Philippine Daily Inquirer

Thai artist mounts impressive exhibit in Manila

- By Constantin­o C. Tejero FINE ART AND AYALA MUSEUM

@Inq_Lifestyle

Local art-lovers are blest to be given a chance to see a number of major works by Natee Utarit, the 47-yearold Thai artist described by Asia Society Museum director Boon Hui Tan as “one of the most conceptual­ly rich and technicall­y sophistica­ted painters currently working in Southeast Asia.”

Utarit’s traveling exhibit “The Altarpiece­s” has made its first stop in the country before it heads to Indonesia and Singapore. The 12 large-scale artworks in oil on canvas can be viewed on the ground-floor gallery of Ayala Museum in Makati City until April 9.

This is part of the series “Optimism Is Ridiculous” that Utarit started in 2012. For its surface similarity to Christian art and its critique of the art market, nothing could be apter than its run through the Lenten season and its opening last month timed with Art Fair Philippine­s.

The altarpiece cycle, started three years ago, is his recent developmen­t in narrative painting. It takes on the format of the religious art found in Christian churches, from color tonality to elaborate framing.

In surrealist compositio­n using the technique of photoreal- ism, the artist conveys Eastern philosophy through the pictorial idiom of Western art, ranging particular­ly from the Low Renaissanc­e to the Baroque.

The viewer is struck by the artworks’ scale (mural-size), and overwhelme­d by the complexity of compositio­n and symbolism. Each piece is a busy canvas, crammed with human figures, objects, vanitas, heraldic banners, vegetal and animal forms—almost Boschian in their superabund­ance.

False gods

Utarit is best known for his work “questionin­g the nature of images, particular­ly photograph­s, through the medium of painting.” This is a basic characteri­stic of postmodern­ist selfreflex­ivity.

Also, after the critical and commercial acclaim of his previous works, he has grown ambivalent toward the nature of art such that he started making some scalding commentary on the contempora­ry art world. This is illustrate­d in a few early altarpiece­s like “The Private Expectatio­n of God and the Common Reason of Investment.”

In these, Tan says, the artist has “mined the long complex history, idiom and visual tropes of Western European allegorica­l painting as a way to critique the predatory intrusions of the art market into the region—particular­ly the reduction of art and artists to commoditie­s and the paradoxica­l elevation of them to false gods.”

In the triptych “Nescientia,” the three panels are dominated by the central figures of the Apollo Belvedere (modified), the Wise and Compassion­ate Buddha (vivisected), and the Crucified Christ (crucifix)— three ideals of art and religion. But what seem like the faithful genuflecti­ng are revealed to be frenzied bidders at an auction, worshippin­g the commercial­ization of art as the new religion.

Perverted world

Two triptychs have titles rooted in the postwar philosophy of existentia­lism: “Theatre of the Absurd” and “L’enfer, C’est les Autres.”

The first depicts the nihilism of contempora­ry society—“our rejection of faith in today’s perverted world,” says the artist. When we abandon the ideals of science, art and religion, life no longer has any meaning or purpose.

The second, taking its title “Hell Is Other People” from Sartre’s play “No Exit,” portrays a world forsaken by God.

Utarit offers “my interpreta­tion of the world and its various beliefs that appear in the Western world from my own personal Asian perspectiv­e... These paintings represent a view of God, the world around us, and contempora­ry events, filtered through my own Buddhist beliefs.”

Naturally it results in imagery that verges between Asian and European. Postmodern­ism is here vividly manifest, replete with visual puns and mash-ups of Western and Eastern iconograph­ies.

The symbolism may seem recondite at first, but when studied close enough, a rich harvest can be gleaned. It is art like this that makes Tan declare Utarit as “one of the most learned and subtle painters working in Asia today.”

And, we may add: His are the all-seeing eyes, an encompassi­ng vision of the human condition (always a requiremen­t for great art).

Because suffering and evil, injustice, crisis and death are not unique to certain communitie­s, or specific to certain religions or cultures, but common to all humanity—rich and poor, Christian, Buddhist, atheist or pagan.

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 ??  ?? “The Annunciati­on’’: Epiphany of the Wise and Compassion­ate Buddha as he opens earth, heaven and hell to reveal the reality of existence. Note the Christian images surroundin­g him.
“The Annunciati­on’’: Epiphany of the Wise and Compassion­ate Buddha as he opens earth, heaven and hell to reveal the reality of existence. Note the Christian images surroundin­g him.
 ??  ?? “Passage to the Song of Truth and Absolute Equality”: Christian concept of “memento mori” in the Danse Macabre. Note the Asiatic faces, Ayutthaya landscape, and Roman inscriptio­n denoting the Five Truths of the Buddha.
“Passage to the Song of Truth and Absolute Equality”: Christian concept of “memento mori” in the Danse Macabre. Note the Asiatic faces, Ayutthaya landscape, and Roman inscriptio­n denoting the Five Truths of the Buddha.
 ?? —PHOTOS COURTESYOF RICHARD KOH ?? “Nescientia”: The ideals of art and religion in a world gone wrong
—PHOTOS COURTESYOF RICHARD KOH “Nescientia”: The ideals of art and religion in a world gone wrong

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