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2020 Exhibition
5 - 8 September 2020

2020 Exhibition

Past exhibition
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Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Do Ho Suh, Untitled, 2020
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Do Ho Suh, Untitled, 2020
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Do Ho Suh, Untitled, 2020

Do Ho Suh

Untitled, 2020
Perspex cube, polyester fabric, epoxy resin, silk clay, thread
20x20x20cm
Copyright The Artist
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Further images

  • (View a larger image of thumbnail 1 ) Richard Allan London, Breaking Free - Slate
  • (View a larger image of thumbnail 2 ) Richard Allan London, Breaking Free - Slate
  • (View a larger image of thumbnail 3 ) Richard Allan London, Breaking Free - Slate
  • Untitled
Do Ho Suh's Untitled work, created especially for Cure3, sees the ghostly forms of household objects that we come into constant contact with – door knobs, keys – emerge from...
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Do Ho Suh's Untitled work, created especially for Cure3, sees the ghostly forms of household objects that we come into constant contact with – door knobs, keys – emerge from a delicate body of texture and material. Retaining the same lightness and ethereal quality seen in his large-scale sculpture, it is playfully responsive to the architectural space of the cube. In the artist’s words:

“The cube prompted a new avenue of enquiry for me, which has been really exciting. I worked with materials I had to hand in the studio and the result builds upon my exploration of psychic space and the body. These recognisable quotidian objects, things we touch unthinkingly every day (and have become newly familiar with during lockdown), emerge and transmogrify into something more bodily. There’s a malleability to the fabric forms, which bear the material evidence of their making – loose threads and stitching – and they are free of the rigidity that is often associated with architecture and built environments in the West. The little balls are from a huge sculptural ‘artland’ I’ve been crafting out of modelling clay with my two children for over four years in the studio. That project is partly a means of giving physical form to the chaos of the child’s mind so there’s various layers of meaning to this work – it’s very tender and explorative for me. I’m so pleased that something that means a lot personally is going to support such an important cause.”
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Cure Parkinson’s is a registered charity in England and Wales (1111816) and Scotland (SCO44368) and a company limited by guarantee – company number 55399740.

 

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