I'm joining @Shopify as a Principal Designer
I'm part of a newly-formed group in the brand design studio that's leading special projects across various teams.
Today was my last day at Cohere. It's been a privilege working with some of the most amazing people I've met in my career. Thank you personally to @iamaidang and @1vnzh and @nick_frosst for believing in me.
Grateful for the memories, excited for what's next.
Realized I never shared these installation shots from After/Images, an exhibition I curated back in January of works by Lu Gao and Way.
Grateful again to both artists for their thoughtful work —I feel so lucky to have collaborated with them and with Black Brick Projects @blackbrickproject 🖤🖤🖤
Artists: @lugao_studio@micro_way
Curator: 🙋🏻♀️
Curatorial assistant: @carolineschultz__
Special thanks to: @_______kirsten
Design: @_erichu
Eric Hu for Ghostly, 2025
5 years on from our Astro Boy collection, we’ve teamed up again with the renowned designer @_erichu on a new capsule featuring his unique flair for color and type, including a long-sleeve and short-sleeve Tee, Hat, and Nalgene.
Printing by @lqqkstudio and embroidery by @arena_embroidery
Black Brick Project and Milly Cai are pleased to present After/Images, an exhibition that brings together the works of two contemporary Chinese and Taiwanese artists. Lu Gao and Way utilize photography, performance, and material transformation to explore how we see, remember, and inhabit spaces around us.
The afterimage, that which lingers in our vision after exposure to the original image, serves as both a visual and conceptual phenomenon within this exhibition. In considering the photograph as a document (of specific histories and lived experiences), After/Images seeks to capture the tension between presence and absence, memory and erasure, interrogating the role of the image in preserving, distorting, and even erasing the past. The works in this show invite us to question the act of looking itself- how the camera becomes a tool for reconstructing our relationship with the present by altering our understanding of how histories endure.