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May 29 September 13

Free
TOP OF PAGE: “Monica & Matoki” Photo: Colin Day

Situated within Fort Mason – a former U.S. Army port of embarkation and key hub for military operations across the Pacific – the work connects this site’s role in projecting American power abroad to the lived consequences of that presence. Rooted in her own familial history – including her paternal family’s migration from the Philippines to escape martial law shaped in part by U.S. geopolitical influence in the region – Canilao brings these global histories into intimate focus.

Working across many mediums, Canilao utilizes fiber, murals, painting, altar work, jewelry, site-specific installation, performance, costuming, set design, printmaking, and illustration as tools to transform the spaces we inhabit. Canilao explores the passage of time, queer and indigenous futures, the imprint of human presence, and embellishing the ordinary as ceremony and necessary. Her practice reflects an ongoing search for a sense of home and a feral desire for human connection within the modern world.

Artist Statement. We need mementos, regalia, and altars to hold our stories and tend to the memories that shape us. In this installation, Canilao creates a series of reliquary altars built from found objects yearning for new purpose. Stacks of crystal dishes – used to feed both family and spirits – elevate and support these structures. These works function as tools of reverence: spirit houses, monuments, and memorial shrines that mark moments and place, serving as vessels for holding and transmuting grief – for everything that came before us, and to help guide us toward becoming future ancestors ourselves.

Artist Statement (continued). In a related series, Canilao utilizes found portraits to rebuild narratives of forgotten lives, interweaving painting, assemblage, beadwork, cloth, and other materials. These works seek to counter the erasure of colonization by restoring individuality and dignity, adorning each subject with regalia that makes their histories visible, and reimagining Indigenous pasts through new mythologies that honor those lost to time.

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