The piece I love most at the RoCo is the sculpture series. I’m not a mania football fan, but I can feel a very strong connection with the idea that the invisibles are what make us today.
I am always an astronomy fan. It’s funny, but when I was a little child how the universe is going to end is the question bothers me most. I believed at that time if we knew the answer to that question we might be able to prevent the end of the space happening. While I gradually grow up, I start to understand that there are so many things in this world that we are able to influence at all, for example, the end of the world if it has to come. Yet, moving away my attention from the “ending,” I start to have more interests in the “Dark Matters.”
According to Wiki, “Dark matter is a hypothetical kind of matter that cannot be seen with telescopes but would account for most of the matter in the universe. The existence and properties of dark matter are inferred from its gravitational effects on visible matter, on radiation, and on the large-scale structure of the universe. Dark matter has not been detected directly, making it one of the greatest mysteries in modern astrophysics.” However, “the total mass–energy of the known universecontains 4.9% ordinary matter, 26.8% dark matter and 68.3% dark energy.[2][3] Thus, dark matter is estimated to constitute 84.5% [note 1] of the total matter in the universe, while dark energy plus dark matter constitute 95.1% of the total mass–energy content of the universe."
The most part of universe is come up with something we cannot see, feel, or even detect. This is just like how we plan our life. Though people try to set up a solid way, accidents and coincidences still keep happening. How our lives are is sharpen by what we cannot see.