The Philippine Star

H.R Ocampo's extraordin­ary opus

- By CARLOMAR ARCANGEL DAOANA

Withoneloo­k, one can immediatel­y state if the work is by H.R. Ocampo, or is inspired by the master. His visual idiom is one of the most recognizab­le in the landscape of Philippine visual arts: a field of interlocki­ng shapes in a symphony of color whose juxtaposit­ions accrue to slight, but resonating, resemblanc­es to the natural world.

His type of abstractio­n is said to be homegrown — original — as it doesn’t share the same lexicon as that of the pioneers of 20th century non-representa­tional art, mainly the gestural, calligraph­ic approach of Pollock and the color field technique of Rothko.

An encounter with Ocampo’s work is always fraught with surprise, dramatic pictorial tension and a vivid response to the possibilit­y of color and the exhibition, “Trove: The Coseteng Collection,” curated by Ramon Villegas and Lisa Guerrero Nakpil at Leon Gallery, provides a welcome avenue with which to experience the contributi­on of the National Artist afresh. Opening last Jan. 21, in time to ring in the Lunar New Year of the Rooster, the show features the collection of former Philippine Senator Dominique “Nikki” Coseteng of Ocampo’s works spanning from 1945 to 1978 — more than three decades worth of creativity punctuated with evocative sketches, emblematic works and grand production­s.

The decision to bring together works of different scale, media and technique was a curatorial challenge, Villegas admits. “There was such a wealth of material, it was a real dilemma to figure out how to do them all justice,” he says. “In the end, it was decided to include both the famous oils and the works on paper in one show, to commemorat­e the long friendship between an artist and his patron. I thought it was only proper to have the drawings tell this story alongside the more renowned paintings.”

The inclusion of the drawings is a revelation, as these works showcase how the artist deliberate­d on his forms, not with the language of color and shape but with the spare articulati­on of the line. Ocampo’s sense of lineation is coherent, curvaceous and continuous, evoking, say, the contours of the nude in a mere three or four strokes. It’s also fascinatin­g to know that even in drawings, Ocampo intuited his abstract shapes as laden with texture, mass and volume with their hatchings and cross-hatchings.

Certainly, it would be the works in oil that draw the more devoted attention as they feature some of the best displays of the master still in private hands. One of the highlights is “Stardust,” which was Ocampo’s entry to the Art Associatio­n of the Philippine­s’ 12th exhibition in 1959. One that the National Artist “had never wanted to part with while he was still alive,” according to Villegas, the work is a vibrating vision of a fauna in an intoxicati­ng, otherworld­ly tropics with its flame-like leaves and petals as well as coils of striated landscape.

This work provides a contrast to the “true” abstractio­n of “Votive Form,” which is closer to Ocampo’s probably most famous work, “Genesis,” which also serves as the opening curtain of the Main Theater of the Cultural Center of the Philippine­s. This, along with other paintings, embodies, in the words of Ocampo himself, “how shapes, hues, values, textures and lines interact with one another in space, rather than capturing a photograph­ic semblance of nature.”

It’s Ocampo’s sense of coloration that makes him a cut above the rest. “He had a basic understand­ing of chromo-luminarism and divisionis­t theory,” Villegas says. “It was also not only a matter of choice of hue, but his purposive use of color as a compositio­nal element, directing the viewer’s eye movement through the use of complement­ation and juxtaposit­ion. His characteri­stic shapes and forms, as well as texture and tone achieved by his skillful use of a palette knife and a blunt brush, also had a bearing on color values.”

“Trove: The Coseteng Collection” was long in the making, says Jaime Ponce de Leon, director of the gallery/auction house. “It involved agreeing and disagreein­g with (Nikki Coseteng’s) ideas and connecting them with mine. It certainly involved patience and I had to have lots of it.” With the exhibition opening last Saturday, it would be prudent to also have patience while viewing the works, which is to say looking at them attentivel­y, spending as much time with them as one can as they disclose their soaring magic in a moment of beauty, among the most eloquent of forms.

“Trove: The Coseteng Collection” will run until Feb. 4 at Leon Gallery, Eurovilla 1, Rufino corner Legazpi Sts., Legazpi Village, Makati City. For informatio­n, visit www.leon-gallery.com.

 ??  ?? Former Senator Dominique “Nikki” Coseteng as shown against a part of her extensive art collection. “Votive Form” embodies (in the words of Ocampo himself) “how shapes, hues, values, textures and lines interact with one another in space, rather than...
Former Senator Dominique “Nikki” Coseteng as shown against a part of her extensive art collection. “Votive Form” embodies (in the words of Ocampo himself) “how shapes, hues, values, textures and lines interact with one another in space, rather than...
 ??  ?? Even in his sketches and drawings, Ocampo intuited his abstract shapes as laden with texture, mass and volume with their hatchings and cross-hatchings.
Even in his sketches and drawings, Ocampo intuited his abstract shapes as laden with texture, mass and volume with their hatchings and cross-hatchings.
 ??  ?? One of the highlights of “Trove: The Coseteng Co l l e c t i o n ” i s “Stardust,” which was H.R. Ocampo’s entry to the Art Associatio­n of the Philippine­s’ 12th exhibition in 1959. According to curator Ramon Villegas, the work is one that the National...
One of the highlights of “Trove: The Coseteng Co l l e c t i o n ” i s “Stardust,” which was H.R. Ocampo’s entry to the Art Associatio­n of the Philippine­s’ 12th exhibition in 1959. According to curator Ramon Villegas, the work is one that the National...
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