Working across 3D animation, GIFs, and interactive web pieces, Lee uses glitch aesthetics not as a gimmick but as a language. Her recurring themes—distorted avatars, broken hyperlinks, pastel hellscapes—critique how we perform identity online.

🌐 Lee doesn’t fear the glitch—she worships it. In a world obsessed with 4K clarity, she reminds us that the buffer wheel, the torn JPEG, and the frozen screen are where the real emotion lives.

We spend billions trying to make digital experiences "seamless." Lee argues that seamlessness is a lie. Trust breaks when an interface is too perfect. Authenticity today looks like controlled chaos.

Lee’s use of pastel gradients, anime motifs, and Y2K textures isn't nostalgia. It's a Trojan horse. Beneath the glossy surface, her pieces often contain distorted text, broken code, or fragmented faces. She asks: Why do we make our digital anxieties look so pretty?

Where earlier net artists were cynical, Lee is affectionately destructive . She loves the internet enough to break it apart on screen.