In 1981, the Filipino artist and curator Raymundo Albano adopted the phrase ‘suddenly turning visible’ to describe the rapid transformation of Manila’s urban landscape. The visibility that Albano was evoking was an aspirational one as the Philippines, along with much of Southeast Asia, had embarked on their most ambitious infrastructural projects so far. The driving force was the logic of developmentalism—a desire for rapid economic growth, in which art had a critical role.



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