J Studio

J Studio J Studio is where art careers grow. We offer exhibits and events to help artists and keep you connected to the latest in art.

Step into a world seen through the lens of light and texture. We are thrilled to invite you to “Through My Eyes,” a solo...
09/04/2026

Step into a world seen through the lens of light and texture. We are thrilled to invite you to “Through My Eyes,” a solo exhibition by Jeff Gauci. Curated by Reb Belleza.

"Through My Eyes" is a solo exhibition by Jeff Gauci, inviting viewers into the artist's personal and introspective world. Through a collection of expressive oil paintings, watercolor and charcoal works the exhibit captures his inner journey, reflecting his relationship with the world around him. Each brushstroke is a narrative, and every color is a language. His style is a contemporary impressionistic painting of landscapes and seascapes that conveys the depth and intensity of human emotion.

🗓 Opening Reception: April 18, 2026
🕔 Time: 5:00 PM – 9:00 PM
📍 Location: J Studio Makati, La Fuerza Compound, Makati City

Join us for an evening of art, conversation, and a firsthand look at Gauci’s contemporary impressionist masterpieces.

📧 RSVP & Inquiries: [email protected]

Untamed is an art exhibit featuring 80 women artists, exploring womanhood in its most natural state: unfiltered, self-po...
07/04/2026

Untamed is an art exhibit featuring 80 women artists, exploring womanhood in its most natural state: unfiltered, self-possessed, and free from performance. It invites viewers to recognize themselves in nuance rather than stereotype, and to linger with what feels true.

​Now on its fourth edition, Untamed is presented by the Babae Collective in collaboration with J Studio Gallery. The initiative traces its roots to 2022, beginning with the exhibit Kolektibayi at Egyolk Streetshop and Artist run space, founded by Toshihiko Urio. It later evolved into the Babae Collective. Since then, it has grown into a movement where feelings take form through art.

​It doesn't lean into edgy tropes of rebellion and unruliness, nor does it default to saccharine softness of pretty, palatable, or nauseously nurturing.

Instead, the exhibit stays with what's harder to name: the gray areas of being a woman. Not black or white, but all the in-betweens. The subtle shifts, the contradictions, the constant rebalancing. In those subtleties, gentleness sits beside grit; intimacy lives alongside distance; devotion coexists with independence.

Tenderness can carry power, strength can be quiet, and sensuality can remain understated. All of which felt in gesture, gaze, texture, and presence. It enmeshes playfulness along the spectrum: the childlike innocence of girlhood, joy without justification, and the lightness that comes from curiosity.

​Across mediums and perspectives, each piece offers a grounded, human view of femininity as lived experience. Multi-dimensional. Imperfect. Whole.

​At the heart of Untamed is an unbridled presence. Calm, grounded, and rooted in self-trust.

​Because there isn't a single way to be a woman, there isn't a single way to be untamed.

​Written by:
Nea Reyes

📍 J Studio, Makati
🗓 Extended viewing until April 11, 2026

For details and inquiries:
📞 +63 935 537 6399 (Viber/WhatsApp)
📩 [email protected]

✨ Thank you for dropping by J Studio at Art in the Park 2026 on its 20th year edition! 🎨💙J Studio is incredibly grateful...
17/03/2026

✨ Thank you for dropping by J Studio at Art in the Park 2026 on its 20th year edition! 🎨💙

J Studio is incredibly grateful to everyone who visited our booth and supported our artists—it truly means a lot. Congratulations as well to the organizers on a successful milestone year!

See you again next time! ✨

✨ Join us at Art in the Park 2026! 🎨J Studio is excited to participate in this year’s 20th Anniversary of Art in the Par...
13/03/2026

✨ Join us at Art in the Park 2026! 🎨

J Studio is excited to participate in this year’s 20th Anniversary of Art in the Park, presenting works by our featured and participating artists. Discover a vibrant collection of paintings, potteries, and contemporary artworks by both established and emerging Filipino artists.

Come spend a creative Sunday with us, explore inspiring artworks, and support the local art community.

📍 J Studio | Booth 6
Jaime Velasquez Park, Salcedo Village, Makati
🗓 March 15, 2026 (Sunday)
⏰ 10:00 AM – 10:00 PM

We look forward to seeing you there! 🎨✨

Thank you to everyone who joined us for the opening of UNTAMED: Babae Collective 4th Edition last March 7 at J Studio, M...
11/03/2026

Thank you to everyone who joined us for the opening of UNTAMED: Babae Collective 4th Edition last March 7 at J Studio, Makati. 💜

Bringing together 80 women artists, Untamed explores femininity beyond extremes—moving through the gray areas between tenderness and strength, intimacy and independence. The works reflect womanhood as it is lived: layered, nuanced, and free from a single definition.

If you missed the opening, the exhibit is still on view until March 31, 2026. We invite you to drop by, spend time with the works, and experience the many voices that shape this collective expression of creativity and solidarity.

📍 J Studio, Makati
🗓 On view until March 31, 2026

For details and inquiries:
📞 +63 935 537 6399 (Viber/WhatsApp)
📩 [email protected]

Untamed brings together 80 women artists exploring femininity beyond extremes. The works move through the gray areas: be...
03/03/2026

Untamed brings together 80 women artists exploring femininity beyond extremes. The works move through the gray areas: between edgy tropes and saccharine softness, between tenderness and strength, intimacy and independence. This exhibit centers an unbridled presence: calm, grounded, and deeply human.

Untamed invites viewers to experience womanhood as lived: Layered, nuanced, and free from a single definition.

Notes by Nea Reyes

Join us as we celebrate International Women’s Month with UNTAMED: Babae Collective 4th Edition ✨

An empowering showcase of diverse voices and fearless expressions — no extremes, no stereotypes.

🗓 March 7, 2026 (Saturday)
🕐 1:00 PM Pop-Up/Merch
🕔 5:00 PM Opening
📍 J Studio, Makati

Come through and celebrate creativity, strength, and solidarity with us. 💜

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For details and inquiries:
📞 +63 935 537 6399 (Viber/WhatsApp)
📩 [email protected]

Iñigo Acuña’s solo exhibition explores surface as memory—layered with pigment, scraping, and fragments of imagined citys...
03/03/2026

Iñigo Acuña’s solo exhibition explores surface as memory—layered with pigment, scraping, and fragments of imagined cityscapes.

Weathered textures, fractured forms, and concealed color evoke structures shaped by time, where rupture and resilience quietly coexist.

Through abstraction and subtle luminosity, each work invites slow looking and reflection on what endures.

Viewing extended until March 4 @ J Studio

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For details and inquiries:
📞 +63 935 537 6399 (Viber/WhatsApp)
📩 [email protected]

ART FAIR PHILIPPINES 2026 x J STUDIO SAGRADO DOSa solo exhibition by NORMAN DREODIBUJO X MACHINAreview by ABE OROBIAfor ...
17/02/2026

ART FAIR PHILIPPINES 2026 x J STUDIO

SAGRADO DOS
a solo exhibition by NORMAN DREO

DIBUJO X MACHINA
review by ABE OROBIA
for Sagrado Dos (AFP 2026)

Norman Dreo’s latest masterpiece titled “SAGRADO DOS” is his presentation
for Art Fair Philippines 2026. A progression to the 2024 “Sagrado” where he
depicted a retablo venerating the pillars of Philippine Art History — from the
classical to the modern period. Sagrado Dos is an ode to the continuing role of
visual artists in the post-modern and contemporary times. The old masters are
once again given prominence, now juxtaposed with elements of the nation’s
history—colonization, adaptation, revolution, transition and embrace of
modernity.

Revivalism and Digital Technology

Who says the old cannot become new? Who says the classics are not timeless
and unable to resonate with our present realities? Dreo intertwines two
grandeurs—his homage to the old masters and his fascination with digital
technology. He is best known for his finely detailed, multi-figure compositions that
reflect the intricacy and richness of the narratives embedded in his work.

Instead of a retablo, Dreo superimposed and framed the masters he revered
within a Parthenon-like structure.
Juan Luna (1857–1899), Félix Resurrección
Hidalgo (1855–1913), Fernando Amorsolo (1892–1972), Victorio Edades
(1895–1985), Vicente Manansala (1910–1981), Carlos “Botong” Francisco
(1912–1969), and Ang Kiukok (1931–2005) are artists he believes greatly
contributed to the growth and appreciation of visual arts in the country.
Furthermore, he juxtaposed and complemented their oeuvres with symbolic
elements, creating a bridge between his vision and that of his predecessors.

On the pediment are the sculptures seen on the façade of the National Museum
of Fine Arts (formerly the National Legislative Building). These neoclassical
allegorical figures represent Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao at the center, with
Wisdom and Strength on the left and Trade and Commerce on the right. Created
around 1925 by the German sculptor Otto Fischer-Credo, these works were part
of his collaborations with Juan Nakpil, the father of Philippine architecture. More
than architectural ornamentation, their placement symbolizes the nation’s cultural
progress and societal advancement prior to World War II, when the Philippines
was hailed as the Paris of Asia and the Pearl of the Orient.

At the summit sits Juan Luna, portrayed authoritatively with crossed legs and
quiet bravado. Luna, the celebrated painter of Spoliarium, earned the prestigious
First Prize Gold Medal at the 1884 National Exposition of Fine Arts in Madrid,
making him the first Filipino and Asian artist to achieve such global recognition.
His triumph affirmed that Filipino genius stood equal to that of the Spanish
colonizers.

Also featured within Luna’s hall are several masterpieces that continue to
resonate today: The Battle of Lepanto, echoing the nation’s ongoing struggle for
the West Philippine Sea; España y Filipinas, depicted by Dreo in two of its three
versions, symbolizing the Philippines as a developing nation striving for progress;
and The Blood Compact, also rendered by Botong Francisco at the base hall,
representing the Filipino value of honoring ties and friendship—an enduring trait
that defines the nation’s warm and amiable spirit.

The middle hall, meanwhile, is anchored by Félix Resurrección Hidalgo, Fernando Amorsolo, and Victorio Edades, each representing pivotal shifts in Philippine art and consciousness. Hidalgo, a reformist and among the first Filipino artists to gain international recognition alongside Juan Luna, evokes Filipino religiosity through Las Vírgenes Cristianas Expuestas al Populacho (The Christian Virgins Exposed to the Populace). The work reflects the deeply rooted faith of a predominantly Christian nation—one carried with conviction across time and circumstance.

Amorsolo, the country’s first National Artist and revered as the “Grand Old Man of Filipino Art,” is portrayed elegantly seated on a wooden chair, surrounded by luminous, backlit compositions that define his signature style. Among these is The Tinikling Dance, a celebration of Filipino adaptability, resilience, and the enduring ability to find joy despite hardship. Through light, warmth, and everyday life, Amorsolo immortalized the nation’s spirit of hope and grace.

Nationalism, on the other hand, is explored through interconnected visual
narratives. These include Fernando Amorsolo’s The Making of the Philippine Flag Carlos, “Botong” Francisco’s Bonifacio Mural, Félix Resurrección Hidalgo’s
The Assassination of Governor Bustamante and the female figure from Juan
Luna’s The Parisian Life. Complementing these historic masterpieces are Dreo’s
symbolic additions—most notably the pillar-cages in Luna’s hall containing
doves, representing freedom, and the figures from José Rizal’s Noli Me
Tangere—Sisa, Crispin, and Basilio—serving as metaphors for innocence,
persecution, and suffering. Hovering above the crossbeam of the base pillars is
the Haribon (Philippine Eagle), ingeniously positioned as the nation’s king of
birds bearing the weight of artistic splendor—an emblem of resilience woven into the Filipino spirit.

La Barca de Aqueronte (The Boat of Charon) is the work that firmly cemented
Hidalgo’s legacy. It earned a Gold Medal at the 1887 Exposición General de las
Islas Filipinas in Madrid, followed by another at the 1892 Exposición Internacional de Bellas Artes, also in Madrid. The painting exemplifies his mastery of Neoclassicism, depicting damned souls crossing the River Acheron toward the gates of Hades. In Dreo’s reinterpretation, this powerful imagery becomes a social commentary on the wrath of nature and humanity’s failure to
protect it—further emphasized by tree-like pillars shown deteriorating yet struggling to sprout new leaves.

Victorio Edades, hailed as the Father of Philippine Modernism, stands as a
revolutionary force in the nation’s art history. He broke away from idealized and
romanticized realism, favoring a raw, expressive, and socially grounded style
characterized by bold palettes and unfiltered subjects. His socio-realistic
depictions of everyday life, particularly “The Builders”, continue to resonate across generations as reflections of labor, struggle, and national progress.

Vicente Manansala, also a National Artist and pioneer of Transparent Cubism,
bridged Western modernism with Filipino sensibilities. By layering forms and
light, he rendered urban life and marginalized communities both accessible and poignant. Works such as “Madonna of the Slums and the “Barong-barong Series” transformed themes of poverty into narratives that spoke even to the
elite—elevating social realities into shared national consciousness.

Carlos “Botong” Francisco, with his lyrical compositions and poetic rendering
of human movement, is widely credited for reviving the art of mural painting in the
Philippines. His deep love for history and his horror vacui sensibility—an
aesthetic of richness and fullness—resonated strongly with Filipino visual culture. Through his grand-scale murals, Botong brought art out of private spaces and into the public sphere, making history visible and accessible to the masses. This
democratization of art profoundly influenced Dreo himself, who likewise embraces muralism as a powerful narrative form.

Ang Kiukok’s legacy, meanwhile, is marked by intensely expressive and emotionally charged works that confront the complexities of the human condition—grief, agony, bewilderment, violence, joy, and exaltation. His art, often described as raw, anguished, and hauntingly beautiful, features screaming figures, crucifixions, and rabid dogs rendered in hard-edged geometries, forceful brushstrokes, and bold, uncompromising colors. Kiukok’s timeless resonance lies in his ability to expose human vulnerability with brutal honesty, transforming pain into enduring visual power. He painted most of these during the Martial Law era in the Philippines.

Creating New Paths and Moving Forward

The foreground of the composition symbolizes the forefront of societal
change—the enduring role of art and artists as instigators of movements and
transformation. Central to this visual procession is a group of artists led by
Alfredo Esquillo, depicted through their advocacy bike ride “Sikulo at Sikleta +
Tour de Egai,” commemorating social realist Egai Talusan Fernandez and
advancing calls for environmental protection. Alongside them are religious
penitents, suggesting devotion expressed through art—or art itself as a form of
faith and sacrifice.
Leading the procession are children carrying gadgets and toys—symbols of a
new generation poised to wield creativity through technology. They embody
resourcefulness, innovation, and the evolving language of expression that will
shape the future. On the right side of the painting, Dreo’s signature
“motherboard” motif reappears, evoking a top-down view of a bustling city and
reinforcing the idea of artists as movers of culture, industry, and progress.

Through Sagrado Dos, Norman Dreo does more than honor the Giants of
Philippine art—he weaves their legacies into the living pulse of the present and
projects them boldly into the future. History, nationalism, modernity, technology,
and social consciousness converge in a singular visual symphony. Each figure,
symbol, and structure becomes both memory and momentum.

Dreo reminds us that art is not merely to be admired—it is to be felt, questioned,
carried forward and lived. In this monumental work, the past stands as
foundation, the present as dialogue, and the future as promise. Sagrado Dos
ultimately affirms that the spirit of Filipino artistry is not confined to history—it
continues to rise, evolve, and shape the nation’s soul.

Dreo has once again presented us with another masterpiece. I implore the audience to observe, dissect, and reflect every element in Sagrado Dos so they can find meanings that resonate with them.

ART FAIR PHILIPPINES 2026 X J STUDIOBATO BATO SA LANGITa special exhibit by CARLO TANSECOFor Art Fair 2026, Carlo Tansec...
14/02/2026

ART FAIR PHILIPPINES 2026 X J STUDIO

BATO BATO SA LANGIT
a special exhibit by CARLO TANSECO

For Art Fair 2026, Carlo Tanseco presents a Special Capsule Presentation featuring two works from his Rizal Eyechart series, last exhibited in 2021. Positioned as a direct address to political power, Rizal is no longer treated as a historical monument or untouchable symbol, but as a living moral presence.

He confronts corrupt politicians with a raised middle finger, abandoning reverence in favor of accountability. At the same time, a tear runs down his face. Rage and grief coexist, expressing not only condemnation but deep disappointment in the betrayal of the ideals he once died for.

Upon closer inspection, the tear reveals a faint outline of the map of the Philippines. This subtle detail shifts Rizal’s sorrow from the personal to the national. His grief becomes a cartography of loss, suggesting that what he mourns is not only moral failure, but the condition of the country itself.

The eye chart format is central to the work. Traditionally a tool for testing vision, it is transformed into a test of responsibility. The nation is no longer blind. What is being examined is not awareness, but accountability.

The deeper question the works raise is more unsettling—now that we see it clearly, are we willing to accept the truth of it, confront it, and refuse to normalize it?

The letters embedded in the chart spell out clear moral statements in Filipino:

“Tanggihan ang tukso, pananamantala at kasakiman”
(Reject temptation, exploitation, and greed)
and

“Ang kapalit ng inalay ngayon, bayang nilustay.”
(What was once sacrificed for is now a nation wasted)

These function not as poetic commentary, but as direct indictments, reminding leadership that Rizal’s sacrifice was not symbolic, but ethical.

Tanseco’s use of language carries a precise ingenuity. On first reading, the viewer is deliberately led to form insults aimed at corrupt officials.

Before meaning stabilizes, language briefly collapses into confrontation. Suppressed anger surfaces instinctively, and the act of reading becomes participatory rather than passive.

Through this interplay of image, text, and reaction, Tanseco transforms Rizal into an active conscience rather than a commemorative figure. The tear carries national grief; the gesture carries refusal and demand. Together, they insist that Rizal’s legacy is not to be admired quietly, but to be answered in the present.

ART FAIR PHILIPPINES 2026 × J STUDIOIBANG LABELa solo exhibition by CARLO TANSECOIbang Label continues Carlo Tanseco’s e...
14/02/2026

ART FAIR PHILIPPINES 2026 × J STUDIO

IBANG LABEL
a solo exhibition by CARLO TANSECO

Ibang Label continues Carlo Tanseco’s exploration of everyday objects, language, and cultural habit through an intuitive yet disciplined practice. Following the attention surrounding Sari Sari Sabi Sabi, the exhibition situates his work within a trajectory that values clarity, wit, and sensitivity to meaning. While his last exhibit, The Anthropometric Man marked a shift in form and approach, the core of his practice remains intact. Ibang Label operates as a continuation that refines and extends his visual and conceptual language.

In a contemporary context often marked by repetition, Tanseco’s exhibitions remain notably fresh. Each presentation brings a sense of anticipation, introducing new ideas while sustaining a coherent and evolvingartistic voice.

The works transform familiar objects into sites of reflection and play. Bottles of ordinary sauces, enlarged intosculptural form, draw from the artist’s personal routines and turn private habit into shared experience through humor and afirmation. This engagement with food culture is extended by the reappearance of the famed spiced ham, referencing his earlier Delata Series and linking the exhibition to a broader continuum of his practice.

Pencils and paint cans are similarly reimagined. Tools and materials associated with making are shifted inscale and context, allowing language, form, and surface to become active elements. Together, these works invite viewers to slow down, read closely, and find meaning in what is usually overlooked.

In Ibang Label, Tanseco presents a body of work that is accessible yet rigorous, personal yet open—afirming his continued ability to find clarity, humor, and resonance in the ordinary.

Thank you for joining us at Art Fair Philippines 2026! ✨💙We’re truly grateful to everyone who came by to celebrate creat...
14/02/2026

Thank you for joining us at Art Fair Philippines 2026! ✨💙

We’re truly grateful to everyone who came by to celebrate creativity, connection, and community.

Congratulations to all our participating artists for sharing your vision, passion, and incredible talent—you made this year’s fair unforgettable.

We loved being part of it and celebrating with all of you. See you at the next one! 🎨💙

Photos credit to : Dindo Guttierez

Address

2241 Chino Roces Avenue
Makati
1200

Opening Hours

Tuesday 12pm - 7pm
Wednesday 12pm - 7pm
Thursday 12pm - 7pm
Friday 12pm - 7pm
Saturday 12pm - 7pm

Telephone

+639355376399

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