BY JAY BAUTISTA |
Interception by Marvin Quizon is an ongoing virtual exhibition at the Art Cube Gallery. It can be viewed through Art Steps. Log on to artsteps.com/download the Artsteps App.
Alter Ego |
For
the living imagination of visual artist Marvin Quizon, it has always been the struggle
between rationality and passion--a bitter war against maneuvering clichés—ever
since he started mixing paints on canvas for seven years now. His third solo
exhibition, Interception, culminates
with finality what has been evenly fought for in his previous two exhibitions
dealing deeply on positive realizations of pain and suffering like flowers
emanating from a rubble.
With the extended lockdown
looming at large, Quizon’s sense of time resulted in a moment of temporal unity
for these binary opposing forces. Against a contemporary art scene of
restlessness, churning out paintings after paintings in every auction, art fair
or biennale that comes along, Quizon offers a pregnant pause of the sublime in
these six paintings.
There is something in the
midst of Bulacan that transposes a poetic element in Quizon. Even with a short
distance from Manila, the allure of the province draws the melancholic and even
recluses like him. The vast expanse of the remaining rice fields or sudden
change of the season—that misty still unpolluted air while cumulative clouds
slowly parade—allows one to find sanctuary and immediately seek contemplation.
This lieu seems much more conducive to creative people such as musicians,
writers more so hungry young artists.
Interception |
Quizon visualizes
purposely how the mind and heart interchangeably return to their constant
engagement in the self-titled Interception--a work on paper with
three-dimensional cut outs. With radical and energetic determination, Quizon
has roamed freely from that conventional into an internal existence of wonder
and fantasy. Using tentacles to symbolize the enticing even
teasing flirtations of the consciousness, Quizon philosophically quizzes the
viewer how man can surrender to himself, give in to temptation, and ultimately
succumb to overthinking in a single arrested development.
We are
oftentimes hapless victim of our own faulting that we create our own tentacles
that continue to rob us blind leaving us in misery. We are trapped by our own
making or even our hands become the very tentacles that wallow us. There are times
Quizon gets utterly torn as to what his mind says from what his heart feels although
deep within he has already made up his heart. Shown in The Antagonist as it tips
the scale for once with the brain overwhelmed by his tempting limbs. The figurative
brain forms the subliminal octopus which has the ability to protect, defend,
overarching itself to cling on something it focuses itself into.
Discordant Comfort Zone |
Although everything
exists in the brain our deepest desire, and ultimate longing is what our heart
wants. The brain is physical while the heart is your soul. The fictitious tentacles envelope the man even becoming the man
himself in Alter Ego making it the
closest portrait Quizon can depict the blatant personified quagmire he becomes.
In Discordant Comfort Zone Quizon
configures idleness as a solitary enemy. Lounging is a feeling of repose, a
vacated sofa lingers comfortably while his creativity is held hostage. Done in
raw sepia-finish, one is seemingly invited to jump in the comforting
pillow-like palm of a giant.
Everyday reality has been
distorted, exaggerated, brought to excess, dressed up and supplanted. Time Intercepted is evident to
the mechanical call to order by a clock. In his profound solitude Quizon
produces exemplary parallelism in counting an infinity of the little hours
while painting in lockdown, he reduces the brain to logical rationality and the
heart to its purely visual function. It is necessary to purge thought of all
that is not in relation to ideas, ridding it of all the myths with which the
senses overlay the truth.
Quizon interprets the uncanny in surrealist brushstrokes as Nature of Mind and Soul is
a masterpiece rendered in a dream-like manner. In what he
interprets as an experiment in psychological layering, found at the dead aim
center is a man caught in flames signifying he is in a peril state of
saturation. The confusion overwhelms him on whether to be rational or hear the
pulsating beat of his heart. The resolution remains evident by the where flowers
in bloom.
Time Intercepted |
Quizon favors ongoing dialogues
of strange objects into a new visual language. These explorations of
incongruousness in existence are often highlighted by intricate details and
unusual perspectives. Notice the brain and how it is highlighted to represent
knowledge. It is inherent that we think what is right for us through where the
light leads us. Often he distorts his space using hyperrealism marked by rustic
finish and in raw and limited monotone palette often depicting his mood. Quizon
is fond of depicting symbols, allegories and odd juxtaposes of objects. The
heart is in a dim part but it still glows as it grows. Proof that the heart
wants what it wants, it is the soul that benefits. Quizon
has even left ample space in the foreground for the viewers to interlude as
Quizon opens up the invitation to look intently on the canvas. There is an open
clamor as the viewer could even get burned by his fatal indecision.
Compared to his
contemporaries, Quizon prefers his slow creative process to be long and
arduous. Quizon paints everyday leaving only a day to regain his momentum. He
usually does rough sketches and writes his thoughts. He continues with
unfinished studies as he conceptualizes further on canvas. Quizon is organic in
approach that he usually ends up adding from what his initial studies were. He
accepts this as his visual style—a way of surrendering into his subconscious.
Sometimes Quizon ends up with a different yet more improved version of his
initial studies.
The Antagonist |
He then proceeds to
photograph his references even edits them in his computer as he is well-versed
to be. He proceeds to layer his oil paints how the way masters like his
influence Rembrandt of the 17th century Dutch Golden Age does it. He
finishes off by color glazing much like the way his fellow artists from Bulacan
do theirs as well.
Upon careful reflection
on his pieces, Quizon subdues his colors to suit his intended emotions. Quizon is
an old soul at barely 26 years old, his commitment to his craft and his pursuit
for artistic emancipation reflects within his soft-spoken character. In the
end, he believes we can love
completely without even complete understanding.
Nature of Mind and Soul |
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