What does it Mean to Be Free for the Filipino Today?
WORDS CRAFTED + ARTIST CURATION BY JY JIMMIE FLORA GABIOLA
KIM REQUESTO | KERR CIRILO | LANI ASUNCION | DJ GUARDIAN GUERILLA PUMP | BRYANT SINA | VEECAPS | BREA PARKS | TOHA | RAMON ABAD |
KIM REQUESTO | KERR CIRILO | LANI ASUNCION | DJ GUARDIAN GUERILLA PUMP | BRYANT SINA | VEECAPS | BREA PARKS | TOHA | RAMON ABAD |
What does it Mean to Be Free?
Prior to the arrival of the Spanish in 1521, the group of islands we now call Philippines was home to many, diverse ethnolinguistic groups long before the Spanish-American war in 1898.
The history of the Philippines from 1898 to 1946 began with the outbreak of the Spanish–American War in April 1898, when the Philippines was still a colony of the Spanish East Indies, and concluded when the United States formally recognized the independence of the Republic of the Philippines on July 4, 1946
Independence Day Araw ng Kasarinlán; also known as Araw ng Kalayaan, "Day of Freedom") is an annual national holiday in the Philippines observed on June 12, commemorating the declaration of Philippine independence from Spain in 1898.[1]
With a ponderous history surrounding imperialism and colonization, the Filipino today has a challenging but rewarding journey ahead —unraveling personal and collective histories, interweaving experiences which make sense of our relationship to the Filipino culture and to one another while honoring our Ancestors.
125 years of decolonization and we’re paving a hopeful future of kapwa amongst the diasporas.
Spotlighting Artists throughout the diasporas on what their thoughts on Freedom for the Filipino today.
KIM REQUESTO
KIM REQUESTO (she/her) is a Philippine born, Mission District raised Cultural Worker and Interdisciplinary Artist based in unceded Ramaytush Ohlone Territory also recognized as San Francisco, California. With an artistic foundation in Philippine folk dance, Requesto has dedicated herself to cultural expression and advocacy through movement, photography, and community outreach. Requesto has been part of the Philippine Folk Dance community since 2005 and is currently with Parangal Dance as part of their Artistic Team. Requesto, a two time recipient of the San Francisco Artist Grant is the producing artist behind Pangalay Circle, a workshop series focused on providing accessible resources and creating in-person dance circles with hopes of connecting community members with seasoned practitioners who specialize in Pangalay dances and other related forms. To learn more please visit her website kimrequesto.com
KERR CIRILO
Kerr Cirilo was born in the Philippines in 1996 and grew up in Hawaii. He studied Religion and Studio Art at Whitman College in Walla Walla, WA and his Master's of Fine Arts in Photography at the Rhode Island School of Design. Their work is heavily invested in the mechanics of the identification photograph. They have also been questioning the meaning of America (and the Philippines) in their work both as subject and as imaginary. While the recurring subject depicts their figure and face, the images speak to larger systems of circulation, particularly that of bodies and people. Their work operates in the intimate spaces between image and empire. To learn more please visit his website kerrcirilo.net
jy jimmie flora gabiola
Jy Jimmie Gabiola, born in Manila Philippines, is an artist living and working in the San Francisco Bay Area. His practice explores personal & collective narratives surrounding the echoes of immigration in relation to the Philippine Exodus – the mass migration of Filipinos within the last hundred years.
This curiosity anchors his investigation of the human condition & what it means to be seen in connection to ethnic identity in relation with America’s urban/natural landscapes with a clear focus towards the Filipino Future.
His photographic practice is informed by analog, alternative & digital processes. The underlying themes embodied in his personal work revolves around his perspective as a gay immigrant Filipino American by way of the Ilocano people of northwestern Luzon. Moving to America at a young age, he became a US Citizen through naturalization at 10 years old. With barely anything, he & his family navigated life and their struggles with the belief that if you get creative, resourceful and have a positive mental attitude -- anything is possible. Gabiola grew up as a military dependent. Having to relocate and move frequently allowed him to experience & be immersed in different cultures. Jy Jimmie studied at the California College of Arts with a Bachelor’s in Fine Arts Photography & Literature Minor. Gabiola is part of the inaugural cohort of the Brownthought Academy. To learn more please visit his website jimmieflora.com
bRYANT SINA
California College of the Arts Alumni, Bryant Sina, is a mixed media artist native to the Bay Area. Sina combines his portraits with symbolic imagery of his past and present life experiences, which includes teaching art to kids, hanging out with friends, exploring nature’s organic shapes, and his Mantra, “be happy.” His mantra is a constant reminder to himself to choose happiness and to be present in gratitude. Sharing his mantra through his third eye smiley face, Bryant’s “be happy” is also a reminder that people have the mental strength to choose happiness. Sewing all of his thoughts together through mixed media, Sina carefully places each memory as he develops a composition that is structurally supported with various mark makings. He is currently making work in Oakland, California. To learn more please listen to his podcast episode oddlyawesome.com
LANI ASUNCION
Lani Asuncion (they/she/sa) is a Boston based interdisciplinary multimedia artist creating socially engaged art in both private and public spaces, independently and collaboratively. Their work weaves together a visual language guided by historical research, community engagement, and experimental performance connected to their identity as a queer multiracial Filipinx-American born in California and grew up in Appalachia South, Hawai'i, and Okinawa, Japan. Using ritualized performance, Asunción integrates transmedia storytelling through new media technologies to encourage conversations that facilitate healing and collective cultural empowerment in the face of cultural violence, oppression, and ancestral intergenerational trauma. To learn more please visit her website laniasuncion.com
TOHA
Toha is a multimedia artist exploring the intersections of indigenous justice, electronic music, and digital art. Their work is inspired by both their Filipino and Native American heritage and often created as offerings to honor their ancestors. To learn more please visit his website beacons.ai/toha
VEECAPS
Vivian (Veecaps) is a visual artist, muralist, and UX designer based in the Bay Area. Her artwork entails a variety of vibrant and colorful portraits that blend with her upbringing with her cultural roots. When she's not in the studio, she designs user experiences and applies her creativity in visual aesthetics to digital products. To learn more please visit her website veecaps.com
BRÉANA PARKS
Breana Parks is a Afro-Filipinx Photographer born and raised in California. Started doing photography in 2014, studied at UCSD in Visual Arts, Media Emphasis in Photography, and minored in Ethnic Studies. Much of their work tackles social issues, identity, and history.
In my younger years, I used photography as a way to freeze time, to hold onto the memories of my family that would be missed or forgotten. Because of that I would become the historian of my family events and hold the archive of people we have lost in the library of my hard drives. In some ways photography has allowed me to process the world; to explore social issues and identity and connection to others. Throughout all my recent projects, I have explored how far I can push my photography to go beyond printed paper--to see how I can display the images in new ways that are more fluid. Fabrics are always incorporated from movement, texture, and displays in three of my recent works.
Growing up as a biracial Black person, I have always been searching for ways to connect whether to myself, to others, to understand these were the driving forces for me to create. Photography was always interwoven into my discoveries of self. At University of California, San Diego, I never wanted to be put into a box in terms of picking my identity or conforming to the artist my professors wanted me to be. As I did that, I was able to be more vocal about things in my classrooms that bothered me such as being the only Black person in a predominantly white arts program. This was shown in my piece called 1 in 3, that looked at the statistic of 1 in 3 Black men going to jail and the media’s perception of them. Fast forward to summer of 2020, I started a project called Waves that focuses on showing the Black male body in feminine ways while highlighting the Black body in relation to water. From my background in Ethnic studies, I tend to research every element and historical component that goes into my pieces.
Two projects I developed in 2021 are called Illusions of innocence, and Many moons. Illusions of innocence is a photo series that explores the perceived notions projected onto Black youth that forces them to grow up by the age of 10 thus stripping them of their innocence. The first images of the series are the stereotypes often put on the shoulders of Black youth. Juxtaposed is the second image which portrays the genuine euphoria of youth. The photographs are printed onto silks to act as a veil that some outside the community wouldn’t see. Many Moons is a collection of photographs and textiles of the female lineage in my family that will be turned into a quilted piece. This quilted piece looks at how the trauma a woman holds is passed down from their mother mothers linking them together. In addition to this quilted piece, there will be photographs of the female figures within 3 generations with the quilt.
Photography has become a vessel and challenge for me to transform how we view photographs. The common thread to photography is that history and stories are the things that link how we interpret work. My hope for my work is to be able to learn more about history and people through it, and along the way find myself more. And maybe someone would find themselves in it too. To learn more please visit her website breanajanae.com
RAMON ABAD
Ramon Abad (he/his) is a Filipino American puppeteer, artist, and teacher based in San Francisco, unceded Ramaytush Ohlone land. Since the mid 90s to present day he has performed solo puppet shows at Bay Area Filipino American festivals. His current puppet booth project “Tito Ramon’s Pop-Up Puppet Show” was the first puppet show performed at Kapwa Gardens in 2021. Since ‘21, he has been one of the resident artists at Balay Kreative Studio in SOMA Pilipinas.
From 1995 to the early 2000s, he was a company member, puppeteer and designer with Larry Reed’s ShadowLight Productions on shows that have toured throughout the USA and UK. He was a puppeteer in “Wayang Listrik” which played at the Public Theater NYC and venues throughout the East Coast as part of the Jim Henson International Puppetry Festival 1997.
As a member of tongue in A mood, the premier Filipino American sketch comedy troupe based in Bindlestiff Studio, Ramon performed on countless skits in productions from 1996 to 2001. He wrote, directed and made puppets for adult comedy pieces that involved shadow puppetry and hand puppets. Sponsored by a CA Arts Council Youth Arts Grant 2019, Ramon directed a collaboration with Bindlestiff and the Asian Pacific Islander Cultural Center (APICC) on “Rosalyn Learns How to Misbehave” 2020. Initially designed for an indoor stage, the show was adapted to be performed online due to COVID-19 restrictions and became the first Zoom puppet show for children in the Bay Area. Commissioned by APICC, while stay-at-home orders were still in effect, he directed a group of young playwrights to write and perform short puppets stories on the live Zoom show “Tito Ramon’s Incredibly Silly Puppet Show” 2021.
Funded by a San Francisco Arts Commission Individual Artist Grant 2020-2021, Ramon wrote and directed “The Party” a puppet video short that celebrates the history of the Filipino American mobile DJ culture of the Bay Area in the 90s. The video premiered on a live, family-friendly Zoom show in June 2021 where Ramon performed puppet skits and led a puppet-making workshop.
With a grant from APICC, he directed a team of designers, musicians and puppeteers in the in-person, children’s theater production “Pickles! The Bindlestiff Kid Show” that premiered November 2022. He commissioned three young kids to write the stories and headed a hybrid cast of adults and children to work together as puppeteers and musicians. The show was one of the first post-pandemic productions for children and families performed live, on-stage in South of Market San Francisco.
Ramon is currently working on a solo art installation funded by a Visual Arts grant 2022-2023 from the San Francisco Arts Commission. “Mabuhay, Friend!” will premiere in Fall 2023 at the gallery of the San Francisco Arts Education Project at the Minnesota Street Project. The exhibition will be a series of kinetic sculptures designed as puppets that visitors will be encouraged to interact with. To learn more please read his Balay Kreative Resident Artist feature
DJ GUARDIAN GUERILLA PUMP
DJ Guardian Guerrilla Pump aka Sailor G is 1st Gen Afro/Filipino Award Winning DJ and Community Organizer rooted in the East Bay’s Underground Scene. He is Bay Area Father of the iconic global Trans DJ collective New World Dysorder, and a founding member of We Are The Ones Weve Been Waiting For, a DJ crew known for their mutual aid initiatives building power & safety with communities targeted by state sanctioned violence. From the renegade to the club, Guerrilla Pump ignites the dance floor with a powerful street-laced sound fusing old school and underground genre’s including Ghetto House, Electro, Bass, Freestyle, Funk Antigo, and Ballroom (vogue). His style mixes hypnotizing harmonies of love and passion with hyped up rhythms and urban booty-bumpin beats, creating unforgettable experiences filed with excitement, empowerment and pride. DJ Guardian Guerrilla Pumps is a true Champion of Love & Unity. His deep love for music is a transformative force, organizing with community to create brave and inclusive sanctuary on the dance floor and mobilizing movement beyond the turntables - in-sync with The Rhythms of Revolution making the desire for change, action and creative resistance irresistible. To learn more please visit his website, Guerrilla Pump