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2009 Notable Exhibits Includes Deleted Scenes Group Show

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For more information about the Deleted Scenes exhibit, please visit LINK1LINK2. My art statement for this group show can also be found at LINK.

 

 

(Image grabbed from spot.ph)

 

Most notable art events of 2009

By Lito B. Zulueta, Philippine Daily Inquirer 

 The year showcases both established and emergent art, the old and the new—a fitting summing up to the first decade of the new century, a decade of transitions

THE FIRST important art event of 2009 is “Juan Senson: 19th Century Master of Angono,” which mainly consists of works from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas collection. The works show the strong suits of the great artist: a mastery of landscape and pictorial composition. Despite the patina of age, the works are ageless.

Betsy Westendorp comeback show at Mandarin Oriental-Gateway (March)

Unassumingly titled “Reflections,” the return exhibit of the venerable artist is as unassuming as the artist herself. Although Westendorp became a famous artist for the portraits of the elite of the Philippines and Spain in the 1960’s, she’s particularly noted for her landscapes, a genre to which her “reflective” style is particularly suited. The following month, she teams up with her daughter, Carmen Westendorp-Brias, for a delightful mother-and-daughter exhibit.

Neal Oshima’s ‘Play’ at Silverlens (April-May 2009)

The great photographer takes his cue from the games played by his 10-year-old son and employs a very ancient (and archaic) photographic process, the photogram on hand-coated paper, mixing and coating light-sensitive emulsions onto “artisanal papers” to create works that embody, in both form and content, the exhibit’s title and theme. Playful of Neal, indeed.

Roberto Chabet’s ‘10,000 Paintings I Must Paint Before I Die’ at Mag:net Katipunan (April-May 2009)

The father of Filipino Conceptual Art and the mentor to at least a generation of UP Fine Arts students, for better or for worse, returns to his architectural roots (no, he did not take up Fine Arts but Architecture—in UST), and comes up with an intriguing exhibit that’s part installation, part interior design, part architecture, part psychological test, and part—but of course—conceptual: canvases painted in primary colors attached onto clipboards and arranged like a grid that cover the entire walls of the gallery. Don’t bother to count if they number 10,000 exactly because that would be literal, not conceptual, reading. But if art is in the cv material, then shouldn’t the approach be at least literal, not conceptual—or would that make the art immaterial? Whatever. Chabet is a master of the intriguing thought.

Fernando Modesto’s ‘Galaxies, Earth, St. Marys and Second Heaven’ at Hiraya (June)

“One of the country’s most prolific and critically acclaimed contemporary artists” (says writer Ige Ramos) returns to depict again his eclectic cosmology, mixing Christianity, Eastern mysticism, and environmental pantheism in a show that confounds as well as pleases, with its pantheon of deities and angels, its constellation of highly infectious colors.

Julian Schnabel at National Museum and Manila Contemporary (June)

Southeast Asian regional art impressario Valentine Willie brings the Singapore show of top American contemporary artist-filmmaker Julian Schnabel to Manila (the Singapore show took place in the summer). The Museum show consists of Schnabel’s recent large-scale multimedia paintings (mainly ink on polyester). At the Manila Contemporary are his exciting prints. The works in both shows, according to Ige Ramos, are “cinematic.”

Romulo Olazo’s “A 40-Year Retrospective” at Ayala Museum (June-September)

Mounted in collaboration with Azool and Paseo Gallery in time for Olazo’s 75th birthday, the retrospective exhibit reaffirms Olazo’s formidable position in the history of Philippine art. It consists of 113 paintings, prints and what the artist calls “paperwork,” in mediums ranging from oil and acrylic on canvas and board, to Chinese ink, oil pastel and watercolor on paper, and plain dyed paper pulp. These have been culled from around 15,000 catalogued artworks. The centerpiece is the “Diaphanous” series, large-scale works of utter translucence and color genius. The series shows that despite his age, Olazo’s art has taken on superhuman quality.

Dudley Diaz retrospective at UP Vargas Museum (August)

Because he started in the art world at a precocious young age, it seems that Dudley Diaz has been in the art world for forever. His 40-year retrospective exhibit, mounted by Duemila Gallery, affords his collectors and admirers the chance to survey his achievements and locate the leitmotifs that comprise the “Dudley Diaz design planet.” The logic that governs his sculptures is spirituality, from his raids of Philippine folklore and mythology to his explorations of Christian themes. All themes are united by Diaz’s restless art, embodying the restlessness of the soul that seeks repose in the godhead.

Toti Cerda’s ‘Forever Young’ at SM Art Center (August)

Mounted by Genesis Gallery, the exhibit consists of large canvases depicting children at various states of delight while playing under the rain, their gossamer wetness captured by Cerda’s genius in watercolor or acrylic. Cerda has always been best when depicting children at play, and he reinforces this strength again in this show through art that’s never childish.

Soler’s ‘Stream: Works on Paper’ at Alliance Francaise (September)

Soler Santos returns to exhibiting with this series featuring several new mixed-media pieces in acrylic, pencil, ink and collage, an experiment in layering depths and textures. Done in mainly black, white and ochre colors, the depictions mimic water on stone, like a flowing stream. The result is poetic and engaging.

National Artists Nick Joaquin and Ang Kiukok become fashion brands (October)

Fashion house Freeway comes out with its National Artist Collectors’ Series, featuring the words of Nick Joaquin and the images of Ang Kiukok on its apparel and accessories. The series mainstreams the important works of the National Artists. Now it’s hip to wear Nick Joaquin or Ang Kiukok.

‘Deleted Scenes’ at Lopez Museum (November up to Jan. 9, 2010)

As its contribution to the annual multi-museum exhibit “Zero-In,” the Lopez Museum mounts a multimedia exhibit by various artists—contemporary artist Lyle Buencamino, filmmakers Sari Dalena, Camilla Griggers, and Dada Docot, and social realist Al Manrique—centering around the theme of deletions or “such omissions both in pictorial and literary accounts of national history hinged on modes of representation that museums invariably lay out,” says curator Eileen Legaspi-Ramirez. Buencamino’s large paintings are based on movie stills from LVN Films whose archives are now hosted by Lopez. Dalena and Griggers show a documentary, “Memories of a Forgotten War,” of the latter’s personal recollection of her Filipino grandmother abandoned by her American grandfather. Manrique is represented by a sketchbook with illustrations about American relations during the Marcos regime. All of this constitutes revealing intimate biographies and histories that, however (because of the postmodern rejection of grand narratives, which the Lopez Museum. come to think of it, represents—the grand narrative, not the rejection), may hardly cohere into anything whole, comprehensible, or useful. Because of its own suspicion of fact and fiction, it deletes or effaces itself, a fragmentary approach to a history of fragmentation.

Sanso’s early expressionism at Mandarin Oriental (November)

“Sanso: Pioneer of Expressionism” takes art-lovers back to that phase in his career in the late 1940s and early 1950s when he pioneered Expressionism in the Philippines. Among these works are paintings done after World War II when, like many of his generation, the young Sanso carried with him the anguish and deep scars of war. The show is both a retrospective and a reaffirmation of the strength and spirit of Sanso’s prodigious art.

Lor Calma at Ayala Museum (November)

“Architect Lor Calma: Paintings and Sculptures” marks the return to the visual arts of the trailblazing Filipino modern architect and interior designer. A man of modesty and laconic speech, Calma lets his achievement speak for themselves. And what utter anthems to contemporaneity and geometry they are!

Kidlat Tahimik Family at Ricco-Renzo (December)

Typical of the playfulness of the man, Kidlat Tahimik (aka Eric de Guia) calls this exhibit with his spouse and artist-sons, “K-Ayos, K+KKK+K (Organized Chaos), A Family Exhibit.” The exhibit is formidable because it does not alone feature the famous filmmaker--the first Filipino to have won a prize in a major international film festival (the International Critics’ Prize in the 1978 Berlin Film Festival for his “Mababangong Bangungot”)—but his wife, Katrin de Guia, a German scholar-artist, as well as sons Kabunyan, Kawayan and Kidlat, all artists with teenybopper looks and with their respective legions of fans and collectors. The result is nothing short of tumultuous lightning.

50 years of prints at CCP (November-January 2010)

The Philippine Association of Printmakers is marking its 40th anniversary with a 50-year retrospective of Philippine prints, highlighting in particular the career of Manuel Rodriguez Sr., the father of Philippine printmaking. The exhibit does justice to the achievement of the oft-neglected art of printmaking and shows the mastery of Filipinos in the difficult art form.

UST unveils restored work by Locatelli (December)

The University of Santo Tomas through its own restoration clinic has restored a gem from its vast visual arts collection, Italian artist Romualdo Frederico Locatelli’s “Portrait of a Balinese Girl,” painted in the 1940s. Locatelli’s works have been fetching high prices in Sotheby’s auctions of Southeast Asian paintings and the discovery of a Locatelli in the Philippines has stirred the art world. The Locatellis fled Europe during World War II and joined Italian expatriates, notably Francesco Monti, in Manila. Locatelli’s work is just among a host of several priceless works in the UST collection that are being cleaned or restored in the run-up to the Pontifical University turning 400 in 2011 as Asia’s oldest university.

‘War and Dissent: The US in the Philippines (1898-1915)’ at the National Museum (December to March 2010)

Mounted by the Presidio Trust of San Francisco, with the National Museum, Lopez of Balayan, Batangas Foundation, and Fundacion Santiago, this exhibit charts the war between the US and the Philippines from both points of view, with important materials from the Filipino American National Historical Society in the Bay Area. Curated by Randolph Delehanty with Ambeth Ocampo and Purissima Benitez-Johannot, this is a very important exhibit that seeks to resurrect from collective historical amnesia a forgotten war. Call the National Museum for several public programs and lectures related to the exhibit. 

 

Presentation at the Red House, Sofia

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Screening of the documentaries of Dada Docot and discussion

in English and Bulgarian, with interpretation. 

The films are with English and Bulgarian subtitles.

 

Held at the Red House Center for Culture and Debate,

Sofia, Bulgaria. February 1, 2010. For more information, visit

http://www.redhouse-sofia.org/Event.aspx?id=4750 

 

 

Last Updated on Monday, 29 March 2010 01:53
 

Filming the Everyday in Filipino Migration

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Film Screening and Discussion with Dada Docot 
Date:
Monday, 01 February 2010
Time:
18:30 - 21:00
Location:
The Red House - Sofia, Bulgaria
Street:
15 Lyuben Karavelov St.
 
 

 

1 февруари 2010 (понеделник), 18.30ч.

Червена зала

Филмираното всекидневие на Филипинската миграция

Прожекция на документалните филми на Дада Докот и дискусия с авторката за филипинската трудова миграция, глобалните тенденции, азиатската миграция в България и българката тема там.

През 2008 година Статистическият Алманах за миграция и развитие на Филипините отбелязва, че филипинските мигранти са рапръснати в 239 страни и теротирии. В последните три десетилетия паричните потоци по официалните банкови канали минават 120 милиарда долара. Зад голата статистика, обаче, остава сложната история на битките, мечтите и мотивациите на филипинските мигранти. Дада Докот /изследовател по културна антропология и филммейкър/ представя своята първа серия от документални филми посветени на международната миграция на филипинците.

Performing Naturalness (3 мин., 2008) е коментар върху въпроса: какво е да си чужденец в Япония.

Sunday (e)Scapes (10 мин., предварителна прожекция, предстоящо излизане 2010) е филм за това как филипинските мигранти,работещи предимно като домашни помощници, превръщат една модна бизнес зона в Хонк Конг в място за „бетонен” пикник.

Baad ng Pauno/Restless (30 mins, 2009), е филм за тревожното очакване на американска виза на майката на Дада Докот.

В дискусията ще участват: Дада Докот, антрополог и филмов автор, доц. д-р Ана Кръстева - ръководител на Центъра за европейски бежански, миграционни и етнически изследвания (CERMES) е създаден през 2003 г. като структура към департамент “Политически науки” на Нов български университет.

Модератор: Ирина Недева (журналист и координатор на програмата „Политически дебати” в Червената къща)

Дискусията ще е на английски и на български език с превод. Филмите са с английски и български субтитри.

Вход: 2/1 лв.

В рамките на проекта на Центъра за култура и дебат с фондация „Америка за България” 

------------------

Filming the Everyday in Filipino Migration

In 2008, the Philippine Migration and Development Statistical Almanac reported that Filipino migrants are scattered across 239 countries and territories. In the last three decades, cash remittances via formal banking channels alone have added up to over US$120 billion. Within these hard statistics, however, lie intricate stories -- of struggles, desires and motivations -- of Filipinos in migration. Interested in looking at these personal stories, filmmaker and researcher Dada Docot presents at The Red House her first batch of documentary films on Filipinos in international migration. To be screened are: Performing Naturalness (3 mins, 2008), a commentary about surveillance of foreigners in Japan; Sunday (e)Scapes (10 mins, preview only, upcoming in 2010), a film about the transformation on Sundays of Hong Kong's business district by Filipino domestic workers into a concrete picnic ground, and; Baad ng Pauno/Restless (30 mins, 2009), a film about her mother's anxious quest for an America visa. An open discussion about global migration of Filipinos, as well as Asian migration to Bulgaria, will also take place. 

Panel: Dr. Anna Krasteva (Migration specialist, New Bulgarian University); Irina Nedeva (Journalist, Bulgarian National Radio, and Red House Programme Manager for Political and Social Debates)

Discussion in English and Bulgarian, with interpretation. 

The films will be shown with English and Bulgarian subtitles.

Admission: 2/1 BGN

 

To confirm attendance or to reserve a ticket, visit:

Red House Online OR

Facebook Event Invite

 

 

Artist Statement for the Group Show at the Lopez Museum

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Statement for BAAD NG PAUNO (Restless)

Exhibited at the “Deleted Scenes,” 
A group show with works by Sari Dalena, Camilla Giggers,
Lyle Buencamino and Al Manrique,  
at the Lopez Memorial Museum, Philippines
from November 20, 2009 to January 9, 2010

 

About three and a half decades ago, my parents migrated from Nabua, Camarines Sur to Cubao – the latter being the most accessible transportation hub for travel between Bicol and Metro Manila – leading the gradual migration to the city of the rest of the family. Later on, when one of my aunts moved to the U.S., the “dream” of my immediate family for upward mobility evolved from running a bamboo furniture and handicrafts business in the Philippines to finding success overseas. Now, my siblings and several of my cousins have left for abroad, while many of my cousins still in the Philippines have opted for more “global professions” that will facilitate international migration. Within this entire story of leaving and dreaming to leave the country, there are many smaller, yet defining, stories of hope and struggle. Baad ng Pauno seeks to document the intricate details of two important days on which my mother pursues her own “American Dream.” 

 

The idea of “Deleted Scenes” for this film, like any other work, may allude to both the literal and the figurative. The latter perhaps refers to the understanding of the film as portraying only one of the thousands of yet untold small stories of Filipino international migration – of “America” as experienced by Filipinos hoping to temporarily leave for reasons of leisure and/or reunion with their loved ones. The figurative may also pertain to the experiences of those who are not bothered with the concepts tied with the idea of migration that are much bigger and more complex than their dream of simply traveling overseas.

 

The literal “deletions,” however, are not any less important and, perhaps, by examining the consciously excluded scenes and the process/es by which deletions are selected, one can find intricate issues that relate to identity performance/construction and to the making of meanings. The final copy of the film is an open book, although, as it usually happens with many other releases, what you get is the edited, the “OK-ed” version. I wanted to produce a film to show not only to the wider audience, but also to my family living in the Philippines and overseas. Upon viewing it, some of the family members cringed at its openness and even  requested for several scenes to be modified, if not completely removed. The editing of the film itself involved the process of sifting through layers of the intimate – some scenes are completely or somewhat acceptable for public viewing, while others had to be tagged for permanent omission from the final cut of the film. As for the actors in the film, they have resolved the dilemma of exposing themselves and their private world to the audience with a simple request – not to show the film at “home” - our hometown. Thus, deletions pertain not only to the actual exclusions, but to the selection of venues where the characters' representations can be consumed. 

 

In the end, the question about the making of meanings and the crafting of representations derived from the process of deleting scenes becomes: how long do you, as audience of this short film turned into a video installation for a particular exhibit, intend to see the film? Would you stay to watch its thirty-minute run? Perhaps after viewing for a few minutes, you will leave the museum, taking home several of its scenes and eventually deleting the rest of the story.

 

- Dada Docot


Last Updated on Tuesday, 24 November 2009 14:58
 

Baad ng Pauno at the Lopez Museum

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Deleted Scenes calls attention to the leavings of image-making and the coupling of sensory elements used to craft narratives of presumed fact and proposed fiction — mimicking its internal mechanisms that play into the core and periphery within its own trove. Featuring works by Lyle Buencamino, Sari Dalena, Camilla Griggers, Dada Docot and Al Manrique, along with pieces from the museum’s own collection, this exhibit can be viewed at the Lopez Memorial Museum from November 12, 2009 to January 9, 2010.

The Lopez Memorial Museum is open from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Mondays to Saturdays.


Venue:  Lopez Memorial Museum, G/F Benpres Building, Exchange Road corner Meralco Avenue, Ortigas Center, Pasig City
Last Updated on Saturday, 07 November 2009 09:17
 
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Performing Naturalness

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Using a roll of an 8mm film, a Filipina documents surveillance in Japan.

Sunday (E)scapes

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On the transformation of HK during Sundays

Hiratsuka

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A film about Filipino Community Life in Japan.

Baad ng Pauno

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A film about my mother.