Meiqin Wang

Regenerative Artivism

Arts EN ↓ 15 episodes

Regenerative Artivism is a podcast about how Asian women artists, curators, and community organizers use creative, place-based practice to confront social and environmental injustice and shape more livable futures. Drawing on long-term field research in East Asia, with a strong focus on the Greater China region, art historian Meiqin Wang traces how socially engaged and ecological art grows from struggles over land and water, migration and memory, the everyday work of care, among others. Each episode is a guided case study of one practitioner or project, with close attention to process: how col...

Author

Meiqin Wang

Category

Arts

Latest episode

Jun 30, 2026

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Episodes

Liu Yang: The Porous Institution and the Museum as Neighborhood Commons 30.06.2026

This episode follows curator and public-program organizer Liu Yang (刘阳) into Huangbian Village (黄边村), an urban village in Guangzhou. Set beside Guangdong Times Museum (广东时代美术馆), a contemporary art museum embedded in a residential complex, Liu’s work unfolds across two scales at once: the architectural institution above, and the lane-level commons below. The episode focuses on two adjac...

Ge Huichao: Building Body On&On and Making Access 16.06.2026

In this episode, I stay with the Beijing-based curator and producer Ge Huichao 葛慧超, also known as Dew Ge, the founder of Body On&On (身身不息). The episode frames her work through a simple but consequential proposition: access is not an add-on to art, but a craft that shapes how public culture is made. Read through the lens of regenerative aesthetics, access becomes an aesthetic practice of...

Chen Yun: Curating As Mutual Aid and The Infrastructure of Minor Histories 02.06.2026

In this episode, we follow Shanghai-based curator and organizer Chen Yun 陈韵 and ask what happens when curating stops being an exhibition format and becomes a way of living with neighbors under demolition pressure. The story begins in Dinghaiqiao 定海桥, a working-class neighborhood shaped by redevelopment, where Chen and collaborators turned a modest rented apartment into the Dinghaiqiao Mutual-...

Hsiao Li-Hung: From Chicken Farm to Creative Ecology on the Tamsui River 19.05.2026

Hsiao Li-Hung (蕭麗虹), also known as Margaret Hsiao, built one of Taiwan’s most influential platforms for socially engaged and ecological art by starting with what was available: a repurposed chicken coop on the river’s edge in Zhuwei, near the Tamsui River system. This episode traces how Bamboo Curtain Studio (竹圍工作室) grew from a making-centered ceramics site into a porous cultural commons—o...

Prologue: What Makes Regenerative Work Last 05.05.2026

In this short prologue for Season 2 of Regenerative Artivism, I introduce the guiding question for Season 2: what makes regenerative artivism last. Staying in the Greater China region, the season shifts from landscapes of repair to the infrastructures that make care and creativity durable over time. Infrastructures here does not mean only highways and dams. It means enabling conditions: residencie...

Season 2 Trailer: What Makes Regenerative Work Last? 21.04.2026

Season 2 of Regenerative Artivism follows Asian women artists, curators, and community organizers working across the Greater China region to build the social and cultural infrastructures that make care and creativity durable. This trailer previews six episodes that move from northern Taiwan to Shanghai, Beijing, Guangzhou, Macau, and Quanzhou, tracing how regenerative practice takes shape through...

Season 1 Closing: What Regeneration Asks of Us 24.03.2026

In this short season finale, I reflect on what season 1 has been doing at its core: practicing a slower, more accountable way of paying attention. Rather than chasing crisis headlines, the season lingered with place-based creative work that often hides in plain sight, in classrooms, farms, creeks, kitchens, improvised studios, and everyday gathering spaces. Across these sites, regenerative artivis...

Aluaiy Kaumakan: Weaving after the Storm 17.03.2026

Summary Episode 6 follows the practice of Aluaiy Kaumakan, also known in Chinese as Wu Yuling (武玉玲), a Paiwan (排灣) textile and installation artist from southern Taiwan, and asks how weaving can become a method of cultural survival after climate disaster and forced relocation. Moving between community-based making and large-scale installation, this episode stays close to the material intellige...

Song Chen: Soil Artivism, Ritual Repair, and the Mythic Body 03.03.2026

Summary This episode follows the Shanghai-based artist Song Chen (宋陈), whose practice treats soil not simply as an environmental theme but as a medium, a witness, and a moral problem. Beginning from the premise that urban life is designed to keep soil out of sight, the episode asks what it means to build modern comfort on damaged ground. Song’s early earth-based works, including Dust to Dust and...

Chen Xiaoyang: Water, Villages, and A Living Museum in South China 17.02.2026

Summary In this episode, we travel through South China’s river deltas and mountain headwaters around Guangzhou to follow the practice of Chen Xiaoyang (陈晓阳), an artist, visual anthropologist, and museum leader whose work treats art as fieldwork and public method. Moving from an urban village in Guangzhou to a headwater village in a protected water-source area, Chen’s projects show how exhibitio...

Lo Lai Lai Natalie: Art, Farming, and Fermenting Futures in Hong Kong 03.02.2026

This episode of regenerative artivism travels to Hong Kong, one of the most densely built cities on earth, to spend time with the practice of artist and ecological practitioner Lo Lai Lai Natalie (劳丽丽). Working between small farms on the urban fringe, fishpond landscapes in the New Territories, and multi-channel video installations, Lo lives what she calls a half farming, half X life that fus...

Wang Fangfang: Natural Art Pedagogy on the Loess Plateau 20.01.2026

In this episode, we follow Chinese artist and educator Wang Fangfang (王芳芳) from the artist village of Songzhuang on the outskirts of Beijing back to the loess hills of her home region in northern Shaanxi, and onward to the headwaters of the Yangtze River on the Qinghai–Tibetan Plateau. After an early career inside the capital’s contemporary art circuit, Wang made the deliberate decision to leav...

Regenerative Artivism: Listening to the Work of Asian Women Artivists 06.01.2026

In this introductory episode, I lay out the core idea of regenerative artivism and the scope of the podcast. Speaking from southern California with my attention grounded in East Asia, I reflect on how art, care, and collective imagination help communities confront social and environmental injustice and craft/cultivate more livable futures in damaged places. Using the image of a threatened valley a...

Wu Mali: Watersheds, Kitchens, and One Cubic Centimeter of Land 06.01.2026

This episode introduces the practice of Taiwanese artist Wu Mali (吳瑪悧)as an early anchor for regenerative artivism in East Asia. Moving from a polluted suburban creek at the edge of Taipei to river basins, a former naval kitchen on Cijin Island, and finally a project focused on one cubic centimeter of soil, the episode traces how Wu treats art as environmental infrastructure rather than isola...

Trailer – Introducing Regenerative Artivism 21.12.2025

This trailer introduces regenerative artivism: Asian women’s creative strategies for social and ecological futures. I am your host, Meiqin Wang, an art historian working in contemporary Asian art and the environmental humanities. In this podcast, I explore how Asian women artists, curators, and community organizers use creative, place-based practice to confront social and environmental injustice a...

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