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Poklong Anading’s “deep in the shallows, afloat in the depths” Exhibition at Silverlens Gallery


  • Silverlens New York 505 West 24th Street New York, NY, 10011 United States (map)

Organizer: Silverlens New York

Type/Location: In Person / New York, NY

Description:

In the Silverlens New York Viewing Room, conceptualist Poklong Anading presents deep in the shallows, afloat in the depths (lumalalim sa kababawan, lumulutang sa kalaliman). Marking the artist’s first U.S. solo exhibition, the show features a new sculpture and video installation that reflects on humanity’s impact on marine ecosystems and the possibilities of both damage and renewal. Anading’s exhibition will be on view from May 8 – June 21, 2025.

Here, Anading expands upon a series started during his stay at the Lubi Art Residency in Kopiat Island, Davao de Oro, Philippines. The residency encourages artists to use and upcycle indigenous raw materials found exclusively on the island, which is revered for its biodiversity. Anading was guided by the diving community’s ethos, Every dive is a clean-up dive. He observed not only marine life but debris that drifted through the water. One particular sight startled him: an abandoned fishnet, entangled in coral reefs. He learned that private beach resorts once installed these nets to protect coastal waters from debris. Yet, without proper maintenance, they became “part of the very problem they were designed to prevent,” notes Anading. As they tangled, frayed, and deteriorated over time, their fragments gradually damaged the island’s rich marine biodiversity and delicate reef ecosystems. 

Titled recruit (no. 2), the piece on view at Silverlens New York centers on found ghost nets recovered by Anading and a team of Davao Gulf Divers, led by Master Diver Iñigo Taojo. The artist reimagines the net into a monumental sculpture installed in the heart of the gallery. Reshaped to resemble coral, these once-destructive objects become symbols of regeneration. In this gesture, Anading pointedly echoes Marshall McLuhan’s concept that “the medium is the message”: the nets retain the memory of their past harm while embodying the resilience of the marine life they once imperiled. A video component behind the sculpture documents reef rehabilitation efforts and honors the divers who aided in the net retrieval, underscoring Anading’s belief in the power of collective action in the urgent work of ecological care. The titular ‘recruit’ draws from the term used by divers to describe coral larvae that settle on submerged structures—signaling both natural renewal and the growing scope of the artist’s ongoing project. 

Anading’s work has the possibility to move audiences to a deeper, more nuanced understanding of their relationship with the ocean. He builds on his long-standing fascination with found and discarded objects, and what they reveal about humanity’s connection to the natural world.

About the Artist:

Poklong Anading (b. 1975, Manila, Philippines; lives and works in Manila) works with a wide range of mediums and is acclaimed for his pieces that investigate photography and travel. Fascinated with the process of creation and permutation, Anading explores different mediums to engage with a range of sociopolitical and environmental questions. Having begun his career as a painter, he is not driven by an overt agenda, but prefers to let his mind wander, thinking with and through his materials as they undergo their transformations. He frequently uses found objects and discarded materials that lead him to investigate notions of worth and value, and to explore what it means for art to exist inside and beyond capitalist production.

Anading has completed residencies with Big Sky Mind, Manila, Philippines (2003 to 2004), Common Room, Bandung, Indonesia (2008), Bangkok University Gallery, Thailand (2013), Selasar Sunaryo Art Space, Bandung, Indonesia (2013), Philippine Art Residency Program - Alliance Francaise de Manille in Cite Internationale des Arts, Paris, Centre Intermondes, La Rochelle in France (2014) and das weisse haus, Vienna Austria (2018). He had solo exhibitions in Galerie Zimmermann Kratochwill, Graz, Austria (2010 and 2012), Taro Nasu in Japan and Athr Gallery in Jeddah (2016), 1335MABINI in Manila, Philippines (2013, 2015 and 2017). He has been included in notable group exhibitions such as: Gwangju Biennial, South Korea (2002 and 2012), No Country: Contemporary Art for South and Southeast Asia, the first exhibition of the Guggenheim UBS Map Global Art Initiative in New York, Hong Kong and Singapore (2013 to 2014), 5th Asian Art Biennial: Artist Making Movement, National Taiwan Museum of Fine Arts, Taiwan (2015), The Shadow Never Lies, Minsheng Art Museum, Shanghai, Afterwork, Para Site, Hong Kong, China and in the Architecture Biennale for the 15th International Architecture Exhibition, Philippine Pavilion: Muhon: Traces of an Adolescent City at Palazzo Mora, Venice, Italy (2016), Constellations, Photographs in Dialogue, SFMOMA, California, USA (2021) and Living Pictures: Photography in Southeast Asia at National Gallery Singapore (2022).

Registration:

To attend the event in person, please register here.

 
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