Every time I look at Eunsuh Chois glass sculptures, I'm curious as to how he allows these fragile and fragile glasses to support their own weight without collapsing. After all...the snail in the photo just wants to It’s not easy to crawl forward, not to mention carrying a ladder!
Eunsuh Choi, a Korean artist who now lives in the United States, uses pyrotechnic glass art to depict the successes and setbacks people face in the pursuit of their ideals. The training and struggle in the pursuit of ideals form a strong contrast with the elegance of glass art. The ladder on the snail seems to tell that there is no good thing that can be achieved in one step in the world. If you want to get something, you have to pay first. What.
Pyrotechnic glass is a glass art that uses a gun to heat a borosilicate glass rod and then bend it to form a lattice-like structure. After being tempered by a flame, pyrotechnic glass is actually much stronger than it looks on the outside. , it is a metaphor that once you go through a test, it can at least make you stronger, firmer, and determined, so that you will not go through this experience in vain.
In addition to ladders, trees, clouds, boxes, and houses are also creative elements often used by Choi, or branches that strive to grow upward, holding up white clouds that were originally out of reach.A home, or cuboids of different sizes, stack up to create a terrifying balance that may topple over at any time. After all kinds of life experiences are beautified by glass art, they are like photos that have been retouched with beautiful skin and soft focus. All the hard work is not worth mentioning.