
In the context of contemporary curatorial practice, the role of the “Creative Director” is gradually emerging as a new language of exhibition-making. It is no longer limited to exhibition execution, but instead emphasizes the overall construction of theme, spatial structure, audience journey, visual language, interactive experience, and communication strategy. As a Creative Director, Yalin Hu stands at the forefront of this evolving approach.
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Over the past year, she has led several international exhibition projects, including Infinite Weave during New York Design Week, the online exhibition Unraveling during London Design Festival, and Touching the Void at The Blanc Gallery in New York. In May 2026, she will also lead Becoming, a New York Design Week exhibition at Artech Space in New York. Across these projects, Hu has used cross-media creative methods to connect art, design, digital technology, and public experience.

How Curatorial Thinking Takes Shape Across Media
Yalin Hu approaches each project as a complete creative system. She focuses on how an exhibition develops from an initial concept into a full audience experience: how a theme takes shape, how artworks are organized, how visitors enter and move through the space, how online and offline formats connect, and how the exhibition continues to create conversation after it closes.
This approach gives her role as Creative Director a broad scope. She shapes the direction of an exhibition while also designing audience pathways, digital platforms, on-site interactions, artist exchanges, and public programs. For Hu, an exhibition is never a static outcome. It becomes a space where connection, dialogue, and creative energy can continue to emerge.
In May 2025, Yalin Hu served as Creative Director for “Infinite Weave” , an art and design exhibition presented during New York Design Week, also known as NYCxDESIGN Festival. The exhibition was included in the official NYCxDESIGN schedule, placing it within a highly visible and influential design platform. As New York City’s official annual design festival, NYCxDESIGN is one of the city’s major design events. Each May, it brings together exhibitions, talks, open studios, brand launches, and public programs, attracting professionals, institutions, brands, and audiences from fields including architecture, digital technology, art, and fashion.

What made ” Infinite Weave” distinctive was its approach to digital space. The project created two parallel ways of viewing, one online and one offline. Hu built a virtual exhibition through the New Art City platform and brought that digital space into a physical venue. On site, visitors could enter the virtual gallery through QR codes or explore the exhibition through interactive screens, moving between the digital platform and the physical exhibition.
The exhibition presented works by 20 artists and designers. Through this combination of online and offline experiences, Infinite Weave extended beyond the limitations of traditional physical exhibition spaces and transformed the digital exhibition from a remote webpage into part of the on-site experience. For Hu, digital technology is not only an additional tool for exhibition-making; it is an important medium that can reorganize how audiences view, communicate, and experience an exhibition.
During the London Design Festival, Hu served as Creative Director for the online exhibition “Unraveling”. By building a virtual exhibition space, she brought together 10 artists and designers from the United States, the United Kingdom, and China within a shared digital environment. In addition to the exhibition itself, she also curated and moderated an international online artist panel. The discussion focused on how technology intervenes in artistic creation, how interdisciplinary methods expand artistic expression, and how creators from different cultural backgrounds understand and respond to the experience of the digital age. This panel highlighted the potential of online exhibitions to support cross-regional exchange and international artistic dialogue.

At the end of 2025, Yalin Hu presented Touching the Void at The Blanc Gallery in New York. If the ” Infinite Weave” exhibition emphasized the integration of online and offline exhibition formats, and the ” Unraveling” exhibition focused on international exchange within a digital space, then Touching the Void further reflected Hu’s attention to real-world social interaction, public engagement, and industry connection.
Beyond the exhibition itself, Hu specially organized a “Social Night,” inviting collectors, art critics, curators, and representatives from cultural institutions to gather and exchange ideas on site. The event further expanded the exhibition’s public dimension and real-world interaction. Guests included Xianglong Li, cofounder of Aspace Gallery; George Madarasz, former Director of Tate Chelsea Gallery; Shi Lan, an independent curator based in New York; and Janet Rutkowski, a New York-based curator. Several industry professionals responded positively to the exhibition during the event, making “Touching the Void” not only an exhibition of artworks, but also a platform connecting artists, curators, collectors, and cultural professionals.
This project once again demonstrated Hu’s method as a Creative Director: an exhibition does not end with its opening or presentation. Through event design, guest engagement, and on-site exchange, it can further activate the relationship between artworks and real-world communities.

From Exhibition Presentation to Ongoing Creative Exchange
Unlike traditional curatorial models that focus primarily on completing a single exhibition, Yalin Hu is more interested in how exhibitions can continue to inspire new ideas, collaborations, and conversations.
I have always believed that the value of an exhibition lies not only in what audiences see on site, but also in whether it can create lasting connections and inspiration.
Looking ahead, Hu hopes to integrate more forms of media, including video, sound, digital technology, and live interaction, into future projects. She plans to curate more cross-disciplinary exchange programs, allowing the work of artists and designers to be seen by broader audiences while creating more opportunities for viewers and creators to truly encounter one another through exhibitions. Whether in physical spaces or on virtual platforms, she hopes to shape exhibitions as open spaces for creative exchange, where art can become a link between public dialogue and cultural communication.
During New York Design Week in 2026, she also plans to present a new exhibition project in New York, continuing her exploration of the relationship between art, design, technology, and audience experience.
From New York to London, from physical galleries to virtual exhibition spaces, Yalin Hu is expanding the boundaries of exhibition-making through her role as Creative Director. Her practice shows that creativity is not simply the packaging that comes after an exhibition is made; it is the structure of the exhibition itself. Curation, in this sense, is not only about selecting works, but about creating a way for artworks, audiences, and cultures to come into meaningful relation with one another.


















