Haegue Yang

Strange Attractors

Anne Barlow editor Giles Jackson editor

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Tate Publishing

Published:1st Jan '21

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Haegue Yang cover

A vital expansion of the ideas that punctuate Haegue Yang's Tate St Ives exhibition, bringing together installation photography and new texts on the artist

Brings to the fore Yang's extraordinary artistic vision of a world that is in equal parts complex, chaotic and interconnected

A vital expansion of the ideas that punctuate Haegue Yang’s Tate St Ives exhibition, bringing together installation photography and new texts on the artistBorn in South Korea in 1971, Haegue Yang is renowned for creating immersive environments from a diverse range of materials. Yang’s sculptures and installations conjure abstract narratives which play with our sensory pre-conceptions of scent, sound, light and tactility. Often using recognisable household objects, her work liberates forms from their functional context and applies new connotations and meanings to them. Interweaving industrially made objects with labour intensive and craft-based processes, Yang articulates her interest in folk and pagan cultures, and their deep connection with seasonal rituals in relation to natural phenomena. For this book and its accompanying exhibition at Tate St Ives, the context of the Cornish landscape and its ancient archaeological heritage is an important point of departure for Yang, whose work combines materials, theories and cultural references to make astute and surprising connections between local contexts and wider geographies and histories. Recurring themes of migration, postcolonial diasporas, political struggle and social mobility underpin Yang’s research, culminating in a body of work that is an apposite comment on our own time.

ISBN: 9781849767378

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

84 pages