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" IN - LIGHTENMENT "
October 3 -31, 2009
Cavestany’s iron-and-light menagerie
Once again artist Valeria
Cavestany is out to explore fresh views on old themes, this
time pertaining to the relationship between humans and
animals in her latest exhibit, IN-LIGHTENMENT, at the
Galleria Duemila, from October 3-31. Featuring a menagerie
of more than thirty animals welded in iron and lit from
within the exhibit is a reiteration of the enduring
universality of myths—or superstitions, as Cavestany
sometimes likes to call it—or stories spun around common
creatures like fish and insects, dogs and roosters, and
members of the lizard family.
World mythologies assign
different meanings to different animals. For instance,
snakes or serpents can be helpful or harmful, depending on
whose story is being told. The Hopi Indians living in the
dry American Southwest have stories about a water snake that
is associated with springs while the Romans regarded snake
spirits as protection for their homes. Precisely because the
snake sheds its skin as it grows, some cultures view it as a
symbol of rebirth and have associated it with healing.
The Bible, however, describes
the snake as a treacherous creature, and a Japanese myth
tells of a huge eight-headed snake that holds a princess
prisoner.
The
freighted relationship between humans and animals stems from
their closeness throughout history, which in turn has given
rise to myths and legends. Often, animals perform heroic
deeds or act as mediators between heaven and earth. As in
many cultures across Asia, they may also be the source of
the wisdom if not hold the power of a shaman.
These are just some of the
themes that artist Valeria Cavestany explores in IN-LIGHTENMENT.
“Many stories surrounding animals are certainly without
borders,” she says, citing the eternal tale of the gecko (lagartija
in Spanish and sargantana in Catalan) and the lizard
family as the embodiment of regeneration and resilience. “If
they lose their tails they grown them back. That is one of
the most compelling visual metaphors for the human ability
to reinvent the self.”
For Cavestany, such resilience
is also the enduring quality of people who triumph over
setbacks. In a sense, reinvention is her personal story as
well. The Spanish mestiza has taken the well-trod road of
art—a choice that, at first blush, might seem to have been
inspired by her mother, an exceptionally creative homemaker
and model born and raised in the Philippines. But it was the
desire to grasp the workings of the world and its
ethnicities that impelled Valeria’s deliberate course, which
first brought her to Manila in 1980.
Today, nearly three decades and
several group and solo shows later, Cavestany declares, “I
am Filipino.” And in the Philippines is where she has been
painting and creating through other media such as light and
metal, her version of personal histories and cultural
junctions, to emerge as one of the city’s finer artists
imbued with what one critic has described as “infinite
charm…stylishness and flourish.”
Fresh from a successful solo
exhibit at the Casa Asia in Barcelona this August, Cavestany,
through IN-LIGHTENMENT, seeks to speak anew on old themes in
much the playful way she did at her exhibit Fragments and
Flowers in Istanbul in 2008. Here, her thirty watercolor
and mixed-media paintings bore her trademark boldness in
combining, this time, Chinese, Filipino, Turkish, and
Ottoman motifs.
Cavestany confesses that she
herself favors works by new artists precisely because of the
brisk perspectives they bring. According to her
“Circumstances compel today’s artists to be constantly
innovating and it’s always good to look for the unfamiliar,
whether one is traveling or creating.”
IN-LIGHTENMENT delivers on the same
premise -- reviving the familiar through new materials to
produce a fresh take on one of the oldest relationships that
have bound all living things. Exhibit runs from October 3-31
at Galleria Duemila, 210 Loring Street, Pasay City. The
gallery is open Mondays to Saturdays from 10 am to 6 pm. For
more information, please contact Eryl Torres or Thess Ponce
through Tel. No. (632) 831-9990 or Telefax(632) 833-9815,
email: duemila@mydestiny.net
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