"Siete Pintandos" November 8 - December 2, 2008
Internationally-acclaimed sculptor and
installation artist Junyee will unveil Siete Pintados,
a one-man exhibition of recent works in wood, at the main
hall of Galleria Duemila from 8 November to 2 December 2008.
This is the artist's second time to exhibit in a commercial
gallery; most of his previous shows being held at
international and local art museums, public spaces, and art
centers in the Philippines and in other countries.
The Siete Pintados exhibition will
present seven life-size wood sculptures of pre-colonial
Filipino males, embellished with colored tatoos sourced from
both indigenous and contemporary iconographies. Measuring
around five feet each, the works and the symbols in these
embody the “collision of cultures”, as art critic Alice
Guillermo terms it, induced by uneven and transitional
spheres of development within the context of Philippine
society and culture.
The figures were sculpted from discarded
acacia and santol hardwood, reflecting the
artist's intentional adherence to the use of indigenous
objects in art production. An avowed environmental advocate,
the artist intentionally refrains from cutting any live
trees and sources out trees that have been felled out of
natural causes and then discarded.
Junye's Pintados series date back
to the past eight years. The first Pintado sculpture
created by the artist was exhibited as one of the two
Filipino entries to the 7th Havana Biennale in
Cuba in 2001: a wooden life-size figure of a tatooed pre-hispanic
figure held aloft by natural fibers and hovering above a
mirror image of a contemporary Filipino made out of etched
glass. The second figure was exhibited at the inauguration
of the Ayala Museum in 2004.
The artist makes use of composite tattoos
as symbol and metaphor for cultural contradictions. The
tattoos are sourced from two representational traditions:
from book illustrations of tattoos worn by pre-colonial
Filipinos from the Mountain Province and Leyte islands and
from contemporary tattoos prevalent in popular culture
influenced by foreign images, such as the iconography of
American hip hop groups, beatnik culture or the protest
movement.
Siete Pintados
draws on two periods of Filipino representational heritage
as a springboard for creativity, to bring across a personal
testimony of how the advancement of modern civilization (and
its ills, such as development aggression) creates a litany
of unexpected and stark impacts for the inhabitants of a
Third World country where the majority are left behind. The
works articulate apprehension of losing individual and
collective identity in this period of transitional trauma.
Siete Pintados
will open simultaneously with Derelict Penthouses, a
one-man exhibition by Jose Tence Ruiz. The two shows open on
the 8th of November (Saturday) and will be on
view at Galleria Duemila until 2 December 2008. For
inquiries, please contact Galleria Duemila at (632) 831 9990
and (632) 833 9815; email:
duemila@mydestiny.net
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