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Art Beyond the White Walls

Philippine Pottery

Art Beyond the White Walls

Raindrops pounded on our roof, thumping like rocks falling from the sky. Yet the sound was quickly drowned out by an unspoken question in my mind:

“Will our framework for our community-based ceramic art program, Salinlahi Sining ng Komunidad, thrive in situ?”

I felt anxious about every written detail for the next run of Salinlahi as I re-read When Art is Not Enough by Eileen Legaspi-Ramirez, co-curator of Off Site/Out of Sight, a series of community workshops and site-specific art installations organized at UP Diliman in 2014. In every kwadra of UP Diliman’s stud farm, kids from CP Garcia and Krus na Ligas would come to play and read books with UP students. It was a public space created to address the disparity between the university and its settlers through art.

Off Site/Out of Sight, Video Courtesy of Rai Javier

I had the chance to talk to UP alumnae who volunteered for Off Site/Out of Sight. One of them was Rai, an artist we often collaborate with in most of our present-day workshops, and the other was Oda, lead artist and founder of Odangputik Art Space. Rai read books with kids while Oda painted a hand holding a pencil on one of the walls. Oda used to call the site “paraiso” or paradise, together with Chandra, who is currently a pottery apprentice in our studio. For these former student-volunteers, it became one of their favorite hangout spaces within the campus. It was a place for creativity outside classroom walls, a place to take breaks from academic pressure, and a place shared with kids who were once strangers but soon brought bursts of laughter and kakulitan in every kwadra. Every reading material about Off Site/Out of Sight was not only a reference for a curatorial framework but also a record of unforgettable memories with people I continue to work with on community-based art projects. This made me want to feel the emotions behind the project more than overanalyze the case.

When I learned that Off Site/Out of Sight did not proceed to its next phase, I felt more anxious. I had to pause for a deep breath. Off Site/Out of Sight and Salinlahi Sining ng Komunidad both involve histories of loss – the former involved loss of public spaces, and the latter the loss of security.

Oda at Off Site/Out of Sight
Oda, a decade ago, in the location of Off Site/Out of Sight, their so-called 'paraiso'

In 2022, however, Salinlahi used to respond to the loss of human connections during the COVID-19 pandemic. A free pottery workshop was held at Bacoor, Cavite back then. In Ibajay, Aklan, in 2024, Salinlahi addressed the lack of creative learning activities for children during academic breaks, offering an alternative to spending hours on mobile games. Salinlahi 2024 was a collaboration between Odangputik Art Space and Sanga Artist-Run Space.

Salinlahi 2022. A film by Rex Maure

These phases of Salinlahi may seem more intentional compared with Salinlahi 2023, which was in response to a call from Lokal Lab, a non-profit organization based in Siargao, for a workshop facilitator. Nonetheless, Salinlahi 2023 in San Isidro, Siargao played a crucial role in restructuring our framework and gave a significant drive for the succeeding phases of Salinlahi. 

Salinlahi 2024 in Ibajay, Aklan

It was an exciting day for all of us in San Isidro, especially for the ates and kuyas who had been with us since the first day of our hand-building pottery workshop series. It was their first time experiencing pit firing, and their excitement made us feel as though the heat from the sun and the fire from the pit did not exist. As the smoke rose with the wind, they began sharing their stories from Typhoon Odette. One ate recalled that their survival felt like a miracle from the heavens, while one kuya admitted he still lives in fear of another deadly typhoon devastating the island again. For them, surviving the typhoon was not a distant memory but a haunting reminder of the past.

Pit Firing With Locals in San Isidro, Siargao @Tropical Academy

Pit firing with locals in San Isidro, Siargao. Salinlahi 2023.

We left the pit firing area at around three o’clock in the afternoon. Oda and I drove the motorcycle as we followed our ates on their way back to to their families, after they have invited us to visit their homes. They were filled with energy when they brought us to a field near their residence; they said it might be a good spot to place a kiln for firing.

Skies were turning pink when we had to wrap up our mini planning session. It was our time to go back to Baybay, a nearly 25-minute motorcycle drive from their place. That was our last day in San Isidro but we promised our ates we would come back for a more comprehensive ceramic program and local clay exploration. Since then, they have been one of our greatest motivators to pursue Salinlahi, with a framework revised and built on the concept of community curation. 

Pit Firing Philippines

Through community curation, we include our partner local communities in all stages of the decision-making process. In this approach, we do not empower but we co-power–trusting that locals already hold the power to influence the status quo. We treat the community as the bearer of authority and the primary source of knowledge, even beyond what scholarly research articles can provide. And curating a community-based art program requires triple the effort to ensure every process is ethical and local insights are valued. It is important to remember that to curate is to take care–to take care of an art collection, an art space, an exhibit, a cultural heritage, collective values and principles, or even the relationships made from the process of art-making.

This approach for Salinlahi, however, must be supported by technical knowledge in pottery-making, art education, social sciences and materials science. If art is not always enough, then, we shall weave its capabilities with the strength of other disciplines.

Philippine ceramics

Looking back at Off Site/Out of Sight and the previous years of Salinlahi, I realize that not everything will unfold according to plan. Making room for acceptance is essential. Fieldwork is a far more nuanced environment than the plans we put on paper. When the unexpected happens, we do not see it as failure but as part of the process, adding more meaning to the project. For example, in Salinlahi 2024, we could not gain access to a kiln in a neighboring municipality within Aklan due to budget and time constraints. Instead of firing these terracotta pieces made by the children of Ibajay, terracotta pieces were placed on their roof as if they were additional art installations within the space.

And as I also look back at the plans made with the locals of Siargao, Salinlahi shall now respond to the need of remembering the devastation caused by storms and floods. Through ceramic workshops which may conclude in a public art exhibit in these typhoon-prone areas, we’re aiming to establish a reminder that many of our fellow Filipinos continue to lose their homes, their livelihoods, and even the lives of their loved ones to catastrophic typhoons. 

While this may not solve the root cause immediately, drawing institutional attention to the problem and to the lived realities of communities directly affected by these disasters is already a testament that art may be enough, at least for now. Yet, in rekindling the memory of what humanity has lost to monstrous typhoons, a single matchstick is not enough; we will need many matchsticks, willing to gather in one matchbox, ready to ignite together.

As Oda showed me more photos of Off Site/Out of Sight and I glance at a piece of paper containing my field notes from Salinlahi, I began to accept that:

Art may not always be enough when faced with the entangled systems of power, politics, and individual priorities. But in a world that resists utopia, every impact, no matter how small, still matters. It is a constant reminder that community-based art, or art in general, and even curation, is an unending process of rethinking and evolving.

Salinlahi in Siargao

References: 

Legaspi-Ramirez, E. (2015). Off Site/Out of Sight: When Art is Not Enough. Project Bakawan.

Joaquin-Paz, C. (2005). Gabay Sa Fildwurk.

Martin, J., Carrier, D., & Arrhenius, S. (2007). Cautionary Tales: Critical Curating. https://apexart.org/publications/cautionarytales.php

Picture of Written By Lin Bajala
Written By Lin Bajala

Lin Bajala, raised in South Cotabato, is a poet with literary works in Filipino and Hiligaynon. Her poems metaphorically describe the pain of losing, longing, and hoping.

She is also the curator for the core programs of Odangputik Art Space which are mainly designed for the progress of Philippine contemporary ceramics. Her practice often integrates decentralized structures and interdisciplinary concepts.

She took Master in Business Management Major in Finance in Mindanao State University and she is currently studying Art Studies in the University of the Philippines Diliman.

Above all things, Lin would prefer to introduce herself as a crazy cat lady.

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If Trees Could Talk: A Budding Sanctuary of Art and Advocacy

Elmer Borlongan

If Trees Could Talk: A Budding Sanctuary of Art and Advocacy

Elmer Borlongan

Rich pastures and lush trees welcomed the participants of the International Art Biennale, carrying the theme ‘If Trees Could Talk’. Geared towards making art and nature converse and coexist in the same space, the field was thoughtfully scattered with installation projects from renowned artists all over the world.

If Trees Could Talk started out as an art exhibition held in 2014, 2017, and 2018. This year’s event is a continuation of Center for Art, New Ventures & Sustainable Development’s (CANVAS PH) advocacy to enliven discussions on climate change. The opening of the Biennale was held in the future Tumba-Tumba Children’s Museum of Philippine Art site in Ibaan, Batangas on February 24, 2024 and will run until June 24, 2024.

 
Geraldine Javier

“When we talk about art, ang palaging namamayagpag na discussion is all about the art market. But here we would like to talk about how art and literature can be catalysts for more meaningful exchanges,” said Jaime Pacena II, If Trees Could Talk curator. 

Responding to the theme of environmental consciousness, artists like Geraldine Javier, Matthias Garff, and Veronica Garcia incorporated found objects and recycled materials into their works. 

Some artists like Cian Dayrit, Pam and John Santos, Mark Salvatus, Don Bryan Bunag, and the Spore Initiative created immersive and interactive spaces designed for visitors to exist in harmony with the installation and with nature. 

Massive in scale and in impact were Elmer Borlongan, Lito Mondejar, and Leeroy New’s pieces in their take on If Trees Could Talk.

 
Leeroy New

The works present in the Biennale were not only aesthetic displays of artistic skill, but were successful features that brought art closer to children, as is CANVAS PH’s advocacy. Children were allowed to play with their tactile senses and touch the art installations. 

“The idea of play, movement, and being just carefree, yun yung nature ng bata. We want this place not to be restricted. It’s a simple way to communicate with children about a deep and important issue,” said Pacena. 

Laurence Vallières

For Laurence Vallières, a visiting artist that hailed all the way from Canada, she was inspired by CANVAS PH’s initiative and hoped that such meaningful projects were more prevalent in her home country.

Vallières is also the artist behind the striking pawikan sculpture that greeted the guests as they entered the orchard. 

The pawikan, an endangered sea turtle in the Philippines, is the subject of Vallières’ work made with recycled plastic. She wanted to challenge people to be more mindful with their consumption to create a sustainable world for everyone and those creatures that we coexist on Earth with. 

Her idea behind the brilliant yellow pigment of her work is to match and blend with the mango trees that surround the pawikan, which became a subject of visitors’ curiosity and awe as visitors, especially children, immediately flocked to the sculpture and took pictures with it. 

“I want people to think differently and be able to use whatever they have around them to do anything,” said Vallières.


If Trees Could Talk

More art installations, workshops, and sculptures should be looked forward to in the coming months of the Biennale as CANVAS PH continues to expand the dialogue on environmental consciousness through the weapon of art. Pacena hopes that If Trees Could Talk will extend to different organizations and places to open the advocacy to more people. 

“Ang pinakagusto talaga namin is to emphasize that the environment is part of our existence,” said Pacena. 

Canvas PH If Trees Could Talk
Picture of Written By Frenzel Cleofe
Written By Frenzel Cleofe

Frenzel is a student-intern under Pagtanom: Odangputik Art Studio Internship Program. She is a young, dilligent and passionate learner with 15 years of art experience in formal and informal settings.

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Looking back: A Compilation of Ianna Engaño’s Works for Xavier Art Festival 2022

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Engaño’s works as part of the three-woman show, Caution Handle With Care, for the Xavier Art Festival 2022 under Eskinita Art Farm

Title: Self-portrait | Medium: Stoneware | Size: 8 x 9 x 11 inches

 

Self-portrait | Artist Statement: Mirrors and cameras show our reflections and images whilst this ceramic piece reflects the artist’s past. With a life filled with nothing but scarcity, Ianna used to be sickly and severely malnourished as a student while working multiple part-time jobs to secure necessities. The love for herself was frequently neglected and unrequited.
Although some parts of the past may not be buried in soil, the past can still be molded into a piece of timeless stoneware. Then, it will only stay as a memory, an inspiration to thrive and change for the better, but it will never drag down whatever is celebrated in the present time. For today, Ianna promises a wealth of love and reverence for herself.

 

Title: Bahay-uod | Medium: Stoneware | Size: 16 x 9 x 5 inches

 

Bahay-uod | Artist Statement: Fragile body but muscles are stiff. The mind seems to be a blank slate but it’s filled with lessons. Young but carries the responsibilities of an adult. This happens to a human being who was exposed to forced labor at an early age – carrying the weight of the whole family. She is like a caterpillar that needs to crawl to survive until it builds, on its own, the walls that will protect it from harm. Fast forward to the future, that cocoon will give birth to a new being where it won’t have to crawl for the rest of its life; it will fly high and spread abundant pollens of kindness and wisdom into barren land.

Title: Bao sa Kawalan | Medium: Stoneware | Size: 16 x 10 x 5 inches

 

Bao sa Kawalan | Artist Statement: The ocean, likened to nothingness and the unknown, can be a trap for creatures dwelling in it. When a small object is thrown into the ocean, ripples multiply and go the distance until the object damages a sea dweller’s body, causing it to die.
But we can still be in control of the ripple effect in the vast ocean that we call life. We may not alter the direction of the ripples but we can still do something to stop its continuum; we can only change what we can change in this life where not all things are pre-determined.

 

Title: Kaliskis Ko’y ‘Di Nakakahawa | Medium: Stoneware | Size: 19 x 11 x 4 inches

 

Kaliskis Ko’y ‘Di Nakakahawa | Artist Statement: A basket filled with five fresh apples and one rotten apple will make the rest of the apples rot. A grandmother told someone’s mother, a father said this to a teacher, a sister said this to a brother, and they all believed in it. And when the sanctimonious people said that a homosexual is a decayed apple in a basket filled with good apples, they believed.
Nevertheless, this artwork still believes that homosexuality is not a disease – it is not contagious nor ought to be medicated. It can only be accepted with all of your heart once perspective changes. Look at the endless rainbow, this is how gender is seen as a wide and beautiful spectrum.

 

All photos on this page were captured by Michael Angelo Sison

Picture of Written by Lin Bajala
Written by Lin Bajala

Lin Bajala, raised in South Cotabato, is a poet with literary works in Filipino and Hiligaynon. Her poems metaphorically describe the pain of losing, longing, and hoping.

She is also the curator for the core programs of Odangputik Art Space which are mainly designed for the progress of Philippine contemporary ceramics. Her practice often integrates decentralized structures and interdisciplinary concepts.

She took Master in Business Management Major in Finance in Mindanao State University and she is currently studying Art Studies in the University of the Philippines Diliman.

Above all things, Lin would prefer to introduce herself as a crazy cat lady.

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Ianna Engaño’s Stories of Transformation (Part 1)

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“Bahay-uod”
Size: 16x9x5 inches
Medium: Stoneware
Photo by: Michael Angelo Sison

We hear people say that while the children are still young, let them play. That wasn’t the case for Ianna Engaño. At an early age, when she was too small to even lift a bag of goods, she struggled to fend for herself. Just like a caterpillar, she crawled to survive; she built a hard cocoon to protect her younger self from the horrors of this world until she blossomed into this butterfly that she had always dreamed to be.

The path to becoming an artist and, most importantly, a good person was a bumpy road for Ianna. The emotional, physical, and mental pressure that she had since she was a child until she became a young adult took a toll on her well-being. Fortunately, Ianna recently changed the way she looked at all these bad experiences. She began to think that those trials offered lessons that she wouldn’t have realized if life didn’t throw a full basket of lemons at her. The acquired knowledge and the motivation to push beyond her potential were, at least, the good things that all those unimaginable hardships gave her.

Photo by: Michael Angelo Sison 
Photos by: Michael Angelo Sison 
Bahay-uod is currently at Eskinita Art Farm, Tanauan City, Batangas

The artwork made out of stoneware clay tells one of Ianna’s stories of metamorphosis. The ceramic piece is a baby wrapped in a self-made cocoon that works as a shield against potential danger while lifting a closed fist, making her look like she is ready for a big battle – the survival of the fittest. On the right side of her head, a good morning towel can be seen. This is a cloth that most labor workers use to wipe off every drop of their sweat and this adds to the concept of child labor. On the left side of the baby’s head is an enormous brain with a message written in baybayin. If you can decode the baybayin letters on this ceramic sculpture, you will understand Ianna’s advice for the new and the older generations after she won over years of traumatic combat.

Picture of Written by Lin Bajala

Written by Lin Bajala

Lin Bajala, raised in South Cotabato, is a poet with literary works in Filipino and Hiligaynon. Her poems metaphorically describe the pain of losing, longing, and hoping.

She is also the curator for the core programs of Odangputik Art Space which are mainly designed for the progress of Philippine contemporary ceramics. Her practice often integrates decentralized structures and interdisciplinary concepts.

She took Master in Business Management Major in Finance in Mindanao State University and she is currently studying Art Studies in the University of the Philippines Diliman.

Above all things, Lin would prefer to introduce herself as a crazy cat lady.

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The Pillar of This Home is Dying

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Death and suffering are parts of our life cycle. It is easy to say this but when we come face to face with the end of life and agony, we become adamant in accepting that fate. The word “death” is not limited to the eternal stoppage of the human heart and the cells being discarded on the surface of our bodies; it can also be associated with the dying will of a person to live, the inability to find a reason to live, a moral principle that was buried, or even a promise that was forgotten. Suffering is also more than just a pain felt by a single person, it can be a decay that can rot a person’s spirit and suffering that can be passed on or shared from one person to another living being. Death and suffering are some of the most simple and common notions that we encounter in our daily lives yet they can still be as complex and intriguing as the first time you heard of the molecular structure of DNA.


Artwork Title: Haligi
Medium: Stoneware
Size: 21 x 10 x 4 inches





Ianna Engaño’s ceramic sculpture, Haligi, is a picture of death – the pillar of the home is dying. Yes, this may mirror the reality that there is a father in his last breath after years of working hard for his family but help came too late. He had been worn out for the rest of his life but distress and poverty still continue to suck him down to the grave that even if you send him aid, it does a little to help solve the problem. This is because of the environment that this father is currently in where everything is a quicksand; it does not allow us to rise from the cold harsh ground.

Haligi installation art is currently seen at Vinyl on Vinyl Gallery, Makati City, Metro Manila

However, if you look at this work of art from another angle, there’s more to it. The pillar of this home – this country – is dying. What will keep our country strong and what will make its foundation stand tall and everlasting? It is good governance which is deeply rooted in empathy, integrity, innovation, and the mission to serve that should be the pillar of this home. But where is it now? The quicksand is sucking it down to the grave and honestly, we still don’t know how are we going to save it. This is the truth that we cannot unsee or the light that we cannot unsee. Even though we do not have the answers right now, who says that we are going to stop searching for answers? Life is meant for an endless search.

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A Letter From Your Tooth Fairy

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Dear patient,

I may call you this every time you seek help from me. Please know that calling you my patient is not a thing that one should take lightly. You may think that our relationship is as shallow as the tip of this iceberg but it has been rooted deep since the day you’ve put your faith in me.

 

Acrylic on Canvas 
An Artwork By a Young Filipino Artist, Ianna Engano, at Boribor-Maningding Ortho Dental Clinic,
Bacoor City, Cavite, Philippines




 

Being my patient means that you are my responsibility and that responsibility is as big as this iceberg. With this, I hope that you will continue to paint everything between us in blue – the hue that represents trust.

Worry not for you are in good hands.

Sincerely,

Your Tooth Fairy

Picture of Written by Lin Bajala
Written by Lin Bajala

Outside Odangputik Pottery, Lin is a poet, a singer-songwriter, a researcher, content writer, social media strategist, an entrepreneur, a cat mom, and an advocate for equality. She is an INFJ-A without a doubt. And if you ask her if she can choose between English or Filipino, she'll choose the Filipino language without hesitation! But something that perfectly describes her is that she is a woman who will most likely adopt every street cat she sees.

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Cast Away into the Ocean: Ianna Engaño’s Lamang-dagat Ceramic Series

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Known for her ceramic works inspired by marine life, Oda combines the beauty of oddity, magic, and the ocean into her new ceramic series – Lamang-dagat at Silang Lumalangoy.

 

 

Syokoys and Sirenas have been part of the Philippine mythology for a long time. They are both mythological sea creatures with peculiarities; Syokoys are green-skinned humanoids with scales and fins like a fish while sirenas are the Filipino counterpart of mermaids. If they were true, all of their eccentricities would have made them outcasts in our society, they would have hidden deep in the abyss of an ocean that nobody wants to explore.

 

 

Gaining social acceptance is as elusive as catching a firefly in a dead forest. Once a person deviates from what they call beautiful and normal, it will be difficult to catch that firefly. Centuries have passed but discrimination is still a thing for human beings who don’t seem to learn, as well as prejudice. They swim at the surface of the ocean where they only see the most trivial matters; because they don’t try hard enough to go for a deep dive, they don’t see the most important matters and the far more exquisite reefs that keep the ocean alive.

 

This ceramic series is the artist’s warm embrace for those who are different. Whether it is because of your gender, sexuality, race, skin color, physical disabilities, and other conditions that people see you as someone different, you are not alone as you journey out of that abyss. You do not have to live in the dark because your light is what the world needs in order for it to grow.

Ceramic sale is still ongoing on Instagram (@odangputik) and you can still get your own ceramic mugs. There are only a few mugs left from this series!

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Birth of A Hundred And Ten

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The 110 newly hatched sea turtles are made with acrylic on bisque ware. These are the continuation of the artist’s series of sculptures featuring endangered marine animals to remind us, human beings, that we are not the only children of Mother Nature and whatever we do will not only affect the next generation of human beings, but it will also have an impact on other living things. The first series featured blue whales in an installation art made for Tuklas 2021 entitled “Out of the  Blue”.  

 

As also shown in National Commission for Culture and the Arts’ Bagong Biswal 2021, this artwork gives life to the artist’s memories of the people whom she has helped to open their eyes to the world of art, and to the world that she perceives. An average of 110 green sea turtles are produced by one bold adult female green sea turtle; before they are hatched, the fearless mother must surpass the wobbling waves of the ocean to reach breeding sites on land. And sadly, these hatchlings have a low chance of survival. In parallel with that fact, the artist sees herself as the mother of those green sea turtles who survived the waves. The vehement waves are the self-proclaimed righteous people or the know-it-alls who tried to control her life and who tried to smash her with their belittlements – saying that she would not have a bright future if she pursues her art and that she would have a better life if she chose a different profession in the field of science.  Unswayed by unsolicited advice, the artist stood firm with the plans she created for herself – her dream to become an artist and to let art be her best soldier in fighting for her advocacies. If she had been swayed by these waves, she wouldn’t have given birth to these sea turtles. But for the artist, given that these sea turtles have a low chance of survival, it will still be up to these sea turtles if they would strive to live out the inspiration that she somehow gave them – the inspiration to continue writing their dreams and not to simply follow what they’ve been told to do.

Picture of Written by Lin Bajala

Written by Lin Bajala

Outside Odangputik Pottery, Lin is a poet, a singer-songwriter, a researcher, content writer, social media strategist, an entrepreneur, a cat mom, and an advocate for equality. She is an INFJ-A without a doubt. And if you ask her if she can choose between English or Filipino, she'll choose the Filipino language without hesitation! But something that perfectly describes her is that she is a woman who will most likely adopt every street cat she sees.

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