Wen-Chuan obtained her Master of Music and Doctoral of Musical Arts degrees from the Taipei National University of the Arts, under Rolf-Peter Wille and Taicheng Chen. She previously studied with ChiaHui Tsai, Mikhail Kollontay, and Marina Drozdowa during her years at the Tainan National University of the Arts.
She was the artist-in-residence at the Taipei National University of the Arts from 2009 to 2010, and was selected as the pianist for the 2009 Joint project of the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center and the National Concert Hall. She won "Best Performer Award of Taiwanese Composition” in the 2007 National Taiwan Symphony Orchestra Concerto Competition and the 2004 Jian-hua Philharmonic Classical Elite Award. In addition, she was one of the nominees for the 2001 Ryukyu Sugar Hall Best New Artist Competition in Japan, and her playing was praised as “free and moving" by Okinawa Daily.
She was invited to perform in a concert series at the Rachmaninoff Young Piano Competition in Tambov, Russia in 2001, and in a concert project “HUI” by Dance Forum & TanDun Project in 2015-17. She was invited by the National Taichung Theater to perform in its Giant Series - Tomoko Mukaiyama's "Multus No. 3: Canto Ostino for Four Pianos".
In 2019, Wen-Chuan and violinist Ya-Ching Chang collaborated on the album "Paintings of An Elder by the Sea" which won “Best Crossover Album" and "Best Arrangement” of the 30th "Golden Song Awards.” This album contains music by Ling-Hui Tsai, inspired by paintings of Jin-Fa Chang and stimulated by musical material of Taiwan origin.
In May 2018, Wen-Chuan was invited to perform and record the premier of "Botanical Samples-Taiwan Tea Series" composed by Mamoru Fujieda from Kyushu, Japan. The music was composed by extracting and transforming the potential difference of tea trees, and was part of the 2018 artist-in-residence series of the Taiwan National University.