The artist has chosen to interpret the Horse of Love by referencing gilded decors found in old buildings and using contemporary craftwork techniques of great precision to create a sculpture that dwells between the states of dream and reality. These traditional metalwork patterns used are inspired by elements found in old chapels or houses, such as decorative windows, metallic embellishments on keyholes, or connecting and twisting fences. Consciously deconstructed and rearranged, the hollow-engraved and overlapping stainless steel flowers and spatial concepts crisscrossed with elusion and tangibility have come to form a fantasy beast with spreading wings. It comes from memories and imaginations for a beautiful future, as it leaps through layers of anticipation and hops through reality reaching people’s dreams.