A young woman with black hair sits cross-legged on a pink sculpture that resembles a giant capsule or pill. She is wearing a black satin-like top and black pleated pants, looking to the side with a neutral expression. A circular light spot is projected on the wall behind her.

Yimeng Wang works with space as a narrative medium, approaching architecture, interiors, and exhibitions as interconnected forms of spatial storytelling. Her practice centers on the lived experience of space—how movement, material, and objects shape meaning over time.

Wang received her Bachelor of Architecture from the University of Southern California, where her training emphasized rigorous spatial thinking alongside conceptual and contextual inquiry. She has also completed a Master Certificate in Museum Studies at Harvard University, an academic experience that informs her approach to exhibitions and cultural environments through an awareness of institutional frameworks, ethics, public art education, and audience engagement.

Wang approaches design as a process of translation.

Each project begins with careful research into its physical, cultural, and human context, translating intentions, constraints, and lived realities into spatial form. Her work develops through dialogue with clients, collaborators, and materials, with particular attention to what should be clarified and what may remain open. She is especially interested in spaces that balance legibility and ambiguity—environments that are structured yet open to interpretation.

In parallel with her design practice, Wang advises residential clients on art acquisition and placement, working closely with galleries and art institutions through long-term professional relationships. This perspective further shapes her understanding of space as a setting for art, daily life, and evolving personal narratives.