Ronald Ventura Territorial Crossing
Ronald Ventura illustrates the disorientation of contemporary society. The visual entanglement that characterizes his work does not follow a linear narrative structure, but rather presents itself as a contraction of space and time in which past and future ultimately coincide. His depictions of hybrid beings—men, plants, animals and things all at once—are both archaic and futuristic. To attempt to follow a path within his work leads to the risk of being tangled up in the likes of a spider web. At a metaphoric level, Ventura expresses ascertainment of a situation that appears to offer no way out. From What is Left of Man by Demetrio Paparoni
Bull, 2018 Fiberglass, resin, polyurethane and paint Cm 315 x 261 x 218 6
In Ronald Ventura’s Wild Out (2018) we can notice similarities with Georg Grosz’s chaotic and grotesque Agitator (1928), which describes the German society before World War II, hypnotized by a mass spell caster. Grosz used cartoons to convey the sense of angst and anxiety that characterized that historical period. Answering to the question ‘As wild beasts are getting tamer and tamer, why is the supposedly civilized man becoming wilder and more beastly?” Ventura charges his caricatured images of ambivalent meanings, oscillating between game and disturbance. The central figure in Wild Out is a dog-headed circus tamer standing on a platform, waving a crowd of animals: cartoon characters, hybrid figures with animal and human features, while death crosses the scene riding a skeleton horse. These caricatured and grotesque figures, posing more like emblems of royalty rather than symbols of jungle, convey a sense of brutal irony and carry the viewer into the heart of darkness. Here not only rules a perpetual contrast and ambivalence between seriousness and fun but instinct and reason blend one into the other losing their own distinctive characteristics. Together with the chosen characters, the context represented also helps in this respect. In the eyes of the artist, the circus itself is not merely considered as entertainment and talent showcasing, it does not display animal personification as something extraordinary only inside the circus tent but it presents hybridity and abnormal unions out of it. These sinister beauties are then extracted from their comfort zone and exhibited in the public square, where personal becomes public and public becomes personal. Faithful to the socio-political imprint that characterizes his work, in Wild out Ventura refers to the rapid transformation of the post-colonialist Southeast Asian society, leaving both the desire for a change and the sense of loss to be felt. The human hands of the tiger in the foreground on the left allude to unnatural grafts due to cultural interferences and impositions that deform and alter the meaning of tradition. The work thus shows how in the era of globalization the real and the virtual overlap creating chaos and disorientation. Demetrio Paparoni
Wild Out, 2018 Oil on canvas, fiberglass and resin frame Cm 214 x152 (painting); cm 314 x 228 (total size) 10
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“Territorial crossing”, Ronald Ventura’s latest solo show at Primo Marella Gallery in Milan, gathered 28 works in painting and sculpture engaging with the idea of dissolving physical and figurative boundaries in contemporary society. The title of the exhibition referred to the concept that the barriers and clear-cut distinctions to which geographical, biological and social categories have been anchored no longer hold. Born in 1973 in Manila, Philippines, where he is still based, Ronald Ventura is known for his seductive layering of imagery and techniques, and eclectic mix of influences—from popular culture to indigenous and Christian iconography, mysticism and mythology—woven into complex, iconic compositions. Upon entering the exhibition space, one became immersed in a world of stark black and white: from the corners of the ceiling hung four large, dark, ragged curtains, decorated with hand-stenciled motifs that recur in the artist’s work, such as cryptic symbols, fantastical animals and threatening cartoon characters, while the gallery floor was overlaid with a pattern of black and white diagonal stripes. A life-sized, black fiberglass crocodile, whose head and back appear to emerge from the floor, immediately captured the viewer’s attention in Crocodile (2018), its gaping jaws and sharp white teeth conveying a sense of threat. Nearby, Bull (2018), a massive sculpture of a winged black bovine with pointed spurs sprouting from its limbs, recalling a mythological beast, stands majestically, muscles darting beneath the shiny black coat stained with blood-red patches. Looking more closely, however, a pair of incongruous human feet in place of its back hooves diminishes this initial impression of the creature’s mythical power. The exhibition’s titular series of 2018 paintings revolved around the idea of an uneasy identity, subverting classical portraiture to disturbing effect. Fifteen hyperrealist, mostly grayscale portraits were installed in a row on the main gallery’s wall, mounted in identical, silvery-black, fiberglass, sculptural frames decorated with wolves, skulls and bones, reminiscent of motives in medieval coats of arms. The installation resembled a classic portrait gallery, but the sitters in the paintings had turned into monstrous creatures from a contemporary urban wilderness. Territorial crossing 10 is a half-length portrait of a young man gazing steadily out at the viewer, the fur and fangs of a hyena adorning his torso and face like a second skin, revealing a latent aggression. Beauty and ferocity were paired in Territorial Crossing 14, depicting a handsome woman in a t-shirt, her eyes hidden under a pink lace ribbon. The portrait is overlaid with lettering, among which is the
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word “beauty.” The character exudes boisterous menace, her teeth grinding in a red-lipped, feral grimace. By contrast, the manipulation of the body for aesthetic, rather than violent, purposes is shown in Territorial Crossing 3, in which a pin-up girl with full lips and flowing hair turns out, on closer inspection, to be a doll or a dummy. In the same gallery, the garish, exuberant comic-book hues of Wild Out (2018), a mural-sized painting hung on a wall of its own, stood out against the show’s mostly black and white color scheme. A ringmaster with a bulldog’s head, wearing a black top hat and scarlet coat, poses on a pedestal in between two standing tigers, realistically depicted except for the fact that their paws have mutated into human hands. A host of human and anthropomorphic cartoon characters populate the canvas, producing a chaotic metaphor for a circus-like world of dissolving biological and cultural borders. Elsewhere, Breakfast (2017), an imposing, large-format painting, was rendered in hues of gray and luminous white, creating a rich and dramatic chiaroscuro effect. In the work, a young man stands still holding a teacup, the contents of which is scattered upwards into gravity-defying droplets that seem to float in mid-air. In the background, a stormy sky seems about to erupt into a tempest. The man’s face is a hybrid of human and feral features; his head morphs into spindly structures resembling thorns or bones. On his shoulder is a half-dissected bird, its innards visible, while a skeletal toy pony rests on the man’s head. This strikingly sinister though compelling image seems to condense the sense of impending doom that runs throughout the show. “Territorial crossing” provided an in-depth look into Ronald Ventura’s ongoing exploration of hybridity and morphing as defining contemporary conditions of humanity. His “creatures of discomfort,” as the artist has called them, inhabit a chaotic, nightmarish realm of perpetual uncertainty and threat, mirroring the anxieties of living in an age of rapid, often inscrutable, transformation. Alessandra Alliata Nobili
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Crocodile, 2018 Fiberglass, charcoal and polyurethane paint Cm 40 x 40 x 136 18
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Territorial Crossing 1, 2018 Oil on canvas, fiberglas and resin frame Cm 40 x 30 (painting); cm 89 x 71 (total size) 20
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Territorial Crossing 2, 2018 Oil on canvas, fiberglass and resin frame Cm 40 x 30 (painting); cm 89 x 71 (total size) 23
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Territorial Crossing 3, 2018 Oil on canvas, fiberglass and resin frame Cm 40 x 30 (painting); cm 89 x 71 (total size) 25
Territorial Crossing 4, 2018 Oil on canvas, fiberglass and resin frame Cm 40 x 30 (painting); cm 89 x 71 (total size) 26
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Territorial crossing A territory implies exclusivity over a realm, having the sole authority and control in a given domain. To cross such territory could mean a multitude of things, from challenging power and enacting an ambition to expand, to transcending limits and boundaries, moving freely between worlds. The latter sense resonates strongly in light of today’s increasingly global community: the world getting smaller through ease of transportation and communication; human mobility intensifying; nation-states gearing its political and economic affairs towards the larger region beyond its borders. In this exhibition, Ronald Ventura interprets “Territorial crossing” as a state in contemporary society’s way of life in which long-held binaries are collapsing, hybridities emerging, wide spectrums being embraced, and comfortable distinctions and categories being blurred and conflated. These tendencies occur in various aspects of today’s society, ranging from social norms and values to ideals and standards. Using metaphorical imagery and direct references, the works comment on technology, popular culture, mass media, lifestyle, and personal expressions. Several tropes recurring in the artist’s repertoire express the idea of dichotomy dissolution and unsettling of clear-cut divides where human lives have long been anchored. Standards of beauty and how the intervention of technology has dissolved the lines that separate the natural from the synthetic are confronted in works that feature dolls, mannequins, and their hybrid with human representations. The same reflection is embodied in compositions where perfect bodies and faces are patched or intertwined with geometric planes. Together, these works intimate how digital technology in the mass media, on one hand, and advances in cosmetic surgery, on the other, have engendered an artificial and oftentimes unrealistic concept of beauty and physical perfection from which individuals base their ideal selves. In images where animals morph into human figures or are shown with human-like gestures, man’s relationship and link with animals are probed, as well as instances where distinctions between the two species seem to fade. In keeping pets, for example, animals are treated in some households as ordinary family members provided with the same level of comfort and luxury as human beings. On the other side, when a human feels extreme anger, his ferocious and violent behavior can be revealed, reminding us of our affinity with the animal kingdom and a nature driven by instinct and desire for survival. But what makes the human is the individual freedom of choice. This freedom, too, has struggled with social norms and in turn challenged boundaries, as suggested by pieces that portray contemporary fashion as self-expression, and an expression of love that deviates from conventions on gender and sexuality. The figure of a winged bull weaves several
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thematic strands intimated across the exhibition together. Presented as a cross between a four-legged animal and a winged creature, the imaginary bull navigates both land and air. At the same time, its wings may well be reminiscent of angels and the horns of the devil, a combination that can be symbolic of good and evil coinciding in human nature. Having human feet on its hind legs, the bull reiterates the reflection on human-animal confluence. Finally, the other works illustrate a world where black and white are reversing, captured by the pairing of an image and its negative, and a world that goes beyond black and white in which monochromatic rendering is being punctured by a spilling of diverse colors. It is a world of crossing limits, breaking into new grounds, and leaping into a new era of existence. Ryan Francis Reyes
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Territorial Crossing 5, 2018 Oil on canvas, fiberglass and resin frame Cm 40 x 30 (painting); cm 89 x 71 (total size) 32
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Territorial Crossing 6, 2018 Oil on canvas, fiberglass, resin frame Cm 40 x 30 (painting); cm 89 x 71 (total size) 35
Territorial Crossing 7, 2018 Oil on canvas, fiberglass and resin frame Cm 40 x 30 (painting); cm 89 x 71 (total size) 36
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Territorial Crossing 10, 2018 Oil on canvas, fiberglass and resin frame Cm 40 x 30 (painting); cm 89 x 71 (total size) 40
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Territorial Crossing 8, 2018 Oil on canvas, fiberglass and resin frame Cm 40 x 30 (painting); cm 89 x 71 (total size) 43
Territorial Crossing 9, 2018 Oil on canvas, fiberglass and resin frame Cm 40 x 30 (painting); cm 89 x 71 (total size) 44
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Territorial Crossing 11/12 - diptych , 2018 Oil on canvas, fiberglass and resin frame Cm 40 x 30 each (painting); cm 89 x 71 each (total size) 46
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Territorial Crossing 13, 2018 Oil on canvas, fiberglass and resin frame Cm 40 x 30 (painting); cm 89 x 71 (total size) 50
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Territorial Crossing 14, 2018 Oil on canvas, fiberglass and resin frame Cm 40 x 30 (painting); cm 89 x 71 (total size) 53
Territorial Crossing 15, 2018 Oil on canvas, fiberglass and resin frame Cm 40 x 30 (painting); cm 89 x 71 (total size) 54
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Human Study series A, 2017 Graphite and oil on canvas on clip board, plex frame Cm 30 x 22,5 (painting); cm 37 x 26 (total size) 57
Human Study series B, 2017 Graphite and oil on canvas on clip board, plex frame Cm 30 x 22,5 (painting); cm 37 x 26 (total size) 58
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Human Study series C, 2017 Graphite and oil on canvas on clip board, plex frame Cm 30 x 22,5 (painting); cm 37 x 26 (total size) 60
Human Study series D, 2017 Graphite and oil on canvas on clip board, plex frame Cm 30 x 22,5 (painting); cm 37 x 26 (total size) 62
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Human Study series E, 2017 Graphite and oil on canvas on clip board, plex frame Cm 30 x 22,5 (painting); cm 37 x 26 (total size) 64
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Human Study series F, 2017 Graphite and oil on canvas on clip board, plex frame Cm 30 x 22,5 (painting); cm 37 x 26 (total size) 67
Mark 1, 2, 3 The three figures register as hybrid creatures with a lion’s head and multiple wings, a rather familiar combination of symbols that comes in a number of versions across cultures. Reminiscent, for instance, of St. Mark’s Lion—the symbol of Venice—the winged lion instantly suggests power, might, and dominance. The King of the Beasts projects its ferocity through a straightforward look, with mouth open and sharp fangs exposed as if devouring its prey. Its wings bring to mind eagles or angels, both conveying ideas of flight, in swift and gliding motions that demonstrate a perfect balance between agility and strength. The arrangement of the wings also illustrates another possible reading of the configuration: a star high above the sky and illuminating the world from a great distance. With human skulls reduced in scale, scattered around its head and appearing like a mere ornament, necklace or components of a headpiece, the figures imply the many forces in contemporary society under which humans had become subjected to. The figures may well represent the wings of power associated with the media, the bearer of news which crosses territories and borders. From media, religion, political institution, technology, or popular culture, individuals and collectivities can be vulnerable to more powerful entities which may be the very products of their own creation. Ruel Caasi
Mark 2, 2018 Fiberglass, resin, metal, acrylic and silver/gold leaf Cm 175 x 130 x 22 71
Mark 1, 2018 Fiberglass, resin, metal, acrylic and silver/gold leaf Cm 155 x 140 x 23 72
Mark 3, 2018 Fiberglass, resin, metal, acrylic and silver/gold leaf Cm 172 x 133 x 20 73
Ronald Ventura is the painter of an era, of a world and of humanity in the depth of crisis. In his paintings, whether meticulous and complex constructions of apocalyptic scenarios or individual figures framed frontally, images from very diverse traditions flow together from, among others, Western art history, Philippine painting of the 1960s, the Disney world, the figures of the ritual iconography of Asian people, aesthetics of the virtual world and videogames, and science. The key to the comprehension is always the psychological atmosphere dominated by a sense of melancholy, instability and danger. In Breakfast (2017), a man with animal-like features and an indefinable age, holds his breakfast cup so as to dump out its content, demonstrating the absence of gravity, and he looks directly out of the frame with an expression of suffering as his features dissolve into modernist structures and animal skeletons. On his head a toy horse that could be the stuff of a dream, but which instead reveals its bones and becomes a nightmare. Behind him, a sky of final judgement lowers and the natural phenomena seem to invade his body, which in turn becomes the scenario of the current night. From Le Nuove Frontiere della Pittura by Pia Capelli, curated by Demetrio Paparoni, Skira, Milan, 2016 Translation by Johanna Kreiner, NTL, Firenze
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Breakfast, 2017 Oil on canvas Cm 213,8 x 152,5 80
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Exhibition view Le Nuove Frontiere della Pittura 16.11.2017 – 25.02.2018 ph. Š Roberto Marossi, courtesy Fondazione Stelline
Exhibition view miart, Milan 2018 Primo Marella Gallery
Previous Works
Blast, 2015 Oil on canvas, fiberglass and resin frame Cm 92 x 61 (painting); cm 143,5 x 111,7 (total size) 88
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Lamp, 2018 Bronze cast Cm 90 x 65 x 68 90
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Journey, 2016 Oil on canvas; wooden frame Cm 74,6 x 98,5 (painting); cm 122,3 x 98,6 (total size) 95
Behind the clouds 4, 2016 Mixed media on fiberglass, resin; flex frame Cm 62 x 43 (painting); cm 92,6 x 72,3 (total size) 96
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Tour de force 1, 2016 Mixed media on fiberglass, resin; flex frame Cm 39 x 58,5 (painting); cm 92,5 x 72,5 (total size) 98
Tour de force 3, 2016 Mixed media on fiberglass, resin; flex frame Cm 39 x 55,5 (painting); cm 92,5 x 72,5 (total size) 99
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Ventura tries to dissolve ordinary binaries (on which the contemporary world and believes are based) creating varieties and casualities. The bodies he creates are maps of power and identity, not innocent, not seeking unitary identity and generating antagonistic dualism without end: one is too few and two is only a possibility. In his sculptures you can see an intimate experience of boundaries, their construction and deconstruction. There is a myth system waiting to become a political language. Recontructing boundaries of daily life, in partial connection with others, in communication with all our parts. A dream not of a common language, but of a powerful infidel heteroglossia. Meaning both building and destroying identities, categories, relationships, space, stories in a neverending spiral dance.
Bullydog, 2018 Fiberglass, charcoal and polyurethane paint Cm 17 x 76 x 44, ed. 1/3 103
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Over Charge (2017) by Ronald Ventura links the historical to the contemporary in a dramatic layering of forms and images that keeps one’s gaze actively engaged across the entire frame. The most visible figure easily registers as horseracing: a trotting horse ridden by a jockey whose missing head seems to be wiped out by an elastic formation. A hint of a sword tucked in by the rider’s side paints another picture, however. The weapon brings to mind a cavalry in action, suddenly transporting the scene into a moment in an ancient war. The blurring of the surroundings and blending of details work well to suggest – in both racing and aggression – the disorientation of vision due to speed and tension, or the presence of a thick cloud of dust emerging from a vio lent confrontation. The visual melding of the concepts of racing and fighting lends the composition the allusion of a battle for survival and supremacy in contemporary society. It reflects how individuals and nations today compete and aspire for achievement, recognition and dominance as if in a tight race, and how stiff competition in many instances leads to conflict and atrocities. The color scheme gives the canvas a nostalgic appearance, while a dogheaded human covering its eyes injects humor to temper the serious mood evoked by the theme of rivalry and antagonism. The entire plane is abundant with surprises as it is loaded with figures obstructed from view or partially hidden through overlapping. Such figures – an eagle, wings, and the head of a human sculpture, to name but a few – are motifs symbolic of power and might from Classical tradition. They emerge like phantom images competing for visibility against the central figure, creating a confusing and chaotic vision, hyperactive and excessively charged – a fitting description of contemporary times. Ryan Francis Reyes
Over Charge, 2017 Oil on canvas, fiberglass and resin frame Cm 122 x 92 (painting); Cm 173 x 142 (total size) 105
Over Charge, 2017 - Details 106
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Exhibition view Arte Fiera 2018 Primo Marella Gallery
CV Ronald Ventura (b. Manila, Philippines, 1973) earned a B.F.A. in Painting at the University of Sto.Tomas, Manila, Philippines in 1993. From 1993 to 2001 he worked as a university instructor at College of Fine Arts & Design, University of Sto.Tomas, Manila, Philippines. Selected Solo Exhibitions 2018 Territorial crossing, Primo Marella Gallery, Milan, Italy 2017 Shadow Forest, Encounters and Explorations, The Metropolitan Museum of Manila, Manila, Philippines 2016 Finding Home, MoCA, Museum of Contemporary Arts, Taipei, Taiwan Behind the Clouds, The Drawing Room Contemporary Art, Makati City, Philippines Talisman, Ronac Art Center, Greenhills, Manila, Philippines Anito Kristo, Ronac Art Center, Magallanes, Makati City, Philippines Ronald Ventura, Recent Works, Primae Noctis Art Gallery, Lugano, Switzerland 2015 The Hunting Ground, Primo Marella Gallery, Milan, Italy Ronald Ventura. Recent Works, Taiwan Art Fair, World Trade Center, Taipei, Taiwan 2014 E.R. (Endless Resurrection), Tyler Rollins Fine Arts, New York, NY, USA Bulul, Ronald Ventura and the Traditional Art of the Philippines, Museo delle Culture, Lugano, Switzerland 2013 Voids and Cages, Perrotin Gallery, Hong Kong Ronald Ventura: Recent Works, Fine Art Center, Tainan City, Taiwan 2012 Fiesta Carnival, Primo Marella Gallery, Milan, Italy Recyclables, Singapore Tyler Print Institute, Singapore Watching the Watchmen, Vargas Museum, Quezon City, Manila, Philippines 2011 Thousand Islands, Tyler Rollins Fine Art, New York, NY, USA Humanime (I), Fine Art Centre, Eslite Building, Taipei, Taiwan 2010 Converging Nature, The Drawing Room, Makati City, Philippines Fragmented Channels, Primo Marella Gallery, Milan, Italy
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2009 Metaphysics of Skin, Tyler Rollins Fine Art, New York, NY, USA Major Highways, Expressways and Principal Arterials, Ark Galerie, Jakarta, Indonesia 2008 Mapping The Corporeal, Museum of the National University of Singapore, Singapore Zoomanities, The Art Center Megamall, Mandaluyong City, Philippines 2007 Illusions & Boundaries,The Drawing Room, Makati City, Philippines Under the Rainbow, West Gallery Megamall, Mandaluyong City, Philippines Antipode, The Human Side, Artist Residency, Artesan, Singapore 2006 Cross Encounter, Ateneo Art Gallery, Quezon City, Philippines Dialogue Box, West Gallery Megamall, Mandaluyong City, Philippines 2005 Human Study, The Cross Art Projects, Sydney, Australia Morph, West Gallery Megamall, Mandaluyong City, Philippines Human Study, The Art Center Megamall, Mandaluyong City, Philippines 2004 Dead-End Images, The Art Center Megamall, Mandaluyong City, Philippines Black Caricature, Big & Small Art Co., Megamall, Mandaluyong City, Philippines Contrived Desires, West Gallery Megamall, Mandaluyong City, Philippines 2003 X-Squared, West Gallery Megamall, Mandaluyong City, Philippines 2002 Visual Defects, West Gallery Megamall, Mandaluyong City, Philippines Body, The Drawing Room, Makati City, Philippines 2001 The Other Side, The Drawing Room, Makati City, Philippines 2000 Innerscapes, West Gallery Megamall, Mandaluyong City, Philippines All Souls Day, The Drawing Room, Makati City, Philippines
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Selected Group Exhibitions 2018 Contemporary chaos, Vestfossen Kunstlaboratorium, Vestfossen, Norway 2017 Le Nuove Frontiere della Pittura, Fondazione Stelline, Milan, Italy Changing Perspective: Art Jog 10, Jogja National Museum, Jogjakarta, Indonesia Mutable Truths: Perspective in Philippine Contemporary Art, Sydney, Australia Metropolitan Museum of Manila X Ronald Ventura, Art Fair Philippines, The Link, Makati City, Philippines 2015 Ventura X Bench, Art Fair Philippines, The Link, Makati City, Philippines 2014 Art Fair Philippines, The Link, Makati City, Philippines 2013 Basel Art Fair, Perrotin Gallery, Hong Kong The Philippine Contemporary: To Scale the, Past and the Possible, The Metropolitan Museum of Manila, Manila, Philippines 2012 Korea International Art Fair (KIAF), Perrotin Gallery, Hong Kong 2011 Surreal versus Surrealism, IVAM – Institut Valencià d’Art Modern, Valencia, Spain 2010 A Duad at Play: Francis Ng & Ronald Ventura, Lasalle College of the Arts, Singapore 2009 South East B(l)ooming, Prague Biennal 4, Prague, Czech Republic Post-Tsunami Art, South East B(l)ooming, Primo Marella Gallery, Milan, Italy 2008 Filipino Art Exhibition, Singapore Art Museum, Singapore Asian Sculpture Exhibition, Oita Prefecture, Buongo Ono City, Japan 2005 Cross Encounters: The 2005 Ateneo Art Awards Exhibition, Power Plant Mall Rockwell Center, Makati City, Philippines
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2004 Korea Asian Art Festival, Inza Plaza, Seoul, South Korea 19th Asian International Art Exhibition, Fukuoka Asian Art Museum, Fukuoka City, Japan 2003 13 Artists Awards Exhibition, Main Gallery, Bulwagang Juan Luna, Cultural Center of the Philippines, Pasay City, Philippines 2002 Philip Morris Asean Art Awards, Nusa Dua, Bali, Indonesia Soft: Tresacidos, Art Center, SM City Cebu, Philippines 2001 The 8th Annual Filipino-American Arts Exposition, Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, San Francisco, CA, USA Tresacidos: Small Works, The Enterprise Center, Makati City, Philippines 2000 Guhit I, II & III, Ayala Museum III; Museum Espana; Jorge B. Vargas Museum, University of Philippines Mad About Lithographs, Ayala Museum, Makati City, Philippines 1999 Philip Morris Asean Art Exhibit, Hanoi, Vietnam • 9th International Biennal Print and Drawing Exhibit, Taipei, Taiwan 1998 1st Lithograph Competition Exhibition, The Drawing Room, Makati City, Philippines
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© Primo Marella Gallery © The artist for the artworks © The authors for the texts A special thanks goes to: Alessandra Alliata Nobili Demetrio Paparoni Ruel Caasi Ryan Francis Reyes Pia Capelli Photo credits: Ronald Ventura Studio Francesca Fattori Roberto Marossi Layout: Francesca Fattori Translations: Vincenzo Gangone Johanna Kreiner Reproduction and diffusion of this catalogue or any part of it by electronic storage, hardcopies, or any other means, are not allowed.
Published on the occasion of Ronald Ventura - Territorial crossing Primo Marella Gallery - Milan April 13 - May 25, 2018