Phantom Vessels and Imagined Leverage: A Curatorial Frame on Maritime Diplomacy and Filipino Seafarers
Phantom Vessels and Imagined Leverage: A Curatorial Frame on Maritime Diplomacy and Filipino Seafarers --- Part I: Curatorial Frame 1. The Exhibition of Absence Curatorial writing often begins with the object. Yet here, the object is conspicuously absent. There is no Filipino crude carrier, no Philippine-flagged VLCC slicing through the Strait of Hormuz. What exists instead is a phantom vessel, conjured by the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) in its pronouncements. The irony is palpable: a nation whose maritime identity is deeply tied to seafaring labor, not ownership, suddenly imagines itself as a shipping power. This absence-as-presence is a curatorial gesture. In museums, curators sometimes exhibit empty vitrines to signify loss. The DFA’s statement functions similarly: it exhibits sovereignty through language, even when material sovereignty is missing. The “Filipino vessel” becomes a rhetorical artifact, curated for public reassurance, much like a wall text describing a...
