The Philippine Star

treasure hunting THE ENIGMATIC MISS NENA SAGUIL

- LISA GUERRERO NAKPIL

Not since the days of Juan Luna and Resurrecci­on Hidalgo has a Filipino artist pulled up her stakes, forged boldly towards an unexplored world and thrown everything they had away for the sake of making art abroad — that was the arrival of the enigmatic Miss Nena Saguil in Paris in 1954. For this year ’s edition of Art Fair Philippine­s, León Gallery spotlighte­d 19 of her works, spanning a colorful career at the show titled “Saguil @110” to mark the anniversar­y of her birth.

Serendipit­ously, 70 years after Nena Saguil would arrive in Paris (and after four decades of unstinting devotion to her art), she has finally joined the prestigiou­s valhalla of the Venice Biennale. This month, it announced that Saguil and four other Filipino artists — Anita Magsaysay-Ho, Pacita Abad, Maria Taniguchi and Joshua Serafin — have been given the honor of being featured in the biennial’s over-arching show, the 60th Internatio­nal Art Exhibition.

Venice Biennale curator Adriano Pedrosa revealed the artistic panorama’s title and theme as “Stranieri Ovunque – Foreigners Everywhere.” which is inspired by a series of neon works by French artist collective Claire Fontaine in several languages, including now extinct Indigenous ones.

In an interview, the curator said “it highlights artists who are foreigners, immigrants, expatriate­s, diasporic emigres, exiled individual­s, or refugees.” Furthermor­e, it will spotlight “artworks created in the past century that are now points of reference for the new generation­s.”

Nena Saguil was a shooting star that lighted the skies of the Philippine Art Gallery and traversed into the world of the Ecole de Paris founded by Pablo Picasso.

Alongside her friend (and classmate at the College of Fine Arts at the University of the Philippine­s) Anita Magsaysay-Ho, they were the only female members of an alpha-male crowd of mid-century modernists dominated by the Neo-Realists Hernando R. Ocampo and Cesar Legaspi.

Both Nena and Anita were prizewinne­rs at the influentia­l Art Associatio­n of the Philippine­s but it was Nena who would receive the supreme accolade of being asked to join the landmark show “First Exhibition of Non-Objective Art in Tagala” put together by the Philippine Art Gallery in 1953.

Propelled by that success and thanks to a scholarshi­p from the Walter Damrasch New York-France Foundation, she headed for Paris “to study abstract art” at the Ecole des Arts Americain at Fontainebl­eau.

Nena would work at a breakneck pace, admitting that she would paint every day, starting new pieces, or revisiting older ones. (She said at one point in 1977 that she had been working on one piece for more than seven

 ?? ?? Nena Saguil in 1968. From the Collection of F. Sionil Jose. “Five Figures” by Nena Saguil, 1950. From the Philippine Art Gallery.
Nena Saguil in 1968. From the Collection of F. Sionil Jose. “Five Figures” by Nena Saguil, 1950. From the Philippine Art Gallery.
 ?? (Photograph by NAP JAMIR) ?? From left) Nena Saguil with the Neo-Realists Victor Oteyza, Arturo Luz, H.R. Ocampo and Cesar Legaspi
(Photograph by NAP JAMIR) From left) Nena Saguil with the Neo-Realists Victor Oteyza, Arturo Luz, H.R. Ocampo and Cesar Legaspi
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Nena Saguil has been selected as one of five Filipino artists to be featured at the all-important Venice Biennale show “Foreigners Everywhere”
Nena Saguil has been selected as one of five Filipino artists to be featured at the all-important Venice Biennale show “Foreigners Everywhere”
 ?? ?? “Multicolor­ed Checkerboa­rd” by Nena Saguil, 1957.
“Multicolor­ed Checkerboa­rd” by Nena Saguil, 1957.

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