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" BOSO "
September 5 -30, 2009
Galleria Duemila presents Raul
Lebajo’s most recent drawings and paintings in acrylic in an
exhibit entitled “Boso.” The
show predominantly takes off where his previous shows
“Kara” ( 2003) and “Tagapagmasid” (1998)
conclude. In his exacting pen and ink drawings, the
reclusive artist whom the art world once knew as Mr. Boogie
Man fully breaks away from the flat dimensionality of his
works from the 70’s to the early 90’s. Yet there is
continuity in the works of Lebajo even as he explores and
eventually pushes different boundaries of his
environmentalist disposition.
For the most part, as
the title of the show suggests, “Boso” features the
surreal all seeing eye, singular on in a pair, which
playfully appears not only on Lebajo’s haunting faces but
also on other subjects: from appear first on top then on the
sides his headlike forms, to even his ever recurring cups
and tree stumps. Even his bird heads all of which possess
human eyes, recalling 1998’s “Tagapagmasid” are as
frequent as bird wings sprouting from were the human
ears should be.
Other themes, the face
and other dreamscapes of his imagination, seen from various
views, assume cubistic angles, fractured and haunting as
they are: A nose magnified to a large scale here, an
exaggerated protrusion of a body part there. Trees and
shrubs wriggle out of heads, then on top of various intimate
parts of the human body. “There are always
possibilities” Lebajo explains. “Each drawing or
painting that I do always suggests the next.” Some works
are even taken from the depths of his personal experiences.
For example, the passing away of his mother, who was an ever
present moving force in his life, is hauntingly symbolized
in a couple of perpetually continuing drawings. His works
are not just products of the imagination but of his
conscious effort to depict those significant events in life
in a manner uniquely his own.
While Lebajo’s
drawings such as these show a new organic evolution, his
paintings still show the familiar imprints of his earlier
works. His ambiguous biomorphic forms in plunging depths of
the painting “Journey” and the floating fruits in
“Green Day” recalls his phase in the mod 1990’s. Against
a dark blue field, geometric grids that go back as early as
his works in the mid 1970s now serve as backdrops to his
paintings “Red Field” and a “Cup of Cloud”. Ever
experimenting with color, his new paintings stand out as
darker and more brooding while still recalling elements from
his earlier works.
One must remain child
like and curious when viewing his works. What may be merely
playful to one viewer may also be erotic to another. He
stretches the mind’s imagination allowing the viewers to
come to their own conclusions.
Raul Lebajo graduated
from the Philippine Women’s University with a Bachelor of
Fine Arts degree in 1969. Since then he has been a prominent
figure in the Philippine art scene. He was awarded a joint
grant from the Illinois Art Council and the National
Endowment for the Arts. In 1998 he was chosen to represent
the country in the Art in the World 98 Exhibition held
in Paris, France, sponsored by Beaux Arts, the leading fine
art magazine and the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
Galleria
Duemila is open Mondays to Saturdays from 10 am to 6 pm. For
more information, please contact the gallery through Tel.
No. (632) 831-9990 or Telefax(632) 833-9815, email: duemila@mydestiny.net
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