VisceralThis photography series, named “Visceral,” presents verbatim immediate feelings and emotional upsurge. “Visceral,” a word originating from its Latin root, Viscera, denotes the character of the activities among the internal parts of the body, especially those around the heart. Before the maturing of modern science, the strong internal experience was always attributed to “the tide of the viscera,” during which nature coexists with chance, common sense and logic stand by, and the subtle trivialities of life invite me to act in response. The moment I view and capture them, their images detach as irrelevant others from them while they as objects remain in the self-being space, becoming the texture of my imagination - dimensions become loosened and space relative. The emerging similarities are the karma of the “visceral tide.” Throughout the process, I do not think, but as if in Buddhism, instead I act by “intuitive awareness” - I respond to nature by an “intuition” and when consciousness catches up with my “intuition”, the “awareness” became “intuitive” as a serendipity.