Breaking Containment: A Public Experimental Lab on Artistic Design, Engagement and Practices of Knowing

- Tuesday 10 June 2025, 12:00 - 15:00 (UK time)
- Light lunch reception starts at 12:00; Event starts at 13:00
- FAB 0.08, Faculty of Arts Building, University of Warwick main campus
- Open to the public, staff and students of the University (Free of charge)
- Sign up now and receive a free limited-edition tote bag on the day!
Introducing Breaking Containment Public Lab
Breaking Containment is a public lab, aiming to serve as a space for conversation, collaboration and creation with the public, artists and thinkers. We believe that artistic design and creativity can create new ways of approaching sustainability, opening up possibilities to engage with urgent global issues—not just through words, but through shared making, questioning and reimagining.
Public discourses and languages of sustainability and global challenges, such as migration, food security and climate change, often serve as a containment that limits what we know, as well as what we do not know culturally, socially and politically. Art and design often have the power to reshape how we see the world. When it comes to complex issues like sustainability, climate change or migration, existing language and discourses don’t always connect with people emotionally. Art can—through visuals, storytelling and immersive experiences from the public—help connect these abstract challenges.
Who are invited to participate?
We welcome everyone to enable intergenerational, intercultural and intersectorial engagement. Whether you a member of the public or the University, you are all welcome! (Free of charge)
What to expect at the Public Lab?
- Photography exhibition Care-fully Plate-Up
What is good food for you and your family? You will be guided by Dr Wes Lin to explore an online photography exhibition Care-fully Plate-Up about 'What is good food?' and how mothers navigate childhood nutrition in China.
- Hands-On Paper-Cutting Design Workshop with Sijia Chen
- Engage with a traditional artistic practice - paper-cutting, with LA-based multimedia artist Sijia Chen—no experience needed!
- Use this artistic practice to connect with contemporary issues of sustainability in creative ways.
Why Participate?
- Break Out of the Usual Sustainability Talk
Move beyond buzzwords and into creative engagement.
- Art as a Tool for Change
Discover how cutting paper (literally!) can help us cut through old ways of thinking and knowing.
- Connect with the Public, Thinkers & Makers
This isn’t an academic lecture—it’s a public space for dialogue, experiment and practice.
For more information about the public lab, please contact Dr Wes Lin at xiaodong.lin@warwick.ac.uk
Keynote Artist
Sijia Chen
Sijia Chen (born in Shantou, China, lives and works in Los Angeles) is a multimedia artist recognized for her papercut collages and large-scale sculptures. Her work explores themes of cultural identity, collective memory, and the impact of human displacement, blending traditional craftsmanship with contemporary techniques. Central to Chen’s practice is a social engagement practice through which she collaborates with communities to create a dialogue between personal narratives and shared histories.
Using materials of personal and cultural significance—such as government forms, menus, and photographs—Chen constructs intricate papercut collages that narrate the complexities of migration and identity. These works reflect her belief that materials carry memories and meanings that transcend their physical form. After outlining drawings of mountain ranges that are culturally significant to her, Chen layers papercuts onto canvas, repeating processes of gluing, sanding, and tearing. This approach reinterprets the Chinese idiom “Cross the Water and Climb the Mountains” (“Ba Shan She Shui”), capturing the aspirations and challenges that accompany human displacement, and continually redefining the medium of painting.
Chen’s sculptural works incorporate community-sourced visuals, transforming public input into visual expressions that preserve both individual and collective experiences. These projects emphasize shared humanity within multicultural communities, fostering connections and mutual understanding.
Born in Shantou, China, Chen moved to Guangzhou at age 15 on her own, later relocating to Philadelphia before settling in Los Angeles. She learned the art of papercutting from her father, who was taught by his aunt. Chen received her B.A. from Guangzhou Academy of Fine Arts and her M.F.A. from Tyler School of Art at Temple University.
Chen’s work is in collections including Victoria and Albert Museum, Inside-Out Art Museum, Guangdong Art Museum, GAFA Art Museum, and the Art Museum of Shantou University. Permanent installations of her public art projects can be found in spaces like Seattle International Airport, Chaoshan International Airport, and Shantou International Convention Center, as well as cities including Santa Monica, Portsmouth, Wichita, North Kansas City, and Claremont in the U.S., and Guangzhou, Shantou, and Jieyang in China.
Acknowledgement
The event is kindly supported by the Humanities Research Centre (HRC), the Warwick Institute of Engagement (WIE), and the School for Cross-faculty Studies (SCFS), and the 'Care-fully Plate-Up' Exhibition is supported by the UKRI BBSRC.
Register for the event
- We welcome everyone to enable intergenerational, intercultural and intersectorial engagement.
- Open to the public, staff and students of the University.
- You don't need a Warwick staff member or student account to register for the event.