
Chuhui Luo is a video artist working across photography and film. Her work grows from personal experience and looks at historical, social, and postcolonial questions through image and sound. She often blurs the line between fiction and reality, using letters, movement, and space to explore family ties and memory. She also examines how narratives are built and makes that process visible. Her practice includes experimental films and installations.
She received her Master’s in Fine Arts (Art.Image) from Esä (École supérieure d’art, Dunkerque/Tourcoing), France.
Research Project: Breath Note
Dual-screen video installation
Ongoing research project
Color, sound, HD, 2025–2026
The film begins with the personal story of a girl from a family across cultures. She looks back at family ties and memory and tries to reconnect with herself and with a family that spans Cambodia and France. The story unfolds through letters, movement, and quiet spaces where absence slowly takes shape. Between the ruins of an old garden by the Mekong River and a new garden taking form, Breath Note reflects on how displacement and silence shape memory. Fragments of sound, image, and breath weave together and reveal the unseen familial and emotional forces that shape identity. Here, memory is not a return but a flow. Between language and time, it slowly rebuilds what endures.
She received her Master’s in Fine Arts (Art.Image) from Esä (École supérieure d’art, Dunkerque/Tourcoing), France.
Research Project: Breath Note
Dual-screen video installation
Ongoing research project
Color, sound, HD, 2025–2026
The film begins with the personal story of a girl from a family across cultures. She looks back at family ties and memory and tries to reconnect with herself and with a family that spans Cambodia and France. The story unfolds through letters, movement, and quiet spaces where absence slowly takes shape. Between the ruins of an old garden by the Mekong River and a new garden taking form, Breath Note reflects on how displacement and silence shape memory. Fragments of sound, image, and breath weave together and reveal the unseen familial and emotional forces that shape identity. Here, memory is not a return but a flow. Between language and time, it slowly rebuilds what endures.

