Linge Meng
Artist - Painter
Born in 1989 in Zaozhuang, China, MENG LinGe develops a multidisciplinary practice at the intersection of painting, installation, and video. Trained at the Émile Cohl School in Lyon, where he obtained a diploma in Applied Drawing, he continued his studies at the Media Art School in Chalon-sur-Saône, earning a National Diploma in Art (DNA), before joining the Master’s program in Fine Arts at the Grenoble-Valence School of Art and Design.
His work is rooted in personal experience, which he mobilizes as a sensitive material to resonate with a collective dimension. Through representations of time, memory, loved ones, and often overlooked everyday objects, he creates singular compositions that open onto new forms of self-portraiture. In his practice, he tends to reduce the presence of portraiture as a fixed identity, in order to soften political, cultural, and social distinctions. He thus proposes a shift toward a more essential interiority, where the figure becomes a space for projection and shared experience. He currently lives and works between Chalon-sur-Saône and Grenoble.
LinGe Meng – Between Memory and Introspection
Born in 1989 in Zaozhuang, China, LinGe Meng currently lives and works between Lyon and Chalon-sur-Saône, France. As a painter, video artist, and visual artist, he explores both the intimacy and universality of human existence through works that intertwine memory, solitude, and collective resonance.
He was trained at Émile Cohl School in Lyon, where he obtained a diploma in applied drawing. He then continued his artistic journey at the Media Art School in Chalon-sur-Saône before completing a DNSEP (Master’s degree in Fine Arts) at the Grenoble-Valence Higher School of Art and Design. In October 2022, he joined the LeGrandLarge association, marking a new stage in his artistic development.
LinGe Meng’s work draws from personal experiences to reach a universal dimension. He explores time, memory, childhood figures, and the relationships between the individual and their environment.
Through painting, installation, and video, he seeks to reveal the deeper identity of human beings within their diverse cultural contexts. His work deliberately avoids overemphasis on portraiture, politics, or cultural differences, in order to foster a more intimate and introspective reflection. This aesthetic and philosophical approach allows his work to transcend borders and resonate with viewers through a singular sensitivity.
As a Chinese artist born in the late 1980s, LinGe Meng belongs to a generation shaped by the one-child policy. This memory, deeply embedded in his imagination, informs much of his work. As an only child, he often overcame solitude through imagination, inventing fictional siblings. Now a father of two children, he revisits his own childhood by capturing moments from his daughter’s life. These fragments of memory, reinterpreted in his work, function both as reminiscence and as a reflection on his own identity construction.
LinGe Meng’s universe oscillates between dream and reality, between past and present. His dreamlike compositions are imbued with softness and poetry, yet beneath this calm surface lie deeper questions about existence. He constructs spaces in which viewers can project themselves, reconnect with their own past, and question their own memory.
By simplifying representation and reducing explicit narrative elements, LinGe Meng develops a visual language in which absence becomes a vehicle of meaning. The unspeakable, the invisible, and the forgotten occupy a central place in his work. Each painting, each installation invites silent contemplation—a journey into the depths of memory and perception.
LinGe Meng approaches intimacy with rare delicacy, capturing those fleeting moments we too often overlook. Through his artistic quest, he gives voice to silence, weight to ephemeral moments, and material form to the most subtle emotions. His works are not confined to a single interpretation; they open themselves to the viewer, resonating differently with each individual’s story.
Encountering his work becomes an immersive experience where time expands, memory intertwines with the present, and every detail—even the most subtle—can become a key to understanding our own story.
LinGe Meng reminds us that art is not merely an object of contemplation: it is a mirror through which we may glimpse the invisible layers of our own existence.

Education
2020 – 2022
• Grenoble-Valence Higher School of Art and Design, France
Master’s Degree in Fine Arts (DNSEP)
2018 – 2020
• Fructidor Media Art School, Chalon-sur-Saône, France
National Diploma in Art (DNA)
2015 – 2018
• Émile Cohl School, Lyon, France
Diploma in Applied Drawing

Exhibitions
2025
• Reminiscences, Vanities Gallery, Paris, France
2024
• The Child of Art, Halle Ronde, Givry, France
• 40th Anniversary of the Artothèque, Villefranche-sur-Saône, France
• The Open Sea, Lyon Biennale, France
• Call of the Sea, Paul-Dini Municipal Museum, Villefranche-sur-Saône, France
2023
• Art Amoy, Cho Kuang Art Exhibition, Xiamen, China
• Professional Days Exhibition, Lyon, France
• Animalia, Boston, USA
• Clairière, Sentiments Gallery, Paris, France
2022
• A Free Spirit, Vivienne Gallery, Paris, France
• Professional Days Exhibition, Lyon, France
• Materially Possible, Geographically Probable, Bourse du Travail – Art3, Valence, France
• JAM, Le Transfo, Grenoble, France
2019
• Vivarium, Espaces des Arts, Chalon-sur-Saône, France
• Point and Live, virtual exhibition, France
• Cache-misère, EMA Exhibition Space, Chalon-sur-Saône, France
• Faire mouche, EMA Exhibition Space, Chalon-sur-Saône, France
Dossier de presse de l’exposition « Réminiscences ».
Une exploration sensible de l’enfance, entre mémoire, solitude et imaginaire.
2024
• S. Pioda — Focus on contemporary creation at the Paul-Dini Museum — Read
• I. Jorland — The exhibition of Franco-Chinese painter Linge Meng — Read
• S. Rosier — Thursday Journal, March 21, 2024 — Read
• Le Progrès — Villefranche-sur-Saône: ten young artists invite us to “set sail” at the Paul-Dini Museum — Read
• R. Montel — An exhibition dedicated to travel arrives at the Paul-Dini Museum — Read
2023
• The Call of the Open Sea — Read
• Collective — EEC — Read

LinGe Meng selected from the museum’s collection Salomé on Holiday by Daniel Tillier (2001). “Everything resonates: the theme and the colors,” comments the painter. Photo: Le Progrès / Marie-Noëlle Toinon