Starting from the symptoms of insomnia, I looked at inanimate dolls as a way to deal with consciousness repeatedly hovering on the edge of wakefulness and sleep. There is no doubt that it is a kind of emotional compensation, a physical mapping of one's untouchable virtual communication, so that one can live alone and feel at ease with a physical entity in the real world after having communicated with a person on a cold electronic device.
Insomniac Bear
Canon760D
Touch Starvation
This object in a response to the vague symptomatic descriptions of skin hunger prevalent online. This sculpture served as a commodified solution to skin hunger, accompanied by an associated advertisement video. Through addressing this self-validated event outcome, I sought to challenge the subtle manipulation of our psyche by societal and media forces through the lens of communication studies. This endeavor illuminated the contemporary societal phenomenon wherein subjective judgments about ourselves are perpetuated and amplified.
Touch Starvation
Plastic, Silicone
15cm x 20cm
The Greatest Apple
We are always be educated by some classic stories in our life and asked to follow a certain truth, but sometimes it is not suitable for the reality. People always tend to form a fixed mind- set, not willing to analyze the changes and developments of things, or study the special con- tradictions of things. This makes me realize the importance of stepping out of the stereotypes in our mind. If we don't question the old concepts, we would never look at the problem from a new perspective. This kind of dogmatic behavior will Numbs our senses and our mind.
The Greatest Apple
Video, 2’31’’ 2022
There is a ring that I lost physically and emotionally. My ex-lover bought it for me before I left China in my 19. He bought it because this ring can only be purchased once in a lifetime with his ID, he wanted it to be a commitment. And later, time difference and distance made us struggle, I was crushed a lot and uncertain. He didn’t travel to me, I didn't call him. Before I returned, the two thousand days of relationship we had turned to zero, the ring I wear every day was lost by accident. At that time, the ring had long been out of production, which meant that not only could it not be bought by him again, but it would never be bought again in this world. When a stage of life suddenly disappears, you have no evidence that it ever happened. I’m still holding that absence in my memory, fulfilled yet empty.
The work explores memory concretization by expressing diverse memories through a consistent form. Memories fade daily, blur in our minds, and require retracing. They only resurface through senses and objects—tear-stained tissues, gifts, familiar scents, or melodies. This piece encapsulates the ephemeral nature of memories, making it a poignant exploration of the passage of time and emotional connections.
Beyond Reach
Multiple Materials