Skip to main content
Exhibition

Animal, Vegetable, nor Mineral: Works by Miljohn Ruperto

Sponsored by
Miljohn Ruperto, What God Hath Wrought (Kairos), from the series The Great Disappointment, in progress. Three animations with VR (color, sound). Courtesy of the artist and Micki Meng Gallery, San Francisco.

Thursday, June 11, 2026

Add to calendar:

Cantor Arts Center, Freidenrich Family Gallery
328 Lomita Drive, Stanford, CA 94305
View map

Event Details:

Animal, Vegetable, nor Mineral is the first large-scale solo museum exhibition of Manila-born, Los Angeles-based artist Miljohn Ruperto (b. 1971). Working across photography, video, animation, generative artificial intelligence, and other mediums, Ruperto explores the ways humans have understood their place in the world. From digitally-created fantastical botanical specimens printed as gelatin silver photographs to immersive apocalyptic landscapes experienced in VR, Ruperto’s artworks highlight the elusiveness of knowledge and unsettle what we think we know about nature.

This exhibition is presented as part of the museum’s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI). It is accompanied by a publication featuring short essays by Ruperto, providing expanded context for the artist’s collaborative practice, and an essay by exhibition curator Maggie Dethloff elucidating the conceptual underpinnings of the artist’s wide-ranging artistic output.

We gratefully acknowledge generous support for Animal, Vegetable, nor Mineral: Works by Miljohn Ruperto provided by the Minami Fund for the Arts and Sue and John Diekman, with additional support provided by Amy Corton and Carl Eibl, and Genie Dethloff. Sustained support generously provided by Megan O'Reilly Lewis and Todd Lewis, The Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art, The Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for Academic Initiatives, The Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fund, and The Phyllis Wattis Program Fund.

IMAGE: Miljohn Ruperto, What God Hath Wrought (Kairos), from the series The Great Disappointment, in progress. Three animations with VR (color, sound). Courtesy of the artist and Micki Meng Gallery, San Francisco.

MUSEUM HOURS
Mon & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM
Thurs: 11 AM–8 PM
Sat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM
CLOSED: Tues and Wed
We’re always free! Come visit us, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit

Location: