No Need For Back Up |
BY JAY BAUTISTA |
In his essay, “Meditations on a
Hobby Horse,” art historian E.H. Gombrich stresses how perception is acquired
in the objects that he is exposed to. Like in a hobby horse, with only a
horse’s head and a stick for a body, the child experiences sheer wonder. He sees
the whole horse with it, how he likes to ride on it and even go to far away places
with using his imagination. The symbolic connotation is not it resembles a
horse but the pure fun the child can have with that “stick with a horse’s
head.” We can learn much from children as they know the proper use of things as they
transgress them.
What more with unadulterated media wherein studies prove that for a child there is no distinction between product commercial and the main show? This is what young artist Archie Oclos’ first show “Paradigma” seek to resolve and the seven works contemplate how media indeed profusely affect our lives.
Need Back Up is a critique of the days when indigenous games were
played and occupied our busy streets and expressions of joy, triumph determination,
ardor and vigor are experienced at play. Patintero,
Tumbang Preso, Taguan, Luksong Tinik,
and Teks – these were the games we
used to play, games that taught us teamwork, patience and fair play; games that
developed dexterity and ingenuity.
“Ito ay ang
unti-unting pagkalusaw ng mga larong pinoy sa henerasyon ngayon na kung saan
uso o in ngayon ang mga computer games such as Counter Strike, Dota, etc. Sana maipabatid kung gano pa rin
ka-importante ang larong pinoy kung saan mas nabibigyan nito ng magandang
benefits ang mga kabataan tulad ng
pagiging patas sa laro, ang interaksyon ng pakikipagkapwa tao, makatutulong sa
pisikal at mental na lakas ng kabataan, di tulad ng computer games na sa
"birtwal" na mundo na sila
gumagalaw o ang nakikita nilang reyalidad ay ang mga birtwal na bagay na kung
saan nababawasan nito social skills na kayang ibahagi ng kabataan.
Nagkakaroon
din ng
conflict ang pananaw ng mga kabataan ukol
sa "reyalidad" na kanilang
kinagigisnan sa ngayon, kung ang reyalidad ba ay makikita sa birtwal na mundo o sa mundong
kanilang tinutuntungan at maaari pang ma-discover,” explains Oclos. There is indeed childhood lost as the kids are alienated in technological interaction as early on in their lives, this time with the aid of computers. The possibility of growing up introvert, for Oclos what started out as naïve family computer games have bloomed into serious Role Playing Games (RPG).
kinagigisnan sa ngayon, kung ang reyalidad ba ay makikita sa birtwal na mundo o sa mundong
kanilang tinutuntungan at maaari pang ma-discover,” explains Oclos. There is indeed childhood lost as the kids are alienated in technological interaction as early on in their lives, this time with the aid of computers. The possibility of growing up introvert, for Oclos what started out as naïve family computer games have bloomed into serious Role Playing Games (RPG).
Identity Crisis |
We are alarmed and even scared some more with the
piece Identity Crisis as one’s self
identity is lost by ironic divulging of information such as age, school,
address, hobbies and interests in social networks. Even how one feels at the
moment of writing your status is open to all. Everything is shared even personal
photos are accessed to all who may have the time to lurk in your account to the
point of stalking you.
“Para lahat nakapaloob as “advertisement” lahat ng bagay
tungkol sa’yo, alam na ng lahat. nawawala na ba ang pribadong sarili? Nais ko
lamang ipabatid ang responsibility ng
bawat taong gumagamit ng social media networks, kumbaga "think before you click,” Oclos advises.
His colors have that strong multiplier effect as the gallery lights hit his brushstrokes. The natural outburst of varied hues reflects immensely giving viewers a visual treat of its shades. Such as in the piece Swiper No Swiping which is for me the best piece in the collection. The show about games is a game on shows. As the clash of good and evil is reenacted, Oclos uses every possible weapon available emulating the many heroes he has played before to slay the enemy in the form of a dragon. Determined to fight until the end, the dragon continuously breathes red streaks of lightning coming from his mouth. Oclos finely captures this fleeting moment of equanimity by using metallic colors of white, blue and fuchsia along with monochromatic earth tones.
Swiper No Swiping |
Mind Controlled |
One can almost hear the ethereal movement
in Oclos’s Mind Controlled. In garnering
more points, they make you want to grab a game pad and continue the game after
pressing “start.” Going beyond being whimsical to suggest significance yet
often overlooked connections between monitor and canvas, Oclos reflects: “More
than escape for me, mas masaya ang
art and gaming than reality because you get to realize things that you cannot
accomplished in real life you could do it virtual gaming.” In bridging the two
realities in this show, Oclos has validated his thoughts about computer games.
Style-wise, Oclos considers
himself well-versed both in abstraction and realism to create his own. The
subliminal use of video games music was also very instrumental in coming up
with the paintings. They were conversing with Oclos while he was sketching and
mixing paints in preparation for the show. It should have been evident in the
pieces.
Oclos adds “Gano
ka-influential, manipulative ang
teknolohiya sa kaisipan ng bawat indibidwal, kung saan halos lahat ng ating
ginagawa ay naaayon sa kung ano ang mga sinasabi ng mga commercials kunwari maganda ka kung gumagamit ka ng whitening
products, hindi ka maganda kung maitim ka
or what, slim o payat para sa mga
kababaihan, may abs at macho para sa kalalakihan, maraming reality
shows na kung saan nalalapit daw ito sa
realidad ng buhay, dahil dun nakokontrol nito ang batayan o "standards" ng kagandahan sa
lipunan.”
All art is play but not all
children grow up to be like Oclos. Of late, cotemporary art has actually
morphed into one big playground. You can actually say that Oclos is both a
progressive and a conservative artist. Progressive in the sense that his visual
language is new, like using images from games as art forms is fresh
perspective. Conservative because a revelation of meanings unfolds in every
depicted image. In every canvas marked by his own dual aesthetics, one in real
time and one happening in cyber world, Oclos has composed something ethereal
yet less stolid. His desire to render “grayness” or in sepia in his works
rustically sit well, against the futile colorful aesthetics found in most
exhibitions coinciding it in the art scene today.
Oclos’s works are meant to be
viewed on many occasions and not just on opening day. The works eventually
reveal more with every successive viewing. He has spent so much time
researching and sourcing from his past games, in relation with his art, he
translates these shapes and colors in a kind of relevance and transformations
in art in the context of modern technology. This is clearly evident in Option A at Option B.
He expounds “Tungkol
po ito sa dalawang options na maaari nating piliin kung "positive o
negative" ba ang epekto ng
teknolohiya sa atin na kung saan tayo ay natatali sa ganong kalagayan. ang
pagsasabi ko na nasa bawat indibidwal ang desisyon kung pano nila gagamitin ang
kahalagahan ng teknolohiya.”
One of the most critical
decisions a serious artist makes is when to have your first solo show. As Oclos passed his first test, he has even all the trappings for a future in contemporary arts. UP Fine Arts graduate,
check; Philippine Collegian Graphic Artist, check (read activist); Had group shows in Tin-aw Art Gallery and Jorge Vargas Museum, double check.; now for the look, bonnet and goatee, check.
There
may be artists who have the skills but they are somehow caught in the
quagmire of commissioned works (can you do school of me coy fish?) or joining art contests t(it's a bad habit to break) in boosting one’s career that
career-wise they have failed to plot whatever artistic style they want to
pursue. Such that they get left behind in terms of growth as an artist or worse
they stop painting for the love of it. We hope Oclos is wise
enough to know the differences.
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