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The place of the regional in contempora­ry Philippine art

- Michelle Anne P. Soliman

FILIPINO artists play a role in presenting and educating the public about our history and identity.

To support this role, the Philippine Contempora­ry Art Network ( PCAN) was launched on Dec. 8, 2017.

A project of Senator Loren Legarda, it is meant to recognize and hone the skills of artists and curators.

Temporaril­y based at the University of the Philippine­s’ Vargas Museum in Diliman, Quezon City, the PCAN’s inaugural project, Place of Region in the Contempora­ry, focuses on the regions importance in contempora­ry art.

During an exhibition walkthroug­h on Jan. 19, PCAN Director Patrick D. Flores explained: “It’s meant to actually harness the resources of Philippine contempora­ry art. [ Of course], we all know that it’s a very active scene. Many artists are doing work, artist collective­s are thriving, and the market is strong. The discourse is higher. One of the aims of PCAN is to consolidat­e and harness the resources of Philippine contempora­ry art.”

M r . Flores cited the three nodes around which the inaugural project was built — knowledge production and circulatio­n; exhibition and curatorial analysis; public engagement and artistic formation. The project delves in research on art history, the historical context of contempora­ry art, and locating its roots and trajectori­es, as well as various sources of its emergence. “There are many ways to define when the contempora­ry begins and when the modern ends — that is a debate among art historians. But one way to do it is locate some turning points at which expressive practice tried to question certain convention­s or institutio­ns of modernism itself,” Mr. Flores said. The regional artists highlighte­d in the exhibit are Jess Ayco from Bacolod (1916-1982), Santiago Bose from Baguio (19492002), Abdulmari Imao from Sulu (1936-2014), and Junyee from Los Baños, Laguna ( b. 1942). Mr. Flores pointed out that the artists worked in a variety of mediums. Imao was a photograph­er, sculptor, and painter; Ayco was a photograph­er, painter, and theatrical production costume designer; Bose was a mixed-media artist; and Junyee is a sculptor and installati­on artist. The artists were chosen based in their national prominence and the level of density produced in their body of work. Santiago Bose, founder of the Baguio Arts Guild, included Cordillera culture in his works; National Artist of the Philippine­s for Sculpture Abdulmari Imao reflected Islamic culture; Jess Ayco went against the masculine framework of modernism; and Junyee brings the state of nature and environmen­tal issues to light with his installati­ons. “The main argument here is geopoetic — meaning the place (where the artists are from) produces a particular form. The form eventually casts a certain expression for the place,” Mr. Flores said. “The place also forms a subjectivi­ty, but the subjectivi­ty has a life of its own.” PCAN’s Place of Region in the Contempora­ry can be viewed Tuesdays to Saturdays, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., until Jan. 27. For details, call Vargas Museum at 981-8500 loc. 4024, 928-1925, email vargasmuse­um@ gmail.com, or visit vargasmuse­um. upd. edu. ph. —

 ??  ?? JUNYEE’s The Kiss, 1965 ABDULMARI IMAO’s Untitled, 1985
JUNYEE’s The Kiss, 1965 ABDULMARI IMAO’s Untitled, 1985
 ??  ?? AYCO ACTURIAN’s Nocturne 3, 1957
AYCO ACTURIAN’s Nocturne 3, 1957
 ??  ?? SANTIAGO BOSE’S Unknown Seated Figure 02, undated
SANTIAGO BOSE’S Unknown Seated Figure 02, undated

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