Google翻訳
"Inner Mirror" is a collection of works by Taiwanese photographer Lin Hsuan-Lang. Based in Taipei, Lin has treated photography not merely as a means of documentation, but as a medium for exploring the nature of perception and cognition. In 2016, he was selected for the Kiyosato Photo Art Museum's "Young Portfolio," and has attracted attention as one of the leading young photographers in Taiwan. In this book, the artist questions not the subject matter itself, but the act of "seeing" itself. It contains street corners, landscapes, and fragments of everyday life, but these do not serve to explain anything, but rather to highlight the ambiguous boundary between what we consciously see and what we unconsciously receive. As the title "INNER MIRROR" suggests, this book is not a personal photograph that speaks of the inner world, but functions as a mirror that reflects the very mechanism by which we perceive the world. It is a contemplative collection of works that quietly asks "what do we see" through photography.