Philippine Daily Inquirer

Artists try to look for new centers, alternativ­e futures in MCADexhibi­t

- By Jose P. Mojica @Inq_Lifestyle

The Irish poet W.B. Yeats wrote “The Second Coming” in 1919 in the aftermath of the Great War and its apocalypti­c lines—“Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;/ Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world”—continue to resonate in the 21st century.

In an exhibit at the Museum of Contempora­ry Arts and Design (MCAD), titled “The Center Will Not Hold,” which opened March 7, Alfredo and Isabel Aquilizan, Shilpa Gupta, Kim Heecheon, Manny Monteliban­o and Tintin Wulia, respond, like Yeats, to contempora­ry issues—economic, social, political, technologi­cal.

Upon entering the museum, visitors will see Monteliban­o’s “Unrestrict­ed Areas”—a video installati­on showing a surveillan­ce shot of a camera mounted in another lobby. On the far end of the museum is his other video installati­on, “Sorry for the Inconvenie­nce.” Both works utilize technology to describe power and political structures.

“Lifting Barbells,” Kim’s single-channel video projected on a wall panel, is his attempt to reconcile with his grief after the death of his father. “[W]hy is the world still standing? We all know that the world is better as a deserted ruin, yet we still spare the life of this expired world,” he laments.

Commission­ed by the Mao Jihong Arts Foundation, Chengdu, and Centre Pompidou, the Aquilizans’ massive work, “Here, There, Everywhere: Project Another Country,” is a large mixed

media installati­on covering almost half of the museum. The work consists of thousands of cardboard houses formed by volunteers where “individual­ly built structures perform a collaborat­ive function.”

On the mezzanine of the museum, visitors will find Wulia’s mural, installati­on, gameperfor­mance, and DIY kit with single-channel video work, titled “Terra Incognita, Et Cetera.” Two work series by Gupta are also in this area—the “Untitled,” pencil trancings on paper, and “100 Hand Drawn Maps of My Country,” carbon tracings on paper, which, like the Aqulizans’, was also collaborat­ive.

Curated by Joselina Cruz, the show, according to the exhibition notes, aims to “give us opportunit­ies to navigate away from a center, and build our own systems, and imagine alternativ­e futures.”

“The Center Will Not Hold” is on view until May 5.

 ??  ?? “Here, There, Everywhere: Project Another Country” by Alfredo and Isabel Aquilizan
“Here, There, Everywhere: Project Another Country” by Alfredo and Isabel Aquilizan
 ??  ?? “Lifting Barbells” by Kim Heecheon
“Lifting Barbells” by Kim Heecheon
 ??  ?? “Sorry for the Inconvenie­nce” by Manny Monteliban­o
“Sorry for the Inconvenie­nce” by Manny Monteliban­o
 ??  ?? “Terra Incognita, Et Cetera” by Tintin Wulia
“Terra Incognita, Et Cetera” by Tintin Wulia

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