Catalogue > At random
Mark Salvatus
Should the Source of Fulfillment Be Seen with Our Eyes
Experimental video | hdv | color | 16:25 | Philippines | 2024
Kung ang Makagiginhawa ay Matingnan ng Ating mga Mata (Should the Source of Fulfillment Be Seen with Our Eyes) 2024 Exploring the ethno-ecologies of Mt. Banahaw—how the surrounding more-than-human world shapes and are shaped by cultural imaginations. It weaves together Salvatus’s ongoing research on the vernacular histories of Mt. Banahaw and Lucban, convened from family archives, popular history, and mythical motifs. It looks at several trajectories of millenarian renewal that converge in Mt. Banahaw as mystical and ethno-ecological topos: from a revolution that aimed to encourage the native folk to find their own idiom of religious discernment, a history of marching bands and musicians and their place in a postcolonial regional modernity, to Salvatus’s very own practice of assembly and salvaging that situates us in this shared mystical world, animates in us a planetary political spirit.
Mark Salvatus, a Filipino artist hailing from Lucban and residing in Manila, defines his extensive artistic approach as ‘Salvage Projects.’ This concept, echoing his surname, serves as a framework for his diverse investigations into the remnants of urban politics, the layered narratives of national history, and the ceaseless motion of contemporary life. Working across various disciplines—from objects and photography to video, installations, and participatory art—Salvatus crafts direct and indirect engagements that illuminate the multifaceted outcomes of energies, meanings, and experiences.