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Green Papaya Art Projects
Established2000
LocationQuezon City, Metro Manila, Philippines

Green Papaya Art Projects is an independent art space located in Quezon City, Philippines. The oldest existing artist-run space in the Philippines[1], the space was founded in 2000 by choreographer and critic Donna Miranda, and artist Norberto Roldan, to support and organize actions and propositions that explore varied approaches to the production, dissemination, research and representation of art in various disciplines. A core value of the centre is to provide the artistic community a space for intellectual exchange, sharing of information, critical dialogue, and creative and practical collaboration in the production of contemporary art.

References

  1. ^ "Big Sky Mind « Art Radar Asia". artradarasia.wordpress.com. Retrieved 2017-03-19.

External links

Category:Art museums and galleries in the Philippines Category:Artist-run centres Category:Organizations established in 2000 Category:Art galleries established in 2000


Ringo Bunoan
BornAugust 3, 1974
NationalityFilipino
EducationBFA in Art History, University of the Philippines, Dilliman
Known forArtist, Curator



Ringo Bunoan is a Filipino artist, curator, research and writer based in Manila, Philippines. She works in installation, sound, video, bookworks[1] and writing. She earned her bachelor's degree in Art History from the University of the Philippines, Diliman. Her works have been shown in galleries, museums and alternative art spaces in Manila, across Asia and the Pacific and USA including Center for Contemporary Photography, Melbourne[2], 4th Gwangju Biennale, Singapore Art Museum, Busan Biennale Sea Art Festival, Asian Art Museum, Walter McBean Galleries in San Francisco and Redcat Gallery in Los Angeles, USA and Campbelltown Arts Centre, Sydney.

In 1999 Bunoan co-founded Big Sky Mind, an independent art space located in Cubao, Quezon City, a gallery and café that she ran with collaborator Katya Guerrero from 1999 to 2001 before it became a space for artists’ projects until 2004. Big Sky Mind was part of the second generation of artist-run spaces founded in Manila. The goal of the centre was to create awareness about contemporary Filipino art on both a local and global scale, and to provide young artists with working studios and other support facilities that enabled them to produce and develop their work.[3]

From 2007 to 2013, Bunoan was active as a researcher in residence for the Asia Art Archive, specializing on Filipino artist-run spaces and the work of Roberto Chabet.[4]

Her solo exhibitions include In Advance of the Things We Cannot See at Mo_space in 2012; Archiving Roberto Chabet at the Jorge Vargas Museum in 2009; Pillow Talk at Silverlens Gallery in 2008; and Little Deaths at Mo_space in 2008.

Awards

She was the recipient of Cultural Center of the Philippines' 2003 Thirteen Artists Award and Silverlens' Foundation 2007 Completion Grant[5], and was shortlisted for the 2009 Ateneo Art Awards.

Exhibitions

Market Forces - Erasure: From Conceptualism To Abstraction


Curatorial Work

In 2016 Bunoan curated the Marker program of the Art Dubai contemporary Art Fair, focusing on artist-run culture in the Philippines.[6] In 2018, Bunoan was chief curator of the inaugural Manila Biennial, which took place in Intramuros, and ran from February 3rd to March 5, 2018.[7][8] She curated OPENCITY, a site-specific exhibition, and worked with co-curators Con Cabrera, Cocoy Lumbao, Matthew Lopez, and Monchito Nocon.

References

  1. ^ L., C. "Bookworks". Mo Space. Mo Space. Retrieved 11 March 2018.
  2. ^ "GALLERY 2 CURATED BY TESSA DWYER & SARAH TUTTON: USEBY". Centre for Contemporary Photography. Retrieved 11 March 2018.
  3. ^ "Organisation File (Philippines): Big Sky Mind". Asia Art Archive. Asia Art Archive.
  4. ^ https://aaa.org.hk/en/programmes/programmes/archiving-artist-run-spaces-in-manila. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  5. ^ "Ringo Bunoan". Tropical Papers.
  6. ^ Forrest, Nicholas. "Interview: Ringo Bunoan on Art Dubai's Marker 2016 Program". Blouin Art Info International. Blouin Art Info.
  7. ^ "THE ARTIST RUN BIENNALE MANILA BIENNALE: OPEN CITY 2018". Art Fair Philippines. Art Fair Philippines. Retrieved 11 March 2018.
  8. ^ V. de Jesus, Totel. "Last call for Manila Biennale 2018". ABS-CBN NEWS. ABS-CBN News. Retrieved 11 March 2018.


Category:1974 births Category:Living people Category:21st-century Filipino artists Category:Filipino women artists Category:21st-century women artists


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