TITLE: The Rite of Spring
Inspired by Igor Stravinsky's timeless masterpiece < The Rite of Spring >, this series is a visual ode to the vitality of spring, reimagined through the lens of Eastern aesthetics, wisdom, and philosophy. The female dancer's reflection embodies the elegance and fluidity of life, while the white bauhinia flowers bloom in full splendor, symbolizing the purity and cyclical renewal of nature.
The mirror serves as a metaphor for duality—the seen and the unseen, the transient and the eternal. The dancer, poised in her movements, represents humanity's delicate yet profound connection to the natural world. The blooming bauhinia, a flower deeply rooted in Eastern culture, further enriches this narrative, evoking themes of resilience, harmony, and the perpetual cycle of rebirth.
The images invite viewers to pause, reflect, and find meaning in the delicate balance between human existence and the natural world—a balance that is as fragile as it is profound. It's my tribute to spring, to life, and to the enduring spirit of creation.
AUTHOR: xidong luo (China)
Xidong Luo is a self-taught fine art photographer based in southern China. She specializes in using mirrors, flowers and other natural elements to honor the grace of age, to express the evanescent feminine beauty and the built-in female pain, the deep connection between female and nature, now and then, life and death…
She has a keen interest and a special eye over withering stuff rather than those fresh ones. For her, a withered rose may carry more meaning than those still in bloom, so do all living beings aging with seasons’ change. Her creation is deeply influenced by the traditional Chinese philosophy and the Japanese wabi-sabi aesthetics.
The inspiration of using a mirror in her creation came from a Chinese idiom “镜花水月”. Literally it means "flowers in the mirror and the moon reflected in the water", which is a metaphor of the UNCERTAINTY, UNATTAINABILITY and NOTHINGNESS of life itself. While visually, besides adding more dimensions and drama to the creation, it leads to a disorientation in time and space, now and then, here and there...slightly surreal.
As an amateur dancer, she takes the advantage of her fairly well-shaped body (for her age) by using herself as the medium of expression to accomplish her art projects ever since the COVID-19 lockdown. Yet it's not just about the beauty of a body shape, it’s more about her profound comprehending and cherishing of life through sorrowfully accepting its fleeting nature.
Before starting a career in photography, she worked for IBM for nearly 10 years and gained multicultural experiences through international business trips. However, due to a lack of interest in business management, she resigned and spent years backpacking off-the-beaten-track, which is the crucial cause nd the inspiration of her path in photography.
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