Underground

Underground It gave credence to a probable view of how we respond to the urbanization of our times, chronicling its pitfalls and triumphs.

Covering the Underground
By Jonathan Olazo

Taking on a hefty and veritable name, Underground (UG) has thrived as a proverbial shelter from the storm, a habitué for artists and art enthusiasts in a meeting of minds that look for something beyond the usual fare of a painting and into the brave and unconventional, extraordinary and vanguard. In a fortuitous setting albeit brought on by hard work and

entrepreneurial savvy, owner Manny de Castro has UG in a host of defining circumstances that only sees his endeavor progress – finding a space for exhibitions in the below ground level of a landmark Makati building, and deciding on a gallery name taken from the spirited and iconic song by The Jam with a battle cry that goes, “but I want nothing this society’s got.” The advocacy just spills over. At the time of writing, UG marked its inaugural calendar of exhibitions that saw critically memorable exhibitions straddling various points of the spectrum. Artists of various ranks and pedigrees were brought together working toward a common goal in thematic exhibitions organized and conceptualized by artist-curators. “Babel”, organized by Nice Buenaventura, was participatory in nature as wooden blocks were handed to artists to be worked on as one saw it fit and necessary, according to personal artistic dispositions and viewpoints. In “Bangkal Paintings”, conceptual artist and curator Nilo Ilarde brought in a cornucopia of seemingly “anonymous” paintings bought from the thrift market district of Bangkal in Makati and gave license to painters and artists to choose and/or assigned paintings for each to interact on the given and existing painting image. The initiative challenged many levels of art making in terms of its inherent processes and up to its receiving end in being accepted by a collecting market. UG has taken pride in launching first solo exhibitions by protégé artists in James Esguerra and Potti Lesaguis. In the same vein, a two-person exhibition by Nicole Tee and Gale Encarnacion focused on the intricacies of the dialogue between object, material and idea that tapped on the impetus of questioning and addressing the inherent stories of art making. Perhaps indicative of fostering contrasting attitudes, UG held an exhibition of photographs by Luis Martinez that portrayed musicians and singers of the celebrity caliber as the artist took their portraits while watching in their live concert performances. In a positively controversial outing, artist Felix Bacolor somewhat crucified himself on the gallery’s walls using only duck tape and allowed himself to be on sensational display for a relative marathon duration of time that elicited opinions and enthrallments from the gallery passerby. The norm of painting was given its due spotlight. Alvin Villaruel gave rendition to his signature style of blurred images that referenced the great Gerhard and paints chosen scenes on aluminum surfaces that explore the ambient quality of these and its resulting effect on the depicted scene. Japanese artist Atsuko Yamagata had a suite of luminous non-representational works on paper that are delivered using traditional inks and cutouts that plotted the psychological and poetic structures of perceived space. Gino Bueza, Zean Cabangis and Don Dalmacio sought to pursue painting formats in lieu of its past tense and understanding its significance through its reconstruction and reconfigured formations. In another artistically difficult exhibition by a classy artist in his mid-career years, Juan Alcazaren’s paintings cm assemblages seem to define the aesthetic path the gallery is taking. This is about the endorsement and recombining of painting mediums, found objects and manipulated materials. These juxtapositions shed light on recent past histories and lineages, therefore defining influences and beliefs. This is a base for a pursuit that can only be about serious art making in its purest, and its arbitrated public appreciation. With all of these as the tip of the iceberg of the banquet table, Underground espouses an interesting mix of aesthetic works that limber toward giving artists their due leeway to explore riskier ideas and concepts. Underground has concluded a brilliant year with a roster of almost a double dozen shows, a prolific resume for any upstart or even established gallery to follow. On an offbeat day, a visitor can walk into the gallery and catch owner de Castro and close colleagues listening to vinyls on hi-fi turntables and amps, talking about the recesses of the liner notes that go with these records. Then in a flash bit, the art biz is on the agenda. It is easy to call the Underground home.

Underground warmly thanks everyone who spent time with us at ALT Art 2026, SMX Convention Center, February 13–15. We are...
16/02/2026

Underground warmly thanks everyone who spent time with us at ALT Art 2026, SMX Convention Center, February 13–15. We are deeply grateful for the conversations, connections, and shared moments around the artworks.

Final day to view Underground’s featured artworks at ALT Art 2026.  Happening today, February 15, at the SMX Convention ...
14/02/2026

Final day to view Underground’s featured artworks at ALT Art 2026. Happening today, February 15, at the SMX Convention Center–MOA.

14/02/2026

Underground | Special Project

Lesley-Anne Cao
Amphibian palm
2026

Amphibian palm is an installation with aquarium tanks containing
"books." The work explores ideas around books and the activity of reading.

What constitutes a book? Does binding together sheets of any material create a book? What constitutes reading? With the aid of electronic wavemakers automated by timers, each of the book's pages flip from one end to the other: they undulate or behave like books, at other times rest or stutter. Music composed for them plays with them. The automated flipping displaces human agency and asks if, in this environment, reading continues to happen, and if so, who or what is doing the reading.

Cao is interested in materials and arrangements that can continue to change while they are being presented and viewed - in works that in some ways can have their own lives, logic, or improvisations, and where the work can shift moment to moment and person to person. In this new iteration, the space is constructed as part of the work. The contents of its three tanks include textiles, film photographs, flora, plastic wrappers, embroidery, retired names of our most destructive typhoons, air, dust, reflections.

14/02/2026

Underground | Special Project

Lesley-Anne Cao
Amphibian palm
2026

Amphibian palm is an installation with aquarium tanks containing
“books.” The work explores ideas around books and the activity of reading.

What constitutes a book? Does binding together sheets of any material create a book? What constitutes reading? With the aid of electronic wavemakers automated by timers, each of the book’s pages flip from one end to the other: they undulate or behave like books, at other times rest or stutter. Music composed for them plays with them. The automated flipping displaces human agency and asks if, in this environment, reading continues to happen, and if so, who or what is doing the reading.

Cao is interested in materials and arrangements that can continue to change while they are being presented and viewed - in works that in some ways can have their own lives, logic, or improvisations, and where the work can shift moment to moment and person to person. In this new iteration, the space is constructed as part of the work. The contents of its three tanks include textiles, film photographs, flora, plastic wrappers, embroidery, retired names of our most destructive typhoons, air, dust, reflections.

14/02/2026

Rhaz Oriente
Memory as an Archipelago, Time as the Eraser
2026

Data-based textile installation, single-channel video, and floor sculpture

Rhaz Oriente’s ontological treatment of Memory as an Archipelago, Time as the Eraser reveals her process in which an idea materializes from inception, to production, then presentation.

For this exhibition, she focuses her lens on the multifaceted nature of time. Fragments of memories from eras gone by, what could have been, an imagined timeline, the naked truth, and visions of a future that is bound to happen are woven on pictographic tapestries as vast as the sea; that she both visualizes in a new light and contains in honor of what was once unreclaimed by human machinations.
In the space that Oriente’s work will occupy, one will be welcome to experience and converse about how dense time really is and navigate it properly. Memory will serve as a map, moving images will be a guide to remembering (or forgetting), and portals to switch to an alternate reality will be available.

Jerome Destacamento

13/02/2026
ALT ART 2026Halls 1 & 2, SMX Convention Center – Mall of AsiaOpen daily through February 15, 10:00 AM – 7:00 PM — we war...
13/02/2026

ALT ART 2026
Halls 1 & 2, SMX Convention Center – Mall of Asia

Open daily through February 15, 10:00 AM – 7:00 PM — we warmly invite you to visit.

Underground presents a curated exhibition featuring contemporary artists whose diverse practices explore material, narrative, identity, and the evolving language of Philippine art today. Bringing together established and emerging voices, the exhibition creates a space for dialogue, experimentation, and discovery within the current art landscape.

Curated by Nilo Ilarde

Featuring works by:

Alvin Villaruel
Beejay Esber
Bert Antonio
Jason Montinola
Jon Cuyson
Juni Salvador
Kaloy Sanchez
Lester Amacio
Nilo Ilarde
Oca Villamiel
Pete Jimenez
Pow Martinez
Roan Alvarez
Tekla Tamoria
Valerie Chua
Juan Alcazaren III
Joebau

Discovery
Rhaz Oriente

Project Space
Lesley-Anne Cao

We invite you to experience this dynamic gathering of contemporary voices presented by Underground.

We invite you to experience this dynamic gathering of contemporary voices presented by Underground.

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Makati

Opening Hours

Tuesday 11am - 5pm
Wednesday 11am - 5pm
Thursday 11am - 5pm
Friday 11am - 5pm
Saturday 11am - 5pm

Telephone

+639275118489

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