2/6/2026, 2/7/2026
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Statement
Make Yourself at Home is a phrase commonly used to welcome guests, meaning “please feel as comfortable as you would in your own home.” Yet even when such words are offered with warmth, it is rarely easy to feel truly at ease in someone else’s space. If one leaves their home and continues life elsewhere, can that place ever truly become home?
This exhibition brings together six Korean artists—Junhyung Cho, SunHo Sophia Cho, Hoe Jung Jung(JJ), Handeul Kim, Doah Kwon, and Rose Sung Eun Park—who are based in New York and live across multiple countries. Each artist approaches the idea of home differently, constructing a personal sense of home shaped by memory, sensation, and identity.
In Korean society, home carries a particularly strong meaning. It is not only a place to live, but also a foundation of life, often tied to stability, ownership, and long-term commitment. People often develop lasting emotional bonds with their homes, shaped by jeong (정/情)—a uniquely Korean sense of attachment that grows over time through familiarity and care.
For the artists in this exhibition, however, home is not defined primarily by physical space. Rather than a fixed location, it is understood as something fluid and mobile, often temporary rather than permanent. Having grown up in a culture where forming jeong with one’s home is considered natural, the meaning of home becomes increasingly complex when life is shaped by constant movement. Living in New York—a city defined by flux and transition—home shifts away from a single place and toward the self as a source of continuity. Wherever they are, home exists in the ability to sustain oneself emotionally.
In this exhibition, home is presented not as a static space but as an inner site where memory, sensation, and identity accumulate. By shifting the focus from where one lives to how one exists, the exhibition expands and reconsiders the meaning of home. Amid the pace of urban life, this exhibition invites viewers to reflect on what home means to them—and where they themselves feel most fully at home.
Written by dyne Jeong
Artists
Jun is a Seoul-born, NYC-based designer who builds experiences across digital and physical spaces. He currently designs digital community experiences as a UX designer and explores the intersection of interior design and branding through his personal practice. He co-designed this website.
Doah is a designer at Google with a focus on UX/Visual design and digital experiences, originally from Seoul. Now based in NYC, she previously worked at Pentagram and Wolff Olins, where she created brand identities designed to convey personality and foster lasting connections. For this exhibition, she contributed as an artist and played a key role in its branding and planning.
JJ is a brand and web designer at Pentagram, where she focuses on crafting digital experiences. Made in Korea, assembled in India through a Bollywood high school adventure, and now exported to New York in pursuit of creative spark. She designed and developed this website and shaped its exhibition branding.
Rose is a New York-based graphic designer from Seoul, creating lasting visual experiences through the connection of space and emotion. She participates in this exhibition as an artist and collaborated on the exhibition branding and planning.
SunHo Sophia Choi↗
Sophia is a Korean, NYC-based designer working across digital and fine arts. She currently designs at the Human Rights Foundation, where she visualizes human rights issues through research-driven, narrative design. Her work explores identity, displacement, and political visibility, using design as a tool to translate complex realities into accessible visual forms.
Handeul Kim↗
Handeul is a Brooklyn-based graphic designer building integrated brand experiences across digital and physical spaces. She contributed to the branding and planning for this exhibition while participating as an artist to trace how identity is reconstructed across changing environments and boundaries.
Curatorial assistant
Dyne Jeong is a South Korea–born curator and producer working internationally. Her practice focuses on East Asian and European art, exploring how diverse cultural perspectives can meet, overlap, and reshape contemporary exhibition narratives.
Coming soon!
2/6/2026, 2/7/2026
RSVP
Statement
Make Yourself at Home is a phrase commonly used to welcome guests, meaning “please feel as comfortable as you would in your own home.” Yet even when such words are offered with warmth, it is rarely easy to feel truly at ease in someone else’s space. If one leaves their home and continues life elsewhere, can that place ever truly become home?
This exhibition brings together six Korean artists—Junhyung Cho, SunHo Sophia Cho, Hoe Jung Jung(JJ), Handeul Kim, Doah Kwon, and Rose Sung Eun Park—who are based in New York and live across multiple countries. Each artist approaches the idea of home differently, constructing a personal sense of home shaped by memory, sensation, and identity.
In Korean society, home carries a particularly strong meaning. It is not only a place to live, but also a foundation of life, often tied to stability, ownership, and long-term commitment. People often develop lasting emotional bonds with their homes, shaped by jeong (정/情)—a uniquely Korean sense of attachment that grows over time through familiarity and care.
For the artists in this exhibition, however, home is not defined primarily by physical space. Rather than a fixed location, it is understood as something fluid and mobile, often temporary rather than permanent. Having grown up in a culture where forming jeong with one’s home is considered natural, the meaning of home becomes increasingly complex when life is shaped by constant movement. Living in New York—a city defined by flux and transition—home shifts away from a single place and toward the self as a source of continuity. Wherever they are, home exists in the ability to sustain oneself emotionally.
In this exhibition, home is presented not as a static space but as an inner site where memory, sensation, and identity accumulate. By shifting the focus from where one lives to how one exists, the exhibition expands and reconsiders the meaning of home. Amid the pace of urban life, this exhibition invites viewers to reflect on what home means to them—and where they themselves feel most fully at home.
Written by dyne Jeong
Artists
Jun is a Seoul-born, NYC-based designer who builds experiences across digital and physical spaces. He currently designs digital community experiences as a UX designer and explores the intersection of interior design and branding through his personal practice. He co-designed this website.
Doah is a designer at Google with a focus on UX/Visual design and digital experiences, originally from Seoul. Now based in NYC, she previously worked at Pentagram and Wolff Olins, where she created brand identities designed to convey personality and foster lasting connections. For this exhibition, she contributed as an artist and played a key role in its branding and planning.
JJ is a brand and web designer at Pentagram, where she focuses on crafting digital experiences. Made in Korea, assembled in India through a Bollywood high school adventure, and now exported to New York in pursuit of creative spark. She designed and developed this website and shaped its exhibition branding.
Rose is a New York-based graphic designer from Seoul, creating lasting visual experiences through the connection of space and emotion. She participates in this exhibition as an artist and collaborated on the exhibition branding and planning.
SunHo Sophia Choi↗
Sophia is a Korean, NYC-based designer working across digital and fine arts. She currently designs at the Human Rights Foundation, where she visualizes human rights issues through research-driven, narrative design. Her work explores identity, displacement, and political visibility, using design as a tool to translate complex realities into accessible visual forms.
Handeul Kim↗
Handeul is a Brooklyn-based graphic designer building integrated brand experiences across digital and physical spaces. She contributed to the branding and planning for this exhibition while participating as an artist to trace how identity is reconstructed across changing environments and boundaries.
Curatorial assistant
Dyne Jeong is a South Korea–born curator and producer working internationally. Her practice focuses on East Asian and European art, exploring how diverse cultural perspectives can meet, overlap, and reshape contemporary exhibition narratives.
Coming soon!
2/6/2026, 2/7/2026
RSVP
Statement
Make Yourself at Home is a phrase commonly used to welcome guests, meaning “please feel as comfortable as you would in your own home.” Yet even when such words are offered with warmth, it is rarely easy to feel truly at ease in someone else’s space. If one leaves their home and continues life elsewhere, can that place ever truly become home?
This exhibition brings together six Korean artists—Junhyung Cho, SunHo Sophia Cho, Hoe Jung Jung(JJ), Handeul Kim, Doah Kwon, and Rose Sung Eun Park—who are based in New York and live across multiple countries. Each artist approaches the idea of home differently, constructing a personal sense of home shaped by memory, sensation, and identity.
In Korean society, home carries a particularly strong meaning. It is not only a place to live, but also a foundation of life, often tied to stability, ownership, and long-term commitment. People often develop lasting emotional bonds with their homes, shaped by jeong (정/情)—a uniquely Korean sense of attachment that grows over time through familiarity and care.
For the artists in this exhibition, however, home is not defined primarily by physical space. Rather than a fixed location, it is understood as something fluid and mobile, often temporary rather than permanent. Having grown up in a culture where forming jeong with one’s home is considered natural, the meaning of home becomes increasingly complex when life is shaped by constant movement. Living in New York—a city defined by flux and transition—home shifts away from a single place and toward the self as a source of continuity. Wherever they are, home exists in the ability to sustain oneself emotionally.
In this exhibition, home is presented not as a static space but as an inner site where memory, sensation, and identity accumulate. By shifting the focus from where one lives to how one exists, the exhibition expands and reconsiders the meaning of home. Amid the pace of urban life, this exhibition invites viewers to reflect on what home means to them—and where they themselves feel most fully at home.
Written by dyne Jeong
Artists
Jun is a Seoul-born, NYC-based designer who builds experiences across digital and physical spaces. He currently designs digital community experiences as a UX designer and explores the intersection of interior design and branding through his personal practice. He co-designed this website.
Doah is a designer at Google with a focus on UX/Visual design and digital experiences, originally from Seoul. Now based in NYC, she previously worked at Pentagram and Wolff Olins, where she created brand identities designed to convey personality and foster lasting connections. For this exhibition, she contributed as an artist and played a key role in its branding and planning.
JJ is a brand and web designer at Pentagram, where she focuses on crafting digital experiences. Made in Korea, assembled in India through a Bollywood high school adventure, and now exported to New York in pursuit of creative spark. She designed and developed this website and shaped its exhibition branding.
Rose is a New York-based graphic designer from Seoul, creating lasting visual experiences through the connection of space and emotion. She participates in this exhibition as an artist and collaborated on the exhibition branding and planning.
SunHo Sophia Choi↗
Sophia is a Korean, NYC-based designer working across digital and fine arts. She currently designs at the Human Rights Foundation, where she visualizes human rights issues through research-driven, narrative design. Her work explores identity, displacement, and political visibility, using design as a tool to translate complex realities into accessible visual forms.
Handeul Kim↗
Handeul is a Brooklyn-based graphic designer building integrated brand experiences across digital and physical spaces. She contributed to the branding and planning for this exhibition while participating as an artist to trace how identity is reconstructed across changing environments and boundaries.
Curatorial assistant
Dyne Jeong is a South Korea–born curator and producer working internationally. Her practice focuses on East Asian and European art, exploring how diverse cultural perspectives can meet, overlap, and reshape contemporary exhibition narratives.
Coming soon!