(Xin chào)
I am an artist and community organizer based between Stanford and Ho Chi Minh City. My practice is rooted in anti-imperialist politics, the everyday, and the collective imagination of what could be. I work across digital and print media to explore how art can disrupt, regenerate, and build spaces of care—especially within systems designed to surveil, isolate, and suppress.
I work across print and digital media because I’m drawn to the contradictions they hold and the potential they offer. With publications, I explore how the material and aesthetic act of making can carry political urgency—how print can document, provoke, and build. With the Internet, I search for spaces of intimacy and solidarity tucked within systems designed for surveillance and control. I ask: how do we feel each other’s presence across distance, across systems that fragment us? How can we create and hold space for care?
I approach code as a speculative tool—not something to be optimized, but something to be reclaimed. Through net art and creative coding, I use technology to question, reflect, and imagine new ways of being together. I’m interested in how digital tools, often used to dominate, can instead be used to connect—to nourish, to resist, to build beyond what we’ve been told is possible.