Nasher Sculpture Center presents Haegue Yang: "Lost Lands and Sunken Fields" opening day

eventdetail
Photo courtesy of Haegue Yang

Nasher Sculpture Center will present "Lost Lands and Sunken Fields,," a major exhibition by Haegue Yang (b. Seoul, 1971). Across the museum’s spaces, the exhibition features newly conceived airy and sprawling installations and a dense arrangement of her previous sculptures.

Over the past three decades, Yang has developed a prolific and hybrid body of work that reconciles and juxtaposes folk traditions with the canon of modern and contemporary sculpture-making. Informed by in-depth exploration into vernacular techniques and related customs and rituals, and her continual movement through and within disparate cultures, Yang’s work is both homage to multiple modernities and critique of the singular Western modernist project.

For this exhibition, Yang explores a series of contrasts in response to the building’s architecture: light and dark, aerial and grounded, buoyant and heavy, sparse and dense. Entering the Nasher’s light-filled, street-level galleries, visitors will be greeted by a group of sculptures suspended from the ceiling.

On view for the first time, Yang’s Airborne Paper Creatures, Triple Synecology (2025) comprise hanji (Korean mulberry paper), birch plywood, fabric ornaments, and metallic bells. These new works reflect the natural world, referencing the often abstracted forms of fauna such as birds, insects, and aquatic animals in centuries-old kite-making traditions that flourished throughout Asia.

As installed in this transitional space of the building, just beyond the entrance and admissions desks and ahead of the threshold to the garden, Airborne Paper Creatures calls attention to the felt and heard environment, airflow and the sound of the bells on the kites that is prompted by the continual movement taking place just beneath them.

The exhibition will remain on display through April 27.

Nasher Sculpture Center will present "Lost Lands and Sunken Fields,," a major exhibition by Haegue Yang (b. Seoul, 1971). Across the museum’s spaces, the exhibition features newly conceived airy and sprawling installations and a dense arrangement of her previous sculptures.

Over the past three decades, Yang has developed a prolific and hybrid body of work that reconciles and juxtaposes folk traditions with the canon of modern and contemporary sculpture-making. Informed by in-depth exploration into vernacular techniques and related customs and rituals, and her continual movement through and within disparate cultures, Yang’s work is both homage to multiple modernities and critique of the singular Western modernist project.

For this exhibition, Yang explores a series of contrasts in response to the building’s architecture: light and dark, aerial and grounded, buoyant and heavy, sparse and dense. Entering the Nasher’s light-filled, street-level galleries, visitors will be greeted by a group of sculptures suspended from the ceiling.

On view for the first time, Yang’s Airborne Paper Creatures, Triple Synecology (2025) comprise hanji (Korean mulberry paper), birch plywood, fabric ornaments, and metallic bells. These new works reflect the natural world, referencing the often abstracted forms of fauna such as birds, insects, and aquatic animals in centuries-old kite-making traditions that flourished throughout Asia.

As installed in this transitional space of the building, just beyond the entrance and admissions desks and ahead of the threshold to the garden, Airborne Paper Creatures calls attention to the felt and heard environment, airflow and the sound of the bells on the kites that is prompted by the continual movement taking place just beneath them.

The exhibition will remain on display through April 27.

WHEN

WHERE

Nasher Sculpture Center
2001 Flora St, Dallas, TX 75201, USA
https://www.nashersculpturecenter.org/art/exhibitions/exhibition/id/2115?haegue-yang-lost-lands-and-sunken-fields

TICKET INFO

$10; Free for members.

All events are subject to change due to weather or other concerns. Please check with the venue or organization to ensure an event is taking place as scheduled.
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