At the Philippine High School for the Arts where he used to
teach and the College of Fine Arts of the University of the Philippines Diliman
where he has taught for almost twenty years Roberto Feleo is both a legend and
an individualist. Feleo techniques as
his students would call it. Amidst the prevalent western orientation in our
approach to art practice, he painstakingly continues to merge the mundane and
the sacred in folk history, mythology, politics and spirituality. His artworks
use non-traditional materials from cut out figurines, furniture parts, egg
shells, and saw dust.
As one of our pioneer judges during the early years of
ArtPetron National Student Art Competition we requested his opinion on
appropriation in Philippine art, which was featured in the ArtPetron Folio magazine in 2008. Here is what he wrote:
Appropriation cannot simply be dismissed as reproducing or copying a work or its parts without considering content and context. Content refers to the intention, idea, and interpretation of a piece. Context refers to meaning derived from a work, within its historical, cultural and personal parameters. Context lends credibility to interpretation of a work.
Alfredo Esquillo Jr., MaMackinley, 2001, Oil on Canvas. (image from afterall.org) |
Lee Aguinaldo, Homage to Vermeer, 1983, Photo collage with acrylic mounted on plywood (image from manilaartblogger) |
Curiously, the tradition of painting in the Philippines
started with copying Christian icons (stampitas) and their attributions as
prescribed by the church. (Colorings rendered by Maranao women on their men’s
carvings is, of course, an exception.) The propagation of faith necessitated
the reproduction of the images. As such, appropriated works had built monuments
to the nation’s christianization.
In the 1920s, Victorio Edades came home from the Unites
States bringing with him modernism a new art movement that would spark the
great debate between the conservatives and the moderns in the local art
community. The influence of Euro-American painters in Philippine painting would
further be entrenched during World War II. Branded as degenerates, an entire
generation of European artists migrated to the United States. After the war,
America mustered its publishing prowess to promote New York City as the art
capital of the world. American influence in painting spread worldwide through
books filled with photographic reproduction of Euro-American painters.
The issues mentioned earlier should provide greater clarity
in tackling appropriation within the national experience. Philippine events
provide a continuum to the present.
Santiago Bose, Native Song, 1999, Oil on canvas with mixed media and color process prints on paper (Gift of Malou Babilonia in 2007, image from education asianart.org) |
Beholden to the development of painting in the West,
Filipino painters, with a few exceptions, fail to appreciate their very own
visual traditions. It is about time they recognize their society as defined by
geography as multicultural and therefore a rich source of images and ideas just
waiting to be tapped. Otherwise they will always be regarded as colonialized.
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