Patterns in art

![]() Mosaic artwork products displayed at the creative center of Victory Glass Building Material Co in Foshan. The company plans to introduce its high-end mosaic art brand JNJ globally next year. [Provided to China Daily] |
The fine arts major in her 30s was inspired to create these wonders after chancing upon the products developed by Western designers at the Bologna Fair in Italy in 2002, one of the top three international building exhibitions in the world. Wen convinced Li Weida, chairman of the company and her husband, to give up some low-end OEM products and commit more on mosaic art creation.
"In terms of creativity, I have to say we Chinese rarely think out of the box," Wen says as she proudly shows off one of her prized designs - a mosaic tobacco smoking pipe dotted with golden cubic pieces.
Victory set up its design department in 2003, shortly after Wen returned from her trip to Europe.
"What we have done in China's mosaic industry is certainly a revolution. We took a lot of risk in the beginning but the outcome so far has been pretty good," says Li Weida.
According to Li, Victory spends 3 to 5 percent of its annual revenue on design and research and development.
Such efforts have not been in vain. In an industry flooded with cheap mosaic, priced as low as 100 yuan ($15.7, 11.8 euros) per square meter, Li's company has managed to command a premium for its products.
A Chinese watercolor painting developed by Victory and made from irregular sized mosaic fetched a price of more than 200,000 yuan this summer. According to Wen, the mosaic painting featuring lotuses took four artists nearly five months to complete with each mosaic shape different from one another.
"All the pieces are made by hand. The size of the painting was about 5 square meters. Thankfully we no longer have to sell products by size now," Li says.
After several years of preparation, the company, which has sold several hundred million yuan worth of OEM products in Europe, North America and the Middle East, is now ready to take its art products featuring Chinese traditional culture to overseas markets.
"It takes time for us to develop our sales network and nurture our design team. In another three to five years, I have no doubt you can find our own stores in countries, like France, Italy and United Arab Emirates," Li says.
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