A concise companion to the "blind installations," light sculptures and recent wall pieces of Korean artist Haegue Yang
The artworks of Haegue Yang (born 1971) are known for their diversity of media and methods, and their eloquent and seductive sculptural language of conceptual abstraction, often derived from Yang's research on figures and events throughout history, as well as inquiries into the notion of folk and traditional craft techniques.
Bringing together new and existing works spanning the last decade, Haegue Yang's solo exhibition In the Cone of Uncertainty at The Bass foregrounds the artist's consistent curiosity about the world and tireless experimentation with materializing the complexity of identity politics and their ever-changing parameters. Its companion publication highlights a substantial selection of Yang's oeuvre, including blind installations, anthropomorphic works and light sculptures, with an expanded focus on her growing series of mural-like graphic wall pieces.