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October – December 2008
JULIE LLUCH RETROSPECTIVE AT CCP
Yuta: Earthworks by
Julie Lluch, will
open on October 9, 6:00 p.m. at the CCP Main Theater Lobby,
and will be on view until December 31, 2008 at the CCP
Bulwagang Juan Luna (Main Gallery). The retrospective, an
initiative of the Cultural Center of the Philippines and
Galleria Duemila, celebrates sculptor Julie Lluch's artistic
career spanning thirty years. Yuta is a
Visayan word for clay. The exhibit will bring together
works from private and institutional collections as well as
those from the artist’s personal collection.
One of the country’s
foremost exponents of terracotta sculptures, Julie Lluch
finds perfect expression in the indigenous clay which she
refers to as the most sensuous and pleasurable medium. A
philosophy graduate of the University of Sto. Tomas, Lluch’s
strong feminist stance helped open the national women’s
movement in the area of arts and culture and co-founded
women’s groups such Katipunan ng Kababaihan para sa Kalayaan
(KALAYAAN) and KASIBULAN, which she co-founded in 1990. Her
works such as Philippine Gothic, Cutting Onions
Always Makes Me Cry, Still Life with Cezanne’s
Apple’s on Kiri’s 6th Birthday and Picasso
y Yo, all raise concern about women’s roles in society.
Her works also pay homage to stalwarts of Western Modern
Art, as well as Filipino literary artists and art patrons.
Her life-size figures - Filipina 1898 and Maranao
Women—uphold the role of women in the revolution,
whether in the past or at present. Lluch also did monuments
in bronze of Gen. Carlos P. Romulo, Arsenio Lacson, Chief
Justice Jose Abad Santos, Cayetano Arellano and Pres. Manuel
Quezon.
Julie Lluch has joined
prestigious exhibitions abroad at the First Asia-Pacific
Triennial in Brisbane, Australia; the Third Asian Art Show
in Fukuoka, Japan; Asian Modernism in Indonesia, Malaysia,
and Tokyo; Clay and Fire International Clay Sculpture
Exhibition in Korea and Federation of Asian and Latin
American Countries show in Manila.
For her excellent
works in the field of Philippine sculpture, Lluch was
awarded the CCP Thirteen Artists Award (1990), Iligan City’s
Outstanding Citizenship in Art (1992); Quezon City’s Most
Outstanding Woman Artist (1995), and the Sining at
Kalinangan Award given by the City of Manila (1997).
Yuta
is supported by the National Commission for Culture and the
Arts, Asian Tigers Lane Moving and Storage, Autozentrum BMW,
Epson, St. Paul’s de Chartres, Carlos P. Romulo Foundation,
Bench, BPI Asset Management and Bailey’s.
Gallery hours are from
10 am to 6 pm daily except Mondays and holidays. For more
information, please call the CCP Visual Arts and Museo
Division at 8321125, local 1504/1505.
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