
Abstracts as Meditation and Universal Resonance
Q (expanded from Lee’s fifth question): Do you see your paintings as a form of meditation, and do you hope they offer something universally resonant?
Yes, the process itself is profoundly meditative. Whether I am pouring paint to mimic the drift of tectonic plates in Tectonic or placing collage-like stitches in The Hearth Quilt, I am fully present, listening to my inner voice. Each gesture is intentional, yet open to discovery.
For viewers, I hope my abstracts provide a similar space of resonance. Golden Fracture may evoke fragility and harmony at once. Hypnosis may invite someone to lose themselves in colour and emerge with a sense of peace. These works are not about dictating meaning but about offering a universal language of rhythm, line, and light—spaces where people from all backgrounds can see fragments of their own story.
Art becomes most powerful when it transcends boundaries. If a painting can make someone pause, breathe, and find calm or connection—even briefly—it has already fulfilled its purpose.
✨ Step into the meditative rhythm of my original artworks.