04/11/2025
The sea has always connected the Philippines and Japan. For centuries, its shifting tides have carried people, traditions, and ideas from one shore to another. More than a border, the sea is a bridge, a reminder that identity, like water, is never still.
Across Currents brings together Filipino painters and sculptors in Tokyo, with each work shaped by memory, migration, and imagination. Some carry fragments of home: the warmth of the tropics, the weight of history, and the rhythm of everyday life. Others lean toward what is still to come, offering visions that extend beyond borders. Together, these works gather into a tide in motion, converging here in this city of crossings.
The exhibition invites us to see painting and sculpture as currents in their own right: alive, restless, and transformative. A canvas may recall the horizon between sea and sky. A carved form may embody both the stillness of belonging and the pull of departure. A brushstroke, a contour, a surface, each becomes a way of tracing what it means to live between places, to hold memory while reaching forward.
To move across currents is to be shaped by encounters, by forces greater than ourselves, and by the possibility of connection. It is also to recognize that beauty often arises not from fixed identities, but from what happens in the space between.
In this sense, Across Currents is not an exhibition about distance but about relation, about how painting and sculpture, like the sea itself, carry us toward one another.