Weaving Women's Words on Wounds of War: A Martial Law Exhibit

IMAGE ATENEO ART GALLERY

The Ateneo de Manila Political Science department, with support from the Ateneo Art Gallery, the Asia-Pacific Centre for the Responsibility to Protect, and the Spanish Agency for International Development Cooperation (AECID), is presenting "Weaving Women's Words on Wounds of War," an exhibition of artworks visualizing their experiences during Martial Law under President Ferdinand Marcos Sr. 

More: Katips vs. Maid in Malacañang Is a Battle of Intent vs. Execution

Half a century since, women from Palimbang in Sultan Kudarat; Tabuk and Buscalan in Kalinga; Lake Sebu and Tboli in South Cotabato; Manili in Carmen, Cotabato; Jolo in Sulu; and in the vast home waters of the Sama peoples in Sulu and Tawi-Tawi, have chosen to share intimate and dangerous details of their lives through art.

Photo by Ateneo Art Gallery.

Photo by Ateneo Art Gallery.
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The exhibition introduces the public to the impact of impunity in small Muslim and katutubò communities. Martial Law allowed the government to regard the Philippines’ interior areas as available—with no constraints—to natural resource exploitation. The large-scale projects were articulated as grand national development strategies, which did not recognize the prior stake of small communities living in the areas to be denuded, or flooded, or dug up, or flattened—literally or culturally. 

The women who helped make this exhibition were among those who did not stand aside—who decided to directly participate in armed resistance to state policy inimical to their wellbeing, suffered extraordinary human rights violations, or both.

More: No, Marcos Wasn’t the First To Declare Martial Law in the Philippines

Photo by Ateneo Art Gallery.

Photo by Ateneo Art Gallery.
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Photo by Ateneo Art Gallery.

Curated by Marian Pastor Roces, the exhibit is part of a project titled Surfacing Narratives Towards Transitional Justice in the North and South: Weaving Women’s Voices – A Memory Project, under the Ateneo Political Science department that is supported by the Spanish Agency for International Development Cooperation (AECID).

Apart from the exhibit, the Weaving Project also includes field research in all six areas, publication of a book, and a capacity-building program on transitional justice with a focus on women. Apart from the exhibit team, the project includes Ateneo professors Dr. Ma. Lourdes Veneracion-Rallonza as director and Dr. Meynardo Mendoza as research lead respectively, as well as Robert Francis Garcia as manager and Maricel P. Hilario-Patiño as project officer.

The exhibition will run from August 22 to October 1, 2022. 

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