
CALL OF SPEECH
The Body is Language.
The Body is Not an Object.
Language exists on a pre-verbal level of communication. Even before we begin to understand words, a person reads emotions, intonations, tension, and calmness through movement, touch, and the rhythm of the body. The body stores experience, memory, tension, tenderness, trauma, and social roles - everything that shapes a human being. The body reacts earlier than the mind has time to explain. It remembers what we tried to forget - repressed experience as a form of psychological self-protection. Yet this experience does not disappear: it remains
in bodily memory, where unprocessed emotions are preserved as tension, movement, breathing, or through psychosomatic reactions. The body “speaks” through gesture, posture, breath, and pause.
The project explores the body as an autonomous system of memory and communication. The subject of research is expressed through fragmentation, poses, and a hyper-focus on the nonverbal language of corporeality—universal and intuitively understood by everyone. It is a language that does not need translation, because it resonates within each person.
The color blue constructs an unchanging environment. It acts as the background of life, a stable plane of existence. Within this constant spatial condition, internal changes are perceived through shifts in color temperature. Warm and cool accents do not merely create mood - they mark the phases of states, from immersion within oneself to the impulse toward action.
The technique of layering paint becomes a metaphor for experience: each layer represents something lived through and accumulated, forming the foundation for the next. The transparency and semi-transparency of the material emphasize that memory is not linear - it shines through the present. Bodily experience, on the surface of the painting, forms gradually, layer by layer, leaving traces of the past within the present.
The pink-blue space is a deepening. Silence. Contemplation. Acceptance. Here the body seems to listen to itself.
The orange-blue space is impulse. Tension. Movement. Change. The body is no longer silent - it breaks outward.
Between these states stands an art object made of hands. Hands as a bridge. They connect the inner and the outer, silence and action, vulnerability and strength. Hands are the point of transition -the moment when feeling becomes action.
Alongside the inner state, the project also reveals the social dimension of corporeality. The body becomes a carrier of image, role, and a way of adapting to the environment. We learn to keep our backs straight, to smile appropriately, to hide fatigue, to quiet fear. We construct a version of ourselves for the world.
Within this contrast between natural corporeality and the social shell, a question emerges: can the body speak the truth if the face has learned to remain silent?
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