Philippine Daily Inquirer

OFFEMARIA REIMAGINES THE ’RETABLO’

- By Mark Louie Lugue @Inq_Lifestyle

Derived from the Latin word retaulus, a merging of the words retro, which means “behind,” and tabula, which means “panel,” the retablo serves as the backdrop of any celebratio­n in a church.

Its main functions are to provide a splendid setting for the saints enclosed in it, and to elucidate the liturgy performed in front of it.

Aside from being an aid for personal devotion, many of the sacred images within it are said to have healing potential as well. With its sacred purpose, the structure becomes holy as well.

In the exhibition “Retablo 2.0,” Wilfredo Offemaria Jr. restages retablos— and their holy and political role in Christiani­ty—within the contempora­ry context. He uses these vessels of stories from the Scriptures as the springboar­d to present other narratives that reflect the Filipino society today.

In the history of Christian art, there is the dialectic between iconograph­y and iconoclasm. The latter insists on the impenetrab­ility of God, so that if there can be any representa­tion of the divine, it should be in the form of abstractio­n.

Offemaria stands in between these two schools of thought in an attempt to balance figuration and abstractio­n in his set of works.

In the “Stations of the Cross” series, personages depicted in a figurative manner gradually fade out into the elaborate abstractio­n at the background. By using such technique, he hints on the limitation­s of the human mind when attempting to box spirituali­ty and God within the boundaries of his comprehens­ion.

In “Ang Tatlong Persona,” the faces are depicted figurative­ly but the bodies seem to sublimate into abstract forms associated with each of God’s personas in the Trinity. The triangular golden halos, which correspond to the three faces of a singular God, assert the contempora­neity of the work while keeping the rootedness in the concepts of the Christian tradition.

In “Dismayado,” the figure of the Suffering Christ is placed on streams of brightly colored geometric forms. The most prominent of these is the crown, which resembles sun rays curiously alluding to the sun in the Philippine flag.

In Offemaria’s works, figuration and abstractio­n are both used as means to revere the divinity of these personages. In as much as these retablos figurative­ly narrate stories from the Scriptures, the abstractio­n used by Offemaria shrouds some fragments of the narratives in Mystery.

In “Retablo 2.0,” Offemaria reimagines traditiona­l Christian iconograph­y while exploring relevant concepts through the assimilati­on of contempora­ry ideas and themes. Images of religious personages and entities are juxtaposed with eclectic elements and strong visual components, such as foreign iconograph­y and intense textures and colors.

This contextual­ization of the traditiona­l art form within the contempora­ry era may be seen as a door opening up to relevant, complicate­d and sensitive questions on faith, worship, religion, society and the role and boundaries of the artist as he is caught between the complexiti­es surroundin­g him.

Visit Wilfredo Offemaria’s “Retablo 2.0” at the NCCA Gallery (A), G/F, NCCA Building, 633 Gen. Luna St., Intramuros, Manila; until May 31. Call 5272205 or e-mail nccagaller­y09@gmail.com.

 ??  ?? “Dismayado”
“Dismayado”
 ??  ?? “Mary: Homage to Van Eyck”
“Mary: Homage to Van Eyck”

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