Nice Buenaventura
The Philippines
Environmental Politics, Island Ecology, Ocean and civilization, Urban Indigenous Peoples
A stamped flower on wood

Nice Buenaventura, Thrashing Palm Tree (Typhoon Maria, 2017, Puerto Rico), 2023 iteration, Singapore, photo by Patrick Diokno.

Artist

Region
The Philippines

Category
Biodiversity, Ecosystems and Livelihoods

Topics
Environmental Politics, Island Ecology, Ocean and civilization, Urban Indigenous Peoples

Nice Buenaventura

Projects

Tropikalye

2018 - Present
[Color-cooling] Documented instances of cool colors, especially green, on architectural and other related surfaces in the Philippines.

[Color-cooling] Documented instances of cool colors, especially green, on architectural and other related surfaces in the Philippines.

Nice Buenaventura, Color-Cooling as part of Tropikalye, photo by artist.

[Color-cooling] In the absence of substantial urban greenery, tree murals are painted on a series of buildings in Marikina City.

[Color-cooling] In the absence of substantial urban greenery, tree murals are painted on a series of buildings in Marikina City.

Nice Buenaventura, Color-Cooling as part of Tropikalye, photo by artist.

[Color-cooling] A fake coconut tree in one shade of green stands in front of a green building in Quezon City, housing the office of a coconute juice manufacturer.

[Color-cooling] A fake coconut tree in one shade of green stands in front of a green building in Quezon City, housing the office of a coconute juice manufacturer.

Nice Buenaventura, Color-Cooling as part of Tropikalye, photo by artist.

[Botanical borderlessness] Both parked car and overgrown garden tree lay claim to the sidewalk, structurally forcing pedestrians to share the road with passing vehicles in Quezon City.

[Botanical borderlessness] Both parked car and overgrown garden tree lay claim to the sidewalk, structurally forcing pedestrians to share the road with passing vehicles in Quezon City.

Nice Buenaventura, Botanical borderlessness as part of Tropikalye, photo by artist.

[Tropical Mirroring] One of the more elaborate and nature-like repurposed Mountain Dew bottle decorations that can be spotted everywhere in the Philippines is in Isabela. Photo by Waren Valdez.

[Tropical Mirroring] One of the more elaborate and nature-like repurposed Mountain Dew bottle decorations that can be spotted everywhere in the Philippines is in Isabela. Photo by Waren Valdez.

Nice Buenaventura, Tropical mirroring as part of Tropikalye. Photo by Waren Valdez.

[Weatherproofing] A thick plastic sheet protects an unknown object or objects from the elements in an open field in the province of Isabela. The sheet is held in place by sizeable rocks.

[Weatherproofing] A thick plastic sheet protects an unknown object or objects from the elements in an open field in the province of Isabela. The sheet is held in place by sizeable rocks.

Nice Buenaventura, Weatherproofing as part of Tropikalye. Photo by artist.

[Weatherproofing] Artist Christina Quisumbing Ramilo's DIY pendant lam made out of baskets, the green plastic one used for covering served food. On hotter days, houseflies seem to be more attracted to food left on the table. Photo by Lenda Cobangbang, taken in Cavite City.

[Weatherproofing] Artist Christina Quisumbing Ramilo's DIY pendant lam made out of baskets, the green plastic one used for covering served food. On hotter days, houseflies seem to be more attracted to food left on the table. Photo by Lenda Cobangbang, taken in Cavite City.

Nice Buenaventura, Weatherproofing as part of Tropikalye. Photo by Lena Cobangbang.

[Weatherproofing] Cuts from printed plastic sheets for tables are wrapped around coconut tree trunks to prevent rats from climbing and eating developing drupes. Photo by Bea Misa Crisostomo, taken in Compostela Valley.

[Weatherproofing] Cuts from printed plastic sheets for tables are wrapped around coconut tree trunks to prevent rats from climbing and eating developing drupes. Photo by Bea Misa Crisostomo, taken in Compostela Valley.

Nice Buenaventura, Weatherproofing as part of Tropikalye. Photo by Bea Misa Crisostomo.

[Weatherproofing] A lady on a sunny street in Quezon City with an extra face mask on her forehead: "Nainitan yung noo ko!" ("My forehead is feeling hot!"). Photo by Jed Escueta.

[Weatherproofing] A lady on a sunny street in Quezon City with an extra face mask on her forehead: "Nainitan yung noo ko!" ("My forehead is feeling hot!"). Photo by Jed Escueta.

Nice Buenaventura, Weatherproofing as part of Tropikalye. Photo by Jed Escueta.

"Tropikalye is an artist-initiated mutual co-learning resource on contemporary Philippine aesthetics. Like today, content is and will be collected on a voluntary submission basis from the people who use it, and editable whenever necessary.
Relevant content is defined as images or texts that describe objects and phenomena with aesthetic value found in the day-to-day, preferably on the street. “Street” (or kalye, from the Spanish calle) is used to distinguish from things that belong in indigenous territories and spaces that are maintained by institutions and individuals of a certain stature—these things are already taken care of. Tk’s focus lies in curiosities not necessarily found outdoors but within the context of the vernacular.

The artists and other cultural actors behind Tk do not claim to be authorities on the subject. Instead, they see their roles as note-takers of observations made together with the community."[2]
[2] Nice Buenaventura, “Tropikalye — Nice Buenaventura,” nicebuenaventura.com, accessed March 26, 2024, https://nicebuenaventura.com/Tropikalye.
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The New Word for World is Archipelago

2022
A room lit in neon in green, black canvas on one side of the wall and a sculpture on the other.

Nice Buenaventura, The New Word of World is Archipelago (partial installation view of Impossible Island (Cagayan & Khyber Pakhtunkhwa), and Gaian Assembly series), 2022, Philippines, photo by Dennese Victoria for CCP Visual Arts & Media Division.

A room split in half, the right side is green and the other brown. An image of a man hangs on both sides of the wall.

Nice Buenaventura, The New Word of World is Archipelago (installation view of Mateo, A Typical Philippino [1&2]), 2022, Philippines, photo artist's own.

A room lit neon green. Three wooden slabs with a palm tree image in the foregroun, an image of a man hangs on the wall behind the wooden slabs.

Nice Buenaventura, The New Word of World is Archipelago (partial installation view of Mateo, A Typical Philippino and Thrashing Palm Tree Series), 2022, Philippines, photo artist's own.

A black canvas dotted with white.

Nice Buenaventura, Gaian Assembly I (detail), 2022, Philippines, photo artist's own.

A sculpture of an island hangs on the wall.

Nice Buenaventura, Impossible Island (Cagayan & Khyber Pakhtunkhwa), 2022, Philippines, photo by Dennese Victoria for CCP Visual Arts & Media Divisions.

A resin palm tree on a wooden slab.

Nice Buenaventura, Thrashing Palm Tree (Typhoon Maria, 2017, Puerto Rico), 2023 iteration, Singapore, photo by Patrick Diokno.

"Three out of five Thrashing Palm Trees in the essay of the same title, drawn with water and a hydrophobic solution on sheets of plywood, are featured in the exhibition as durational installations. With the trees patterned after found footage of storms in countries that occupy the top ranks of the Climate Risk Index (among them, the Philippines), despite global-scale carbon emissions coming from the other hemisphere, geographic interconnectedness is asserted in the face of the climate crisis.

A 3D-printed speculative island, formed by the combination of the political borders of Cagayan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, links the issue of climate to the lasting impact of colonialism. Located in postcolonial Philippines and Pakistan respectively, these regions are longitudes apart but where massive, storm-induced landslides have occurred in 2020. In the space adjacent to the green-lit room where the Trees evaporate over time are two large paintings of non-images composed of magnified Xerox noise, deceptively unassuming. Upon close inspection, the print error motif, taken from the flyleaves of a poorly digitised copy of The Philippine Islands and Their People (Worcester, 1898), appears like islands—a Gaian Assembly of interconnected pieces of land, recognised by the colonist insofar as it served their agendas.

Furthering a call to relationalism, two small paintings of Mateo, a typical Philippino according to American colonist-author D. C. Worcester, are each mounted next to other works that represent the different sides of the same coin. Fashioned after Mateo’s portrait in the bad copy of The Philippine Islands and Their People, he is blackened, almost to the point of invisibility and erasure, surrounded by specks of an archipelago he couldn’t truly call his own." [1]

Read Nice's full essay on archipelagic thinking here

[1] Nice Buenaventura, “The New Word for World Is Archipelago — Nice Buenaventura,” nicebuenaventura.com, accessed March 26, 2024, https://nicebuenaventura.com/The-New-Word-for-World-is-Archipelago.


Biography

Nice Buenaventura

Nice Buenaventura is a visual artist and returning lecturer from Manila. Her methods revolve around the offloading of tensions, often between ethics and aesthetics, through drawing, painting, installation and citizen-ethnography.
Nice holds postgraduate degrees in media and arts technology from Queen Mary, University of London and Ateneo de Manila University. She has presented work and participated in art-adjacent projects in Bacolod, Bangkok, London, Manila, Melbourne, Paris, Ruang, Singapore and Zurich. In 2021, she received the Cultural Center of the Philippines - Thirteen Artists Award and the Ateneo Art Awards - Fernando Zóbel Prize for Visual Art.

Website

Nice Buenaventura. Courtesy of the artist.

Videos

Symposium: In Conversation | Islands in Flux: Weathering the Future, Nice Buenaventura, Serina Rahman & Soh Kay Min, Environmentally-Engaged Artistic Practices Symposium, 2024

Nice Buenaventura (Artist, Philippines), Serina Abdul Rahman (Lecturer, Department of Southeast Asia Studies, NUS), moderated by Soh Kay Min (Research Associate, NTU ADM). Filipina artist Nice Buenaventura and lecturer Serina Abdul Rahman discuss the value and importance of citizen-centered learning along the archipelago. Moderated by research associate, Soh Kay Min, the panel will discuss the ways that weather shapes community fishing practices and local knowledge and how these communities respond to changing weather through varied projects of counter-mapping. This recording is part of the two-day symposium, "Environmentally-Engaged Artistic Practices in South, Southeast Asia and the Pacific" held at NTU Centre for Contemporary Art Singapore, supported by the Ministry of Education Academic Research Fund Tier 1 Project (RG39/21) and led by Principal Investigator, Professor Ute Meta Bauer. This symposium was organised by Professor Ute Meta Bauer and Research Assistant Angela Ricasio Hoten, School of Art, Design and Media, Nanyang Technological University Singapore with additional support from Eunice Lacaste, PhD Candidate at NTU ADM.

Conferences

Climate Futures #2 Belonging and Shared Responsibilities, Conference, 26 - 28 October, 2023

Speaker | Climate Futures #2 Belonging and Shared Responsibilities, Conference, 26 - 28 October, 2023
Conceived by NTU Centre for Contemporary Arts Singapore, in partnership with KONNECT ASEAN, an ASEAN-Korea arts programme.

Case Study: The New Word for World is Archipelago
This presentation will introduce the concept of the archipelago as metaphor and methodology in understanding crisis and post-crisis scenarios, particularly in the context of climate. Following an earlier essay and exhibition of the same title, it asserts the primacy of interconnectedness (between the hemispheres, and between colonial past and capitalist present) in the face of an increasingly inhospitable planet. Everything is connected and nothing illustrates
this undervalued fact like the equally undervalued narrative of the archipelago. In the humanities and sciences, it is the solitary island that has long dominated Western discourse, privileging outdated binaries
such as land–sea and mainland–island. This, in turn, inspires myopic assumptions about Earth and her systems. The climate crisis is one such system: orchestrated by one hemisphere with far-reaching effects
in the other. A paradigm shift has to be set
in motion, starting with renegotiating our semantics. Artists and scholars are some
of the first to offer suggestions: that to be “islanded” is to be isolated and that to think in terms of “a world of islands” (vs. “islands of the world”) is to think in terms of fluidity and interconnectedness.

From Grief to Hope, an Archipelago (Presented by Emerging Islands), Nuit de l'Imagination, Columbia Institute for Ideas and Imagination, 2023

Further Reading

Selected Exhibitions


Selected Solo Exhibitions
2023 and land erodes into, with Fyerool Darma, Curated by Carlos Quijon, Jr., Calle Wright, Manila, Philippines

Selected Group Exhibitions
2023 Elusive Edge: Philippine Abstract Forms, Metropolitan Museum of Manila, Curated by Patrick Flores, Philippines
2023 Line of Sight, Galleria Duemila, Curated by Jon Cuyson, Philippines
2023 Three-person exhibition with Brisa Amir and Elaine Navas, Presented by Artinformal, ArtSG, Singapore
2022 The New Word for World is Archipelago, Thirteen Artists Awards Exhibition, Cultural Center of the Philippines, Philippines
2022 No More Mesmerizations, Bangkok Biennial, Curated by Vincent Ardidon, Bangkok, Thailand

Selected Residencies


2024 (Forthcoming) Art Residency, Emerging Islands
2023 Arts Residency for Southeast Asian Artists, Rimbun Dahan