Jojo Barja’s Jungle and Rain

Renato Barja Jr., "How To Fight The Loneliness"

In The Jungle and The Rain, Renato Barja Jr. takes us on a stroll through his former neighborhood, an urban landscape he douses with the color of unpainted

Renato Barja Jr.,"Bumbo the Butcher"

cement, the same ashen hue that water turns into after it’s been used to scrub off grime.  He looks back at the love-hate relationship he maintained with this corner of Cavite, at the cast of characters he encountered for five years on a daily basis.  With them he shared in the din, the putrid smells, the overall drabness of a working class community, one that recession and Typhoon Ondoy had reduced to skid row. Continue reading


Troy Ignacio Scratches Beneath The Surface

On some days, Troy Ignacio sits on a park bench at the center of Makati, an unobtrusive observer of the people around him .  He

Troy Ignacio, "Da King", oil on paper, 5ft x 4ft

quietly sketches what he sees.  It could be the working stiff laughing loudly at some unknown joke or a lady scurrying to complete an errand.  Like all kibitzers, he wonders at the stories that each person carries beneath their visages.  What secrets do their frames contain? Continue reading


Focusing on Mac Valdezco

In Focus: Mac Valdezco

In what must be a first in Manila, the newly-opened Picasso Boutique Serviced Residences in Salcedo Village in Makati has

launched its art program.  Done hand-in-hand with Art Cabinet Philippines, the hotel makes its public areas and third floor gallery available as venues for showcasing art.   Along with room service, guests can look forward to changing exhibits, even on each

Mac Valdezco, "Invisible Pilot"

floor’s elevator foyer. Continue reading


Kiri Dalena And Our Disordered State of Affairs

Events seem to conspire to continue weaving a thread through Kiri Dalena’s works.  In her piece for the show Keeping The Faith, exhibited at the Lopez Museum in late 2008, and for which she won the 2009 Ateneo Art Awards, she recreated a student uprising of the early 1970s.  At the foot of a barricade made from school desks, she displayed two figures lying curled up on their sides, their arms shielding their heads to protect themselves.  This work was Kiri’s response to the voluminous material in the museum’s collection documenting the disappearances of activists during Martial Law.  She cast the two figures in unfired clay, and by the end of the show’s run, they had disintegrated into disjointed parts;  just two more nameless victims of political violence.                       

In October 2009, Kiri resurrected these two figures for the Sungduan exhibit at the National Museum.  For Found Figures In Stones Translated by Pakil Carvers, she sought out wood carvers from her family’s Laguna hometown.  They recreated her cowering forms from the original clay remains. The parts come together like a Lego toy, mimicking the displaced state that they had been “found” after the Lopez Museum show.

This month, Kiri revives these figures once more.

The Present Disorder Is The Order of the Future, Kiri’s current show at MOs Space in Bonifacio High Street, gives us a haunting multi-media commentary on the state of the nation.  Also an activist and a noted documentary filmmaker, she addresses atrocities, acts of injustice, and political issues that have continued to plague us through various regime changes.

On the gallery’s far wall, Kiri mounts 24 marble slabs.  She lines them up in a grid, like lapidas in an ossuary.  Each slab is engraved with documented protest slogans and placard texts that she has encountered in the course of her political involvement.  They range from the humorously frustrated (Patay Na Kami Wala Pang Nangyayari) to the scathing (Once A Tuta Always A Tuta).

On the gallery’s concrete floor, Kiri scatters the dismembered chunks of her two figures, the wooden bits from her Sungduan piece and newly-cast replicas in marble.  Projected from above are outtakes from two of  her documentaries,  one on the  Ampatuan Massacre and another on the violent dispersion of informal settlers.  The films emit eerie, kinetic shadows on the scattered fragments, and provides the show’s sole source of light.

Kiri does not seem to refer to any particular incident in this piece.  But with body parts strewn across the floor, the horrific massacre of 57 people in Maguindanao does come to mind. Or  the detritus of  a site suddenly evicted of its residents.  That she does not point to any specific event actually makes her message more sobering.  Nefariousness has become so commonplace that we can attach it as a tag to any number of occurences.  And this being an election year, a presidential election that already seems full of controversies, it seems almost a certainty that Kiri’s figures, in some form or another, will turn up again.

The Present Disorder Is The Order Of The Future runs from 30 January to 7 March 2010 at MOs Space, 3F MOs Design Building, B2 Bonifacio High Street, Taguig City.  Phone (632) 856-2748 or visit http://www.mo-space.net

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ChrQp-rRiHs


Something Different Part II: Art Sanchez at Blanc Makati

Detail of Art Sanchez, "Saturation Point"

Detail of Art Sanchez, "Saturation Point"

art sanchez 6

Art Sanchez, "Between Raindrops and Sunshine 6"

Art Sanchez works with collages on mirrors.  I first saw his work a few weeks ago when some friends and I set out on a sojourn to Quezon City to check out the art scene away from our comfort zone of Makati.  We all agreed he seemed an artist to keep an eye out for.  For his first solo show, he brings us even more interesting collages.  For two of them, his larger pieces, he combines the mirrors with oil paintings on canvas.  He starts by scratching out the paint behind mirrors and seals his cut outs with lacquer or paint.  As you can see from the photos, they come out kinda cool!

Art Sanchez, "Saturation Point"

Art Sanchez, "Saturation Point"

Art Sanchez, "Afterthoughts...thoughts after"

Art Sanchez, "Afterthoughts...thoughts after"

Afterthoughts by Art Sanchez runs from 6 July at Blanc Art Space, 2E Crown Tower, 107 HV Dela Costa St., Salcedo Village, Makati.  Ph (632)752-0032 or visit

Art Sanchez, "Test Subjects"

Art Sanchez, "Test Subjects"

http://www.blanc.ph

Detail of Art Sanchez, "Test Subjects"

Detail , "Test Subjects"

Art Sanchez exhibit installation

Art Sanchez exhibit installation, at center is "Floating Moodswing"