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When Icons Leak: A Civic Aesthetics of Accountability

When Icons Leak: A Civic Aesthetics of Accountability Amiel Gerald A. Roldan™ June 30, 2026   Introduction This essay explores how self-interest and partisan loyalty shape public responses to wrongdoing, and how those dynamics intersect with Philippine art. It argues that art in the Philippines does more than reflect political life: it diagnoses the moral distortions of partisan defense, stages alternative forms of accountability, and cultivates a civic imagination that can resist color-driven loyalties. The analysis moves from historical patterns in Philippine visual and performative practices to a philosophical reading of art as a site where truth, justice, and collective memory are negotiated. --- Philippine Art as Political Archive Philippine art functions as a living archive of social conflict and moral contestation. From folk prints and barrio murals to contemporary installations and performance pieces, artists have long recorded and refracted the tensions of governance, corr...

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Political Self Interest and the Erosion of Accountability