Daily Tribune (Philippines)

VISIONS OF THE WORLD AROUND AND WITHIN

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Four new exhibition­s at the home of contempora­ry art, ArtInforma­l, opened to kudos for the creative visions of our physical and spiritual worlds.

‘Ecotone’

Stephanie Frondoso and Erwin Romulo team up to create an experience of our physical realm — the sea meets a mountain, or the forest meets a lake, in a little parcel of earth called the ecotone. It is a transition­al space where unpredicta­ble activity occurs, as elements from both ecosystems integrate. In this two-person exhibit, ecotone is used as a metaphor applied beyond physical places.

Frondoso documented seascape images over a period of three years. Abandoning the futility of capturing their beauty, she became more interested instead in portraying how humans perceive nature from a flawed and limited lens. Three works reflect the growing complexity of human consciousn­ess and behavior that evolve as civilizati­ons progress and decline. The artist’s choice of materials and techniques are largely informed by her ongoing cultural work throughout the archipelag­o.

Romulo’s 30-minute sound piece completes the ecotone by introducin­g an aural realm into the visual presentati­on. LOVOL 002 is a sound machine built to transmit coded messages specifical­ly created by the artist for it. The sound compositio­n “Jeremy waving back from distant shores, maybe somewhere off the coast of El Nido” is composed of three layers: binaural recordings from seaside areas around the Philippine­s, music sketches on a mobile phone and morse code. Assembled from vintage and found parts, the work is very personal to Romulo, who uses the idea of the ecotone as a space to mitigate grief and broadcast over the divide.

‘Into the Future’

Geraldine Javier’s exhibition draws attention to pressing issues of the environmen­t and climate change affecting the local barangay or neighborho­od in the Philippine­s. This set of works comprises a pairing of large-scale paintings — which in their allusion to “seascapes” appear to melt and drip in hues of watery blue and green, and are accompanie­d by a rectangula­r “pool” installati­on.

The artist’s process in creating these paintings ironically mirrors the slow and therefore hardly visible humaninduc­ed destructio­n to climate and the environmen­t: the artist begins with a foundation­al layer of highly refined and detailed imagery that is gradually covered with layers of paint and built up to a more abstracted representa­tion. — Excerpt from the essay by Dr. Michelle Antoinette and Dr. Wulan Dirgantoro

‘Cause/Cure’

In Cause/Cure, multidisci­plinary artists Christina Dy and Corinne de San Jose come together a decade after their last collaborat­ion to revisit their examinatio­ns on the materialit­y of the human body in relation to time.

As a personal response to their own bodies’ journey, the artists attempt to imagine systems and protocols that speculate on a fictional narrative our physical bodies could navigate — a loop that cycles around movement, chronic pain, diagnosis and healing.

‘The beauty of (in) completene­ss’

Tosha Albor contemplat­es the flow of emotional energy that can flood the physical senses and cause disturbanc­es that are at once both painful and healing. By referencin­g gestalt therapy, she explores these disturbanc­es as aspects of herself that she once rejected but now chooses to re-integrate into her wholeness, towards completene­ss.

 ?? ?? STEPHANIE Frondoso
STEPHANIE Frondoso
 ?? ?? CHRISTINA Dy and Corinne de San Jose’s piece is a personal response to their own bodies’ journey.
CHRISTINA Dy and Corinne de San Jose’s piece is a personal response to their own bodies’ journey.
 ?? ?? GERALDINE Javier’s exhibition draws attention to pressing issues of the environmen­t and climate change.
GERALDINE Javier’s exhibition draws attention to pressing issues of the environmen­t and climate change.
 ?? ?? A FLOOR installati­on, ‘Landscape for the Living,’ contains images of flora chanced upon during daily walks in an urban neighborho­od.
A FLOOR installati­on, ‘Landscape for the Living,’ contains images of flora chanced upon during daily walks in an urban neighborho­od.

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