top of page

CONTEXTS

​

Do Ho Suh 

 

Do Ho Suh is another artist who is famous for his rubbings. In Suh’s case the rubbings have taken on sculptural dimensions, as the artist, in his Rubbing/Loving Project has painstakingly taken precise and accurate “volumetric shells” of the entire domestic spaces of his past homes in New York and Seoul.  

​

​

​

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

​

​

​

​

​

​

​

​

​

​

​

Suh has stated that what drives him to make such works is how ”space becomes part of us, and how we become part of it”1. Suh’s approach is deeply personal, hoping to ”represent personal or collective memory” in his sculptural rubbings2. This likewise got me to question whether it is possible to represent memory or collective experience through the act of rubbing. This is something that is important if I am to successfully commemorate the process of making. Like Rachel Whitehead, and unlike Suh, I am making work that is not entirely personal. I collectively occupied and used the space from which my rubbings came into existence, and they do have a strong emotional resonance, but they are space also occupied by others. Similarly to Suh, I feel a physical and emotional engagement and the exploration of my marks in the miniature has felt like a method of” exploration and discovery”3. 

​

​

​

​

​

​

​

​

​

​

​

​

​

​

​

 

 

 

 

 

 

​

​

​

​

​

​

I recall the sculptural works of Ingrid Eaton, who creates paper forms from her rubbings in a similar manner, that could allow for the tangibility of the medium to really show through in my own work. Suh’s other artist’s sculptural methods could perhaps be a new direction for my work. 

​

​

​

Foot Notes

​

  1. Do-Ho Suh, Steiner, R., Kim, C. and Smith, E.A.T. (2014). Do Ho Suh : drawings. Munich: Delmonico Books, Prestel. p27

  2. Ibid p27

  3. Ibid p28

 

​

​

​

​

Do-Ho-Suh-Home-within-Home-2013-Polyester-fabric-metal-frame-1530-x-1283-x-1297-cm-960x719
Do-Ho-Suh-Installation-View-2012-440x330.jpg

Do Ho Suh, Rubbing/Loving Project: Seoul Home, 149 x 240 x 240 in, 2018, Victoria Miro

Do Ho Suh, Rubbing/Loving Project, rubbings of various sizes, 2014, Lehmann Maupin

bottom of page