Goldie Poblador 





Why are you so angry?

They made Medusa a monster. Poseidon, Athena, Perseus. Raped, mutated, beheaded. Medusa was once an Athenian priestess.
But after Poseidon assaults her in her place of work and worship, it is not the male god that is punished but the female mortal. Athena turns Medusa into a terrifying Gorgon with serpentine hair and a petrifying look. But all the monster does is return one’s gaze.


In The Rise of Medusa, Goldie Poblador constructs an immersive exhibition that mourns the Verde Island Passage’s irreparable ecological devastation, caused by 2023 oil spills. For this iteration at Olfactory Art Keller, Poblador creates new wall-bound sculptures based on rare manuscripts from the seventeenth to nineteenth-centuries that catalogue coral and sea dwelling invertebrates. The exhibition will be completely dark, with visitors invited to use flashlights that activate the bioluminescent sculptures and navigate through the space. With the additional sensorial elements of smell and sound, Poblador invites the viewer to the seafloor where they might trace the marine environment’s ecological stages as it recovers from the oil spill. With this reparative journey, Poblador finds a familiar trajectory of healing. She imagines Medusa as the monstrous feminine emerging from the wreckage – a symbol of female loss, rage, resilience, and prosperity. Artist and perfumer M Dougherty creates three scents – Oil Slick, Dead Coral, and Verde – that accompany three sound sculptures by sound artist and composer Ben Richter.

The Rise of Medusa is the third stage of Poblador’s Sea Anomaly series that began in 2023 and has been shown in New York, Singapore, and the Philippines. This body of work emerged from a residency at the Oakspring Garden Foundation, during which the artist encountered a rare book that paired botanic illustrations with hopeful poetry. This coupling relates the natural world to a sense of optimism that the artist also finds in her family histories: Poblador’s paternal grandfather was a folk poet who made similar connections with the earth. Poblador contemplates the passing of knowledge between physical and oral mediums as they coalesce in her delicate sculptures that are an extension of the work Poblador began at the Corning Museum of Glass. There Poblador studied the museum’s extensive collection of Leopold and Rudolf Blaschka invertebrate specimens. The Blaschkas were a father and son duo of 19th century jewellers who developed a specific glass-blowing technique to catalogue organic specimens. Poblador’s practice centres on female archetypes such as the maiden, but recently her focus has shifted to the monstrous feminine. In 2013, Poblador was punched in the face in a New York City subway as bystanders failed to help her. In the aftermath, the artist fell into what she describes as the ‘abyss’ and grappled with the monstrous side of her that might have always been there: crazy, angry, ugly. In The Monstrous Feminine, Barbara Creed argues that female monsters in film reflect societal fears about women. Medusa’s petrifying regard, then, is like a mirror of patriarchy’s own anxiety about itself. Building on Hélène Cixous’s “The Laugh of the Medusa,” Poblador envisions herself, Magwayen, and women as resilient and complex beings, laughing in the face of it all.

Text by Marv Recinto
Advised by Andreas Keller Erwin Romulo
Special thanks to OSGF residency and library team
Apa Agbayani
Joseph Sousa
Napoleon and Gizela Poblador

A performance by Goldie, featuring Ben Richter and M Dougherty took place on July 17,2025 at 7:30 pm.


top photo by JL Javier, 2024 
bottom photo by
Anna Frumenti, 2021

Goldie Poblador is a visual artist who merges glass sculpture, performance, and video into multi-sensory installations that address themes of climate change and the emancipation of the female body.



Artist Biography


Goldie Poblador is a Filipina visual artist who creates multi-sensory installations that merge glass scent, sound and performance that address themes of ecology and decolonization as it relates to the emancipation of the female body.

Her work has been exhibited and performed internationally at such institutions as Artpace, The Corning Museum of Glass, Urban Glass, 601Artspace, The Knockdown Center, Saudi National Museum, The Rubin Museum,  Singapore Art Museum, Bangkok Art and Culture Center, Fine Art Museum of Hanoi, Lopez Memorial Museum, Art Fair Philippines, Metropolitan Museum of Manila, The National Museum of the Filipino People and The Cultural Center of the Philippines.

She is the first Filipino artist to be acquired by the Corning Museum of Glass. She has received grants from the Foundation of Contemporary Arts, the University of the Philippines, the Puffin Foundation and a President’s Scholarship from the Rhode Island School of Design. She has completed residencies at Artpace, the Corning Museum of Glass, Oakspring Garden Foundation, MASS MoCa, and the Cité International des Arts. She received her BFA in Studio Arts from the University of the Philippines in 2009. In 2015, she obtained her MFA in Glass at the Rhode Island School of Design.








 








                                                                                                                                                                          
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