Ordong Dragon

A$950.00

Hand-Sculpted using locally sourced Far North Queensland clay, created in Cairns, Qld, Australia.

Ordong Dragon weighs roughly 2kgs and measures 40cm in length, 10cm in width and 6cm in height.

Evolution relies on external stimuli to push it further into adaptation, so when we play with what those stimuli could be, we play with mutation. We play god; if only for a moment in the mind.

What if the atmosphere was so thick with heavy metals like aluminium and copper that flying in the sky felt like swimming underwater. What if the sun shone infrared and the trees breathed out nitrogen. Ordong could sprout from these conditions, or any number of other variations on adaptation that another mother nature could supply. Surely; the list in endless.

Every time we lift a log in a garden or a rock in a tide pool, we are reminded that life simply and eloquently creates itself anew. Ordong is renewed.

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Hand-Sculpted using locally sourced Far North Queensland clay, created in Cairns, Qld, Australia.

Ordong Dragon weighs roughly 2kgs and measures 40cm in length, 10cm in width and 6cm in height.

Evolution relies on external stimuli to push it further into adaptation, so when we play with what those stimuli could be, we play with mutation. We play god; if only for a moment in the mind.

What if the atmosphere was so thick with heavy metals like aluminium and copper that flying in the sky felt like swimming underwater. What if the sun shone infrared and the trees breathed out nitrogen. Ordong could sprout from these conditions, or any number of other variations on adaptation that another mother nature could supply. Surely; the list in endless.

Every time we lift a log in a garden or a rock in a tide pool, we are reminded that life simply and eloquently creates itself anew. Ordong is renewed.

Hand-Sculpted using locally sourced Far North Queensland clay, created in Cairns, Qld, Australia.

Ordong Dragon weighs roughly 2kgs and measures 40cm in length, 10cm in width and 6cm in height.

Evolution relies on external stimuli to push it further into adaptation, so when we play with what those stimuli could be, we play with mutation. We play god; if only for a moment in the mind.

What if the atmosphere was so thick with heavy metals like aluminium and copper that flying in the sky felt like swimming underwater. What if the sun shone infrared and the trees breathed out nitrogen. Ordong could sprout from these conditions, or any number of other variations on adaptation that another mother nature could supply. Surely; the list in endless.

Every time we lift a log in a garden or a rock in a tide pool, we are reminded that life simply and eloquently creates itself anew. Ordong is renewed.