A World Can’t Be Measured By Size - Sacredness and Geometry
This piece of work was created by me after moving to the new studio in 2014. When I was creating this work, the clean room and near-geometry environment acted as my inspiration. This piece of work had its origination from norms and controls. I wanted to find the parts that met my sense of aesthetics from available options, so they became the desired candidates for me to fulfill my ideas. They were fruits of plants, including watermelons, apples and grapes. It was fair to say that this was a complete world, in which I could have control on their shapes in such perfectness, and most of these shapes came from the most simple and direct geometrical shape. It is like choosing the best side of fruit once we see it, and sometimes we will design a scene for them, which resemble the ever-changing parallel world. I couldn’t stop in the search for creations, just like seeking a cause for myself without considering any destination. Finally, I saw the eyes staring at me in my own world, and this let me come to a stop. I love this world, and it has nothing to do with how big or small I am. Sacred Geometry is the name of a book that was bought for me by my wife,and she hoped that I could develop some interest in geometry. Geometry, if translated literally to Chinese, also means the unit to measure sizes. I love both its original meaning and Chinese connotations, which incorporated simplicity with sacredness: A World Can’t Be Measured By Size - Sacredness and Geometry