Mico Escorpeso: Prismatic Fragments

Fresh out of college, Mico Escorpeso is already developing a voice that feels distinct and deeply considered. His mixed media works, often reminiscent of stained glass, translate everyday subjects into striking patterns of color, shape, and shadow. Whether depicting cats, figures, or imagined terrains, Escorpeso approaches each composition with a balance of structure and sensitivity.

YMY: Raw Material, Refined Gesture

Working under the mononym YMY, this artist brings a quiet but compelling presence to abstraction. Her practice is grounded in a material sensitivity that resists excess, drawing attention instead to nuance, tactility, and restraint. Each work is a meditation on balance, where surface and structure merge into contemplative forms.

Manelle Huang: Subtle Structures, Shifting Forms

Manelle Huang’s mixed media works exist between painting and sculpture, built not for illusion but for quiet material presence. Composed on wood with restrained precision, each piece draws attention through softened edges, refined surfaces, and an almost meditative use of space.

Isab Angeles: Where Nature Moves Gently

Isab Angeles paints with a rhythm that feels both fluid and intentional. Her compositions often center on stylized natural forms such as trees, leaves, and hills, interwoven with gestures and patterns that lean toward abstraction. The result is a balance between the recognizable and the instinctive, where familiar elements are reshaped by feeling and flow.

Manuel Gamboa: Scenes in Stillness and Sun

Manuel Gamboa approaches painting as both discipline and discovery. His works unfold through layers of color and gesture, guided by instinct while shaped by thoughtful control. Each piece reflects a rhythm that develops gradually through a series of careful choices and visual intuition.

Jun Rocha: From Rural Scenes to Abstract Terrain

Jun Rocha’s art is rooted in tradition but continues to evolve in form and focus. Known for his depictions of rural life and working communities, he draws from Philippine culture, plein-air techniques, and modernist influences to explore themes of labor, memory, and shared identity.

Juno Galang: Mapping Memory Through Color

Juno Galang’s paintings reflect a deep sense of place, identity, and transformation. Drawing from his life between the Philippines and the United States, his work explores cultural memory through stylized forms, layered textures, and vibrant palettes.

Jao Mapa: A Journey Through Color and Culture

Before gaining recognition for his vivid depictions of Filipino life on canvas, Jao Mapa was a familiar face in Philippine entertainment. He rose to national fame in the early 1990s after appearing in a Pepsi commercial, a breakthrough that led to prominent roles in films like Pare Ko, Hataw Na!, and the long-running TV series Ang Probinsyano.

Between Form and Feeling: The Work of Alfonso Recto

Alfonso Recto’s paintings burst with raw energy, feeling, and emotion. His work explores the boundary between representation and abstraction, using color and movement to convey memory, emotion, and instinct. Influenced by Cubism, Abstract Expressionism, and Surrealism, Recto has developed a distinctive visual language that feels both timeless and modern.

Imperial Expressions: The Art of Hazel Imperial Tan

Hazel Imperial Tan is a self-taught visual artist whose work radiates bold energy and layered emotion. While her personal style gravitates toward black, white, and beige, her canvases are anything but subdued. They pulse with color, texture, and expressive movement.

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2A Lee Gardens,
Shaw Blvd. corner Lee St.
Mandaluyong City
Philippines 1552

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+63917 894 5646
+63908 597 1051

thegallery@imahica.art