Lin Yen-Liang paints endearing portraits of children and animals – each character has their own personality and flare. Sometimes they’re excited, shy or joyful. Sometimes cheeky and mischievous. Whatever the scenario, their expressive faces always tell a story. This is something that comes naturally to Yen-Liang. During his process, he sketches out storyboards like a comic strip or film plot. Plus, his cartoonish style has the charm of a children’s book or animation. Fittingly, manga and anime have a strong influence on his work, along with painters from the Superflat movement like Yoshitomo Nara. The artist also collects children's toys. Their cute faces and smooth curved edges are palpable throughout Yen-Liang’s practice.
Yen-Liang’s studio is much like his art. It’s busy and playful, but calm. He uses a range of materials that sprawl across tables where he works. There are huge palettes of oil pastels and coloring pencils. Small clay sculptures litter shelves and worktops in various stages of completion. His paint palette, propped up on an easel, is full of different colors too. Each hue is carefully mixed to create a soft, subtle atmosphere in his compositions. On the wall, there are pieces of paper and cardboard where he experiments. This approach to painting and drawing sees them blend seamlessly – as if there’s no difference between the two. For Yen-Liang there isn't. Instead, his intuition leads the way and his art follows.