The Philippine Star

AN ITALIAN ART LOVER AMONG FILIPINO ARTISTS

- By Giorgio Guglielmin­o

SINCE MY ARRIVAL IN MANILA LAST AUGUST AS AMBASSADOR OF Italy, I started exploring art galleries. A passion for contempora­ry art, in fact, is a constant drive in my life and led me to write a few books on what goes on in the contempora­ry art world.

Two main features surprised me in a very positive way. The first one relates to the spaces of some of the art galleries I visited and the second one regarding the level of sales.

Some of the galleries I visited have spaces so well designed and conceptual­ized that they could well be in the Chelsea art district in New York or around Cork Street in London: Finale, Art Informal and Silverlens (with beautiful lightings which – let me say – were installed by an Italian company) are truly first class. But 1335 Mabini, which has recently opened a second exhibition space in Makati, and West Gallery in Quezon City are equally fulfilling to visit.

West Gallery, maybe because it was the first gallery I visited since my arrival, has a special place among my favorites. Their idea of giving at the same time three small adjacent rooms to three very young artists (sometimes at their own first solo show) works very well. There I bought my first works by Filipino artists: one by Manuel Ocampo (possibly the most notorious Filipino contempora­ry artist in Europe) and one by Ayka Go, a truly talented very young girl.

The second feature that impressed me is the level of sales I noticed in each and every gallery. The percentage of sold works in the exhibition­s I visited is impressive and it is a very comfortabl­e sign of the establishm­ent of a varied and increasing­ly large number of collectors.

The above two signs are very encouragin­g for a strong and lasting internal contempora­ry art market which is the essential base for a leap into

the internatio­nal scene. Filipino artists, in fact, to be able to be properly acknowledg­ed and recognized abroad, must be able to rely on a powerful internal support, both from galleries and from collectors.

An equally fundamenta­l step towards the art world comes from the participat­ion of the Philippine­s in the Venice Biennale for visual arts both in 2015 and 2017 (and in Italy we wait for the Philippine pavilion in the forthcomin­g Venice Biennale for architectu­re in 2018 and for their third participat­ion in visual arts in 2019). Much credit for this goes to Sen. Loren Legarda whom I sincerely thank for her passion in arts.

Venice Biennale is still widely recognized as the most prestigiou­s and influentia­l contempora­ry art event in the world. A continuous presence over the years gives not only the possibilit­y to present a number of Filipino artists but most of all gives the idea of a long-term commitment in support of local contempora­ry art.

Who will be the next Filipino artists to be recognized widely in Asia, Europe and the United States? Difficult to say, of course. I would like to think that maybe recently Ateneo awarded Cos Zicarelli, represente­d by Art Informal, could be one of them. But here I am biased, because talented Cos is half Filipino and half Italian… a perfect working mix, I would say.

 ??  ?? Dollhouse by Ayka Go
Dollhouse by Ayka Go
 ??  ?? Untitled by Manuel Ocampon
Untitled by Manuel Ocampon

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