Platform Cooperativism: A Digital Platform That Opposes Capitalist Monopolies and Promotes the Spirit of Cooperatives.
Digital construction of urban planning as public infrastructure
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Digital construction of urban planning as public infrastructure
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Yuling Huang is a visual artist and researcher. With a background in fine arts and an MFA in Trans-disciplinary Arts from Taipei National University of the Arts, her work explores the intersection of collective memory, digital culture, and alternative infrastructures.
Over the past decade, she has cultivated a multi-faceted practice combining data journalism, socially engaged art, and experimental design strategies. She previously worked with The News Lens as a data journalist, with CTBC Foundation as a designer, and led art-activism platforms such as the 706 Media Lab and Print & Crave Dept. These experiences have allowed her to explore how artists, technologists, and citizens can co-create new social imaginaries and reclaim agency over urban and digital environments.
Her recent projects include Reimagining Radical Cities at the New Taipei City Art Museum (2025), a feminist printmaking collaboration addressing urban redevelopment; and Entangled Assembly, an exhibition reflecting on global factory systems and transnational labor, shown in Mexico and Taiwan. She has also actively contributed to discourses on platform cooperativism, blockchain art, and the solidarity economy through essays, translations, and public forums.
She often collaborates with grassroots organizations, scholars, and technologists to create participatory formats such as co-design workshops, zines, and interactive installations. Her artistic research focuses on decentralization, ecological futures, and collective authorship - themes she aims to further investigate during international residencies.
As she expands her practice internationally, she seeks residencies that support critical engagement with community, technology, and interdisciplinary methodologies. Through international dialogue and artistic experimentation, she hopes to develop new tools for imagining feminist and equitable futures.
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