A sequel to last year’s Road to Santiago, A Flash and a Clap features the latest collaboration of artists Jonathan Ching and Anna Varona. “I have always known Anna for her experimentation with materials,” says Ching. A Flash and a Clap is a play on lightning and thunder. “The idea came up when I called up Anna and asked her what she is currently up to. She said she has been making sculptural pieces of human heads. Then, I thought I wanted to try to paint sound, as it is ephemeral, until it looped over and over inside one’s head, hence, the idea for the two-person show.”
Posts Tagged: oil painting + object
22
Sep 11
And They Say The Stars Are Worlds
Richard Koh Fine Art, in collaboration with Finale Art File, presents recent works by Philippine visual artist Jonathan Ching in a one-man exhibition entitled And They Say the Stars Are Worlds. The show will be on view at RKFA Singapore from October 12 to 25, 2011.
Th exhibition presents recent paintings exploring the concept of parallel worlds: other realities undeciphered or undiscovered in our own immersion with the immediate and the present. Ching offers viewers paintings that engage both memory and possibility: open ended stories and representations of the everyday, rendered unfamiliar and strangely surreal.
Appropriating its title from a quotation from Thomas Hardy’s classic novel, Tess of the D’Urbervilles, the works in the show utilize images from familiar and alien locations, art works of the past and present, and everyday objects. Ching intentionally builds upon layers and layers of visual references—from Hokusai’s woodblock prints to Gericault’s oil paintings to Philippe Halsman’s underwater photography, for instance—and combines these disparate influences and images into singular works, sometimes splicing together different visual elements into a seemingly unified sequence. Ching also incorporates in his paintings bronze and copper pieces cast from found objects–seahorses and foliage, for instance—as markers of meaning. Ching’s works, though seemingly disparate in subject matter, are unified in their tangible sense of desolation and enchantment, inviting the viewer to venture further into their parallel worlds.
Manila-based artist Jonathan Ching is among the members of the defunct arts collective Surrounded by Water, which sucessfully established an alternative artist-run space from 1998 to 2004. He obtained degrees in Civil Engineering from De La Salle University and Fine Arts from the University of the Philippines in Diliman.
22
Sep 11
Grace is Found Between the Saddle and the Ground
Grace Is Found Between the Saddle and the Ground
Jonathan Ching lassoes a portion of the cowboy’s rugged and mythic life as immortalized by the Marlboro Man. Titled after an Irish proverb, Grace Is Found Between Saddle and the Ground depicts a weathered leather saddle, the only evidence of a phantom rider and an equally phantom horse, floating through the American West’s big sky and billowing fields. Screwed to the bottom of the canvas, a rattlesnake made from a sheet of hammered copper slithers through the underbrush.
20
Feb 11
Accidents Repeated in Geography and Time

An exhibition on how history, fate and free will repeatedly alters one’s life journey and influences one generation after another.
Jonathan Ching presents a suite of oval-shaped canvases featuring objects that relate to the past. The painting depict isolated forms in a dense mixture of oil and clay, evoking a sense of mystery and nostalgia.
26
Nov 10
Silver Dream Machine
On view at Finale Gallery from November 25 to 27, 2010 as part of the fund raising auction for Chabet 50 exhibitions in 2011.
“Silver Dream Machine” comes from a reference to Abelardo Morrel’s photographs of rooms transformed in camera obscura and projects what is outside from its interiors. Ching’s painting alters this photographic allusion with the image of Jones Bridge and an aluminum cast toy train, consequently juxtaposing Morrel’s Havana room with the image of an inverted Jone’s Bridge. These elements come together to direct our thoughts on the Philippines’ and Cuba’s shared history of Spanish colonization and contrasts the dark tones with the artist’s homage to hope.
text by Siddharta Perez
13
Aug 10
Road to Santiago
Artists Jonathan Ching and Anna Varona go on a visual journey together in Road to Santiago. The exhibit is on view at West Gallery beginning August 17 through September 11.
Notes Varona, “We arrived at the concept of the show spontaneously. We were talking about visuals that interested us, and we found a common thread: buses, trucks, shoes, legs, things that have been abandoned or forgotten…” The decision to collaborate on a show came easily: “It was a good idea because we both were at a crossroads in our lives: Jonathan with his career as an artist, and I being torn between being a representative of women’s advocates in the province.”
Ching, who brought up the idea to join artistic forces in Road to Santiago, thinks his and Anna’s works will jive as they go through personal journeys as artists and individuals.
11
Jun 10
Where in the World is Botero’s Leg
Where in the World is Botero’s Leg
Jonathan Ching
Finale Art File
9 July – 2 August 2010
20
Mar 10
These Are Days
“These Are Days” on Wednesday, February 17 from 5PM until 8PM. blanc peninsula manila is located at The Peninsula Manila G/F Shops 8 and 9 Ayala Avenue cor Makati Avenue, Makati City.
The exhibition will run until March 12, 2010.
These Are Days” featured the works of
- Allan Balisi
- Andres Barrioquinto
- Jonathan Ching
- Mariano Ching
- Melvin Culaba
- Eugene Jarque
- Geraldine Javier
- Lao Lianben
- Lynyrd Paras
- Arturo Sanchez
- Yasmin Sison
- Mac Valdezco
- Ronald Ventura








