Johanz and Jed Mercurio Breathe Life Into Stillness With The Quad Series Part One

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In a world that rarely slows down, where speed and urgency often overshadow stillness, two brothers have found their own rhythm of pause and reflection. Johanz Mercurio and Jed Mercurio, through their exhibition Breathe: The Quad Series Part One opening at Thrive Art Gallery, present not just hundreds of small paintings but also a philosophy, a way of living, and a practice that invites both artist and viewer to step back, inhale deeply, and notice life in its quiet details. For Johanz and Jed, the word “breathe” is not just about the physical act of inhaling and exhaling. It is about granting space to the body, the mind, and the spirit. To breathe is to live and to reset. It is to create room for oneself in a world that leaves little room for stillness. Their exhibition is rooted in this very idea. Each work is a pause, a reminder that slowing down is not only possible but necessary.

The practice began simply. Both brothers started painting on small wooden squares, each measuring four inches by four inches. It was not intended as a grand project but as a daily act, almost like doodling in a notebook. The small scale felt manageable and playful, removing the fear that often comes with facing a large blank canvas. One square led to another and then another, until their living space slowly transformed into a gallery of intimate works.


What started as a routine act became a long-term ritual. Some days the process felt meditative. Other days it required discipline. At times, it was neither, and the act of painting simply became necessary. Regardless of the mood of the day, the brothers showed up. Over time, they discovered that each quad carried its own uniqueness. Each piece held the texture of the day in which it was made. Together, they created not just art, but a diary in color and form.

Working within a four by four space taught the brothers lessons in restraint and invention. In such a confined format, every stroke carried weight. There was no space for excess, only intention. The challenge was not limiting but liberating. They describe it as similar to writing a haiku, where meaning is found not in length but in precision.

As the series grew, certain motifs began to appear again and again. Circles, houses, fragments, and soft gradients of nature became recurring elements. Their father’s work as an architect subtly influenced them, and buildings often appeared alongside trees, people, or abstract patterns. These motifs were not consciously planned, but instead emerged naturally, weaving through the works like recurring thoughts that return over the years.

Creating side by side for years gave Johanz and Jed a new understanding of each other. Their bond as brothers shaped the rhythm of the work. They did not need to explain much, often sensing what the other was trying to do without words. At times their differences became points of contrast, with one leaning toward abstraction while the other gravitated toward more grounded forms. Rather than clashing, these differences became opportunities for growth.


There were moments when one of them would leave a quad unfinished, only for the other to step in and complete it. In those moments the works became conversations. Some pieces echoed each other, while others responded to one another. What emerged was less about mirroring and more about dialogue, a back and forth exchange that deepened their bond both as artists and as brothers.

The impact of this practice reached far beyond the physical act of painting. Emotionally, the quads became journals. Mentally, they provided structure and a way of processing daily life. Spiritually, they created calm and presence. The brothers compare the process to mindfulness, a grounding ritual that allowed them to breathe not only in art but in life.


Viewers are invited into this same space. Standing before hundreds of works, one feels compelled to pause. Each quad invites a moment of stillness, while together they form a collective breath. In that pause, a viewer may feel calm, curios, or inspired to slow down. The feeling is not dictated. The experience belongs entirely to the one standing before the work.

Looking back, the brothers see the collection as a timeline of becoming. Each quad holds a trace of the moment it was made, whether in the choice of color, the weight of a brushstroke, or the openness of form. Some days brought bright and expansive pieces. Other days carried muted tones and heavier strokes. Together, they tell a story of persistence, growth, and self-discovery.


The works are both individual moments and parts of a larger whole. Seen one by one, they are frozen instants. Seen together, they connect like chapters of an unfolding story. They are hundreds of small breaths forming a single, ongoing exhale.

The exhibition Breathe is only the beginning. It is Part One of the Quad Series. Future parts will explore themes such as movement, freedom, and discoveries not yet fully imagined. The brothers see the possibility of thousands of quads in the future. They also envision growth into larger canvases, digital mediums, and even collaborations with other artists.

What remains constant is the idea of pausing to create. Whether on a four-inch square or a wall-sized canvas, the act of breathing through art will remain the heartbeat of their practice.

The message of Breathe extends beyond the gallery walls. It is an invitation to anyone willing to listen. The brothers remind us that stillness is not empty. It is full of life. To pause, to breathe, is to rediscover presence.

For those inspired to create their own rituals of pause, their advice is simple. Begin small. Do not worry about the outcome. Focus instead on the act itself. A sketch, a note, or a few brushstrokes can become the beginning of something meaningful. Over time, these small acts accumulate into a practice that can shift the way one lives.

Through their Quad Series, Johanz and Jed Mercurio offer more than art. They offer a way of seeing and being. Their hundreds of small paintings are not just works on wood. They are breaths, pauses, and moments of presence gathered across years of practice.

In a world that celebrates speed, the Mercurio brothers present something different. They remind us that to live fully is to slow down, to notice, and to breathe.

Noel Galon de Leon
Noel Galon de Leon is a writer and educator at University of the Philippines Visayas, where he teaches in both the Division of Professional Education and U.P. High School in Iloilo. He serves as an Executive Council Member of the National Commission for Culture and the Arts-National Committee on Literary Arts.

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