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Bangkok, Thailand — 333Gallery warmly invites you to experience “FORMA – Shape What PETE LIN Feels” an exhibition that invites viewers to witness how intangible “feelings” are transformed into tangible “forms.” Through the refined artistry of PETE LIN, the exhibition expresses emotion, memory, and inner rhythm through delicately arranged lines, light, and wooden textures.
The exhibition will be on view from 9 December 2025 to 13 January 2026 at 333Gallery / Warehouse 30, with an Opening Reception on Tuesday, 9 December 2025, from 4 – 8 pm.

The exhibition begins with a simple yet profound question “How can a feeling become a form?”
This question drives the artist’s creative process—unfolding invisible emotions into physical structures that embody the dualities of stillness and motion, precision and warmth, the visible and the internal.
For PETE LIN, art is not merely decoration. It is “another language of emotion,” a medium capable of holding nuances that words cannot contain.

In FORMA, the iconic aria Carmen – Habanera becomes a shared language between sound and form. The song’s themes of seduction, freedom, and the unpredictability of emotion—serve as the emotional backbone of the exhibition. It is a piece the artist often listens to as he works and has become a central source of inspiration.
Each artwork corresponds to a specific segment of the music, as though each form were the “voice” of an emotional moment. Viewers can walk through the rhythm of the aria, translated into sculptural lines and structures from the gentle introduction to the fiery crescendo, and finally to a quiet, contemplative ending.


Art as Atmosphere, Design as Dialogue PETE LIN is an artist, art consultant, and design strategist whose practice centers on the belief that art has the power to transform spaces, experiences, and emotional atmospheres. As the founder of his studio, he leads a multidisciplinary team dedicated to creating artwork, designing spatial experiences, and managing projects that seamlessly bridge art with people, brands, and contemporary lifestyles.

He works with the philosophy that:
“Art is not only meant to be seen, but to be used in everyday life.”
His approach combines cultural narratives with business contexts, hospitality environments, and modern living sensibilities balancing beauty, aesthetics, and functional design.