We frequently hear the chorus ‘magnificence is ache’ — a phrase used to justify discomfort within the pursuit of one thing visually interesting.
In Theodosius Ng’s follow, that logic is quietly reversed. Their work suggests one thing extra beneficiant, and maybe extra radical: that ache itself could be lovely.
In 2018, a office accident leading to a damaged wrist led to ongoing persistent ache and a compelled two-year break from the studio. For Theo, the hole this left of their life was destabilising, eradicating a significant technique of expression.
Throughout this era they labored in retail, the place visible merchandising supplied some inventive aid, however with bodily and conceptual limitations. Outdoors of labor, they turned to light gardening, caring for cacti and succulents; ‘It’s a grounding follow that continues to show me endurance and what it means to nurture,’ explains Theo. ‘Additionally they encourage my work.’
Returning to the studio required an entire rethinking of how you can create. Continual ache means Theo’s capability fluctuates always, demanding flexibility and foresight.
As an alternative of lengthy, single-task studio days, Theo now juggles a number of processes directly — throwing, handbuilding, clay recycling, preparation — so progress can proceed even when bodily stamina is restricted. On lower-capacity days, advertising and marketing and administration take priority.
Ache nonetheless interrupts the method. Vessels are generally deserted mid-way, when Theo feels a twinge that alerts persevering with would trigger hurt.
‘I’ve felt annoyed, unhappy, offended and overwhelmed at not having the capability to create, which affected different elements of my life with emotions of doubt and hopelessness,’ they are saying.
But current work with ache specialists has basically shifted Theo’s perspective: understanding ache as info — a communication moderately than a failure.
‘I’ve come up to now, integrating ache and therapeutic as a part of the method and follow, recognising that that is what units my work aside… The way it visually expresses ache via kind and end, and the alienation and “otherness” I really feel from it. But, the identical energy that’s fostered and nurtured due to it.’
It’s this deeply private expression that makes Theo’s daring, spiked kinds stand out from the remaining. Drawing from each side of their life, Theo’s works additionally reference historical Chinese language ritual vessels, objects related to non secular ceremonies, and conventional ornaments — all reinterpreted via a up to date and queer lens.
‘I deconstruct these historical visible motifs, silhouettes and thrives and propel them into a up to date context… They’re stranded exterior their authentic context, drawing parallels to the immigrant expertise of leaving the acquainted for the unknown,’ Theo explains.
Clay has grow to be each materials and metaphor. From uncooked materials to completed floor, a single piece might take days or months, formed by fluctuating capability.
By way of pacing, adaptation and deep bodily consciousness, Theo has solid a follow that doesn’t simply survive ache — it transforms it into one thing powerfully inventive and unmistakably their very own.
An edited model of this story initially appeared in The Design Information Journal Difficulty 04. Subscribe to the biannual print journal right here.














