Do Ho Suh
Directing
Known For

Dong in (2022) records the architecture of one of the earliest modernist apartment blocks in the South Korean city of Daegu ahead of its scheduled demolition. Through an involved process of painstakingly captured timelapse from which he produced flythroughs, Suh communicates the textures and materiality of the building. Using complex rigging systems, the camera moves from the exterior of the Dong in building to its interior—and back out again—toying with the demarcation between these spaces and suggesting the porosity of the building. [Overview Courtesy of Lehmann Maupin Gallery, NYC]
Dong in

A statue comes alive at night.
Public Figure/s

A monument and an inverted monument.
Inverted Monument - Plaza

Do Ho Suh's panoramic film is both site-specific and time-specific—a document of Alison and Peter Smithson's modular interiors as they were adapted, decorated, and furnished by residents, as well as a wider meditation about home, memory, and displacement within a physical structure that is about to disappear. [Overview Courtesy of Lehmann Maupin Gallery NYC]