Haegue Yang: Leap Year

Haegue Yang: Leap Year
Haegue Yang, The Randing Intermediates – Underbelly Alienage Duo, 2020. © Haegue Yang. Courtesy of the artist. Commission by Museum of Contemporary Art and Design (MCAD), Manila. Photo: At Maculangan/Pioneer Studios.

Haegue Yang: Leap Year
9th October, 2024 — 5th January, 2025
Hayward Gallery
Southbank Centre
Belvedere Road
London SE1 8XX

Full price standard: £19
Concessions available & Southbank Centre Members go free

The Hayward Gallery will present Haegue Yang: Leap Year, the first major UK survey of the internationally celebrated artist from 9 October 2024 to 5 January 2025.

Considered to be one of the leading artistic voices of her generation, Yang’s work is both spellbinding and boundary-pushing, probing into contemporary ideas of cross-cultural pollination, modernism and folk traditions, and personal and political histories. Leap Year will illuminate Yang’s multifaceted, interdisciplinary and highly inventive practice from the early 2000s to today, echoing the Hayward Gallery’s mission, as part of the creative engine of the Southbank Centre, to champion artists from across the world whose ideas challenge and spark new ways of thinking.

Haegue Yang: Leap Year
Installation view, Come Shower or Shine, It Is Equally Blissful, Ullens Center for Contemporary Art, Beijing, 2015. © Haegue Yang. Photo: Tang Xuan. Courtesy of Ullens Center for Contemporary Art, Beijing.

Arranged into five thematic zones, the exhibition will include three major new commissions and several new productions to present a visual and sensory experience through installation, sculpture, collage, text, video, wallpaper and sound. Yang’s artwork often transforms everyday domestic items and industrial objects, from drying racks and light bulbs to nylon pom-poms and hand-knitted yarn, into distinctive sculptures and multimedia installations that engage the senses. Leap Year will feature
key works from some of her most notable series including Light Sculptures, Sonic Sculptures, The Intermediates, Dress Vehicles, Mesmerizing Mesh and the Venetian blind installation.

Newly commissioned Sonic Droplets in Gradation – Water Veil (2024) is part of Yang’s ongoing Sonic Sculptures (2013 – ) series. Visitors will be invited to walk through a curtain of blue and silver stainless-steel bells which trigger sonic reverberations, signalling their arrival. The materiality of the work is steeped in layers of references, from East Asian traditions and folklore to modernism, contemporary art history and nature, and it will act as a physical gateway into an artistic world imagined by Yang.

Modular structures, geometries and movements are some of the main considerations in Yang’s practice. Sonic Dress Vehicle – Hulky Head (2018) and Sol LeWitt Vehicle – 6 Unit Cube on Cube without a Cube (2018) are two large sculptures adorned with bells, macramé surfaces or blinds. These artworks will be activated intermittently during the exhibition’s run; pushed and pulled on a floor vinyl that is inspired by meteorological charts.

Yang’s recent work investigates the relationship between matter and spirituality. Working with mulberry paper, Yang explores the use of this material in ancient belief systems and practices. In her series of collages, Mesmerizing Mesh (2021 – ), the artwork references sacred and ritualistic paper objects related to shamanism and folk or pagan traditions, while The Intermediates (2015 – ) features hybrid ‘creature-like’ sculptures made from artificial straw that draws from global weaving techniques.

The exhibition will also re-present and reimagine Sadong 30 (2006) after 18 years. This project was set in Yang’s unoccupied family home for 8 years outside Seoul. Carrying the house’s address as the project title, Sadong 30 was the artist’s first solo show in her home country. It was also regarded as her most profound breakthrough, leading to many of her future artistic developments.

Haegue Yang: Leap Year
Haegue Yang, Red Broken Mountainous Labyrinth, 2008, in In the Cone of Uncertainty, The Bass Museum of Art, Miami Beach, 2019. © Haegue Yang. Photo: Zachary Balber. Courtesy The Bass Museum of Art, Miami Beach.

Leap Year will also feature reflections on domesticity, intimacy and everyday gestures and objects. Series of Vulnerable Arrangements – Version Utrecht (2006) is Yang’s first and seminal work made with Venetian blinds, which has become one of her most iconic and recognisable mediums. Yang is drawn to Venetian blinds for their obliqueness, semi-transparent quality, and their capacity to divide and configure a space.

Leap Year will conclude with an ambitious new commission of a large-scale Venetian blind installation, Star-Crossed Rendezvous after Yun (2024). This work features ascending layers of Venetian blinds in varying formations and colours that guide visitors through the space, alongside two breathing stage lights and a historic musical score. Yang’s work often highlights underrepresented, even obscured, yet pioneering and referential figures of modernism. This new artwork was inspired by Double Concerto (1977), created by the late Korean composer and political dissident Isang Yun (1917-1995). Other 20th-century figures appearing in her oeuvre include Marguerite Duras, Sol LeWitt, Sophie Taeuber-Arp, Félix González-Torres and Yves Klein, amongst others.

Haegue Yang: Leap Year
Haegue Yang, Series of Vulnerable Arrangements – Seven Basel Lights, 2007, Installation view at Hamburger Kunsthalle, Hamburg, 2008. © Haegue Yang. Photo: Kay Riechers. Courtesy of Hamburger Kunsthalle, Hamburg.

An accompanying catalogue with full illustrations will be published, including two newly commissioned essays by Hayward Gallery Senior Curator Yung Ma and art writer Pablo Larios. Designed by Wolfe Hall, the catalogue will also feature an interview with the artist by curator and art historian Lynne Cooke and an illustrated chronology by the Taipei-based graphic and visual artist Chihoi.

Haegue Yang: Leap Year is curated by Hayward Gallery Senior Curator Yung Ma with Assistant Curator Suzanna Petot and Curatorial Assistant Charlotte Dos Santos. This survey exhibition is set to tour other European venues in 2025.

The exhibition is generously supported by the Samsung Foundation of Culture. We are also grateful for the key support from Korea Foundation and Kukje Art and Culture Foundation. Additional support has also been provided by the Yang Won Sun Foundation, Institut für Auslandsbeziehungen (ifa) and the Goethe-Institut.

Haegue Yang: Leap Year opens on the 9th of October, 2024 until the 5th of January, 2025 at the Hayward Gallery

©2024 Hayward Gallery