Bergen Kunsthall presents Haegue Yang Journal Of Echomimetic Motions on view 18 October–22 December 2013.
Continuing her dialogue with the canon of modernist art, this time Yang explores her interest in the figurative and spatial elements of the Bauhaus master Oskar Schlemmer’s Triadic Ballet from 1922. The exhibition space is transformed into an experimental stage where sculptures and wall pieces form both scenic elements and active protagonists. A series of five new sculptures on casters or on steel wire are surrounded by a scenic environment of collages made of used envelopes and sandpaper, painted walls and floors. These elements of colour, texture, geometry and composition reconfigure the order of the ballet’s three acts into a spatial arrangement and complete an expansive installation.
Yang occupies the exhibition space with sophisticated sensory experiences that include sound, light and tactility. The Sonic Rotating Lines and Sonic Rotating Geometry envelop the exhibition with sound, creating a specific atmosphere that is visual, spatial and aural. These ‘lines’ and ‘geometric shapes’ are wall-mounted objects that are covered with nickel-plated bells, and can be propelled into rotation by hand, which transforms the hard-edged shapes into ‘circles,’ disintegrating the rigorous physical geometry into another illusory geometry of circles. The act of spinning also causes the bells to tinkle, filling the surrounding space with a rhythm of sound, which corresponds to the speed of rotation. Bells have been a recurring element in a number of Yang’s works over the past few years; only very recently have they been used as a principal material in several new sculptures, including Sonicwears (2013), Sonic Rotating Ovals (2013) and Sonic Dances (2013).
Mobility and motion have been another focus for Yang over the past few years. Mobility is associated here, not only in purely physical or formal terms (with mechanical devices and kinetic constructions), but also in political and historical terms. Mobility and motion correspond to major concerns to which Yang constantly returns: migration, postcolonial diasporas, enforced exile, social mobility or what one could perhaps call ‘lifetime mobility.’ With her mobile performative sculptures, Yang negates the static furnishings of the exhibition space with its fixed installations and carefully placed objects. By allowing the sculptures to move, Yang introduces instability and continuous change into an otherwise solid institutional framework. Understood as complex concepts, motion and mobility become a fruitful focus for Yang’s multi-faceted artistic exploration.
Haegue Yang (b. 1971) was born in Seoul and currently lives and works in Berlin and Seoul.
Bergen Kunsthall
Rasmus Meyers allé 5
5015 Bergen
Norway
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