Philippine Daily Inquirer

PHILIPPINE PAVILION INAUGURATE­D

- By Lester G. Babiera @Inq_Lifestyle

This year’s Venice Biennale unlocks several milestones for Philippine art as the country joins the Art Biennale for the second time since its return in 2015 after a 51-year hiatus.

It presents “The Spectre of Comparison” curated by Joselina Cruz, featuring the works of Lani Maestro and Manuel Ocampo.

The exhibition’s take-off point is Jóse Rizal’s protagonis­t in “Noli Me Tángere,” Crisostomo Ibarra, who experience­s a double vision when he gazes out at the botanical gardens of Manila.

The exhibition looks at how Maestro and Ocampo see the events of the Philippine­s and their adopted countries through an inverted telescope.

Another achievemen­t for the country is that the national pavilion has moved from the 18th-century Palazzo Mora (where the 2015 Philippine Pavilion was housed) to the Arsenale, one of the main exhibition spaces of Venice Biennale.

The vernissage of the pavil- ion was held on May 11, led by National Commission for Culture and the Arts chair sVirgilio Almario.

Although unable to attend, Sen. Loren Legarda, prime mover behind the Philippine­s’ return to the Venice Biennale, congratula­ted the team and said she hoped the participat­ion this year would further inspire Filipino artists to hone their craft and assert their distinct creative identity.

“Every work of art represents a new way of seeing—a vision of the world—and can be seen as a way of creating our world. The arts create our lives by expanding our consciousn­ess, shaping our dispositio­ns, satisfying our quest for meaning, establishi­ng contact with others and sharing a culture,” said Legarda.

Almario noted: “It is only fitting that our exhibit for the 57th Venice Biennale is titled ‘The Spectre of Comparison.’ It stirs the conversati­on to many points of discussion­s; and one of them is to ask what it means to be Filipino and what being Filipino means to a world that is more fragmented than ever, yet is connected via technology.”

Foreign Undersecre­tary Linglingay Lacanlale and Philippine Ambassador to RomeDoming­o Nolasco also led the opening.—

 ??  ?? “Spectre of Comparison”
“Spectre of Comparison”
 ??  ?? Philippine Pavilion at the Arsenale
Philippine Pavilion at the Arsenale

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