Steph Huang

Steph Huang (b.1990, Taiwan) is a London-based multidisciplinary artist whose practice explores themes of labour, value, and commerce through the cultural biographies of everyday objects and spaces. Working across sculpture, installation, film and sound, she transforms mundane materials into minimalist yet poetically resonant installations. Her work uncovers the historical and transcultural narratives embedded within consumer culture while critically examining its environmental and human costs.

Recent solo exhibitions include When An Encounter Takes Place, Perrotin, Tokyo, Japan, 2025; Lili Deli, Taipei Fine Arts Museum, Taipei, Taiwan, 2025; Property for Sale, Hong Foundation, Taipei, Taiwan, 2024; See, See Sea, Tate Britain, London, UK, 2024; There Is Nothing Old Under The Sun, Standpoint London, UK, 2024; The Water that Bears the Boat, E-WERK Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany, 2024; I Will See You When the Week Ends, Public Gallery, London, UK, 2023; A Great Increase In Business Is On Its Way, Goldsmiths CCA, London, UK, 2022. In 2023, Huang was awarded the Mark Tanner Sculpture Award and was a recipient of the Henry Moore Foundation Artist Award. In 2022, Huang was awarded the Grand Prize at the Taipei Art Awards.

    1. Steph Huang, Grafting, 2026, wood hand blown glass, steel, aluminum, copper, bronze, paint, glass, metal, wire, concrete, resin, tatami mat, lightbulb, 220×800×1200cm. Courtesy of the artist and Perrotin, photography credit Mengqi Bao.
    2. Steph Huang, A Great Increase In Business Is On Its Way, 2022, Installation view at the Goldsmiths Centre for Contemporary Art London. Courtesy of the artist and Goldsmiths CCA, photography credit Mark Blower.
    3. Steph Huang, Lili Deli, 2025, Installation view Taipei Fine Arts Museum, Taipei. Courtesy of the artist and Taipei Fine Arts Museum, photography credit Chi Hung Chu.
    4. Steph Huang, See See Sea, 2024, Installation view Tate Britain, London. Courtesy of the artist and Tate Britain, photography credit Joe Humphrys.
    5. Steph Huang, The Water That Bears the Boat, 2024, installation view E-Werk, Freiburg. Courtesy of the artist and E-Werk Freiburg, photography credit Marc Doradzillo.