"Stephanie Syjuco: Rogue States", 6 September - 29 December 2019, Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis. Image courtesy CAM.
"Stephanie Syjuco: Rogue States", 6 September - 29 December 2019, Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis. Image courtesy CAM.

Stephanie Syjuco’s Rogue States at Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis

The exhibition features new and recent work by the Filipino-born conceptual artist.

Born in Manila, in the Philippines in 1974 and now based in Oakland, California where she grew up, Stephanie Syjuco explores the complexities of concepts like citizenship, immigration and nationality. Using a wide range of media, including installation, photography, sculpture and textiles, she links history to present-day political narratives, especially in connection to image-making, the distortions of empire and the impact of colonialism. Her current exhibition at Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis (CAM) “Stephanie Syjuco: Rogue States” takes its title from her 2018 work Rogue States, which is part of the artist’s ongoing exploration into the power and meaning of flags and banners.

"Stephanie Syjuco: Rogue States", 6 September - 29 December 2019, Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis. Image courtesy CAM.
“Stephanie Syjuco: Rogue States”, 6 September – 29 December 2019, Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis. Image courtesy CAM.
Dodge and Burn (Visible Storage) (detail), in "Stephanie Syjuco: Rogue States", 6 September - 29 December 2019, Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis. Image courtesy CAM.
Dodge and Burn (Visible Storage) (detail), in “Stephanie Syjuco: Rogue States”, 6 September – 29 December 2019, Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis. Image courtesy CAM.

The show presents different bodies of work that continue on her ongoing concerns, as CAM writes in the exhibition guide:

Syjuco is especially interested in mining archives, and exposing institutionalized histories as narratives constructed and in uenced by those in power. The artist draws attention to America’s history of cultural “othering” and rendering certain populations invisible, even as she attempts to present alternative stories of marginalized communities.

"Stephanie Syjuco: Rogue States", 6 September - 29 December 2019, Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis. Image courtesy CAM.
“Stephanie Syjuco: Rogue States”, 6 September – 29 December 2019, Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis. Image courtesy CAM.

The installation Rogue States comprises 22 flags hanging in the musem’s performance space. The artist recreated flags designed for Hollywood and European films depicting real and fictionalised enemy nations through a Western perspective. With this work, Syjuco draws attention to the flag as symbol of nationhood and national identity, and their inherent complexities. The flags are representative of fictitious nations – “rogue states” – from Africa, the Middle East, Asia, Eastern Europe, and Central and South America, which are seen in the films as backward, terrorist and unstable. The installation sees the flags arranged in rows, in a United Nations-style display of unity – and “collective anxiety”.

Dodge and Burn (Visible Storage) (detail), in "Stephanie Syjuco: Rogue States", 6 September - 29 December 2019, Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis. Image courtesy CAM.
Dodge and Burn (Visible Storage) (detail), in “Stephanie Syjuco: Rogue States”, 6 September – 29 December 2019, Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis. Image courtesy CAM.
"Stephanie Syjuco: Rogue States", 6 September - 29 December 2019, Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis. Image courtesy CAM.
“Stephanie Syjuco: Rogue States”, 6 September – 29 December 2019, Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis. Image courtesy CAM.

To the Person Sitting in Darkness is part of the same ongoing investigation into the meaning and power of flags and banners to which Rogue States belongs. Nationhood, national identity and a country’s claim over territory are all inscribed in a flag. This work – a flag installed in the museum’s courtyard – represents the latter, by reproducing Mark Twain’s original design idea as published in a 1901 essay for the North American Review, reprinted as a pamphlet by the Anti-Imperialist League. On the flag that was never made, Twain wrote:

And as for a flag for the Philippine Province, it is easily managed. We can have a special one—our states do it: We can just have our usual flag, with the white stripes painted black and the stars replaced by the skull and crossbones.

Block Out the Sun, in "Stephanie Syjuco: Rogue States", 6 September - 29 December 2019, Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis. Image courtesy CAM.
Block out the Sun (2019), in “Stephanie Syjuco: Rogue States”, 6 September – 29 December 2019, Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis. Image courtesy CAM.

In her oeuvre, Syjuco displays a particular interest in researching and investigating the relationship between America and the Philippines, and the colonial attitudes and records of these links. In preparation for her solo exhibition at CAM, the artist took part in a two-week residency in St. Louis in Summer 2019, during which she researched local archives looking for information on the 1904 World’s Fair, and particularly about the Filipino Village, one of the living exhibits in the exposition.

The images she found have become part of her photographic intervention work Block out the Sun, which aims to question the power of photography and its ability to capture a moment in time that may contribute to the creation of long-lasting historical, political and social narratives. As CAM writes in the guide, “Block out the Sun attempts to deny the medium its ability to perpetuate racist narratives by literally blocking a view of the subjects of the photographs.” The Filipino inhabitants of the living exhibit are thus blocked out of the image by Syjuco’s own hands. In an attempt to block a colonial view of the Filipino identity, her intervention in the images substitutes a living Filipino identity for another, somehow perpetuating the unavoidable view of ‘the other’ that dominates in the West.

Cargo Cults, in "Stephanie Syjuco: Rogue States", 6 September - 29 December 2019, Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis. Image courtesy CAM.
Cargo Cults (2016), in “Stephanie Syjuco: Rogue States”, 6 September – 29 December 2019, Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis. Image courtesy CAM.

Syjuco again physically places herself in her work in Cargo Cults, in which she depicts herself in photographic portrait as a foreign and exotic ‘other’, wearing clothes and accessories purchased from American shopping malls. These garments are ordinary, mainstreet ones with tribal or “primitive” designs. Her idea for this body of work was born out of studying historical ethnographic photos from the Philippines, which were captured through a colonial lens, thus influenced by the dominant culture that created them. Syjuco’s photographs express her own search for an identity – having been born in the Philippines and raised in the Bay area – which she has “based on a collage of visuals and influences, each telling me what I am ‘supposed’ to culturally be”. Her work denies an easy interpretation of the image, by adding as a backdrop the intensely patterned “dazzle camouflage” employed by WWI British battleships to confuse enemy aim.

Neutral Orchids, in "Stephanie Syjuco: Rogue States", 6 September - 29 December 2019, Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis. Image courtesy CAM.
Neutral Orchids, in “Stephanie Syjuco: Rogue States”, 6 September – 29 December 2019, Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis. Image courtesy CAM.
Neutral Calibration (Ornament + Crime) and Dodge and Burn (Visible Storage) , in "Stephanie Syjuco: Rogue States", 6 September - 29 December 2019, Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis. Image courtesy CAM.
Neutral Calibration (Ornament + Crime) and Dodge and Burn (Visible Storage), in “Stephanie Syjuco: Rogue States”, 6 September – 29 December 2019, Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis. Image courtesy CAM.

Two installations – Neutral Calibration (Ornament + Crime) and Dodge and Burn (Visible Storage) – transform her perspectives and coded narratives of empire and colonialism so far seen in her photographic work into 3D experiences. Presented like stage sets, the installations are arranged as contemporary “still lifes” containing hundreds of images and objects, many of which are taken from stock photos and Google Image searches. Dodge and Burn (Visible Storage) features two of her hand-sewn garments: an early 20th-century American gown in chroma-key green, and a Baro’t Saya – a traditional Filipino dress – made from Photoshop transparency checkerboard pattern. Both patterns serve as generic placeholders for photo or video editing, and the female garments call attention to how the female is equated to nationhood. Through this work, Syjuco addresses the notion of how controlling narratives continue to dominate despite historical and technological advances, and how past perspectives are still dominant today, making certain populations invisible.

Transparency Filter (Portrait of N), from the series "CITIZENS", in "Stephanie Syjuco: Rogue States", 6 September - 29 December 2019, Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis. Image courtesy CAM.
Transparency Filter (Portrait of N) (2017), from the series “CITIZENS”, in “Stephanie Syjuco: Rogue States”, 6 September – 29 December 2019, Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis. Image courtesy CAM.

The Photoshop transparency pattern is also used in her work Total Transparency Filter (Portrait of N), which represents her latest interest in the analysis of what it means to be American. The series of works “CITIZENS”, to which this portrait belongs, is made in direct response to the current political climate in the US, divided by polarising narratives. The series comprises photographs of immigrants, people of colour, LGBTQ, young women, refugees and undocumented people, all populations at risk from the rise of xenophobia. Portrai of N makes the person behind the veil both visible and invisible, suggesting that different realities and futures are possible to construct, but only after careful examination of “the complicated and contradictory stories about how we reached this perilous present, and why”.

C. A. Xuân Mai Ardia

“Stephanie Syjuco: Rogue States” is on view from 6 September to 29 December 2019 at Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis, USA.

About ASIA

ASIA | Art Spectacle International Asia is an independent online magazine covering contemporary art from Asia-Pacific to the Middle East.

Founder and Editor C. A. Xuân Mai Ardia is a Vietnamese-Italian from Padova, Italy. She currently resides near Venice, Italy, but she has lived around the world for more than 20 years. London was her home throughout university and her first forays in the art world and gallery work, until she moved to Shanghai in 2006 where she worked for Pearl Lam Galleries (then Contrasts Gallery) until 2009.  She has lived between Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, and Padova, Italy in 2009-2016, where she worked at Galerie Qyunh, Craig Thomas Gallery and contributed to Art Radar.

Mai holds a BA in Chinese | History of Art and Archaeology and an MA in Chinese Studies from the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London, UK, as well as an MSc in Development Studies | Conservation of Cultural Heritage from the School of Development, Innovation and Change (SDIC), University of Bologna, Italy. She has worked in the conservation of world cultural heritage in Rome and in contemporary art galleries in London, Shanghai and Ho Chi Minh City. Her articles have been published in Art Review Asia, Art Radar, The Culture Trip and CoBo Social.

Mai joined the Art Radar team as Copy Editor in May 2013, and became Staff Writer in November of the same year. Continuing to contribute her writing to Art Radar, she took up the role of Managing Editor from November 2015 to December 2018, when Art Radar ceased publication.

To continue on and contribute to the dissemination of contemporary art ideas and practices from Asia, Mai founded ASIA in Spring 2019.

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