The boundaries between the ephemeral and the permanent are often rigid in the material world, yet in the hands of Taiwanese sculptor Iutian Tsai, they dissolve completely. His practice is not merely an act of shaping brass or steel, but a philosophical translation of ancient East Asian thought into three-dimensional space. Tsai’s work proposes that the weight of sculpture can carry the lightness of ink, and that static forms can embody the perpetual motion of the natural universe.
At the 2023 London Art Biennale, a venue teeming with nearly 80,000 artworks from across the globe, Tsai’s contemporary sculpture Galloping Ox commanded a distinct, arresting presence. The piece did not merely occupy space; it seemed to cut through it with a rhythmic vitality. This powerful resonance earned Tsai the International Confederation of Art Critics Award, acknowledging a visual language that successfully bridges the gap between traditional symbolism and contemporary anxiety.
Galloping Golden Ox (X), 2021, brass sculpture.
The genesis of Galloping Ox is rooted in the specific turbulence of 2021, the Year of the Ox. Created against the backdrop of a global pandemic—a time defined by economic fracture and collective fear—the sculpture was conceived as a vessel for resilience. However, rather than depicting the ox as a beast of burden, Tsai rendered it as a force of dynamic forward motion. The brass forms twist and surge, harnessing the animal’s traditional symbolism to counteract the prevailing stagnation of the era.
The lineage of ink and brush
To understand the fluidity inherent in Tsai’s metalwork, one must look to his artistic origins at Tunghai University. It was here, under the tutelage of the renowned painter and author Chiang Hsun, that Tsai immersed himself in the discipline of Chinese ink painting. This foundation provided more than just a technique; it instilled a worldview where the void is as important as the stroke, and where the artist’s breath aligns with the movement of the brush.
Following his academic years, Tsai transitioned into creating public art, yet the principles of the ink brush remained the architecture of his imagination. He describes his sculptures as embodying “the fluidity of water,” likening them to the graceful, decisive gestures of a conductor or the inevitable rhythmic flow of changing seasons. The metal is treated not as a solid mass, but as a captured moment of liquid transition.
The philosophical anchor of this approach lies in the Dao De Jing, written by Lao Tzu over two millennia ago. The ancient text posits that “The highest form of goodness is like water,” a substance that yields to all things yet possesses the power to erode the hardest stone. This Taoist reverence for water has historically informed the scholar-artist’s preference for ink—a medium that relies entirely on the interplay of water and soot to convey wisdom.
A contemporary sculpture by Iutian Tsai, Piercing Light, 2020
For Tsai, ink is not simply a pigment but a carrier of philosophy. He observes that the monochromatic nature of ink conveys an elegant, enduring pursuit of truth. When the brush meets paper or silk, the water permeates the fibres, creating microscopic streams that dictate the final form. The ink, derived from pine soot, follows this path, settling with an ethereal quality akin to smoke.
Sculpting the invisible flow
This understanding of hydro-dynamics and absorption translates directly into Tsai’s sculptural method. “One must be in a state of ease when creating Chinese ink paintings,” Tsai notes, emphasizing the necessity of “going with the flow.” This state of wu wei (effortless action) allows the artwork to unfold naturally, becoming a direct transmission of the artist’s internal state to the viewer.
In works such as Piercing Light and Flow With the Spirit of Water—the latter earning him the Platinum A’ Design Award in Italy—the material limitations of metal are transcended. These sculptures exude the scholarly spirit of ancient China, balancing elegance with vigorous energy. They appear less like constructed objects and more like calligraphic characters that have been liberated from the two-dimensional page.
The intricate shapes and varying sizes of his portfolio display a consistent logic: the capture of energy in motion. Whether poised and serene or bold and leaping, the forms suggest that they are only momentarily frozen. In Tsai’s vision, the sculpture is a solid anchor, but its essence remains as fluid and ungraspable as the water that inspired it.



















