[Relative Perspective] Jing-Jie Deer


  • Photographer
    Chang Chih CHEN (陳長志)
  • Prize
    Honorable Mention
  • Company/Studios
    Artist
  • Date of Photograph
    2015
  • Technical Info
    f7.1 1/15 ISO 200

Chang-Chih Chen creates a photographic language called "Relative Perspective". He transforms the time-space relationship in relativity into images and applies it in socio-humanity areas. In the long-term landscape collection project, the scenes in city and countryside are cut in pieces. This project encourages people to rethink about the environment, time and space they live at the moment. This Formosan sika deer sculpture, with one deer horn written ‘Jing-Jie’ in Chinese, stands on the platform of the train station in Sinying, Tainan and gazes at the ever-changing scene on the opposite platform. More than three hundred years ago, this was the realm of the Formosan sika deers. The international trades rapidly converted the blood and flesh into the form of fur. Now, besides the offspring in few repopulation fields, they exist as literature, sample and statues. Note: “Jing-Jie” could mean boundary, limits, realm or a state of mind.

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