DIVINE DICHOTOMY
Dec
14
to Jan 14

DIVINE DICHOTOMY

Divine Dichotomy” is an in-depth visual and philosophical inquiry into the intrinsic tensions that arise from contrasting elements, such as light and shadow, freedom and constraint, nature and nurture, abstraction and symbolism and self and context. This work positions itself not merely as an aesthetic experiment or narrative but as a visual meditation on the nuanced interplay between seemingly opposing forces. Rather than viewing these opposites as binary conflicts, it suggests that true holistic understanding emerges from embracing each element as interdependent and mutually enhancing, offering a more integrative perspective on dichotomy.

 

Central to this intuitive exploration is the layered technique employed with mixed media with predominantly acrylic on canvas. Particularly, the integration of woven traditional patterns considers the act of recontextualization that attempts to acknowledge and respect cultural heritage while fostering innovation. By juxtaposing the textural authenticity and symbolic resonance of weaving patterns with variations of acrylic techniques, the artist generates a dialectic between tradition and modernity, positioning the patterns as living elements within a contemporary framework rather than static relics. This approach strives to avoid appropriation by emphasizing the autonomy of traditional motifs within the modern composition. Rather than subsuming the woven patterns, the acrylic serves to amplify their cultural narratives as central to the work, drawing attention to resilience and adaptability. The woven elements maintain their cultural essence, engaging with the paint as equal agents of expression. This approach creates not only visual depth but also a metaphorical one, inviting viewers into a complex, almost immersive landscape of contrasts that encourages introspection. The physical depth of the layers can reflect the multi-dimensional nature of humanity and experience, while the choice of materials and techniques fosters a sense of unfolding discovery. Each brushstroke or element becomes a meditative act, urging the observer to question their own interpretations of contrast and unity within the interaction or at large, as well as their place within these dualities. Through this synthesis, the artwork attempts to achieve forms of newness that honors heritage without dilution, highlighting the capacity of traditional forms to dynamically coexist and evolve within globalized, contemporary visual discourses.

 

Ultimately, “Divine Dichotomy” asserts that the exploration of paradox need not divide; rather, it can serve as a bridge toward unity and a deeper comprehension of both self and collective human experience. By bringing paradox to the forefront, the work challenges traditional notions of truth, suggesting that it may not lie solely within ideas of harmony but within the fertile space of contradiction. It proposes that the vulnerability that comes with change and newness holds a paradoxical strength, allowing for openness and resilience. The work underscores the potential for art to foster shared experiences that transcend the individual, facilitating a communal space for exploration and mutual understanding. Through engaging with these paradoxes, the viewer is invited to reflect on their own contradictions, considering how these tensions can lead to self-discovery and a more profound connection with others. In its embrace of contradictions, it advocates for an expansive worldview—one where opposites do not cancel each other out but coalesce into a richer, more complex tapestry of existence. In a world often polarized by dichotomies and divisions, “Divine Dichotomy” extends an invitation: to explore, embrace, and transcend, seeking harmony within the ever-present dance of supposed “opposites”. In this way, perhaps, cultural identity is a continued process of becoming, not simply a state of being.

Written by Katarina Ortiz

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TWO SIDES OF THE SAME COIN
Jun
10
to Jul 1

TWO SIDES OF THE SAME COIN

Abstraction is seemingly an ontological inquiry into reality attempting to relinquish and deconstruct commonplace forms to escape corporeal conditioning by accessing diverse methods of representation. Representation, a binary concept, can enable and limit form or disposition whilst endeavouring to capture conceptual notions. An indistinguishable mark, a splatter of colour, or an undefined texture may provide perspective into the human psyche that perpetuates an innate cognitive understanding or visceral experience despite the irony of context, interpretation and semantic processes. It seeks to express beyond what is physical despite the analytical consciousness and being rooted in such concepts to materialise. Language semantics divides, and the internalisation of boundaries perpetuates a natural emphasis on distinction and separation. To counter this confinement, processes of abstraction lead to engaging in deconstruction and reformation that lend potential to transform ideas and experiment with interconnection at play through the multitudes of cultural landscapes, individual reasonings and collective certainty that inevitably capitulate a subjective perspective. It resonates almost instinctively as it alludes to ideas connected to the human condition, a unique yet universal state of existence situated in so-called physical reality but perhaps not limited to it.

wRITTEN by Katarina Ortiz

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REAL FICTION
Apr
2
to Apr 30

REAL FICTION

"Thought that accepts reality as given is no thought at all." — Herbert Marcuse

Life is known to us through the aid of the senses, the miraculous filters of awareness, without which we might cease to exist in the current context or perhaps inhabit unknown dimensions of being. The body seemingly functions as an organic tool inherent to evolving biological memory that helps stimulate consciousness. Humanity has likely developed through a self-formative process, wherein the external world is realised, appropriated, and transformed by perception or understanding relative to experience and subject to metamorphosis. The symbiosis of the psyche and the physical is perceived as complementary as it situates human cognisance in states of constant flux. In this way, newness is always at play, generating discourse beyond the corporeal sphere despite being a consequence.

This juxtaposition is particularly evident when considering the belief in a correspondence between the Universe and Man — macrocosm and microcosm. A subject often alluded to when examining our interconnectedness with the environment relative to the human and the cultural sphere. Landscapes (linguistic or otherwise) highlight fundamental questions concerning the nature of being, philosophy of knowledge, and theoretical perspective. Mirroring the tangible through visual cues and commonplace constructs is a catalyst for a better means of universal communication. Simultaneously, it transmutes expressions of transient mentality that attempt to capture some essence of an innate and visceral human condition. Considering a correlation with the audience or observer further informs the exhibition's intrinsic and cyclic exchange between the external and internal. We might individually live dependent and bound by personal knowledge and awareness, comprising our so-called reality; however, both concepts are considered equivocal. As the earth is a locus for humanity, a landscape serves as a locus for interconnection regardless of manifestation.

by Katarina Ortiz

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AQUARIUM
Dec
12
to Jan 16

AQUARIUM

AQUARIUM CAME FROM A DESIRE TO EXPLORE IDEAS RELATING TO SELF, SYMBOLISM, AND SOCIETY USING ILLUSTRATED ANALOGY AND SUGGESTIVE REPRESENTATION. THE WORK IS ALLEGORICAL, INSPIRED BY CONCEPTS PERTAINING TO THE HUMAN CONDITION, A SEGREGATING YET UNIVERSAL EXPERIENCE. ITS MANIFESTATION IS NOT UNLIKE AN EDITORIAL CARTOON GENERATING DISCOURSE PROMPTED BY THE POLITICAL CLIMATE, EXTREME EVENTS, AND CURRENT CIRCUMSTANCES, NOR IS IT AS TRIVIAL AS A QUICK SKIT. INSTEAD, THE CREATIVE PROCESS BECAME LIKENED TO DAILY JOURNALING OR MARK-MAKING. AFTER ALL, FUNDAMENTAL LANGUAGE ELEMENTS, INCLUDING ALL MENTAL PRODUCTS AND CULTURAL TREATMENTS, ARE REPRESENTED AS SIGNS, SYMBOLS, AND OTHER SUCH SEMANTICS. THROUGH THESE CONTEXTUAL CLUES, THE VISUAL METAPHOR OF AN AQUARIUM IMPLIES THE MACRO, THE WORLD AT LARGE, WHILE SIMILARLY, THE MICRO, A SELF-PORTRAIT OF TIME SPENT DAILY DURING ENHANCED COMMUNITY QUARANTINE. THESE KINDS OF BINARY OPPOSITIONS BECAME CENTRAL MOTIFS, MORE SPECIFICALLY: ISOLATION AND COMMUNITY (THROUGH THE ECOLOGY OF THE SUBJECT), INSIDE AND OUTSIDE (FROM THE PERSPECTIVE AND RELATIONSHIP OF AUTHOR AND AUDIENCE), AND TRUTH OR TALE (IN ITS GENERALIZATION AND SUBSEQUENT ABSTRACTION). INEVITABLY, DRAWING WITHOUT SYNTAX WOULD NATURALLY GENERATE MEANING AS MEANING IS THE OFFSPRING OF RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN SIGNS, PERHAPS, POSTULATING THAT A WORK OF ART IS A WORK OF NATURE.

BY KATARINA ORTIZ

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HOMECOMING
Oct
12
to Nov 12

HOMECOMING

“Every sign, linguistic or non-linguistic, spoken or written (in the usual sense of this opposition), as a small or large unity, can be cited, put between quotation marks; thereby it can break with every given context, and engender infinitely new contexts in an absolutely non-saturable fashion. This does not suppose that the mark is valid outside its context, but on the contrary that there are only contexts without any center of absolute anchoring. This citation, duplication, or duplicity, this iterability of the mark is not an accident or anomaly but is that (normal/abnormal) without which a mark could no longer even have a so-called “normal” functioning. What would a mark be that one could not cite? And whose origin could not be lost on the way?” - Jacques Derrida (Smith, p.99, 1995)

Concepts of Identity and Origin

The notion of identity and the question of origin emerge as significant preoccupations from early experiences. The construction of identity begins immediately after birth, entangled in a web of social expectations and classifications: a name, age, family structure, cultural markers, religion, and more. These identifiers act as constraints, imposing a fixed narrative that prescribes an individual’s relationship to self and the world. Faithfulness to such rigid structures—whether concerning race, nationality, or other social identifiers—often limits the complexities of being. While these categories create a framework that shapes character and moral orientation, they simultaneously enforce boundaries that distinguish and separate individuals, fostering an ‘us versus them’ mentality. These categorizations, influenced by societal pressures to codify and define every aspect of existence, manifest through a complex lattice of unspoken expectations and institutional systems. Returning to the Philippines after an extended absence reveals the complexities of these preconceptions in sharper relief. A re-immersion in traditional frameworks of belonging, where shared cultural and historical markers often overshadow individual difference, sharpens the urge to destabilize these fixed identity constructs. Recognition—or its absence—based on pre-existing notions such as stereotypes or aesthetic markers amplifies the drive to explore the fluctuating relationship between self and context.

Reworking Identity Through the Medium of Painting

This examination does not reject the notion of identity, as doing so would make communication and engagement with the external world impossible, given that language itself is inherently embedded in identity constructs. Instead, painting is employed as a conceptual and practical tool to interrogate and disrupt conventional perceptions of self. Within this practice, the painter and the painting engage in a dynamic of signifier and signified. This relationship serves as a means of questioning the structures and assumptions embedded in both visual and verbal languages. The medium allows for play with the paradoxes of communication—utilizing an inherently flawed symbolic system while simultaneously critiquing its limitations. Thus, the act of creation inhabits a dual space, both as author and audience, existing between authorship and spectatorship, subject and object.

Self-Reflection and the Process of Materiality

Painting serves as a reflective process, a means of engaging in a dialogue with the world. What might appear as landscapes are, in essence, self-portraits—deeply visceral explorations of the self, layered reflections that resist simplification. The brush functions as a prosthetic extension of the body, sometimes wielded with intention, sometimes with spontaneous intuition. Paint, in its material substance, parallels the complexity of organic processes: it is akin to blood, containing within it traces of narratives, descriptions, and analogies—functioning almost as a form of visual DNA that traces back to the work’s genesis. The act of painting, therefore, is not merely about the finished surface but the layers of history, intention, and meaning that lie buried beneath. This art challenges the notion of conventional dimension, questioning the assumption that a painting must reside exclusively within the two-dimensional confines of the canvas. These works, with their concealed and exposed marks, engage in an ongoing dialogue about what is seen and unseen, known and unknown.

Navigating Meaning in the Absence of Certainty

The painting process itself acts as an obscuring mechanism, concealing as much as it reveals. This practice acknowledges the instability of meaning, embracing contradictions and ambiguities that resist simple interpretation. Just as the skin covers the body’s inner workings, so too does the paint conceal the evolving essence of the work—what it has absorbed, what it has endured. Transformations of color, tone, form, and texture are not merely technical choices; they are silent testimonies of the process, remnants of decisions that, though hidden, continue to exert their influence. The blank canvas, from the outset, is not an empty vessel but a space teeming with potential, an invitation to creation. Even within nothingness, language imposes the drive to assign meaning, an impulse fraught with its own contradictions. Thus, defining engages in a dialogue of implication, where every description contains the seeds of exclusion.

Revisiting and Re-defining Context

Painting offers the freedom to revisit, re-mark, and reconfigure perceptions of self and surroundings. Through this iterative practice, a more coherent understanding of impressions emerges, an evolving internal narrative engaging with the fluidity of identity. Much like the construction of a painting, the self is conditioned by inherent origins—cultural, historical, and personal—but is equally shaped by the contexts in which it exists. Each viewer brings interpretations, histories, and subjectivities, transforming the work with every engagement. Thus, the work remains open-ended, refusing finality and expanding with each interaction, with each new perspective.

The Visceral Landscape and the Geography of Belonging

The landscapes depicted are rooted in real locations within the Philippine Islands—territories that carry the weight of cultural heritage, identity, and personal connection. These depictions act as markers of geographical and emotional ties to the Philippines, providing a foundational framework for navigating complex senses of belonging. These works serve as points of convergence, visual metaphors for the fluidity of identity, where places of origin are not fixed endpoints but starting points for transformation, dialogue, and collaboration. Creation does not seek closure but opens pathways of meaning—growth involves both building up and breaking down what once was. Traditional dichotomies—life and death, creation and destruction, author and audience—do not stand in opposition; they collaborate, defining each other in an ongoing cycle of becoming. In this way, the narratives embedded within the work reflect a continuous journey—an engagement with identity not as a destination but as an evolving, multifaceted process. This process transcends the personal, speaking to the universal human experience of navigating belonging, context, and self-discovery. The nature of a person is perhaps likened to that of a painting, limited by conditioning and origins of nature but abundant in the way one can nurture limitless possible potentials of self in and despite the context.

Written by Katarina Sabine Ortiz

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A DRAWING SHOW
Jul
22
to Jul 23

A DRAWING SHOW

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To discover drawing is to discover the heart of human history. It is the nucleus of human civilization within the wombs of the caves, of etched lines and markings by prehistoric men, which inevitably gave birth to the outlines of our modern-day culture. A Drawing Show, under Nilo Ilarde’s curatorship, attempts to re-acquaint the audience to drawing as an art practice and an end in itself; not just a B-side or a draft to a masterpiece; but the encore to an artist’s conceptual output. A Drawing Show assembles some of today’s contemporary artists from varied genres resulting to a plethora of possibilities and permutations of drawing styles and techniques. In it, figuration coalesce with abstraction and the only limit set to a stroke or a line is the artist’s willingness to push the boundaries of drawing as a concept. Regardless of the medium, each piece serves as a dot that connects an expanding image – a portrait of the potentiality within the landscape of Philippine Art. This exhibition tries to remind us that an artwork’s value lies not in the pigment but in the artist’s vision; that the emancipation of ideas should not be contained in any medium or material; and each scribble or sketch is a grand gesture awaiting to be realized and actualized. 

WRITTEN By Lec Cruz

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COMPOSITIONS
May
4
to Jun 3

COMPOSITIONS

“It is not simply the physical barrier of the skin since this would overlook both the psychological sphere that EXISTS beyond our basic corporeal boundaries and the reciprocal relationship between self and context.” — Sally O’Rielly

Notions of identity through technology and the COMMODIFICATION of knowledge (as seen by the emergence of the internet) channels a passage to a culture valuing the infinite uses of form and endless movement of signs based on a common ideal that is sharing. the twin figures: dJ and programmer, products of this cultural landscape, practice recycling, re-appropriating, remixing, RECONTEXTUALIZING and reprogramming. By operating with JUXTAPOSitions there is potential to redefine connection, cause growth, stimulate change and generate newness. This does not NECESSARILY mean to DISASSOCIATE from origin but can acknowledge and cultivate it. annexed forms, elements and technological tools situated within the work act as instrument and presence. the journey of a musical loop or sample is likened to as is subject to its conception as mark making and lines congregate in a collaboration defining becoming.

WRITTEN By Katarina ortiz

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