The human figure revealed through fleeting gestures, memories, and quiet presences.

This exhibition brings together seven Colombian artists who explore the human figure from different perspectives, showing how gestures, memories, and silences can reveal experiences, identities, and connections.

In Carlos Alarcón’s work, attention to gesture and presence invites viewers to pause and contemplate the figure’s delicacy. Pablo Arrázola, on the other hand, uses drawing as a poetic language, presenting childlike figures that interact with the space of the paper, evoking memory, curiosity, and contemplation. Armando Castro‑Uribe integrates the figure into landscapes, connecting the body with its surroundings and creating moments of reflection on the human relationship with the world.

Carolina Convers explores female identity, showing tensions between societal expectations and personal experience, while Teresa Currea builds dreamlike atmospheres where the symbolic and the narrative intertwine, suggesting invisible stories. Juan Carlos Rivero‑Cintra addresses memory and personal connections, reflecting on migration and displacement. Finally, Pedro Ruiz links the human figure with historical and social narratives, connecting the individual with the collective and with territory.

The space we inhabit invites viewers to explore different ways of approaching the human, where each work engages the observer through gesture, memory, and presence.