Glove Play (手戲)
This photographic series began with a small encounter: one night my camera ran out of power, and on the street I noticed a single red glove lying quietly between rows of parked scooters. The glove appeared strangely calm and independent, as if it had its own story. That unexpected moment became the inspiration for this project.
In this work, abandoned gloves become characters in a small poetic narrative. The “glove brothers” wander through landscapes, climb hills, rest beside a dried pond, and imagine a world beyond the place where they were left. Through these staged scenes, ordinary objects are transformed into protagonists of a quiet journey.
My approach to photography is influenced by the idea that images should awaken the senses and evoke emotional resonance. A photograph is not only a visual record but also a form of language that captures a fleeting moment and preserves it as memory. By focusing on overlooked details in everyday life, I aim to reveal subtle beauty and invite viewers to imagine stories hidden within ordinary scenes.
This project explores how photography can turn simple objects into narrative spaces, where imagination, memory, and emotion intersect.
Glove Play
This series transforms abandoned gloves into characters in a poetic narrative. Inspired by a red glove I encountered on the street one night, the project imagines the gloves as “brothers” exploring the world after being left behind.
Through staged scenes and careful observation of everyday spaces, the photographs explore how ordinary objects can evoke emotion and imagination. My work seeks to capture small overlooked moments and turn them into visual stories, allowing viewers to experience the quiet beauty hidden within daily life.