How do we converse without words? Micat Po’s watercolour art encourages a wordless dialogue with our own subconscious, nature, and one another.
Through her abstractionism, Micat Po channels the energy of a world often overlooked—the rhythms of nature, the wounds of history and the spiritual connections that run beneath the surface of daily life. A painter whose art has become a window into the subconscious, she quietly transforms the way we see the world around us, and perhaps, ourselves.
Her path to art wasn’t a straight line. Born and raised in the Philippines, Micat spent years as a marine ecologist before art came calling again—this time with an urgency that couldn’t be ignored. “I was in Hawaii, feeling lost,” she says, “and the first thing I painted after a seven-year hiatus was water.” The ocean, it seemed, was coaxing her back to the canvas, and from that moment, Micat’s relationship with art became less about observation and more about emotion, spirit and energy.
Today, Micat’s work is deeply personal, but it also speaks to universal themes—nature, the feminine experience and the human capacity to heal and transform. Her process begins with a spark of intuition: whether a fleeting thought, a song lyric or a dream. “I’m a channel,” she says. “The energy comes from other realms, through my body and onto the paper.” Each piece she creates reflects that flow, an alchemy of feeling transformed into colour and form.
The fluidity of watercolour fits her ethos perfectly. “I never know what a piece will look like until it’s done,” she says. It’s this unpredictability that makes her art so arresting—colours bleed into each other, and shapes emerge and dissolve, leaving space for the viewer to find their own meaning. Her piece Infinite Sun, for instance, was inspired by a song of the same name by Kula Shaker. In it, abstract forms stretch toward an unseen horizon, suggesting both the rising sun and an eternal, cosmic dance.
Furthermore, she thinks we still live under an oppressive system that rewards greed and power. Women are still disadvantaged, which has trickled down from generations of patriarchy. “My work is a desire to transform and transcend our current reality.”
Yet despite the weight of her themes, there’s a lightness to her art. The shapes and colours may hint at heavy concepts, but they invite you in rather than confront you. This accessibility is intentional. “Abstract forms are intriguing because they’re not concrete,” she says. “They evoke feelings and memories without telling you what to think.” Micat’s art encourages a conversation—a gentle, meditative one—with our subconscious, with nature and with each other.