"Creation is a practice where forgetting and memory merge; memory is but a byproduct of gazing."
Formerly an Industrial Engineering student, a life-altering car accident and coma shifted Rev Wu’s trajectory toward self-taught photography. He treats the lens as a tool for reconstructing fragmented mental landscapes. To him, every blink is a shutter’s flicker—a mirror peering through time to capture wordless emotions that words fail to reach.
In his series, Ways of Gazing, Wu employs a non-linear sequence to challenge traditional narratives. Amidst the aimless swinging of time, these works deconstruct how the act of gazing shapes our projections of life, exploring the fluid boundaries between what we remember, what we forget, and how we choose to perceive our reality.
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