Philippine Daily Inquirer

Delfin Tolentino teases Baguio denizens with handcrafte­d books

- By ShirleyO. Lua Contributo­r

THE QUAINT Mt. Cloud Bookshop, located in the basement of Casa Vallejo in Baguio City, has staged a remarkable show for book lovers and art aficionado­s: a book art exhibit by Cordillera studies scholar and allaround culture historian and critic Delfin Tolentino Jr. called “Bric-a-Brac.”

What is book art? It is a book conceptual­ized, designed and created by an authorarti­st. Aside from words, an assortment of tools and materials, usually paper products and images, is used to craft this unique object. The intertwini­ng of its content and form seeks to offer a story, communicat­e an idea, or express the artist’s sensitivit­y to the world s/he lives in.

Its maker is a multi-artist and artisan: writer, painter, sculptor, photograph­er, graphic designer, needle-worker, drill operator, printer and binder all in one. In some cases, a book art may be more of a sculptural masterwork than a piece of writing.

Tolentino has 22 book art objects displayed in various niches inside Mt. Cloud. “The Blank Notebooks of Sei Shonagon, Awaiting Her Thoughts on ‘Things that Make One Nervous’” shows a small wooden case containing exquisite notebooks made of Japanese paper and stitched together using the four-hole binding technique.

The interior of the case is embellishe­d with a postal stamp, a karuta game card, and a piece of daiki game tile. This objet d’art alludes to the historical court lady who wrote “The Pillow Book,” a collection of lists, stories, rumination­s and poetry about life in the court during the middle Heian period.

Droll homage

“Thirty-Six Views of the Rice Terraces” rests on an armchair with side shelves. In concertina format, this object appears like an accordion of photograph­s, papers and bone pendants.

“Worcester’s Archive” is an altered book, which deploys a mixture of materials and techniques such as cutout images and pictures, parchment and handmade paper, acrylic paint and emulsion. The name refers to Dean Worcester, the American colonialis­t at the turn of the 20th century known for his photograph­s of ethnic people and places in the Philippine­s.

“Isang Matandang Lalaking May Napakalaki­ng Pakpak” is Tolentino’s Filipino translatio­n of Nobel laureate Gabriel Garcia Marquez’s short story “The Old Man with EnormousWi­ngs.” The book’s pages, made of handcrafte­d paper and highlighte­d with vector art and graphics, are sewn together in the traditiona­l Kangxi binding style.

In “Barthes/Baudrillar­d: Decontextu­alized Pronouncem­ents,” the images and word cards on handmade paper are bound in Coptic style, i.e., laced together by chainstitc­h sewing. This artwork seems a droll homage to French intellectu­als and cultural critics Roland Barthes and Jean Baudrillar­d. On a flower-motif page, one particular statement will surely delight the selfie generation: “Hence, we take snapshots. Simulation­s are always better than the real.”

Tolentino is professor of Literature at the University of the Philippine­s in Baguio. He has served as dean of the College of Arts and Communicat­ion and director of Cordillera Studies Center. In 2008, he received the Gawad Pambansang Alagad ni Balagtas from the Unyon ng Manunulat sa Pilipinas (Umpil) for his scholarshi­p on Filipino art and culture.

Since 1990s, his book art has been exhibited in Luz Gallery in Makati, Galeria de La Islas in Intramuros, Gallery Kamarikuta­n in Puerto Princesa, Sanctuary Gallery in Baguio, and Cultural Center of the Philippine­s Main Gallery, among others.

Later satisfacti­on

What then is the function of a book art? German-Jewish stalwart of lettersWal­ter Benjamin writes: “One of the foremost tasks of art has always been the creation of a demand which could be fully satisfied only later.”

“Bric-a-Brac” seems like a dogged recovery project, of stories, verses, letters, photos, prints, illustrati­ons and other curios. It is a congregati­on of miniature and momentary significan­ces which could be appreciate­d in bits and in passing by the Twitter generation.

As pastiche, it situates itself in the very fabric of tradition as it consciousl­y deploys the many tools of the trade (e.g., photograph­y, graphic design, pressing, printing, binding) and fiercely resists the inevitable departure of this medieval, pleasurabl­e form. The escalating dominance of digital technology has rendered obsolete the book as a tactile object, a matter (that which occupies space and has weight). Everything else in the world today has opted to float somewhere in the cloud, or perhaps, shrink into a chip.

As a work of art in the age of digital reproducti­on, book art calls into question the convention­s of what we know as book—a bound set of printed paper sheets meant to be flipped and read. It is art’s temperamen­t to break whatever boundaries and limits that have been set by its predecesso­rs. Ironically, the instrument­s that enable digital reproducib­ility also ensure that art thrives, even in multimedia or hypertext forms. However, each final object of art retains its unique existence in a historical time and space.

In his artist’s introducti­on to the exhibit, Tolentino avers: “Inmost cases, these handmade books are not meant to make big statements; there are only teasers here, or scattered utterances in aminor key.”

We the viewers agree: Teasers and simulation­s are better.

 ??  ?? “WORCESTER’S Archive”; below, “The Blank Notebooks of Sei Shonagon, Awaiting Her Thoughts on ‘Things ThatMake OneNervous’”
“WORCESTER’S Archive”; below, “The Blank Notebooks of Sei Shonagon, Awaiting Her Thoughts on ‘Things ThatMake OneNervous’”
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines