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National Artist in Painting
Legaspi earned his Certificate
of Proficiency at the University of the Philippines in 1936. He then pursued art
studies abroad as a scholar at the Cultura Hispanica in Madrid, 1953-54. He
subsequently entered the Academie Ranson in Paris, France.
Legaspi espoused the cause of
modern art from its early years and nurtured it with his fellow pioneering
modernists, Carlos V. Francisco, Galo B. Ocampo, Hernando R. Ocampo and Vicente
Manansala, to full maturity. Today, he is the most active surviving members of
the Thirteen Moderns. While his work shows the influence of cubism, cubism’s
rigorous intellectual approach of its intellectual phase in Legaspi’s works
gives way to the more harmonious aspect of its synthetic phase. There is a
facetting of figures into larger planes which overlap and cut through space in
transparent curvilinear rhythms and which achieve a richly textured
orchestration of hues and tones. Except for his monochromatic canvases,
Legaspi’s paintings fully release the expressive potential of color, creating a
sensuous chromatic ambiance with a variety of subjects from dancers and flower
gardens, to dynamic street scenes.
His early paintings, from the
period immediately before and after the war, reflect his personal reaction to
the national trauma. Man and Woman (also entitled Beggars) 1945 in an
expressionist idiom involving distortion, shows a couple in rags amidst the
skeletons of buildings which are broken like surrealist sculpture. Another
important work, Gadgets, 1947 done in two version, reflects the increasing
importance of machines in the postwar industrialization period, as well as what
he perceived was the insidious threat of human metamorphosing into machine.
Legaspi spent many years as
magazine illustrator and artistic director in advertising agencies, while he
took time in between his work to do paintings. In 1963, he held a one man show
at the Luz Gallery. This marked the beginning of an active phase with major
pieces, such as Chiaroscuro, in which rocks and stone quarries become his
central image and symbol and in which structure is the predominant concern.
Spatial depth is suggested by the darker tonalities of the recesses in the
granite rock that half-conceals organic forms, like curling fetuses, embedded
within. In these and subsequent works, Legaspi strove towards an artistic
language based on the integrity of shapes and figures that would convey an
entire range of values from strength to sensitivity, power to grace, dynamism to
lyricism.
In 1968, Legaspi finally left
advertising to devote his time to painting. His subsequent works significantly
modified the cubist idiom by rhythmic curvilinear lines and planes contrary to
the angularity of the original style. From 1974 onward his paintings became
more chromatic, sometimes even effulgent with color layers of transparent
passages create prismatic effects. Figures dynamically cut through space in
gestural movements. Lights enhance colors and form or dematerialized and
dissolves them into airy transparencies, creating resonances in space. The human
figure in its well-articulated muscular and structural frame, increasingly
becomes an eloquent vehicle for expression, while a play of contrasts ensues
between organic form and geometric structure, transparency and solidity, the
flexible and the inexorable, tensions that generate the vitality of Legaspi’s
arts. In 1976, Legaspi did a number a multi-layered paintings on wood panel to
give actual depth and shadows to the illusion f spatial movement. He has also
done a large diptych with a crucified torso spanning the two panels; the
graffiti of the times are scattered over the wall like background.
Through the 1970s and 1980s
Legaspi worked on paintings that deal with universal human experience, such as
the Survivor. These large heroic canvases done in his dynamic style, convey the
surging , straining movements of human beings in aspiration, struggle and
triumph. Aside from being dramatic metaphors of the human condition, they are
also visual correlatives of inner moods. The “biota” imagery explores organic
and visceral movements beneath the surface where human beings are one with
nature, woven of the same tissue as the trees. The images of struggle and
nightmare transpose onto the imagery of art the emotional tensions of
everyday that seek resolutions in dreams. In 1978 Legaspi held a big
retrospective show at the Museum of Philippine Art. Ten years later, he held a
major three part exhibit, including the Jeepney series in which the dynamism of
the imagery bring together the spatial and temporal dimensions, dream and
reality, the past and the present.
Legaspi’s awards from the Art Association of the Philippines are: 1948, Sick
Child - 4th prize; 1949, Gadgets - 1st prize; 1949,
Planters - 4th prize ; 1951, Ritual - 3rd prize. He won
first prize for Stairway to Heaven in the Manila Club Art Exhibition in 1949.
His Symphony won an honorable mention award in the Manila Grand Opera House
Exhibition in 1950. He received the Pintura - Patnubay ng Sining at Kalinangan
award from the City of Manila in 1972. He received the Gawad CCP para sa Sining
award from the Cultural Center of the Philippines in 1990. He was proclaimed
National Artist in painting in 1990.
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