Teacher of Dance is the first UK show by Seoul- and Berlin- based Haegue Yang. (b1971). When I viewed it, I was pleased that a group of sixth-formers were there too. I enjoyed watching the way they interacted and responded to her work.

Visitors of my generation often approach conceptual art shows wanting to compare them with traditional forms of art. So for more mature visitors, I suggest you start at the end and work backwards.

As the title suggests, the artist is interested in movement. Her newly created installation in the Piper Gallery, Escaping Transparency, using multi-coloured Venetian blinds, has a sense of movement and beautiful light effects. For me, this aerial display is more successful than the floor displays using blinds. The viewer is seeing them from the optimum angle, looking up and through.

Go to the middle gallery for the video installation Doubles and Halves — Events with Nameless Neighbours. Yang juxtaposes a video of a declining neighbourhood in Seoul with the Giardini of the Venice Biennale in the off season. Audio narrative tells of the anonymous people who used to inhabit Ahyun-dong. Mostly there are no people to be seen in the run-down alleys. The shapes, the dangling wires, the light effects and the kitsch have links with other works in this show.

Returning to the Upper Gallery after seeing the video changed my responses. I think the more domestic pieces in the Upper Gallery would have had more impact in the smaller Piper Gallery and Escaping Transparency would have looked even better in the light of the Upper Gallery. Who would have thought that folding drying racks could look elegant, as they do in her photographs Gymnastics of the Foldables? It is hard to believe that Duchamp produced his Fountain back in 1917, making us see a urinal as sculpture. Yang does that successfully with her Non–Unfoldables, transforming the drying racks into solid shapes, using different materials.

After getting to know her installations, the only works that left me cold were the knitted Can Cosies.

Teacher of Dance, incidentally, refers to G.I. Gurdieff, a spiritualist thinker, who described himself thus. You can meet the artist in conversation with art expert Prof Anne Wagner at 3pm on September 3.