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Philippine Foreign Policy and Oil Crisis Debate

Philippine Foreign Policy and Oil Crisis Debate Amiel Gerald A. Roldan March 29, 2026 Exhibition Critique The exhibition stages a political parable as if it were a salon of diplomatic tableaux: a room of maps, a room of commodities, a room of portraits, and a final room of empty chairs. At its heart is a single, insistently domestic premise rendered in public language — that leadership, like curatorial choice, determines the provenance of scarcity and the choreography of abundance. The show’s conceit is simple and stubborn: the gasoline crisis is not merely an economic hiccup but a symptom of foreign-policy choreography, and the two principal figures named in the premise function as artists whose brushstrokes are national orientation and alliance. Form and Argument Formally, the exhibition is disciplined and theatrical. Works are arranged to produce a narrative arc: anxiety (maps with red lines), remedy (photographs of ports and pipelines), nostalgia (portraits of past leaders), and fi...

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