Installation view of 《Weeping Brushes》 (Dohing Art, 2025) ©Jaeyeon Yoo

Dohing Art presents Jaeyeon Yoo’s solo exhibition 《Weeping Brushes》 from September 9 to October 4, 2025.
 
Jaeyeon Yoo’s brushes are weeping. Laden with paint, they droop their heads helplessly or lean quietly against one side of the canvas with slackened bodies. This is not merely a metaphor for sorrow. It is a landscape saturated with the layered emotions accumulated through the creative process, the memory of fingertips intertwined with doubt and affection, and the endless questions directed toward oneself. The weight of the brush mirrors the weight of creation that the artist has borne. Within it coexist the shadows of surrender and withdrawal, alongside traces of the will that inevitably rises again.
 
Philosopher Vilém Flusser regarded tools not as mere physical extensions but as entities that reflect the user’s thinking and gestures. At times, tools even reverse their role and lead the user. In Yoo’s practice, the brush is not simply a medium for applying color; it functions as a symbolic subject revealing the artist’s inner world. The drooping brushes within the canvas become not objects but self-portraits visualizing the tension, anguish, and weight of creative resolve.

Installation view of 《Weeping Brushes》 (Dohing Art, 2025) ©Jaeyeon Yoo

The works presented in 《Weeping Brushes》 extend her ongoing 'Night Walker' series, now exploring the night studio. The exhibition evokes not only painters, sculptors, writers, and poets who make creation their vocation, but also those who sit at kitchen tables or small desks, writing texts no one may read, painting images no one may see. Staying up through the night to create something, scribbling thoughts into notebooks as if exhaling them—these experiences form another foundation of this exhibition.
 
The artist also attends to the minor moments within the creative process: discovering a sudden glow of color within clotted paint on a palette; the thrill felt at the first line revealed beneath layered pigments; the beauty found in the currents and foam as brushes are washed. Even the trace of a tiny insect left on gesso remains as an accidental record. The studio expands into a site where seemingly trivial yet meaningful incidents accumulate.
 
Beginning from the freedom and solitude of those walking alone in night parks, the artist now turns toward a more intrinsic interior landscape. The darkened studio, brushes and pencils, scattered materials and notes, unfinished paintings leaning against the wall—all these objects and scenes react to and intersect with one another within the painted space. Thus the studio becomes a landscape where the boundary between inside and outside grows uncertain.
 
This exhibition invites reflection on solitude and immersion, and on the tools and spaces that make them possible. The drooping brush symbolizes both defeat and life; the quiet studio contains loneliness and the essential energy of creation at once. Yoo’s painting dissolves boundaries between tool and human, space and interiority, proposing a new landscape. We hope viewers will experience the pain and freedom inherent in creation, and the radiant moments that bloom between them.
 
The exhibition features approximately ten new works from the ‘Night Studio, Weeping Brushes’ series, alongside oil drawings and sculptural works shaped like memo papers and brushes. Notably, small memo fragments and brush sculptures are installed within a partition structure covered in linen over wooden frames modeled after the wall structure of the artist’s London studio, presenting a new spatial experience in which painting, sculpture, and installation converge.

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