Discover the first major retrospective exhibition of South Korean artist Haegue Yang (1971, Seoul) in the Netherlands. Considered one of the leading artists of her generation, Yang has developed a versatile oeuvre spanning over thirty years. Leap year will showcase the artist’s wide variety of media, including installation, sculpture, video, text, and audio. Evoking sensorial associations with everyday objects, from aluminium blinds and drying racks to metal bells, her works dissociate well-established dichotomies like abstract versus figurative.

Yang draws our attention to how movement, sentiments, and emotions operate in various social, cultural, and political contexts by mobilising light, sound, moisture, heat, and scent to disclose memories and associations. Choreographed theatrical lights brush over venetian blinds and cast constant but slow-moving shadows, while drying racks are transformed into anthropomorphic creatures in acrobatic postures. Over the past thirty years, Yang has been commuting primarily between Berlin and Seoul. Themes like migration, identity, history, and tradition are therefore naturally embedded in her practice, closely linked to narratives from music, literature, and politics. Folk rituals and traditional crafts have become another focus over the past decade. On the other hand, Yang also critically reflects on ideas from modern Western art history. Frequently departing from keen observation of social issues, her work always remains subjective, infused with an intense yearning for intimacy.

The randing intermediates and Quasi-Yves Klein Blue

Yang’s colourful rattan sculptures, The randing intermediates – Underbelly alienage duo (2020), were made in collaboration with artisans in the Philippines. Their organic forms, reminiscent of sea creatures, have been woven using traditional techniques and are adorned with artificial plants. Equipped with industrial handles, suggesting they can be moved around, The randing intermediates could also refer to ceremonial rituals where non-human symbols are employed to represent human life. The walls in this space are painted a striking shade: Quasi-Yves Klein Blue, similar to the colour patented by the famous French artist Yves Klein (1928–1962). Interestingly, this specific hue was selected by the Kunsthal’s security staff, who picked it out of several locally sourced paint samples they thought it most closely resembled the original. The term ‘quasi’ is significant here, suggesting something that is very close to the original, but not quite the same. This subtle distinction raises questions about authenticity and legacy.

Star-crossed rendezvous after yun

Especially created for Leap year, the large-scale installation Star-crossed rendezvous after yun (2024) was inspired by the life and work of Korean composer and political dissident Isang Yun (1917–1995). The installation comprises ascending geometric formations of venetian blinds and a choreography of light paired with the musical score of Yun’s Double concerto (1977). Composed for a small orchestra and two solo instruments—harp and oboe, respectively representing a princess and a cowherd—this concerto is loosely based on a Korean folktale. It conveys the sorrow of separation of two condemned lovers, as well as the joys of their annual reunion—a possible analogy with a divided Korea.