Philippine Daily Inquirer

Woodsculpt­ure exhibit proves why Iloilo art scene is vibrant

3 artists turn salvaged wood into searing commentari­es

- By Thelma Sioson San Juan @ThelmaSSan­Juan

The arts scene is bustling not only in Metro Manila, but also apparently in the Visayas, in Iloilo specifical­ly, where we visited two weekends ago for the inaugurati­on of Megaworld’s Festive Walk Mall in the Iloilo Business Park, Iloilo City.

Not only is the Ilonggo arts scene alive—there’s an art event almost every day, we were told —it also exudes a vibrancy and freshness that a heating-up, commercial­ized art scene of Metro Manila could be losing.

On an impulse we accepted the invitation of leading artist Rock Drilon to attend the opening of “Salvage,” a three-man exhibit at gallery i in Calle Real, our first time in that old part of town.

After having been part of the artist generation that helped shape modern Philippine art in the ’80s and ’90s—the group influenced by National Artist dean Jose Joya and which included Nestor Vinluan, Lito Carating, Benjie Cabangis—Drilon has returned to his roots, Iloilo, where he’s become active not only in the arts but also in movements to advance Ilonggo heritage preservati­on and protect the environmen­t.

“Salvage,” which opened June 29 and will run until July 24, showcases the wood art of Jeanroll Ejar, Jun Orland E. Espinosa and Tyrone Dave Espinosa—young (pardon us for using youth as a

defining adjective, but that’s a fact) artists who have been known to work with salvaged wood and discards, both as material and potent, complex symbol.

They’re used to working with wood, Ejar particular­ly in his family’s furniture shop, and transformi­ng it into a powerful, yet whimsical, angst-filled statement of their—our—daily realities.

From debris to collectibl­es

In the exhibit literature, Martin Genodepa, an academicia­n from the University of the Philippine­s and the curator of the new Iloilo Museum of Contempora­ry Art, noted how the three have been known to salvage debris and turn it into collectibl­es.

But more important, he explained how in today’s Philippine society, “salvage” has departed from its original meaning of “rescue” and “save” to come to mean to eradicate or exterminat­e. The society has grown used to the sightings of dead bodies in forsaken places.

The three artists use salvaged wood to convey their searing commentary of the times—powerful yet not depressing, somewhat social and political yet not clichéd, whimsical, witty and fresh. Given such layers of expression­s, the wood sculptures, in this writer’s eyes at least, come out beautiful, not trite.

Ejar’s miniature chairs made from salvaged wood, one solid piece each, say what he thinks and feels about things that have come to intrigue, if not burden and define, society. The sculpture draws you in not only by its intricaten­ess but also by its surprising twists.

Among the most striking is a black (23 x 20 x 36 cm) chair with a seat roped in ( chair and rope carved out of one block of Gmelina wood) titled “Ang ’Di Mabuklat-buklat na Aklat.”

Another has its back carved like wings, titled “Nag-aanghelang­helan.” Still another is a misshapen (surreal?) chair titled “Upuang Baliko” in teakwood.

There’s also another titled “Indigenous Throne,” the artist’s paean to indigenous peoples, made of molave, its back a carved weave with black burn marks to symbolize the fate suffered by this marginaliz­ed sector.

Ejar was a recent second prize winner in the Government Service Insurance System (GSIS) Art Competitio­n.

Individual­ity

Mounted on one side of the exhibit hall were the small and large reliefs of Tyrone Espinosa—all made of salvaged wood. Their uniformity of size belies the unique individual­ity of each piece—individual­ly powerful, that is. They’re carved chains—entangled masses that are intriguing to the beholder simply because they show no beginning nor end.

Genodepa explained in the exhibit literature: “Chains are double-edged symbols: bondage and strength. But this early, this unabashed pursuit of an image that borders on frenzy is very telling of the artist’s commitment to his personal, psychic and creative moorings.”

The visitors that night were drawn to a large relief that opened to reveal more chains, spikes and other elements of torture, if not suffering. It was titled “Kaloob-looban sa Loobin (Innermost Thoughts).”

Orland Espinosa’s sculptures of wood planks mounted on the walls, from afar, seem like random compositio­ns of shapes and textures. Upon closer look, however, the viewer gets overwhelme­d by what, in fact, they are: collages of heads or parts of faces evoking sounds. The viewer readily sees the screams, without hearing them.

Genodepa wrote, ‘They are not pretty to look at, but they are potent because his compositio­ns are like vague sounds that are stuck between a scream and a whimper or a shriek and a groan, leaving the viewer disturbed or dazed.” Disturbed perhaps. But they could make beautiful complexiti­es on one’s wall. The biggest work, Espinosa told us, in fact, doesn’t represent angst or suffering, but his homage to all those who have mentored his art—like voices he continues to heed. It’s titled “Perception of Insanity.”

We were so impressed with this Iloilo exhibit; it’s fresh, and the jaded in us is tempted to say, pure.

Genodepa put it well: “Jeanroll Ejar, Tyrone and Orland Espinosa have not only salvaged materials for art’s sake; they have endeavored to salvage sculpture by thwarting the crass and the commercial.”

 ??  ?? “Ang ’Di Mabuklatbu­klat na Aklat,” by Jeanroll Ejar, in one solid piece of Gmelina wood
“Ang ’Di Mabuklatbu­klat na Aklat,” by Jeanroll Ejar, in one solid piece of Gmelina wood
 ?? –PHOTOS FROM GALLERY I ?? “Karima-rimarim na mga Saloobin,” by Tyrone Dave Espinosa
–PHOTOS FROM GALLERY I “Karima-rimarim na mga Saloobin,” by Tyrone Dave Espinosa
 ?? –PHOTOS BY JAMSTA. ROSA ?? “Perception of Insanity,” by Jun Orland Espinosa Jun Orland Espinosa
–PHOTOS BY JAMSTA. ROSA “Perception of Insanity,” by Jun Orland Espinosa Jun Orland Espinosa
 ??  ?? Tyrone Espinosa before his wood sculpture of masses of chain
Tyrone Espinosa before his wood sculpture of masses of chain
 ??  ?? Jeanroll Ejar Rock Drilon (far left) with the artists
Jeanroll Ejar Rock Drilon (far left) with the artists
 ??  ?? “Salvage” exhibit at gallery i
“Salvage” exhibit at gallery i
 ?? by Jeanroll Ejar ?? “Nag-aanghel-angelan,”
by Jeanroll Ejar “Nag-aanghel-angelan,”
 ??  ??
 ?? –GALLERY I ?? “Upuang Baliko,” by Jeanroll Ejar
–GALLERY I “Upuang Baliko,” by Jeanroll Ejar

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