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“Drawing Painting”
Group Exhibit by Ronald
Achacoso, Ramon Manuel “RM” de Leon, Jonathan Olazo, Raul G.
Rodriguez and Trek Valdizno - June 6 -30, 2009
Galleria Duemila brings
together Ronald Achacoso, Ramon Manuel “RM” de Leon,
Jonathan Olazo, Raul G. Rodriguez and Trek Valdizno in a
group exhibit entitled “Drawing Painting” from June 6 - 30,
2009 at the Galleria Duemila.
Because labels confine, it
would be a disservice to these artists to call them, however
loosely, abstract expressionists, although they have been
called that. What surfaces more pronouncedly though is not
just their passionate commitment to their art, their common
alma mater (University of the Philippines’ College of Fine
Arts) or past collaborative works. These artists create
abstractions that freely draws away from art as mere
representation or blurs boundaries with insightful
figuration. While they eschew depicting easily recognizable
realities, they nonetheless succeed in imparting their
visions by drawing paint, to borrow from painter-writer
Sandra Palomar’s description of Trek Valdizno’s recent
works.
“Drawing Painting” bespeaks of
these artists’ ability of drawing out their medium’s
capacity to enliven, enrage, amuse, disturb; in the end,
engage the viewer beyond mere retinal impressions. These
works are not private Shangri-Las or Hades, exclusive or
inaccessible in its allusive and allegorical arcana or
private codes. This exhibit is akin to a cerebral
show-and-tell session where the artists reveal their finds
and treasures to those who will dare to go beyond mere
retinal impressions.
This exhibit will also showcase
the act of painting’s capacity of drawing out these artists’
inner resources and genius, “transubstantiating” their
influences and selves-in-progress, certainties and
paradoxes, world-views and fancies, into the canvass.
In their own distinct ways,
these artists maximize and even forge beyond the physical
limitation of their materials and artistic processes -- be
it oil, acrylic, ink on canvas, paper, wood while criss-crossing
forms and disciplines, customizing technology, delving on
archetypes and terra incognita.They share the same gift of
animating their medium, making paint follow their unique
process.
Ramon Manuel “RM” de Leon’s
works have always been an engaging synthesis of his fresh
take on contemporary topics, very deliberate dashes of wit
and whimsy and bold experimentations. He once used layers of
acrylic to simulate dated hand-printed or
lithograph-processed images and, through digital technology,
he continues to extend his color palette and even his
pen/brush strokes electronically. He currently teaches at
the School of Design and Arts of De La Salle University’s
College of St. Benilde and coordinates an annual children's
art workshop in Quezon City.
Ronald Achacoso avers that his
works in this collection “transform biology and natural
science to an aesthetic crafting of symbols in painting.”
His artistry effects a transubstantiation in the canvas,
where “paint becomes image – image becomes paint - paint
and image becomes metaphor.” This painter is a also
teacher and a writer who bagged the Art Association of the
Philippines’ Leo Benesa Award for Art Criticism in two
consecutive years (1993 and 1994).
Raul G. Rodriguez, a visual
artist of punk slant in the 80’s, is also an animator,
minister and a long-time confrere of RM from their UP days.
He “explore(s) the tributaries” initiated by his wide
variety of influences that ranges from Caravaggio to Matisse
to Rothko to Chabet, pursuing the visual surprises when
juxtaposing such images that would hopefully lead to new
ways of seeing. Shedding light on his method, he mused that
he “treats the theme or the idea at hand as a poetic
interplay between chosen colors, recognizable elements, the
ambiguity inherent in the properties of paint/painting in
itself, the expected desired results and the improvisational
rapport I experience in the art process.” Furthermore,
he noted that “Style can either be your aesthetic prison
or a stepping stone to knowing more of the possibilities of
the visual language.”
Jonathan Olazo’s Peripeteia
series reference some of his past paintings; the title comes
from the name of a fictional hero who “wanted to champion
a form of modernism and challenge it.” Finding out
whether this hero is presently in a “state of suspended
hesitation” before he goes on to a new adventure or has
already reached a turning point will engage the audience,
specially those long seduced by Olazo’s works, which has
always crackled with his relentless self-reflection and edgy
insights that always translate to exciting new oeuvres and
even deeper questions.
In Valdizno’s latest solo
exhibit (“Paintings from San Rafael, Bulacan,” January 2009)
where he practically sculpted oils in ‘layers upon layers
upon layers of paint,’ his “acts of drawing become a
vehicle to infuse paint with verbs that make it live and
breathe as if human.” He problematizes paint both as a
medium and a commodity, a very genuine painterly concern, as
noted by fellow-painter and art writer Palomar.
Among the five of them, they
have more than enough solo exhibits, CCP Thirteen Artist
awards, well-received commissions, local and foreign grants
and exciting future projects to keep them in top form and to
hold art lovers’ interest till the next exhibit.
“Drawing Painting” will have an
opening on June 6 at 4:00 PM. For more information, contact
Galleria Duemila through Tel. No. (+632) 831-9990 or Telefax
(+632) 833-9815, e-mail: duemila@mydestiny.net The
gallery is located at 210 Loring Street, Pasay City.
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