IJWBAA [eej-wah] is a Filipino digital artist and the first Filipino recognized in the Techspressionism movement. He is a neologist and the originator of Decolonial Minimalism—an art movement that reclaims minimalism through ancestral memory and cultural reawakening. His works, compiled in two volumes of I Just Wannabe an Artist, have been recognized, officially archived, cataloged, and made available in the collections of the Gallerie degli Uffizi, Museo Reina Sofía, the National Museum of the Philippines, Getty Research Institute, and other prominent cultural institutions worldwide.


Dumagat

Dumagat

Decolonial Minimalism Founding Work - Indigenous People

Size: 1400 x 1400 pixels

Medium: Digital Art

Artist: IJWBAA

Year: 2025

Description:

These two figures, stripped to elemental geometry yet clad in ancestral intricacy, stand as mnemonic vessels within the visual grammar of Decolonial Minimalism. Their circular heads and torsos, rectangular limbs, and chromatic restraint are not simplifications but archival codes—each red accent a chromatic invocation, each geometric contour a distilled memory.

The larger figure’s red skirt, etched with diagonal lines, evokes woven abaca grids, while the red headbands on both figures signal ritual continuity and resistance. The smaller figure’s white necklace punctuates the composition like a spoken syllable—perhaps a lineage marker, perhaps a breath of memory. Their beige skin tones resist caricature, asserting presence without spectacle.

The white horizontal line bisecting the blue field is no mere divider; it’s a horizon of inheritance, a visual axis where past and present co-reside. Beneath them, the implied scaffolding reads as both staff and stake—grounding them in place while hinting at the labor of holding history. Their stillness performs a kind of witnessing, as if bearing memory rather than reenacting it.

This isn’t abstraction for abstraction’s sake. It’s a refusal of excess, a protest against the ornamental violence of colonial aesthetics. IJWBAA Dumagat asks: what if minimalism could speak in tongues? What if restraint could amplify rather than mute?

Here, the indigenous gaze is not romanticized—it is recalibrated. What remains is not absence, but essence. This is reclamation through quiet symbols, a visual infrastructure for radical care and collective legacy.


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IJWBAA. Decolonial Minimalism. Photobook, mm/dd/yyyy, p. #. - coming soon

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