
Megumi Ohata
Megumi Ohata is a London-based interdisciplinary and SFX artist with Japanese and Korean roots, working with wearable artificial skin textiles imprinted with their own skin, merging hyperreal sculpture and performance.
Ohata earned an MA (Distinction) in Contemporary Art Practice from the Royal College of Art, London (2023), following a BA (First-Class Honours) in Illustration from Camberwell College of Arts, University of the Arts London (2019).
Ohata’s practice explores identity politics and posthuman philosophy shaped by lived experiences of child abuse, gender struggle, and discrimination tied to their Asian heritage. Working with SFX methodologies, they create sculptural installations that merge wearable artificial skin with hyperreal, life-sized forms, drawing on the folklore of Japanese yōkai to imagine hybrid bodies and alternative embodiments.
The work considers how cultural identity and collective memory are carried by the body—inscribed in skin as both surface and threshold. By reconfiguring seams, skins and interfaces, Ohata blurs boundaries between self and other, human and non-human, material and body, opening spaces for intimacy, empathy and calibrated touch, rehearsing the ethics of contact. Within this expanded field of embodiment, they attend to underrepresented identities and voices, inviting forms and narratives that are often overlooked to become present and legible.
Ohata regards art as an extension of the body—a means to hold trauma and transformation while testing the fluidity of personhood. In this process, they question the role of artists in interrupting cycles of harm and ask: What makes a body relatable?

Portrait of Megumi Ohata. Photographed by Kenichi Asano.

