There are classes in life that no classroom can hold, lessons not even the most brilliant professors can teach. These are the things we learn in the streets when we walk, in experiencing life outside when we put ourselves out there, when we open up to the risk and the warmth of love, kindness. The world, in all its unpredictability, is a teacher more persistent than school, teaching us through doing, through living, through the daily act of facing what each day brings. In this kind of education, there are no textbooks, only moments: fleeting, vivid, sometimes harsh, hopefully often tender. These moments shape us, sharpen us, remind us of what it means to be alive. That life is for the living.
Filipino artist Ryan Rubio has long believed this truth. “Sometimes everyday life is better than school,” he says — not dismissing education, but pointing to the richness of experience outside its walls. It is in the living — the observing, the falling and rising again — that we discover meaning. And it is in the small acts of presence that Rubio finds his inspiration. From the mundane to the monumental, each day carries within it an opportunity to learn, to notice, to create. Even in his other exhibitions, this has always been his central theme. He is most comfortable telling stories about everyday life because he knows, with certainty, that they are true.
In Life Is for the Living, Rubio invites us to slow down and rediscover the beauty hidden in life’s most ordinary moments. His sculptures, crafted from stone and stainless steel, speak to both fragility and permanence — a balance between the transient and the enduring. The choice of materials recalls the Arte Povera movement, where artists transformed humble, everyday matter into profound meditations on human experience. Rubio, too, works with the familiar and the unpretentious, allowing stone and steel to carry the weight of memory, resilience, and the quotidian’s quiet poetry.
Rubio’s works are not polished to perfection. They are touched by the world, bearing textures and marks that tell time. In his hands, these materials are not stripped of their stories. Instead, those histories are brought forward, becoming part of the work’s character. Stone holds the earth’s memory, an ancient witness to the passing of centuries. Steel, in its strength and malleability, carries the imprint of human industry, of cities built, rebuilt. Together, they form a conversation between nature and human effort, permanence and impermanence.
Although he now works primarily in sculpture, Rubio began his artistic journey as a painter. The discipline and sensibility of painting remain embedded in his process. He approaches three-dimensional form with a painter’s eye for composition, balance, and gesture. This mindset allows him to experiment freely with materials, embracing the unexpected. “If I make a mistake, then that’s how it is,” he says. For him, imperfection is not a flaw but evidence of the work’s life.
Much like the Arte Povera artists of the late 1960s who broke down boundaries between art and life, Rubio resists the preciousness of traditional art-making. His sculptures feel accessible, as though they could belong in the spaces we inhabit every day. Yet they also carry an intimacy that makes us pause. It is in this tension — between the everyday and the elevated — that Rubio’s work lives.
For him, Life Is for the Living is more than a title; it is a personal philosophy. “Living is not simply the act of existing,” he explains, “but the choice to be present, to feel deeply, and to connect with the world around us. We are here not just to exist, but to live truly.” The exhibition is also a paalala (reminder) and pasasalamat (gratitude) — a way of telling himself, and others, to treasure life. Waking up each day is, for him, reason enough to appreciate the gift of being alive.
This philosophy is rooted in Rubio’s own story. Born in Paracale, Camarines Norte in 1982, he grew up in a place where the rhythms of daily life were tied to the land and community. He began drawing in elementary school, joining poster-making contests and exploring his creativity long before he imagined art as a career. That early curiosity eventually led him to study Fine Arts at the Technological University of the Philippines, majoring in Advertising. Yet, even as he developed technical skills and formal knowledge, his most enduring lessons came from outside the studio.
“Araw-araw na experience natin — positive man o negative — doon tayo natututo,” he says. “Sa totoo lang, ’yun talaga ang nagtuturo sa atin ng kahulugan ng totoong buhay.” Every day, whether filled with joy or difficulty, offers something to learn. This belief runs like a current beneath his work, where the traces of life’s roughness are not erased, but embraced.
In Life Is for the Living, the works are both personal and universal. They speak to anyone who has felt the quiet satisfaction of getting through a day and waking up the next morning grateful. “Even in the hardest moments, there is beauty to be seen,” Rubio says, “and every day is another chance to keep going.” The stone and steel embody this endurance as materials that can withstand pressure, yet still reveal moments of grace.
As viewers, we are invited not only to see but to feel and imagine the weight of the stone, the coldness of the steel, the time etched in their surfaces. We are reminded that art, like life, is a tactile, embodied experience. It cannot be fully grasped at a distance; it must be lived with, and encountered.
Through Life Is for the Living, Rubio offers both a mirror and a reminder: that the ordinary holds extraordinary depth, that small daily gestures are meaningful, and that waking each morning is an act worth honoring. His sculptures stand as objects of reflection, rooted in the knowledge that life, in all its fleeting, imperfect moments, is always worth living.
— Liz Bautista
