ChantReverb is a Zurich based multidisciplinary artist whose work draws deeply from Chinese heritage and the textures of everyday life. Rooted in the tradition of Buddhist philosophies, her practice explores humanity, peace, life and death, motherhood, and the interconnectedness of all things. She sculpts with rice paper, ink, colour, sound and poetry, creating immersive experiences that feel both ancient and immediate.

Her artistic journey began early. By the age of eleven, she had won multiple national gold prizes in Chinese calligraphy and a citywide gold prize in graphic design. In 2019, she was invited to the World Economic Forum in Davos to perform Chinese calligraphy and create work for global leaders and international delegates. She was later invited by the China Cultural Centre in Bern to present and promote Chinese calligraphy to wide audiences in Switzerland. In 2025, her sculpture work was featured in the exhibition Architetture Invisibili: Spazi dell’Anima e della Città in Venice, where she played an important role within a historic site in the Sestiere di San Marco.

Working fluidly across calligraphy, sound, video and digital forms, ChantReverb resists rigid categorisation. Influenced by Buddhist wisdom and Tao, she approaches art holistically, treating each piece as an invitation to feel rather than over intellectualise. Her intention is to awaken the senses and sharpen presence in a world saturated with noise and information.

A gifted colourist, she understands colour through relational dynamics such as Tai Chi, using it to deepen emotional impact. Central to her process is a continual learning of new tools, technologies and modes of expression. Each material opens another doorway, one sense illuminates another and one language leads gently into the next. Embracing digital technologies, she transforms captured moments into poetic prompts that remind us how much exists beyond the screen.

ChantReverb’s evolving practice is a call to live attentively with curiosity, openness and reverence for the unseen.