23 July 2025
On Wednesday, I was at Tate Modern in London to see 'Walk the House', an exhibition by the Korean artist Do Ho Suh, which was recommended to me by Gavin Stride. Do Ho Suh grew up in a traditional 'hanok' Korean house, a wooden structure that can be disassembled and moved to another location, literally 'walking the house'. But as he has moved across the world and lived in a variety of places, the artist says he feels his childhood home is still following him and walks with him.
![]() |
| Nest/s by Do Ho Suh |
The exhibition includes beautifully delicate translucent pastel-coloured fabric recreations of rooms from Do Ho Suh's various houses, complete with fabric versions of the light switches and doorknobs. But the highlights of the exhibition for me were the rubbings. He covers buildings with paper and then takes a rubbing (like a brass rubbing) of the walls. He then uses the paper to recreate each building in the gallery. The most impressive of these is a one-to-one model of his childhood hanok in paper.
The exhibition makes you think a lot about home: the place where you live and the fabric of the buildings - particularly those fittings, light switches, and handles, of which you have a tactile memory, and which remain once your possessions have been removed. The home walks with you.
'Walk the House' makes an interesting companion piece to ‘Come As You Really Are’ by Hetain Patel (reviewed here in September 2024) and Samantha Manton's 'Lives Less Ordinary: Working-Class Britain Re-seen' (reviewed here in March 2025). All three exhibitions explore and celebrate everyday lives and everyday creativity.

No comments:
Post a Comment