Hmm, yeah, but not straight-up exposition. Rather, I rely on unreliable narrator and repetition to get the meaning across. This is mostly done when I'm doing flashbacks or opening up a scene, so it kinda reads like a play narrator setting the scene.
When doing so, I focus on character interaction, character emotions, and kinda offer a way to peer into the character's mind. I think this is a pretty good example of this:
It's part of my Webtoon series With Butterflies in Her Hair. Here, I really love using unreliable narrator when going through flashbacks. The tone becomes darker, the words become twisted, and you don't hear an outsider explaining things: you hear Troy's voice.
I also like to use repetition before and after a scene -- words gain meaning and can have double meaning when more information is given. So I like to repeat one sentence at the beginning, and then at the end -- showing that change in feelings has changed the words.
I find if more exposition could be done this way, things would get a bit more interesting. Sometimes, you can explain things: but explaining them in a way that shows bias, or has some type of double meaning, makes the information more interesting, and it makes the reader kinda pay attention to see who's lying and who's telling the truth.