Indra's Weave: Nine into One was created collaboratively during a copper wire knitting workshop held in Shanghai. Nine participants, each unfamiliar with the technique, knitted individual panels using hand-guided wire — a process requiring sustained attention and physical precision. The nine resulting pieces were then stitched together into a single suspended mesh, approximately 1,20 x 1,80 metres.
The title references both the Buddhist cosmological image of Indra's Net, in which every jewel reflects every other, and the literal act of lacing — the hand-made joins that bind nine singular gestures into one continuous field.
Light passing through the porous structure casts shifting networks of shadows onto the surrounding walls. These projections form an immaterial extension of the sculpture—an ephemeral reflection of the lattice that continuously transforms with movement and changing light. The work therefore extends beyond the object into a field of relations in space, where physical structure, shadow, and void interact as interdependent elements.