Samantha Gau’s practice centres on the interplay between light, colour, and human perception, examining how these elements shape emotional responses and visual experiences. Drawing on both portraiture and skeletal imagery, her work explores the complexities of identity—both personal and collective. By engaging with the human form in its various states, she creates visual narratives that prompt reflection on presence, absence, and memory.
A key aspect of her recent work involves the deliberate use of colour and lighting to evoke specific emotional atmospheres. Through a process of experimentation, she investigates how shifts in palette and light quality can influence the way a viewer interprets and connects with an image. This research-led approach encourages an intuitive and subjective dialogue between the artwork and the audience, inviting them to consider how perception is shaped not only by what is depicted, but by how it is visually constructed.