In another space, ceramic animal statues surround a large indigo tent. Lin used indigo because of its historical associations with illness, the occult, and colonial trade routes. In keeping with earlier work utilizing extensive archival research, she hand-dyed, hand-printed, and drew on the panels using methods inspired by early 20th-century Nigerian adire cloths and traditional Japanese printing techniques.

“I sometimes feel like I am physicalizing elements that intrigue me from historical accounts, bringing them into a space where I — and others — can encounter them and renegotiate their meaning,” Lin said in an interview with BOMB magazine.

Lin also invites visitors to connect with her personal process, displaying a handmade book called “A Journal of the Plague Year (Cat Demon Diary).” It features drawings, fabric samples, and writing documenting the escalation of COVID and research for the exhibition in the midst of 18 months of deep uncertainty about the state of the world.

“‘Seeping, Rotting, Resting, Weeping’ is a teaching project,” wrote Byers. “On a fundamental level, it starts to walk us through the kinds of physically ‘interactive’ (a clinical-sounding word for a bodily mode many of us have forgotten) behaviors and skills that we all will need in order to re-emerge into, and remake, our post-pandemic worlds.”

“Seeping, Rotting, Resting, Weeping” runs through April 10. On Feb. 22 at 7 p.m. Lin will give a virtual artist talk with Diane Ahn, MIT Ph.D. student in history, theory, and criticism of art, and Carrie Lambert-Beatty, professor of History of Art and Architecture and of Art, Film, and Visual Studies. Registration required.