Haji Oh
By Reuben Keehan
‘11th Asia Pacific Triennial’ August 2024
Haji Oh
Born 1976, Osaka, Japan
Lives and works in Wollongong, Dharawal Country, Australia
A third-generation member of Japan’s Zainichi Korean community and a recent migrant to Australia, Haji Oh uses the techniques and materials of weaving as a platform to explore experiences of dispossession, dispersion and migration, and the complexities of personal identity that ensue. Through weaving, dyeing, tying and stitching techniques, she draws on personal narratives and photographic archives in evocative installations that incorporate mapping, picturing and patterning.
Her textile installation Seabird habitats 2022 is a single tableau of seven suspended woven panels that map the entanglement of Korean labour in the history of colonialism in the Asia Pacific region. Referencing her personal and family history, Oh proposes weaving as a space where these complexities can be mediated — where past and present can come together and new, less exploitative relationships can be formed.
This project is assisted by the Ishibashi Foundation and the National Center for Art Research, Japan.

Haji Oh's Seabird Habitats 2022, installed at GOMA for the 11th Asia Pacific Triennial, November 2024 / Linen (plainwoven, warp-faced, pick-up patterned, four-selvedge cloth), lead, hook, slide projection / Proposed for the Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art Collection / Courtesy and © Haji Oh / Photograph: J Ruckli, QAGOMA
OH, Haji
1976
- present
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