Blueprint
In ‘The Genesis Exhibition: Do Ho Suh: Walk the House’, Korean-born, London-based artist Do Ho Suh invites visitors to explore his large-scale installations, sculptures, videos and drawings in this major survey exhibition.
Is home a place, a feeling, or an idea? Suh asks timely questions about the enigma of home, identity and how we move through and inhabit the world around us.
With immersive artworks exploring belonging, collectivity and individuality, connection and disconnection, Suh examines the intricate relationship between architecture, space, the body, and the memories and the moments that make us who we are.
Source: www.tate.org.uk/whats-on/tate-modern/the-genesis-exhibiti...
Blueprint (2014)
In this drawing, Suh presents the façade of his three-storey New York apartment building, using translucent blue fabric embedded in paper. A pile of colorful threads appear from the door, windows and roof. The title ‘Blueprint’ refers to technical plans and drawings used in building construction. In the drawing, the façade becomes precarious and porous, with the threads suggesting the complexity and energy of life within.
Source: Info in the exhibition, right next to the work
Blueprint
In ‘The Genesis Exhibition: Do Ho Suh: Walk the House’, Korean-born, London-based artist Do Ho Suh invites visitors to explore his large-scale installations, sculptures, videos and drawings in this major survey exhibition.
Is home a place, a feeling, or an idea? Suh asks timely questions about the enigma of home, identity and how we move through and inhabit the world around us.
With immersive artworks exploring belonging, collectivity and individuality, connection and disconnection, Suh examines the intricate relationship between architecture, space, the body, and the memories and the moments that make us who we are.
Source: www.tate.org.uk/whats-on/tate-modern/the-genesis-exhibiti...
Blueprint (2014)
In this drawing, Suh presents the façade of his three-storey New York apartment building, using translucent blue fabric embedded in paper. A pile of colorful threads appear from the door, windows and roof. The title ‘Blueprint’ refers to technical plans and drawings used in building construction. In the drawing, the façade becomes precarious and porous, with the threads suggesting the complexity and energy of life within.
Source: Info in the exhibition, right next to the work