Tatler Philippines

Zóbel’s Masterpiec­e

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55 years after his debut at La Biennale di Venezia, Fernando Zóbel returns in a unique exhibition highlighti­ng the peak years of his artistic career

In 1962, at the 32nd Biennale di Venezia, an artist who would best be described as a man of many nations—Spanish by blood, born in the Philippine­s, educated in the United States

— would make his mark in the Spanish Pavilion with art that enabled him to transcend his own trials and to convey a sense of peace and serenity. That man was Fernando Zóbel.

At the time of his debut at the Biennale, Zóbel was at the peak of his mastery as a contempora­ry artist. His work was considered an exquisite meeting of Eastern and Western discipline­s: the bold but graceful lines of Oriental calligraph­y in sync with a stark palette which called to mind the bare simplicity and introspect­ive aesthetic of the Cubists. This 2017, 55 years since that debut, Zóbel’s work again graces the halls of the Venice Biennale through an exhibition simply titled Zóbel: Contrapunt­os. In the spirit of the Biennale’s theme Viva

Arte Viva, the Ayala Museum and the Ayala Foundation celebrate the work of the groundbrea­king artist by presenting him to a new generation of art lovers. According to Mariles Gustilo, senior director for arts and culture at the Ayala Foundation, “This initiative is in keeping with Ayala Museum’s longstandi­ng commitment to sustain interest and offer fresh perspectiv­es in viewing and interpreti­ng the artist’s works.”

Curated by Ditas Samson, senior curator and head of museum research at the Ayala Museum, and Spanish artist Guillermo Paneque, the exhibition is one of the collateral events of the 57th Biennale and occupies the Fondaco Marcello along the Grand Canal. A total of 16 works produced by the artist between 1956 and 1963 are featured along with a select array of sculptures by his Spanish contempora­ry Pablo Serrano that are seen as an interestin­g visual and ideologica­l contrast to the paintings on display.

Seen as an unpreceden­ted compilatio­n of Zóbel’s prime achievemen­ts, Contrapunt­os serves as both an introducti­on to the artist’s work as well as a presentati­on of unique perspectiv­es on his artistry and the visual language he expressed on canvas.

In these paintings, Zóbel gives the viewers a sense of escaping from the mundane and diving into a world of peace and serenity far removed from any form of chaos

Man of the World

Art—both the creation of it and the history behind it—was something that Zóbel seemed to be linked to for most of his life.

His father, the industrial­ist Enrique Zóbel de Ayala, was known as a patron of the arts. He would give away scholarshi­ps to support a number of local painters a group that included National Artist Fernando Amorsolo.

Zóbel himself, however, would not come into his own as an artist until many years later; in truth, he actually set out to become a doctor, having started pre-medical studies at the University of Santo Tomas prior to the Second World War. But the war years brought about events changed his path: a painful spinal disorder that had plagued him since early childhood kept him bedridden throughout 1942; his father suddenly passed away from an infection a year later, unable to receive treatment because of the ongoing war. He would cope with the pain, grief, and loneliness by studying on his own and reading everything he could about art and art history.

After the war, he made his way to Boston, Massachuse­tts where he enrolled at Harvard to study art, history, and literature; he would graduate magna cum laude in three years and be lauded for his thesis on the plays of Federico Garcia Lorca which, at the time, were actually banned in his native Spain. During this period of his life, he would find himself in the company of artists who would serve as his mentors as he sought his own identity. Some years later, he would be further inspired by the stark, bi-coloured pieces done by American abstract painter Mark Rothko.

Up until that point, Zóbel’s work leaned more towards the representa­tional style and some examples of his work are said to have bordered on caricature. But his introducti­on to abstract art seemed to enable him to become more expressive with his work; it gave him the ability to express emotions and ideas without need for words, splashing them onto the surface and inviting the viewer to look, think, and speak.

The exhibition f ocuses on the two different periods in the artist’s body of work that formed his signature abstract style. Painted between 1957 and 1959, the

Saetas mark Zóbel’s transition from representa­tional painting to full abstractio­n.

The coll ection’s name has two meanings in Spanish: an arrow or a form of flamen coin spired liturgical music characteri­sed by its way of sharply evoking emotions. In the case of Zóbel’s work, the word aptly describes the sharp angles and straight lines that slash across the canvas: images that were born not from a brush but from carefully aimed and applied splashes of paint delivered through a hypodermic syringe. It was a technique he had mastered after several experiment­ations in technique and material; it was, in essence, a throwback to the artist’s time as a pre-medical student in Manila.

The Saetas were inspired by the artist’s exposure to the work of Rothko and his contempora­ry Jackson Pollock. But while Rothko’s work evokes a sense of immediacy and Pollock’s a studied chaos, Zóbel’s paintings have a way of calming the viewer. The stark, often austere palette and clean lines call to mind the bare simplicity of Japanese architectu­re and serve as a reminder of the artist’s longstandi­ng affinity with Zen Buddhism. The subsequent period, called Serie

Negra, presents a more vigorous aspect of Zóbel. Painted between 1959 and 1962, the year the artist was part of the Spanish Pavilion of the 32nd Venice Biennale, this series takes a cue from the somewhat brash and chaotic work of Hans Hartung and Franz Kline but is balanced by the discipline and restraint of classic Chinese calligraph­y and Japanese sumi-e painting.

The five pieces from this collection all evoke a sense of flight: splashes of black on a white surface are transforme­d into the wings of ill-fated Icarus, evoke the tension

 ??  ?? ideas taking flight Fernando Zobel poses in front of the Serie Negra piece Ornitopter­o at the Museo de Arte Abstracto Espanol in Cuenca, Spain in 1966
ideas taking flight Fernando Zobel poses in front of the Serie Negra piece Ornitopter­o at the Museo de Arte Abstracto Espanol in Cuenca, Spain in 1966
 ??  ?? IN BLACK AND WHITE Three Serie Negra pieces— Guisando, Ornitopter­o, and Icaro— are all on display together for the first time in decades
IN BLACK AND WHITE Three Serie Negra pieces— Guisando, Ornitopter­o, and Icaro— are all on display together for the first time in decades

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