Thursday, December 8, 2016

Abstractions and Assemblages

Aligned 2: Imperfect Balance, Abstractions and Assemblages
Opening Reception – 8 November 2016, Tuesday, 6PM
Exhibition runs until November 21, 2016


Kaida Contemporary presents Aligned 2: Imperfect Balance, Abstractions and Assemblages by Pinggot Zulueta and Demosthenes Campos at the ArtistSpace of the Ayala Museum this November.

With mixed media works and assemblages using old discarded wood, textured fabric, carpet, string, wire cables and a miscellany of found objects, Zulueta and Campos explore themes of attachments, junctures, growth and expansion, with abstractions that rework images of mundane objects, reshaping them for visual expressions brought about by personal association and significance.

As Zulueta draws from his recent experiences abroad and the memories triggered by going back to his childhood home, he seemingly recreates parts of a new sanctuary made easier for relocation. With sand, cement, scrap wood moldings, and even junked items such as an old violin and discarded bamboo cover for a fishing basket, he fashions snippets of a past life, transforming function and meaning. Campos, meanwhile, uses acid-bathed metal cuttings, juxtaposing them with fibers secured with tin, textured panels, grassy carpets, and blooms of wire that evince hope blossoming and persistent growth overcoming odds amidst today's harsh social and political climate.

Aligned 2: Imperfect Balance, Abstractions and Assemblages will launch art the ArtistSpace on the 8th of November, Tuesday, at six o'clock in the evening. The pieces will be on show until November 21, 2016. For more information on the exhibition, please contact Kaida Contemporary at +639279297129 or email kaida529@yahoo.com.ph.

ArtistSpace is at the Ground Level, Ayala Museum Annex, Makati Avenue corner De La Rosa Street, Greenbelt Park, Makati City. For more information on the ArtistSpace, please contact Lorraine Datuin, gallery coordinator at (02) 759-8288 or email artistspace@ayalafoundation.org.


Wednesday, March 2, 2016

Incepto Exhibition


INCEPTO
“Thinking is preeminently an art; knowledge and proportions which are the products of thinking, are works of art” (John Dewey, 1929)

Human beings are consciousness in motion. We are essentially embodied beings defined by the layers of memories, emotions, imagined fears and sensory pleasures that we believe make up our existence. Imprisoned by our wild thoughts, we are left with the intelligence to both perceive and create beauty as well anticipate and recognize the grotesque. It is this very duality that Pinggot Zulueta has chosen to explore in his latest works.

Pinggot Zulueta will be showcasing a series of portraits on paper and canvas, in "INCEPTO: Ink Drawings" on March 10-24, 2016 at the Art Cube Gallery, Glorietta Makati.  The title is Latin in origin, which means to “begin, undertake or attempt.” It serves as a fitting moniker to signal the audiences’ entry into the thoughts residing deep within the artist’s soul.

In what can be considered his most personal collection to date, Pinggot Zulueta unveils raw visual products shaped by the innermost workings of his mind. As a widely prolific visual artist, his latest collection offers a peek into his intimate musings on the internal struggles of man.

Showcasing manic ink figures in jet black, the subject of the pieces conforms to and are characterized by the artists own emotional struggles and pains. Zulueta chooses to delve into the most haunting aspects of the human psyche scrutinizing his own personal challenges as part of his philosophical contemplations. Serving as an autobiographical account, the collection is rooted in the period of depression and loneliness the artist experienced during his solitary days.

Gleaned from the visual ideas that emerged in his dreams during these times, a slew of revelations came upon the artist who embraced these figures from his subconscious and launched it into the temporal world. The result are images that speak of the primal and internal fears that plague all of mankind, with his contemplations on the universal derelict state of existence imbibing the works with a powerful energy and a strong impact.

More than a visual catharsis, Zulueta gives a voice to the anxiety experienced by many people in the shadows. Yet through these very figures, Zulueta offers a hope for redemption as it also serves as a celebration of people’s capacity to transcend these thoughts as he himself had done by asserting his passion for his artwork. It is an ode to human sensibility, for all the faults it may present, and the infinite potential that lies within.

In the end these figures do not represent the demons of man, but rather man’s ability to stand in the face of it with a battlecry, “Incepto ne desistam” (May I not shrink from my purpose!)“We are artists of our own lives, and however we make of it will determine the kind of masterpiece that we are working on.”- Pinggot Zulueta

INCEPTO: Ink Drawings" will be on display from March 10-24, 2016 at the Art Cube Gallery, Glorietta Makati






Incepto: Ink Drawings

Text by Rhea Gulin 
Photos by Monica Pantaleon
March 14, 2016  |  Manila Bulletin

In his own words, Pinggot Zulueta defines his latest exhibition as “mga delubyong napagdaanan ko sa buhay.”  More than any advanced art endeavor, Zulueta’s Incepto: Ink Drawings is an expression- at the deepest and darkest sense of it.


Through his 28 artworks, Zulueta was able to document the various turbulence he had experienced in his life which unraveled the best of his artistry. His raw emotions were justified by an equally raw medium: pen and ink. The audience was left with nothing but pure images of an artist’s mind.


Zulueta is not a beginner in the world of arts. The opening reception of Incepto was not only packed with local art enthusiasts but critically acclaimed artists as well. Each and every one of them exclaimed that Incepto is Zulueta’s best project to date.


“Naipakita niya kung gaano kapowerful and composition,” said Filipino painter Fil Delacruz. “Nakita ko na yung earlier paintings niya, mga colorful. Pero this time, itong exhibit niya, black and white drawings, dito nadisplay niya yung kanyang virtuosity sa pen and ink na drawing.”

Delacruz also added that through using a minimalist medium, Zulueta was able to display the best of his craftsmanship..


“Malakas. Very emotional. Alam natin na may bitbit na lakas yung mga imahe ng works ni Pinggot kaya ang gaganda ng mga kinalabasan, ”however, Ching also said Zulueta’s exhibition may be improved if he transfers works to bigger canvasses. “Kung mapapalaki, mas mapapalakas.”


“I am quite impressed na kahit doodle, may composition, which is expressing something. Pen and ink is a good way of doing something na hindi ganoon ka-complicated, but he was able to express yung gusto niyang idea,” Ramon Orlina also vowed that Incepto is only the beginning of Zulueta. “With his love for the arts, we are going to see more of Pinggot’s work later on.”


Pinggot Zulueta’s Incepto: Ink Drawings runs until March 24 at Art Cube Gallery, 3/F Glorietta 4, Ayala Malls, Makati City.


Wednesday, December 16, 2015

Filipino Artists In Their Studios





Artists and their ateliers featured in book

By Amierielle Anne A. Bulan and 
Ma.Czarina A. Fernandez

A NEW coffee-table book on Philippine art by former Varsitarian artist and photographer documents through beautiful photography and informative text the ateliers or work studios of 75 of the country’s foremost artists, what critics have described as a very helpful “archival” project to record the creative process that goes into masterpieces of the visual arts.

“Filipino Artists in their Studios” is published by the Manila Bulletin and conceptualized and photographed by visual artist-photojournalist Jose Vinluan “Pinggot” Zulueta, a BS Fine Arts in Advertising Arts graduate of the old UST College of Architecture and Fine Arts.

“Our goal is to give a glimpse of the artists’ lives, not just a usual profile presentation of them with their artworks,” Zulueta told the Varsitarian during the book launch last Oct. 30 at the Fiesta Pavilion of the Manila Hotel.

The 324-page book is not only a compilation of photographs by Zulueta that originally appeared in the C’est La Vie or lifestyle section of the Bulletin. It is also accompanied by insightful texts and captions written by writers and journalists such as Paul Zafaralla, Barbara Dacanay, Dennis Ladaw, and Isabel de Leon.

“Usually, the audience see just the artwork alone, mounted or framed in an exhibit,” said CJ Tañedo, one of the artists featured in the book. “But once they get to see the studio, they can see the artists in a new light, and they can see his work habits and the natural setting in which he works.”

Tañedo, a winner of the Metrobank art awards back in the late 1990’s, himself is a Thomasian.
De Leon, a News staffer of the Varsitarian during her student days and now the news editor of the Bulletin and a former Malacanang assistant press secretary, compared an artist’s studio to a bedroom which is “not accessible to anyone.”

“We were very humbled when they allowed us to enter their spaces,” De Leon said. “Not everyone can be granted the opportunity to enter an artist’s sacred space.”

Art enthusiasts like Silvana Diaz, who owns Galleria Duemila, the country’s longest running gallery, said the book gives new perspective on Philippine art.

“He [Zulueta] brings the client and the public who are not well versed in art into an intimacy and place where they see the artist in their environment. When you don’t have art education or study art history, you may penetrate into their intimate life this way,” Diaz said.

25 alumni artists
Among the 75 artists featured in the book, 25 are notable Thomasian alumni mostly products of the old College of Architecture and Design. Sculptor Ramon Orlina, National Artist for Visual Arts Arturo Luz, the late abstractionist Romulo Olazo and father of Philippine conceptual art Roberto Chabet are featured along with Antonio Austria, Manuel Baldemor, Gabriel Barredo, Andres Barrioquinto, Salvador Ching, Fil Delacruz, Danny Dalena, Mideo Cruz, Igan D’Bayan, Edgar Doctor, Alfredo Esquillo Jr., Raul Isidro, Prudencio Lamarroza, Julie Lluch, Sofronio Y Mendoza, Mario Parial, Mario de Rivera, Jose Tence Ruiz, CJ Tanedo, Ronald Ventura, and Juvenal Sansó.

Ruiz, who was part of the creative team behind the Philippine Pavilion in this year’s Venice Biennale, recalled the time when the book was still an idea.

“Why don’t I make a more active documentation of what’s happening in our art scene?” was the question asked by Zulueta to Ruiz back in 2008.

According to Ruiz, Zulueta was given the go-signal by the Manila Bulletin to start the project, and from there started a weekly feature in the newspaper that puts the spotlight on a local artist and his or her works.

“He would bring a young writer, and he himself was the photographer. Little did we all realize that that would be a book seven years later. It was all a happy accident,” Ruiz said in an interview.

The book has long been awaited by artists and art enthusiasts. Isidro, an abstractionist and a former fine arts dean of the Philippine Women’s University, said that the publication was “overwhelming.”

“Although there were books published before, this is different as it takes on a personal and intimate relationship with the artist,” Isidro said.

Meanwhile, veteran watercolorist Edgar Doctor said that this book is a breakthrough in the Philippine art scene because it gives recognition to local artists.

“It’s always the art more than the artist, and now the Filipino artist is given recognition,” Doctor said.
“Filipino Artists in their Studios” is available in leading bookstores nationwide.

The Varsitarian I 11/27/2015 I 7:23

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That’s Pinggot Zulueta, the man behind Filipino Artists in Their Studios

Text by AA Patawaran
Published May 6, 2018

I’m writing this straight out of the launch of the second volume of the artist and Manila Bulletin Lifestyle resident photographer Pinggot Zulueta’s monumental Filipino Artists in Their Studios at the Fiesta Pavilion of The Manila Hotel.

This book, along with the first of the series, is now available by order at The Manila Bulletin and soon also at National Book Store. Like the first, this hefty second volume features 75 artists of various mediums, but mostly visual. In all, the books have so far showcased 150 of the Philippines’s most important artists, established and emerging, from National Artists to very young artists who have shown great potential in pushing the envelope in Philippine art.

Kudos to Pinggot Zulueta for coming up with this book project! As a photo-journalist, who never quite forgot his calling as an artist, he had to be at the very least two people at once in order to come up with such a compendium. He was both creator and chronicler, looking from the inside out and from the outside in.

While pursuing his own art, which so far appears very fluid and open, readily shifting from traditional to experimental, from ink and pencil to oil and acrylic, from paper and canvas to wood, Pinggot has also spent the last decade invading the very private spaces of our artists at work. Armed with his camera and his unquenchable thirst to see art make its way from intention to expression, to watch his fellow artists struggle with the brush or the chisel and their thoughts on a quest to express what in many cases is inexpressible. Hence, the full-pager “Artist at Work” in Manila Bulletin Lifestyle’s arts and culture pages every Monday. Hence, this all-important record of the artistic ruminations of our time, Filipino Artists in Their Studios, volumes one and two.




There are many people to thank for this grand endeavor that redounds to our cultural benefit as a people, such as The Manila Bulletin management, particularly Emil C. Yap III, who has championed and nurtured it since “Artist at Work” was first introduced to Manila Bulletin Lifestyle, and everybody who put into words what Pinggot so poetically captured through his lens, writers like Jacky Lynne Oiga, Sara Grace C. Fojas, Pam Brooke A. Casin, and Hannah Jo Uy, also Terence Patrick Repelente, who stayed by Pinggot’s side day and night to proofread everything in the run up to the publication of this second volume. Credit must also go to Isabel de Leon, my predecessor as lifestyle editor, during whose term “Artists at Work” was born and the book idea was conceived. Erstwhile Manila Bulletin Lifestyle artist Eloisa Bernabe designed volumes one and two, the latter she did from start to finish, through unholy hours, though she is already employed elsewhere. And, of course, each of the 150 artists who make up these two volumes, who allowed Pinggot to penetrate their sanctum sanctorum, the very sacred space in which they would give birth, excruciating labor and all, to their art.

But all this is really just Pinggot. At the launch of volume two, I felt all awkward when several artists, many of whom were strangers to me beyond their exalted names, would ask me to sign their books. I would tell them “I’m no artist, in case you think I am” or “I have little to do with this book, except as an editor of some portions” because I felt unworthy to sign my name next to Pinggot’s, whose blood, sweat, and tears are the very ink in which this cultural gem is written.

Nevertheless, I am proud to have played a small part in Pinggot’s success. Filipino Artists in Their Studios is more than a compendium of Philippine art and artists. It is, in fact, a celebration of the process by which art is made. Other than the artist and his artwork, the focal point in these books, if I may say so myself, is his process (and place of work), the sweat in his brows, the oil stains on his fingers, the ink on his hands, the hours and the minutes he pours into his medium, not to mention the compulsions the artist has to grapple with in creating his art to question the status quo, to shake up the system, to break all records, to push envelopes, to open eyes and hearts and minds, to expand the soul, to ponder life and social justice and poverty and riches, to enrich our experience of life as humans and Filipinos.

Do not fear, Pinggot. Though we drink over it to drown our fears and we smoke through it to blur your doubts, I have very little doubt that you will live forever!

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Taking portraits of the Filipino artist

Text by Krizette Chu

Published March 3, 2018,


For someone who professes to not caring about his own legacy, who shies from speaking about his “identity,” the artist, painter, and veteran lensman Jose “Pinggot” Zulueta has ironically made it his life’s mission to chronicle those of his contemporaries.

As the creator and photographer behind the bestselling coffeetable book Filipino Artists in their Studios, Pinggot has invaded the most personal ateliers and workshops of some of the country’s most legendary painters, sculptors, and mixed media artists.

His labor of love is a massive 323-page book published by The Manila Bulletin that featured industry greats like Napoleon Abueva, BenCab, Federico Alcuaz, Manuel Baldemor, Renato Habulan, Raul Isidro, David Medalla, a paean to 75 of the greatest Filipino artists that ever lived.

Ambitious in scope, comprehensive by nature, painstakingly curated, this kind of project has never been attempted or done before.

The book gave the Philippines’ art fans an exclusive look at the spaces where great art is made, providing a glimmer of understanding of the idiosyncrasies, processes, and quirks of the artists. (Do you know Bencab’s studio is as huge as a full size basketball court and Antipas Delotavo’s, famous for his expansive murals, is the size of a small box, but brilliantly utilized with the use of mirrors?)

Within the year, the next volume, the second edition, is scheduled to be released, featuring yet another batch of the country’s most important artists.  This time, there will be more of those young contemporary artists, the current toasts of the art world and the crème de la crème of today’s new generation, who are coming into an industry that only as recently as 10 years ago was tough to break into and survive in.

With today’s artmosphere more appreciative of new talent, and with a more competitive market, readers can expect a different kind of story and flavor from the 75 artists of volume 2.  How will the new blood define their experiences and set up their work spaces?

Portrait by Sara Black

Apart from paying homage to his colleagues, what drove Pinggot to create something this monumental?

“When I was a kid going into arts, we were discouraged by our parents because arts didn’t seem like a viable livelihood. Parents used to tell their kids, ‘anything but Fine Arts,’” says The Manila Bulletin photographer.

Pinggot, too, has a unique vantage point. His day job is as photojournalist for The Manila Bulletin, which puts him in an enviable position of having, in his own words, “a foot in the door of publishing, another foot in the door of the art world.”

He continues, “By putting this together, I wanted to inspire the next generation to believe that they can pursue their dreams as artists. By telling the stories of those who have come before them, of those who struggled not just individually but collectively as they pushed the industry to a better place, I hope the young ones learn from us.”

As he himself, Pinggot says, has been inspired in the course of doing the book. “As an artist myself, I had to be extra careful not to be too inspired that I start following their styles,” he laughs. “But when you’re there, seeing them work, seeing the masterpieces created in their studios, it’s like you inadvertently pick up their styles, their mood, their energy, and I have to be careful! I am inspired by just how brilliant our artists in the Philippines are. I am inspired by how we can’t fit all these artists in one book.”

Visiting the studios also illuminate his own creative process. It helps him deal with his own work and, in some ways, sets him free to pursue his own art sans fear and pretensions.

His latest show, slated on March 8, called “Blinders,” features a series of paintings he calls his “most honest and raw” yet.

Along with Spanish artist Cesar Caballero and British artist Simon Mortimer, Pinggot will continue from where he left off from his last show “Catharsis,” using images of the human face to denote the purge of emotions. Only this time, the paintings focus less on the face, and more on the process of creation. “The artmaking,” he says. Here, the textures, materials take center stage.  The face taking shape is an afterthought.

On a still unfinished piece, paint is splattered violently across the canvas—done almost in a state of mental fugue.  “Under those colors are my emotions,” he says.

In this series of five paintings, Pinggot reveals his truest self. “They’re all self portraits,” he admits wryly. “Five portraits that show my loss of identity, my overwhelming sadness, my intense longing for my family.”

He whips himself into frenzy, working odd hours, from 2 a.m. until he exhausts himself. When he is done, he feels a cathartic sense of relief.

“This melancholia has followed me all my life, and it has become a part of me, there’s a longing I cannot explain,” he says. He has tried to subdue it, dabbling in cheerful geometric abstractions to drive away the somber mood that he feels has started to define his life and his works—and which he pursued for at least two years from 2014 to 2016—but finds himself staring forlornly at his canvas, with an urge to paint what he truly feels.

“I tried to veer into the non-representational, but I give up,” he shrugs, “I am drawn into doing autobiographical paintings.” Unlike other artists who have decided on a certain style to be identified with, Pinggot has swung on both ends of the pendulum, from abstractions to social realism, from painting seascapes to painting gory and dark shapes, to even creating installations out of found objects.

One of the biggest things he learned in pursuit of stories for the book, is that the only way a great artist stays true to his craft is to ignore the mechanisms of marketing in his work—ignore “branding,” ignore consciously crafting an identity, which runs counter to the basic tenets of selling their work.

“I do not create to sell, but to express, and I have come to accept that now, even when I was torn about it before,” he says. “My art speaks to those it resonates with. Life is too short to care about branding. Art is about who you are.”

And his book is an emphatic reminder—and a celebration—that one only needs to run on talent.

“The Filipino artist stands out—just look at the works of Jose Tence Ruiz, Rodel Tapaya, Ronald Ventura—our works are full of content and has an intellectual approach,” Pinggot says. “I’ve exhibited everywhere, from New York to New Zealand, and you could see how the Filipino artist has assimilated the best of our colonial cultures and made it their own. There is no artist like the Filipino artist.”
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Thursday, December 10, 2015

Papelismo


More Thomasians featured in 'Papelismo'

By Ma. Czarina A. Fernandez

THE PAPER as a premier medium in Philippine art was the focal point of Papelismo 6, a group exhibit at the Nova Gallery, Makati City.

Thomasians Thomas Daquioag, Pinggot Zulueta, Benjie Cabrera and Melvin Culaba were among a dozen artists who explored the creative possibilities of paper as an art medium.

Daquioag, a Painting alumnus of UST, shows social realism in “The Heir” and “The Heir 2,” which portray a child on the floor and a woman sitting on a couch.

His other featured work, a watercolor on arches or air-dried paper titled “ABAKADA Series” features a family making their way through a flood.

“Working on paper as compared to other mediums presents a more difficult challenge,” Daquioag said. “Paper requires a degree of perfection that you don’t necessarily employ in other mediums.”
Meanwhile, Pinggot Zulueta’s black-on-white-ink-on-paper works, reflect his life as an illustrator and newspaper cartoonist back in the 1980s.

Zulueta’s “Talking to Basquiat,” “Knowing Francis Bacon” and “Dialogue with George Condo” are explorations of faces and portraits using the forms and shapes of artists like Picasso and Condo.

“I borrowed art styles from renowned artists and incorporated them with my own style,” Zulueta said. “It’s like a conversation of art between my style and the style of others.”

Zulueta also expressed his preference for paper as a medium since he is known for sketches and illustrations.
“With paper,” he said, “art is boundless. You can sketch, cut, fold, or literally do anything that doesn’t limit your art.”

Meanwhile, engraving artist Cabrera’s works titled “Unexpected Visitor,” “Garden Delight” and “Erratic Self-Reflection” deal with themes of creation, preservation and destruction.

“My works in this edition of Papelismo tell the story of evolution where spectators can see the process of life growing and decaying,” Cabrera said.

Despite using engraving in most of his works, Cabrera does not mind using other mediums such as paper, which to him is special if not superior to other mediums.
Culaba’s charcoal-on-paper works delve on religious themes. “Patakam sa kung ano ang kinain… bago kumain” depicts the Crucifix mounted on a wall, among various framed religious icons like the Virgin Mary holding the Infant Jesus.

Culaba’s “Patatawarin po” shows a capped face, resembling the figure of Martin Luther, leader of the Protestant reformation, flanked by a horde of demon-like creatures in the background, in what seems chaos and hellfire.
Renato Habulan, the exhibit curator, told the Varsitarian that he wants to change the mindset of people who think of paper as a second-class artwork.

“We want to challenge the market, that paper is as durable as canvas,” Habulan said.

Ali Alejandro, director of Nova gallery and also a practicing artist, emphasized how paper is a staple in the art scene and how it will always hold a purpose despite arising forms of new mediums.

“Working on paper is a one-act job which requires perfection because committing one mistake will mean you have to start all over again,” Alejandro said.

The group has expanded to 12 artists for this year’s show from the initial five in their 2012 exhibit originally titled PapelMismo.

Posted on 11/27/2015 - 07:18 The Varsitarian

Thursday, October 30, 2014

Fixation Exhibition

                                                Convergence II, mixed media, 2014 

Fixation at KAIDA Contemporary


 Fixation gathers works that evoke the obsession of featured artists Demosthenes Campos, Noell El Farol, Jethro Jocson, Jemina Reyes and Pinggot Zulueta to express their concepts, sensibilities and life principles through abstract painting. Colors, forms and lines are interpreted in myriad renditions, visually enticing the audience to explore the depths of artistic expression.

In Noell El Farol’s Stratigraphy series, he explores the recovery process in archaeological practice in retrieving artifacts with a painstaking process involving wet sieving and flotation. El Farol manually produces handmade paper from juice and milk packages and collected papers from studio works, then marks them with natural pigments. As such, the output may be considered as field notes with its own set of recovered, then reconstructed, footprints.

Jethro Jocson, on the other hand, continues to delve into his scrutiny of value and worth as he questions "If matter is anything that occupies space and has weight, what matters most?" in Perseverance and Compatibility with process colors carefully swathed on stark white canvas.

In Demosthenes Campos’ Detached, he halves his plane of textured and unbleached Titanium White with a floating patch rendered in different colors.

Jemina Reyes, meanwhile, in Beyond, fixates on the spiritual. She closes off the center of her painting with a light border suggesting that the physical world is bound by limits, yet there are things beyond the human plane of awareness.

Pinggot Zulueta introduces a network of thin lines forming a multi-planed enclosure that seemingly captures blocked off shapes and dashes in Convergence 11, and utilizes slashes and stripes that give a visual rendering of beats and free rhythms in Straight Line from the Heart.  

Whether inspired by processes used in archaeology, valuing worth in matter, minimalist detachment, longing for the beyond, or simply celebrating bursts of lively colors and musicality in form, the paintings are exposed to one's personal signification -- interpretation fully depending on the viewers, their compulsions and inclinations, what they hold fast and what they are willing to let go of.

Fixation will be on show until November 12, 2014. Kaida Contemporary is located at 45 Scout Madriñan St., South Triangle, Quezon City. For inquiries, please contact +637090289 or +639279297129, and email kaida529@yahoo.com.ph.

Langkawi Art Biennale 2014, Malaysia

with former Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad at the Langkawi Art Bienalle 2014.


Art in Migration

Text by Jacky Lynne A. Oiga

October 13, 2014

http://www.mb.com.ph/art-in-migration/

Visual artist and photographer Pinggot Zulueta along with other renowned and up-and-coming Filipino artist come together to represent the Philippines at the Langkawi Art Biennale 2014 (LAB 2014) that opened yesterday and will run until Oct. 21 at the Langkawi Lagoon Resort in Pulau Langkawi, Kedah.

The first Malaysian Art Biennale, LAB 2014 was organized by the ArtMalaysia Association, supported by the Ministry of Tourism and Culture Malaysia to see out possibilities for expression in contemporary art within the context of Langkawi by showcasing the work of local Malaysian artists and international artists from over 40 countries. It is Malaysia’s first distinguished platform for international dialogue in fine and contemporary art. LAB2014 aspires to offer new exposure for artists, art associations, and businesses, at the same time infusing deeper public engagement with the arts.

With the theme “Migration,” Zulueta, together with Darby Alcoseba, Frank Caña, Rosscapili, Joel Cristobal, Buds Convocar, John Dinglasa, Joel E. Ferraris, Merlito Gepte, Rick Hernandez, Rem San Pedro, Celso Pepito, Fe Madrid Pepito, Simkin de Pio, Jik Villanueva, and Sonia Yrastorza, each came up with three art pieces that reflect cultures that meld together in a constant state of influx. The theme is also symbolic of artists coming together to a new destination that offers nature, beauty, and inspiration.

Among the activities lined up for the 10-day biennale are Peletakan Orang-orang (Interactive Installation of Scarecrows), Gotong-royong Angkat Rumah (an old Malaysian custom where villagers gather to help some move his house, similar, albeit purely literal, to the Filipino concept bayanihan), and the Malaysian and Chinese exhibition “Friendship is Forever.”

Thursday, September 4, 2014

2View Exhibition

Ross Capili, Pinggot Zulueta celebrate abstraction in joint show


By Dexter R. Matilla 
Philippine Daily Inquirer8:45 am  
Monday, September 1st, 2014
    

Ross Capili and Pinggot Zulueta are stalwarts in photography and photojournalism, but both have also a growing abstract art practice.
Individually, they translate the process of photography into abstracted forms that reveal intellectual depth and technical talent.
The exhibition “2View” brings these two artists together for the first time. It will open at Galerie Francesca-Megamall today, Sept. 1, at 6 p.m.
Multiawarded artist  Capili uses the flowing nature of Asian calligraphy as an inspiration for his new works. Using the spontaneity associated with Chinese and Japanese calligraphy, Capili works with glass and lacquered acrylic to bring about a different kind of art.

The series was first conceptualized in 1998 for a show in Ayala Museum. However, the lacquer fumes were difficult to deal with. So Capili spent the next few years working on the series, and the works in the exhibition will be the first time the public can view them.
With over 30 exhibits, Capili’s works in the exhibit not only reflects on the entirety of his oeuvre, but his philosophy as well.
“Floating Thoughts,” for instance, gives off a “soft” touch and radiates tranquillity.
“Song Imprints” is an abstraction of what Capili feels when listening to one of his cherished vinyl records.

Producing portraits of newsmakers is hardly an effort for Jose “Pinggot” Vinluan Zulueta. But then again, this veteran lensman is hardly just that. How he got his break in newspaper drawing editorial cartoons is known mostly to his colleagues and close friends so his foray into painting was to be expected.
Zulueta would be the first to admit to uncertainty as to how his abstract works would be accepted by the audience. Even before joining the press, he was already a painter of representational works along the Social Realist vein.
His representational phase extended to his abstraction.

“It was full of human drama and emotion,” Zulueta says. “I was conscious to try and evoke Social Realism, and now that I look back, I realize my works were sad.”



In his upcoming show with Capili,  Zulueta is now more freewheeling as an abstractionist. Now, the photographer-artist concentrates more on the process rather than meaning.
His fascination with lines and geometry continues and while these elements are the main focus of this new collection, the vibrant colors that encompass the surrounding space prove that Zulueta has evolved as an abstractionist who’s no longer constrained by fear and uncertainty.
“I’m just enjoying painting now,” Zulueta says. “The works are nonrepresentational and it has no narrative and I guess as I grow older I realize that the struggle is over and it’s only right that I am able to express myself through this. It’s my commitment to myself.”

Capili understands this sentiment quite well. He deals with a medium that’s difficult to control primarily for its permanence.
“It’s irreversible, using lacquer and enamel,” Capili explains.
Capili says he is guided by the spontaneity of intuitive calligraphy.
With layers upon layers, Capili says he builds up his work into a complete piece that’s both fragile and intimidating. The separation of colors gives credence to his attempt to create a painting within a painting.

“It is an intuitive expression in abstract,” Capili says. “Different medium, different approach. You can see the abstractionism but it’s not the type that disturbs.”
The show  “2View” will serve as a precursor to the two artists’ participation in the 2014 Langkawi Art Biennale and the 2014 Malacca International Contemporary Art Festival in Malaysia. “2View” will run until Sept. 15.

Galerie Francesca is at 4/F,  SM Megamall Building A, Mandaluyong City. Call 5709495; e mail galeriefrancesca.mega@gmail.com.