Artworks
Lee Wei Lieh transforms ordinary materials — masking tape, light, acrylic — into works that ask you to look twice. His practice moves fluidly between onsite installations and bespoke commissions, each one built around the same quiet intention: to find wonder in materials everyone already knows.
LOVE
A meditation on devotion and tenderness, rendered through recycled plastic bottles and light. LOVE explores the quiet labour behind every act of care — built bottle by bottle, point of light by point of light.
Whispers
Whispers is an invitation — to slow down, to observe, and to spend time together. Built through sustained, meditative attention, these works use masking tape and light on acrylic, materials that demand time and reward the same from the viewer.
The Collective Xchange
An exploration of connection and reciprocity — a light installation built around the exchanges, seen and unseen, that bind a community together.
Lantern of Duty
Created in collaboration with Project Lionheart, Lantern of Duty honours the quiet vigilance of those who serve — light and irridescent acrylic transformed into a contemplative beacon of duty, sacrifice, and care.
Not all artworks from these series are available for acquisition. Please contact us to discuss availability, pricing, and bespoke commissions inspired by any of the above.
Lee Wei Lieh
Lee Wei Lieh is an intermedia artist whose practice centres on transforming everyday spaces into immersive, emotionally resonant experiences. Working across light, performance, installation, and tape art, his works invite moments of wonder, reflection, and connection within the rhythms of daily life.
The Whispers series began as a personal practice — meditative tape art made through the night, often in public spaces, as a way of recalibrating and healing. What started as small daily gestures grew into a full exhibition exploring light, rhythm, and the quiet persistence of attention.
“I have always believed that the artwork is not only the finished pieces, nor even the exhibition as a whole, but the entire journey and process that lead to what is finally seen.”
— Lee Wei Lieh