The Freeman

“Unang Mugna”

- By Yasunari Ramon Suarez Taguchi

Artworks by a new crop of Cebuano talents headlined Portrait Artists Society of the Philippine­s Inc.’s (PASPI) featured show for the month of June.

Titled “Unang Mugna” and displayed at the Rizal Memorial Library and Museum, the exhibit was more than a debut show for the organizati­on’s new roster of members and affiliates, as its curatorial leanings also symbolized new strides which the group aims to take moving onward – steps that adhere to tradition without turning away from contempora­ry convention­s.

Like PASPI exhibits of the past, landscapes and renderings of everyday life in Cebu dominated the show’s

What made “Unang Mugna” different from past PASPI exhibits was that it presented modernistt­hemed artworks next to figurative renderings – a positionin­g which drew the spotlight on the intricacie­s that encompass surrealist, suprematis­t and neoexpress­ionist works.

Guided by the detailrich techniques that are characteri­stic of portraitur­e and figurative styles, the show’s non-representa­tional works framed a different side to the organizati­on’s creative partiality, grooving how unbounded artists who paint from real life can be.

Like athletes who spend most of their time walking with ankle weights, “Unang Mugna’s” exhibiting talents showed what they can do without “training equipment” – towards narratives and tableaus that captivate their creative sights and visions.

In a way, the show harped on one of the creative field’s age-old rule of thumb –that “an artist has to know all the rules first so he’ll know which ones to break to reach his creative goals.”

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