• Chinese scholars rock

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ENOPIH, 2015
SLS 3D print
27 x 14 x 13 cm
10,6 x 5,5 x 5,1 inches

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During a walk through the Yuyuan garden in Shanghai, a marvellous garden constructed by a government officer for his parents along the border of the Huangpu River, the perforated, irregular rocks grabbed the attention of sculptor Nick Ervinck. There is a strange sense of contemplation, of wisdom, captured in these intricate and ancient shapes. Although born from the power of nature, these rocks seem to escape their natural origin.
These rocks are known as Gongshi or spirit stones in Chinese tradition. The irregularities in the rocks are believed to be an externalisation of qi energy, a vital, spiritual force that is part of all that exists. Through these rocks, and nature in general, scholars reflected on their own morals, virtues and beliefs. The balance and harmony between people and nature was highly valued in Chinese philosophy.
These spirit stones thus had a profound effect on the viewer, encouraging meditation and contemplation. And each time, the holes, paths and ridges reveal something different, reveal another perspective on the world that is encapsulated in the rocks, a spiritual dimension beyond the pure physical appearance.
Next to that, their aesthetic qualities were also strongly admired by the Chinese people throughout history. Mi Fu, a twelfth-century Chinese scholar, wrote a treatise on the aesthetics of the spirit stones. He distinguished four main aesthetic qualities: shou, an elegant and upright stature; zhou, a wrinkled and furrowed texture; lou or cracks that are like channels or paths through the rock; and tou, the holes in the rock that allow air and light to pass through.
Inspired by this ancient occidental tradition, Ervinck constructed a series of contemporary, digitalized rock sculptures. The newest 3D printing techniques allow these complex structures to enter into reality itself. This creates a mutual fertilisation between the digital and the real. By scanning the borders of tradition and innovation through computational methods, Ervinck searches for new ways to revolutionize the art of sculpture. He challenges the power of nature by creating actual sculptures within sculptures, which are impossible to create manually.

2018   DLPA Advocaten, - Kortrijk, BE 2018
 
2017   Summer exhibition - Varied works, Mark Peet Visser Gallery - Knokke, BE
 
2016   Een blik gericht op de horizon, De Mijlpaal - Heusden-Zolder, BE
GNI-RI jul2016, 2PM - Knokke, BE
Colours of the Sky, De Mijlpaal - Knokke, BE
Het verbeelde westen, Embassy of Belgium - Den Haag, NL
In love with beauty, Art Transfo - Zwevegem, BE
GNI-RI apr2016, Oude Kerk - Vichte, BE
Kunstpark Soestdijk 2016, Paleis Soestdijk - Baarn, NL
 
2015   GNI-RI nov2015, Persona Accountants - Roeselare, BE