Sun Woo, Weavers’ Room, 2024, Acrylic and conté on canvas, 320 x 200 cm ©Sun Woo

Weavers’ Room immerses viewers in a quiet, intimate space where women are engaged in the timeless rituals of weaving and sewing. Their bodies are reimagined as termite mounds—architectural towers built by ants from soil, saliva, and dung. These porous structures, essential for ventilation and temperature control, are layered with human pores, battered skin, and female breasts, as if trying to draw in the air from the open windows.

Bound in webs and strands of hair, these lifeless mounds remain still and silent, surrounded by spinning wheels and vintage sewing machines that trace the historical lineage of women’s labor. To the artist, the fetishism for Western antiques and architectural styles simultaneously evokes a nostalgic past and oppressive hierarchy. As these relics surround and encage the earthy corpus, the artist recalls memories and ambivalence bound to her family’s migratory history, speaking to the politics of Asian identity and sensations related to the female sexuality.

Navigating a space between virtual and physical, home and estrangement, seduction and violence, resilience and vulnerability, the work looks to the promise of solidarity, the potential for healing, and the quiet mending of old wounds.

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