Biennales are typically large-scale exhibitions of contemporary art, orchestrated by government agencies, public art organisations and philanthropists. Well-organised biennales take about two years to put together, which is why the more prominent ones occur within this time cycle. Often, they are named after the city that hosts it.
As far as traditional definitions go, the inaugural Manila Biennale, running currently in the Philippine capital from 3 February to 5 March, is rather iconoclastic, considering that it took only nine months to planâ four and half to put togetherâ and involved little to no public government funding.
This biennale, led by popular performance artist, activist and social critic Carlos Celdran, is fully managed, run and funded by artists. âNo government institutions were harmed in this endeavour,â says Celdran, a colourful, outspoken character whose anti-establishment views and opinions often land him in hot water with the local government and the Catholic church. He adds, âTake comfort that not much taxpayersâ money was used to put this upâ.
The only public agency with any real involvement in the Manila Biennale is the administrative body of Intramuros, Manilaâs historical 400-year-old âwalled cityâ which was chosen as the main staging platform for the range of cultural activities and auxiliary eventsâ comprising talks, public art commissions, exhibitions, and workshopsâ that the art festival has produced and is currently promoting.
Nearly 100 artists from the Philippines and overseas contributed time, knowledge and their own art to âbring back the soulâ of the ancient walled city. âThis was all about artists doing it for themselves,â Celdran emphasises. âIntramuros has always been the laboratory of Manilaâs culture. Itâs where Philippine history was made and its culture defined, from the Galleon Trade established in the Spanish times, from nipa huts all the way to volcano ash-carved churches.â
Unfortunately, since its destruction in the Second World War, the walled cityâs relevance and history have been all but forgotten. Former First Lady Imelda Marcos tried to bring back Intramurosâ glory in 1982, but the area again fell into disrepair and out of the public consciousness when the Marcoses were driven out of power a few years later.
Manila Biennale has accomplished what none of the post-Marcos governments could: bring the spotlight back to the historical site. For these four weeks in February and March, Intramurosâ parks, gardens and communal centres are transformed into combination fantasy lands and art-fuelled theme parks that showcase jarring monumental installations and out-of-the-box performance pieces unlike Manila has seen before. While themes range from vintage Japanese animĂŠ to American colonisation to religious metaphors, the collective underlying message of the art featured at the first Manila Biennale alludes most to the politics of national identity.
In essence, this very first Manila Biennale has forced the cityâs citizens to remember and re-evaluate what it means to be Filipino, an intranational debate that still exists nearly 70 years after the Americans granted independence to the Philippines.
Kawayan de Guiaâs âLady of Libertyâ probably presents the most obvious allusion. Presenting a cheeky knock-off of the famed New York landmark, the installation touches on issues of Western imperialism and capitalism, and recasts how the fall of the Americans during the Second World War led to the subsequent desecration of Manila. Not by accident, the artwork looks out to Tondo, one of the most impoverished districts in the Philippine capital.
On a more macabre note, Oca Villamiel uses dismembered doll parts and objects scavenged from various dumpsites and junkyards in the Philippines to create a chilling visual commentary on how the âhorrors of war and the loss of innocenceâ is still crippling the nationâs search for the true Filipino identity.
By contrast, Alwin Reamilloâs contribution, takes on a more positive stance. His âBayanihan Hopping Spirit House,â a curious reinterpretation of both the Filipino bahay kubo (a wooden stilt house indigenous to the Philippines) and the Thai spirit house (small wooden shrines to the protective spirit of a home or structure), represents the ancient Filipino concept of bayanihan, which revolves around collective immersion and community effort. The termâs root word, âbayan,â (pronounced ba-yan) which means town, nation and community, also inspired a new way of saying âbiennaleâ. As Celdran explains, this undertaking was actually a âbayan-naleâ, the result of the combined efforts of a community of artists, art enthusiasts and deep-pocketed patrons.
But while most biennales are criticised for being high-end soirees for curators, gallery owners, collectors, and artists, the Manila Biennale, as Celdran emphasises, was created mainly to benefit and engage a generally middle-class Filipino public that does not necessarily patronise the arts.
The Manila Biennaleâs executive director wanted to snap locals out of their mall-ing habit and bring them to a creative public space that offered a different take-away from the latest denim find at yet another generic department store. âIt was really all about bringing people out of their comfort zone, out of the mall, out of their boxes.â As Celdran points out, there is more to Manila then colossal temples dedicated to central air-conditioning and consumer retail.
Surprisingly enough, the public responded to Celdranâs Pied Piper call. On its opening weekend, the Manila Biennale welcomed about 14,000 visitors to Intramuros, numbers the citadel has not seen in recent history. And Celdran is not overly concerned whether ManileĂąos liked what they saw or not. âEven if they went down to Intramuros and hated it, the fact that they still showed up means that we already won.â
More information at manilabiennale.ph.
This article was written by Ana Kalaw for Art Republik.
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