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FMLA @ Art Cube by Julio Jose Austria

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FMLA @ Art Cube by Julio Jose Austria  Amiel Gerald A. Roldan™ March 13, 2026 Julio José Austria’s FMLA stages migration, labor, and bureaucratic intimacy as aesthetic material—a quietly furious meditation that reframes U.S. policy language into a Filipino diasporic poetics. This reading synthesizes Austria’s practice and exhibition history while arguing against a reductive reading that treats FMLA as mere formalism or nostalgia. An essay in many registers Julio José Austria’s work has long trafficked in the dissonances of movement: maps of cities that are also maps of memory, canvases that read like itineraries, installations that feel like pockets of a life in transit. Austria’s biography—born 1979 in the Philippines, based in New York—matters because his art is not autobiography as confession but autobiography as civic ledger. His CV and exhibition record show a sustained engagement with migration and urbanization across Manila, New York, and Europe.  FMLA is provocatively ...

Epstein's Shadow: Secrecy, Scandal, and the Ethics of Naming War

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Epstein's Shadow: Secrecy, Scandal, and the Ethics of Naming War Amiel Gerald A. Roldan™ March 13, 2026 This essay reads the provocative premise—“This war could very well be called the Epstein Coverup War” (Prof. Clarita Carlos)—as a diagnostic metaphor: a claim about secrecy, elite complicity, and narrative displacement that demands both literary attention and forensic skepticism. I treat the phrase as an interpretive lens, not a literal historiographical verdict.  An academic anecdote: how metaphors do the work of inquiry In a seminar I once attended, a senior scholar likened geopolitics to a palimpsest: every new inscription erases but does not wholly obliterate the old. The phrase “Epstein Coverup War” functions similarly—an evocative manuscript that overlays contemporary conflict with the residue of scandal, secrecy, and the moral economy of elites. To call a war by that name is to insist that the politics of concealment are not incidental but constitutive of the conflict’s me...

The Third Place of Taste: Collecting Identity in Metro Art Markets

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The Third Place of Taste: Collecting Identity in Metro Art Markets  Amiel Gerald A. Roldan™ March 12, 2026 An Essay There is a peculiar alchemy that transfigures a slab of canvas, a sheet of paper, a block of bronze into a thing that matters in a city. It is not merely pigment or metal. It is a social contract, a wager on taste, a ritual of recognition. In metro cities—those dense, humming organisms where anonymity and aspiration coexist in uneasy truce—collecting art becomes less an act of acquisition than a choreography of identity. The collector who buys a painting is not simply purchasing an object; they are purchasing a narrative about who they are, who they wish to be, and who they want others to believe they are. This is not a cynical observation. It is humane, because it recognizes that humans are storytelling animals; it is academic, because it can be modeled and historicized; it is esoteric, because the rituals and codes that govern taste are often invisible to those outs...

Retirement in the Philippines

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Retirement in the Philippines Amiel Gerald A. Roldan™ March 11, 2026 There is a peculiar modern melancholy in the sentence: Who doesn't know where their retirement home in the Philippines when they reach 60. It reads like a riddle with a missing clause, a confession half-formed and left to drift in the humid air of a tropical afternoon. The premise that follows—of inherited houses, of being an only child without children, of the temptation to “wing it” with short-term rentals—maps a topology of anxieties that is at once personal and emblematic of larger social currents. This essay treats that topology with equal parts scholarly curiosity and intimate tenderness: it will analyze, narrate, and finally disconfirm the alternative that improvisation is a sufficient strategy for the uncertain geography of later life. --- The Sociology of Unanchored Futures From a sociological vantage, retirement is not merely a temporal marker but a spatial reconfiguration. Where one lives at sixty and b...