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" DEITIES "
February 6 - March 1, 2010
Subdued Iconoclasm in Mideo Cruz's
Deities
Philippine performance and installation artist Mideo Cruz
has been distinguished for his provocative
multi-disciplinary interventions straddling the irreverent,
the blasphemous, and the subversive. While Cruz has raced
through a range of discourses from colonialism,
globalization and Third World realities while charting his
journey, Deities, his latest one-man exhibition at
the Galleria Duemila in Manila, seems to be the artist's
move to step on the brakes a little bit, sit back and savor
the view along the road.
Deities features Cruz's
constructed collection of hybrid idols: found objects
reproduced utilizing plaster of paris, concrete, and
industrial paint. Rather than representing idols as mystical
objects to be revered, Cruz deconstructs and offers them as
homages to fallen gods and effigies of the sacred, steeped
in modernity and profaned.
A
thematic and formal shift in Cruz's artistic trajectory is
evident in the show. Deities, for instance, presents
more sculptural and permanent works—a fresh departure from
the mostly transient and site-specific installation and
performance pieces that comprised his earlier projects in
the United States as a recipient of residencies and
fellowships from the San Francisco-based Headlands Center
for the Arts and the Asian Cultural Council, respectively.
Intentionally antiseptic, the sculpture-installations in
this show forgo the multiplicity of complex structures,
screaming symbols, and jarring colors that usually marked
the flavor of Cruz's earlier body of works. Instead, the
artist makes full use of minimalist lines, the muted
textures of concrete, and stark white paint--a visual
sensibility once put to full effect by Cruz in Banquet,
a performance-installation on gluttony and bourgeois
hegemony back in 2006 and revived in this collection.
The
show is the artist's personal reflection on the development
of deities between different civilizations. While Cruz's
earlier body of works dealt with strong historically and
socially-situated thematics on issues current and urgent to
the point of volatility, this show seems like the artist's
attempt to dwell on the less exigent aspects of contemporary
gods. In constructing and representing modern-day idols,
Cruz attempts to situate their symbolism in the visual
traditions of earlier civilizations and draw out
parallelisms and contradictions within their spheres of
meaning. For instance, his representations of Mother and
Child figures (a theme replete in Catholic iconography) also
allude to symbols and shapes associated with earlier
pre-Christian cultural traditions.
Yet
for all their comparative mutedness, Cruz's works retain
much of the frank spirit of iconoclasm that marked his
earlier engagements. Liberally mixed in his pantheon of
deities are popular icons spawned from this era of hegemonic
globalization and watersheds in modes of production: the
ubiquitous smiling head of a global food conglomerate's
mascot reproduced many times over, the stray figure of Dolly
the cloned sheep, and other contemporary deities of mass
consumerism. Despite the visual and stylistic departures
from his usual repertoire, but, thematically, the show is a
progression or continuation of the discourses that Cruz has
consistently engaged and interrogated as a visual artist:
the acts of confronting and questioning the gods of our
times.
Deities runs from 6
February to 1 March, 2010 at the Galleria Duemila, Pasay
City, Manila, Philippines.We
look forward to seeing everyone at this unforgettable
exhibition. For more information, please contact, Ms.
Catherine Huit of Galleria Duemila through Tel. No. (+632)
831-9990 or Telefax (+632) 8339815, e-mail:
duemila@mydestiny.net The gallery is located at 210
Loring Street, Pasay City.
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