Steph Huang is a London-based Taiwanese contemporary artist whose sculptural installations use the language of markets, kitchens, and informal architecture to examine labour, value, and the movement of goods and people in global commerce.
Huang was born in 1990 in Taiwan, growing up between Changhua and Yuanlin before relocating to the United Kingdom, where she has lived for more than a decade. She completed an MA in Sculpture at the Royal College of Art in London in 2021, consolidating a multidisciplinary practice that spans sculpture, film, and sound.
Huang lives and works in London, drawing on first-hand experiences of migration, service work, and cooking to connect Taiwanese vernacular culture with the infrastructures of European cities. These biographical crossings underpin her focus on everyday sites of exchange—from convenience stores to food stalls—as spaces where histories of colonialism, global trade, and care quietly intersect.
Steph Huang’s artworks explore how ordinary objects, architectural fixtures, and food-industry materials carry embedded stories of labour, extraction, and desire. Working with glass blowing, casting, carpentry, film, and sound, Huang stages modest materials—wire racks, shelving, signage, deli counters—so they appear at once functional and strangely theatrical, prompting viewers to reconsider their relationship to consumption and the environment.
Projects such as See, See Sea at Tate Britain transform research into scallop diving and the seafood supply chain into immersive installations that connect industrial food production with fragile marine ecosystems. Huang’s sculptural arrangements often juxtapose hand-made glass forms with mass-produced packaging, pointing to tensions between artisanal skill and large-scale distribution in contemporary commerce.
In exhibitions including There is nothing old under the sun and I will see you when the week ends, Huang draws on the aesthetics of corner shops, market stalls, and informal signage to explore how people improvise space under economic pressure. By re-creating display units, counters, and storage systems in the gallery, she highlights the overlooked choreography of stocking, cooking, and selling that underpins daily urban life.
Huang’s work also engages autobiographical storytelling, using playful details—such as enlarged snails in the public sculpture Den Den The Mushi—to address themes of movement, slowness, and adaptation. Throughout her practice, she balances dry humour with careful observation, allowing installations to evoke questions of home, identity, and belonging without prescribing a single reading.
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Steph Huang has been the subject of solo exhibitions and group exhibitions at institutions and galleries in the United Kingdom, Europe, and Asia.
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Steph Huang is a Taiwanese contemporary artist based in London whose sculptural, film, and sound works investigate labour, value, and everyday architectures shaped by global trade and the food industry. You can follow Steph Huang on Ocula to learn more about their work, find out about art for sale, contact their gallery, and keep up to date with upcoming exhibitions.
Work by Steph Huang can be seen at institutional exhibitions at venues such as Tate Britain in London, Taipei Fine Arts Museum in Taiwan, and esea contemporary in Manchester, as well as at leading contemporary art galleries. You can follow Steph Huang on Ocula to receive alerts on upcoming exhibitions by the artist.
Alongside their studio practice, Steph Huang has worked extensively with food and cooking, drawing on kitchen skills and recipes to think about memory and identity in projects such as Everything and Nothing. You can follow Steph Huang on Ocula to receive alerts on news about the artist.
Steph Huang lives and works in London, United Kingdom, after moving from Taiwan to study and develop their contemporary art practice.
Steph Huang’s name is typically pronounced ‘Stef Hwang’, with ‘Huang’ sounding like ‘Hwang’
Steph Huang is represented by leading contemporary art galleries and shows artworks through institutions and non-profit spaces in Europe and Asia. You can explore Ocula to find out which Ocula galleries represent the artist and enquire directly about buying art by Steph Huang and follow them and their gallery to keep up to date. You can also get in touch with Ocula’s art advisory team to find out more about buying or selling work by Steph Huang.
Ocula | 2026

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