Tai’s background in architecture is visible in his works. By experimenting with “boundaries”, Tai uses installations or sculptures to reflect reality.
As a final touch, he finishes his pieces with an element of interaction that encourages viewers to experience them through physical movement.
Other than entering and exiting, can the corridor offer other dimensions? A life-size entrance connects visitors to a tiny and unfamiliar world, making our bodies seem oversized and stopping our ascent halfway up the staircase.
“Even though reality dies in dreams, dreams are still found in reality…What is that world we can move in and out of, without opening the door? The truth is I have opened the door that connects dreams and reality.”
Tai playfully alters the existing architectural structure that compels viewers to move in unfamiliar ways, inspiring new spatial and logical perception.
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