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Haegue Yang: Asymmetric Equality
June 28--August 24, 2008
Opening reception: Friday, June 27, 6:00--9:00 p.m.
Artist talk: 6:30 p.m.
Image: Haegue Yang, Three Kinds (2008) installation view, Life on Mars, 55th Carnegie International, Pittsburgh . Courtesy the artist and Carnegie Museum of Art. Photo: Tom Little.
Haegue Yang's practice is rooted in the permeable relationships between the past and the present in an attempt to broadly locate or conceptualize ideas of community, home and subjectivity. Through abstraction, Yang's work occupies a position that inhabits both a presentness and plurality, while resisting dogmatic formations of subjectivity--a process the artist describes as a "de-territorialization of one's own understanding." Her interest in abstraction is not rooted in Western modernist notions of objectivity or neutrality but rather stems from its boundless capacity to elicit emotional, sensorial and cognitive responses that are necessarily subjective. Somewhere between presence and memory lies the potential and potency for a narrative or subjective whole.
Working with non-traditional materials such as customized venetian blinds and sensory devices including lights, infrared heaters, scent emitters, and fans, Yang constructs complex and nuanced installations that collapse the space between the concrete and the fleeting. Yang's recent works explore the real and metaphorical relationships between her material surroundings and emotional responses, attempting to give form and or meaning to experiences that exist outside conventional order. She explores the possibility of accessing experiences through her own perceived or constructed relationship to social and political determinants or historical precedent. To this end, her recent work has gravitated toward her thinking about historical figures, including the French novelist and filmmaker Marguerite Duras, whose work explored conditions of colonialism and reflected her commitment to the Resistance as well as the underground Korean revolutionary Kim San and the American journalist Nym Wales, whose encounters with Kim under life-threatening circumstances led to the publication of his biography.
For her first solo exhibition in the
This exhibition is accompanied by a bilingual (English and German), 206-page, 4-color catalogue published in collaboration with Sala Rekalde in
Born in 1971 in
This exhibition is made possible by The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, the
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