and Live Art, with an emphasis on process and bodily engagement. 

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Henry Tan is a Bangkok-based artist who co-founded Tentacles Art Space and is a member of Freaklab Thailand and metaPhorest Japan. Henry interested in collective consciousness through investigating the concept of dream, memory, simulation and reality through exploring neuroscience, microbiology, artificial life and virtual reality.

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Kuang-Yi Ku was born and raised in Taipei, Taiwan, and has been based in the Netherlands since 2016. He graduated with triple master degrees in social design from Design Academy Eindhoven; in dentistry from National Yang-Ming University; and in Communication Design from Shih Chien University. Formerly a dentist, Ku is a bio-artist and social designer. He founded TW BioArt (a Taiwan bioart community) to stimulate the fields of BioArt and Science + Art in Taiwan. His works often deal with the human body, sexuality, interspecies interactions, and medical technology, and aim to investigate the relationships among technology, individuals, and the environment.

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Weed Day's works question human's current part in the natural world. For their current project, they forage dominant invasive plants among urban areas leaving more space for native plants to grow as a result creating a more biodiverse environment. With the plants, they forage they make into weed tea among other everyday items for people to enjoy. They see weeds are the voices of the land because they are often the only plants that are grown by mother earth. Thus through their work, they educate people on the value of each and every one of these plants.

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