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An Interview with Shuoqi Xiong about Architectural Design
May 21, 2025Marshall Meixuan Wang
Marshall Meixuan Wang is a multidisciplinary designer and new media artist whose work spans branding, publishing, and cultural collaborations, using design as a tool for storytelling and community connection. Founder of Sequence Giftshop, Wang embraces a holistic creative practice rooted in experimentation, care, and cross-disciplinary exploration.
I submitted this piece because I wanted to see if a personal, slightly unconventional project could resonate on a broader stage. The work came from a place of curiosity and care. I was designing to explore something I felt was missing in the conversation. Entering it into a competition like the NYX Awards felt like a way to test whether that impulse could translate to a wider audience.
Winning to me is a reminder that intuitive, research-driven design can hold emotional and cultural weight. Creative work built from nuance and risk doesn’t have to be niche. Professionally, it opens the door to conversations I’ve been wanting to have, with people and studios who value design that’s rigorous but also poetic. I see this as momentum, not a finish line.
The project came out of a desire to slow down and reframe how we relate to systems that often feel invisible or overwhelming. I was thinking a lot about how design can be used as a tool to speculate intimacy with infrastructure: how visual language can soften, clarify, or even ritualize the way we interact with things like the Big Bang. The piece was born from that tension: between narration and feeling, data and desire.
The original essay I wrote, which later turned into the script, was inspired by Nora Khan's lecture "The Artificial and the Real", where she discusses the blurring boundaries between artificial systems and human perception, questioning how these developments affect our concepts of authenticity and existence. The speculation of AI technology leads me to a re-imagination of life-forms. On expanding the notion of life, and a future of co-existence.
One of the biggest challenges was figuring out how to balance clarity with nuance. The subject matter was dense and systemic by nature, and I didn’t want to dilute it—but I also didn’t want to alienate people with too much abstraction or jargon. There were moments where I felt stuck between being too didactic and too poetic.
What helped me move through that tension was stepping back and reframing the work as an invitation, not an explanation. I started thinking more in terms of choreography—how the audience moves through the piece, what emotions or questions surface along the way.
I leaned on prototyping, writing, and testing as design tools, not just execution stages. That shift in mindset helped me reconnect with the core intention: to build something generous, layered, and legible on multiple levels.
In the end, the obstacle wasn’t just technical but was about trusting that complexity can be communicated with care, and that good design makes room for ambiguity without losing its voice!
Start with a question that actually keeps you up at night. Stay close to your process. Try to do everything because that's how you learn the most, whether from the tools you're exploring or from yourself.
Atlas of Life was a piece of experiment that lasted a year long, from script writing, idea researching, content sourcing, music composing, learning new technologies, and designing with AI. I made sure to understand the relevancy of all aspects of the creative process and crafted what I think would be the best.
I want to try as much as possible. Be the designer, be the film-maker, be the music composer, and be the creative tech artist, all because I can. I see being a creative individual as a holistic approach, rather than one singular label.
I want to be in spaces, whether studios, collectives, or labs—where experimentation is strategic, not just aesthetic. Where design is a tool for systems-thinking, storytelling, and care. Currently, I founded Sequence Giftshop, an artist collective exploring gestures of care through object making and independent publishing. Together with friends, I hope to build this platform as a bridge, connecting audiences and creatives.
"We’re troops, architects, a collective force, hive minds, swarms, and gravity; we can be the ocean, the current, the red giant, the overseer, and the accumulation of patterns and behaviors."
Life forms are layered, mythic, and expansive, just like the internet, the technology, and the data.
Winning Entry
Atlas of Life | 2025 NYX Awards
"Atlas of Life" is a 3-minute graphic essay that investigates the intersection between the living and the non-living from a metaphysical perspective. It explores... (read more here)
Marshall Meixuan Wang
Marshall Meixuan Wang is a multidisciplinary designer and new media artist whose work spans branding, publishing, and cultural collaborations, using design as a tool for storytelling and community connection. Founder of Sequence Giftshop, Wang embraces a holistic creative practice rooted in experimentation, care, and cross-disciplinary exploration
Explore more insights and interview Inside the Creative Minds of Fortes.Vision | Bringing Ideas to Life here.