Dead Horse Bay

Christina Quisumbing Ramilo & Pinky Ibarra Urmaza

 

 

26 October to 23 November 2019
Opening reception is on 26 October 2019, 6 to 9 PM.
Silverlens
2263 Chino Roces Ave, Makati, 1231 Metro Manila, Philippines

 

SILVERLENS is pleased to bring together Christina Quisumbing Ramilo and Pinky Ibarra Urmaza in a two-man exhibition Dead Horse Bay. Opening reception is on 26 October 2019, 6 – 9 PM.

This exhibition will highlight the artists’ similarities– they both lived in New York City and their work are involved with the assembly of found objects and discarded fragments imbued with history. Dead Horse Bay is Christina Quisumbing Ramilo’s third exhibition in the gallery. Previous exhibitions are Construct (2013) and Ordo Ab Chao (2018). This is the first time for Pinky Ibarra Urmaza to exhibit her work at Silverlens.

 

“Dead Horse Bay was a tiny island off the coast of Brooklyn that no longer exists today. In the early 20th century, a community of immigrants lived there, working in nuisance industries: what was then the world’s largest waste reduction site and animal rendering facility. The island was isolated; its inhabitants neglected by municipal authorities and discriminated upon by city-dwellers. Despite these conditions, they were a happy community who found joy in simple coastal activities, and faced their challenges with resourcefulness and adaptability.

When the factories were closed down and residents evicted in the 1930s by the infamous Robert Moses, the island and its history were buried by landfills that connected it to the mainland. But, as if refusing to be erased from memory, remnants from the lives of its former inhabitants emerge on the shoreline to this day. It was in this landscape where Ramilo and Urmaza went hunting for materials that have inspired their work. Artefacts weathered by time and tide are treasures for artists who bring to life hidden stories and create new ones for their audience.

Ramilo’s assemblages are composed of objects she has been collecting for decades, construction site discards, cast-offs from artists’ studios, configured with recent found objects from New York City and Dead Horse Bay. She handles material with minimal intervention, exposing the beauty of what is usually overlooked, playing with their functional identities and sculptural qualities– the recreated forms and meanings applied to a new context.

Urmaza’s collages are fictional narratives using damaged book parts, hence literally deconstructing a source of stories. She combines them with tintype portraits, artifacts from the shore, children’s game pieces, letters, recipes, scraps of fabric, metal and wood, thoughtfully arranged and further marked with graphite, acrylic and ink. These discerning artistic choices echo the quiet domestic situation of that unusual community, while encouraging viewers to reflect on their own current socio-political situations.

Despite a more seemingly inclusive global consciousness, the pervading political climate is still unfavorable to immigrants of all economic levels. Marginalized communities continually strive to be heard even within more developed communication systems. The exhibition brings to light much more than a forgotten history. It is a reminder of the ongoing human struggle and the triumphs of an enduring spirit.”

Stephanie Frondoso

 

Exhibition runs from 26 October to 23 November 2019. For more information, visit http://bit.ly/SLG-DeadHorseBay. For inquiries, please email info@silverlensgalleries.com or call 02 8816 0044.