Small galleries in Korea have multiplied at a breathtaking pace in recent years, buoyed by the arrival of Frieze Seoul in 2022 and the momentum of hallyu (the Korean Wave), turning the city into one of the world’s most buzzed-about destinations for gallery hopping.
Homegrown heavyweights, including Kukje Gallery, Hyundai Gallery, and Arario Gallery, have long anchored themselves in Samcheong-dong, an area beloved by international visitors for its winding alleys and centuries-old hanok houses, while international players like Lehmann Maupin and Pace Gallery are clustered in the central district Yongsan.
But a new wave of younger galleries has gravitated toward less conventional settings like Euljiro, a neighborhood known for its industrial grit and hipster edge, and Haebangchon, once a hillside of makeshift homes for migrants displaced after Japanese colonization and the Korean War and now a multicultural enclave of cafes and bars. Some have even reimagined their own homes as exhibition sites, blurring the line between domestic and public space.
These choices are deliberate. Gwansoo Shin, founder of Shower Gallery, sees the scene’s vitality lying in small spaces that “offer alternatives to what came before.” For him, occupying nontraditional sites is a way of resisting the white cube aesthetic.
The spaces often echo the neighborhoods around them. Hyejin Jee, founder of Sangheeut Gallery in Haebangchon, said she chose the neighborhood precisely for its layered history, which has recently been dubbed “Freedom Village” and is home to a large international community, including English-speaking expats.
Yet, the energy has met headwinds, with Korea’s domestic art market seemingly caught in a prolonged slump, slowed by a sluggish economy. Jungwoo Lee, an artist who is also the director of WWNN gallery, said some local galleries have already undergone a kind of “gentrification,” or a return to the old ways of doing things, but those who weathered the storm have emerged stronger, primarily because each has a distinct program and together, they foster a healthy spirit of competition.
Below a look at five Seoul-based galleries whose singular approaches and commitment to nurturing singular artistic voices makes them worth watching.
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PS Center
Image Credit: Courtesy PS Center A nonprofit named Eulji Art Center until 2022, PS Center was recently reimagined by director Park Jiinn after years of watching artists abandon their practices—and after beginning her own path as a collector. Together with three partners, most of whom come from nonprofit backgrounds, she now runs PS Center with an emphasis on nurturing genuine relationships: guiding new collectors at the start of their journey, while working closely with artists to shape each exhibition.
Housed on the top floor of a former metal factory in Euljiro, the gallery’s arched ceiling hints at its past life. Surrounded by nine other galleries and nonprofits within walking distance, it has become a natural stop on Seoul’s gallery-hopping circuit. Recent programs include a solo exhibition by New York–based Korean painter Park Yoo-ah, known for her portrait series of Korean adoptees.
During Frieze Seoul, the gallery will present a new body of work by Indian artist Naresh Kumar, created during his residency in Gwangju—a city still scarred by the 1980 massacre, when the military killed many pro-democracy demonstrators. Kumar’s works explore the persistence of collective movement, and the struggles that continue to echo across borders and generations. Titled “March to March,” the exhibition runs August 26 to September 13.
Address: 3F, 18, Changgyeonggung-ro 5da-gil, Jung-gu, Seoul
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WWNN
Image Credit: Courtesy WWNN Short for What We Need Now, WWNN was founded in 2023 by artist Jungwoo Lee and curator Juhyun Oh. With a focus on showing installation art, interactive works, and site-specific projects, the gallery’s program revolves around a central question: what it means to be human today.
Lee and Oh believe that understanding the present requires voices that cut across generations, and they often mount exhibitions in which emerging artists are placed in dialogue with mid-career artists. This approach can be seen in a 2024 group exhibition, titled “Fairy Tales,” in which painter Luc Tuymans showed alongside artists decades his junior.
During Frieze Seoul, the gallery will collaborate with Japanese gallery CON, following a joint project at last year’s Art Collaboration Kyoto. From September 4–27, CON will take over WWNN’s space to stage a group show of four artists from Japan and Sweden. Blending hybrid sculpture and sound installations with painting and reconfigured urban objects, the exhibition, titled “Fantasy in the Unexpected,” will probe fragile connections between material, memory, and myth.
Address: 20, Samcheong-ro 5-gil, Jongno-gu, Seoul
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Shower Gallery
Image Credit: Courtesy Shower Gallery With a background in exhibition design and production, artist Gwansoo Shin founded Shower Gallery in 2023 as a space to test ambitious and radical forms of art. For Shin, the gallery is less about displaying objects than about staging meaningful encounters.
That ethos came into focus with “SUCCESSION 0.1,” an exhibition in which artist Hyein Min transformed the space into a labyrinth of temporary wooden walls for photography, video, and sculpture. When the show ended, Canadian artist Simon Shim-Sutcliffe repurposed the structures into a long bridge-like table. Over the course of a week, the gallery became a site of process and play, where visitors shared dinners and, on the final night, a party.
Shower’s current exhibition, on view until September 14, will feature Shanghai-based artist Chen Ruofan, presenting a large-scale installation that transforms factory sawdust into both a visceral environment that looks at the hidden toll of labor and environmental neglect.
Address: GF, 61, Duteopbawi-ro Yonsan-gu, Seoul
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Sangheeut Gallery
Image Credit: Courtesy Sangheeut Gallery After working at blue-chip galleries including Thaddaeus Ropac and Kukje Gallery, Hyejin Jee founded Sangheeut, the only gallery in Haebangchon, in 2021. Jee envisions the gallery as a platform for stories of her generation, giving artists room to experiment with formats that feel less tied to commercial pressure. Sangheeut has introduced rising voices such as Tokyo-based American artist Michael Rikio Ming Hee Ho, Indonesian multidisciplinary artist Maruto Ardi, and Korean sculptor Eugene Jung.
From August 28 to September 27, the gallery will present “Doorstep,” a solo show by Jisoo Lee. Drawing from her own experience as a woman living alone in Korea—where many adopt camouflage tactics like leaving men’s shoes at the door to deter gender-based crimes or avoid societal pressure—Lee explores the fragile boundaries of private space that have been breached by others.
Address: 30, Sinheung-ro, Yongsan-gu, Seoul
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Xlarge Gallery
Image Credit: Courtesy Xlarge Gallery Xlarge is both an exhibition space and a home, founded in 2025 by Jae Seok Kim, a past editor-in-chief of Art in Culture and a former director of Gallery Hyundai, where he once mounted exhibitions for artists such as Lee Kun-Yong, Simon Fujiwara, and Ryan Gander.
The space grew out of Kim’s desire to bring art closer to daily life and to carve out room for curatorial initiatives that champion LGBTQ+ artists, whose visibility remains limited in Korea, where debates around gender equality are fraught and same-sex marriage is still not recognized.
On view until October, the gallery’s current exhibition, only the third since its founding, is a solo for Lee Dong-hyun, titled “Hole-Hole Hoo-ha.” Lee’s sculptures unravel the forms of stuffed animals and Olympic mascots, recombining them into strange hybrids. Installed within the domestic setting, these playful yet unsettling creatures seem to stage a takeover of the house, filling it with both humor and unease.