In his solo exhibition The room you carry with you everywhere., August Lyle Espino turns toward an inward space—one that hovers at the threshold where thought begins to take form, where impulse gathers just enough weight to become visible. His abstractions linger in this suspended moment, as if each canvas were a site of interruption. They do not resolve into fixed images but remain in a state of becoming: blobs, tangles, clusters, tentacles, and shifting shapes arresting an idea still unfolding.
Inspiration, for Espino, does not arrive as clarity. It seethes. It distorts. It assumes a presence that is at once generative and unruly—almost diabolical in its refusal to be contained. The works convulse with energies that surge and proliferate, breaking away from any singular compositional logic, as though negotiating their own expansion. Espino meets this energy with a confidence in handling the large-scale.
What, then, is this room we carry? It is neither metaphor alone nor purely psychic terrain, but a lived interiority that permits us to rehearse other lives, to summon memories with a fidelity that feels immediate, to wander through unrealized futures. We, like these paintings, are not bound to the coordinates of the present. Rather, they remain active, circulating within that private yet shared chamber of experience.
At the same time, Espino gestures toward another kind of room: the studio itself. It is here that these works assume their material presence, even as they continue to draw from an interior source. As the artist notes, “the studio and that inner room feel like the same place. One just happens to be visible.” The remark clarifies the relationship between space and making—not as separate domains, but as overlapping conditions that shape the work.
The exhibit makes us contemplate a self that moves through life as if caught in the act of becoming—never quite arriving, never fully grasping the shape one is taking. As thoughts rearrange themselves, identities coalesce only to loosen their grip, and even the most resolute decisions reveal their fragility over time. This condition mirrors these paintings: suspended between inception and resolution, where form is neither entirely found nor entirely lost. The total image, however much one strains toward it, remains always just beyond view. What emerges is a body of work that stays close to the movement of thought itself, drawing us into a space that is already ours, whether we recognize it or not.
Carlomar Arcangel Daoana
