From Gossamer Objects to Monumental Architecture, Do Ho Suh Embraces the Process


Photo by Anthony Rathbun. All images courtesy of Moody Center for the Arts, shared with permission

From Gossamer Objects to Monumental Architecture, Do Ho Suh Embraces the Process

For Do Ho Suh, the process of making work is as important as the outcome. Individual sculptures and installations are all part of a larger project that allows the South Korean artist to return to and iterate on earlier ideas, materials, and structures, each time pushing the work in a different direction.

At Moody Center for the Arts, Suh puts his process on full display, recreating parts of his studio and charting the course for his sprawling practice in which he explores ideas of home, memory, and how we relate to physical space. Rubbermaids full of string and fabric, shelves lined with toy dinosaurs and action figures, and small maquettes of architectural sculptures offer insight into Suh’s influences and creative exercises, while completed projects reveal the final steps.

a collection of translucent fabric objects
Installation view of ‘Do Ho Suh: In Process.’ Photo by Anthony Rathbun

Included in In Process are several fundamental works like “Inverted Monument,” which suspends an upside-down figure in a dense mesh of string. Also on view is a collection of fabric sculptures that recreate everyday objects like water faucets, doorknobs, and keyholes in gauzy, translucent fabric. Arranged by color, these delicate pieces draw attention to our attachments to and reliance on such mundane items.

Part of exposing the inner workings of his process also involves what Suh refers to as “dismantling the myth of the artist as an individual genius.” Ongoing in various forms since 2016, “Artland” is a vibrant landscape that welcomes various groups—first Suh’s daughters, followed by communities across several continents—to add bits of malleable clay to the otherworldly terrain.

a detail image of colorful piled material
Detail of “Artland”

“For me, ‘Artland’ is an extension of so much of my practice,” the artist told Colossal, adding:

When I had children, I had to let go of a lot of the control I was used to having in my life. Nothing’s wilder or freer than the child’s mind, and I’ve learnt so much from parenting. “Artland” grew from that small-scale family collaboration, but it’s been so validating involving visitors from Seoul to Brooklyn and Houston—the results are always more fantastical than expected and completely joyous.

If you’re in Houston, see In Process through December 21. Otherwise, find more from the artist via Lehmann Maupin and Instagram.

a massive blue fabric suspends from the ceiling while a red string covered structure stands in the gallery
Installation view of ‘Do Ho Suh: In Process.’ Photo by Frank Hernandez
a collection of colorful fabric maquettes
Installation view of ‘Do Ho Suh: In Process.’ Photo by Anthony Rathbun
a collection of translucent fabric objects
Installation view of ‘Do Ho Suh: In Process.’ Photo by Anthony Rathbun
two mounds of colorful, stretchy material on a table with a similarly colorful backdrop
“Artland.” Photo by Anthony Rathbun
a collection of colorful fabric maquettes on shelves with collections of translucent fabric objects on either side
Installation view of ‘Do Ho Suh: In Process.’ Photo by Anthony Rathbun
a detail of translucent blue fabric on a wall
Photo by Anthony Rathbun
a massive blue fabric suspends from the ceiling while a red string covered structure stands in the gallery. a smaller light blue work is on the wall to the right
Installation view of ‘Do Ho Suh: In Process.’ Photo by Frank Hernandez
a collection of toy dinosaurs and super hero figurines on white shelves
Installation view of ‘Do Ho Suh: In Process.’ Photo by Anthony Rathbun

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