DICTEE Art & Exhibition
Dictée names a critical relationship between language, power, and embodiment. Originally published in 1982 by Theresa Hak Kyung Cha, the work occupies a singular position in experimental practice, challenging the assumption that language functions primarily as expression.
For artist and gallery owner Tae Ha, Dictée operates as both reference and method. The gallery’s name signals a commitment to practices where form is not predetermined but emerges from necessity. Following Cha’s engagement with histories of rupture—colonialism, exile, and linguistic displacement—the gallery views the body as the primary site where these forces are registered.
Central to our inquiry is the moment before language coheres: the breath, hesitation, murmur, and gesture. These forms resist containment, suggesting modes of knowledge that exceed syntax. At Dictée, we understand art not as static objects, but as processes responsive to histories and conditions that cannot be fully stabilized.
Our programming gestures toward the tension between discipline and resistance, legibility and opacity—where meaning is not resolved but continually negotiated.