Installation view © Daejeon Museum of Art

The Daejeon Museum of Art annually organizes exhibitions that connect contemporary art with audiences who may find it unfamiliar. This year, it presents《Gestus》, featuring four artists—Geon-yong Lee, Hyung-gu Lee, Young-joo Cho, and Sejin Hong—whose practices expand the concept of the body in art.

The body, perhaps more powerfully than language, functions as a primary agent of communication. As a non-verbal element, it conveys intention and emotion through gesture, contact, and sound, facilitating mutual understanding. The comforting gesture, expression, and gentle voice that say “It’s okay, everything will be fine” to a weary friend may evoke deeper empathy than words alone.


Installation view © Daejeon Museum of Art

An individual’s body is both a channel and a result of experience and memory. The meanings derived from bodily experience lend new significance to the world’s objects, events, and phenomena. This is the foundation that renders life diverse and inexhaustible—and the reason why artists become both the instrument and the embodiment of aesthetic expression.

All of us attempt to express our thoughts and emotions through various gestures. Gestures are instinctive manifestations of the senses—inevitable and deeply human.《Gestus》invites viewers to set aside, if only for a moment, the pleasures of intellectual and visual contemplation, and instead focus on what the body itself perceives and realizes.

References