In an empty gallery space, a set of red stairs descends from above, not quite reaching the ground. Transparent and diaphanous, the fabric that covers the stairs also engulfs the ceiling. This incredibly atmospheric installation is Staircase-III (2010), one of the most memorable works of South Korean-born, London-based artist Do Ho Suh. Where an architect designing stairs must make function-driven decisions about materiality, scale and orientation, Suh chose instead to reflectively recreate the narrow wooden structure that connected his New York apartment, where Suh lived for 18 years, with his landlord’s.
In a short film made in 2016 (Art 21, Extended Play Episode #242: Do Ho Suh: “Rubbing / Loving”), Suh speaks fondly of that landlord, Arthur, who encouraged Suh to do whatever he wanted to the apartment in the…
