BY JAY BAUTISTA |
Ask any child these days on how to make and simply fly a kite chances are you would meet a long blank stare. The most you can probably solicit is a mere shrug at the thought. And if you are luckier he or she would google at your curious query at a later bored time.
Early on, as soon as he would wake up, without fail one
would find Salon either making a kite or flying one. As the wind gushes towards his face, he feels he is on
top or even one with the clouds. Evident in Alapaap one assumes immortality as a kite. Looking up to the big
sky one is grateful for the gift of redemption as he appreciates the
heavens--exaltation to the most high. As one flies his kite, like a true artist
one cannot help but notice the floating characters how God had manually curated
the skies, it was here that Salon observed that there are no same clouds as
they form our favorite animals, flowers or even the faces of our loved ones.
With figures
predominantly in almost ash gray tones, with the strings in hand, by looking at these works Salon allows you to escape time or better yet he simulates you in his time. These were the moments
Salon and his friend dreamed their dreams. They learned life by making kites,
how one should not sacrifice quality of materials just because it is cheap or
available. The better the bamboo the more protective the spine as more weight will
pull you down. The pointer of the kite is most important as it directs the
flight, like being focus on where you want to go. One could say he learned the
rudiments of his being artist through by mixing art and science of kite flying
as well.
Capturing every ethereal emotion Buradol sa Uran rekindles fond memories of Salon growing up in his hometown in the province. Starting with a frame in the form of a house, the kite shaped canvas features other activities he enjoyed as a child like idling on top of water buffaloes. He compliments the use of metallic colors like gold and silver mixed with primary hues like red and yellow. Typical to Salon is his clouds that places you in between a dreamy state or a foggy situation either which way he hopes one can get out of it. His clouds blend to the rustic primary finish he adopts as base–a semblance of decay with a promise of escape or epiphany, Salon is most effective in conceptualizing this.
As December ushers the start of amihan, bringing coolness in the breeze, Salon recalls they would even extend up until the wee hours of the morning come yuletide season. Tanaw reverses the perspective and assigns the viewer as if one is being/feeling feted as a kite himself. As one surges upward, one notices how we are caught in the quagmire from below–from the larger picture of how largely polluted our oceans are or how densely populated our desperate metropolis to how families have been divided not material poverty but of the spirit. Despite having the freedom from above one opts to be spared from gory and even gruesome setting we may not see but be witnesses to. Although Tanaw is a self-portrait, Salon opts to cover his vision in the presence of inevitable bi-polar negative and positive vibes. There is always the silver lining (as his primary canvas) where the rainbow celebrates the brightness of a new tomorrow.
Like the kite one can only be swayed
or even find its way out of this mess, based on how it wants to intensify and
command on the available air to guide him. By flash movement in
the overlapping kite flyers, war and its ugly
head has been a recurring presence in Salon’s works he remains positive as the
child overcomes the adult in Salon. Notice how Salon abhors stillness by
incorporating cartoons to subvert the brutality of it all. Only Salon can paint
children is softer but fierce in stance.
Ask any child these days on how to make and simply fly a kite chances are you would meet a long blank stare. The most you can probably solicit is a mere shrug at the thought. And if you are luckier he or she would google at your curious query at a later bored time.
In Buradol
(Bicolano for kites) Jeff Salon reprises even deeper to his most favored of themes
in childhood--the lost joy of flying kites. Capturing almost ten years of his
early life navigating the starched strings of this bamboo-formed airborne plane
wrapped with plastic, roaming freely the unadulterated skies at the open fields behind
their house in Camarines Sur.
Alapaap. Oil on Canvas, 5x4ft |
De Kahon is part of the Buradol Series |
Typical to Salon is how he multiplies his messages
in a series of artworks, representing the happiness of kite flying in ten
parts, in this case assembled in small-boxed pieces. Done in his usual earth
tones of brown and gray, Buradol
series does more to paints as Salon even expanded them in three-dimensional
pieces using actual wood and nylon string depicting his images on them.
Being aerodynamic
by nature, kites usually take the shape of anthropomorphic forms like fish (the
gills have their purpose in flight), bats, birds or even water buffaloes. Oftentimes
they are airplanes where a pointed front controls its direction and the tail
navigates the wind from below. In fact in kite parlance, he who holds the
strings is a pilot while the co-pilot is the one who releases it while walking
backwards.
Reflected in Buradol
series kite-flying levels off whatever class or gender there are in youth groups.
Salon’s friends have gone far and away from the fields and from where they fly are now patches of a larger subdivision. In these trying times, it uplifting that Salon’s images
of children are built on sterner stuff. They are tough yet meek at heart and
competitive when flying side by side but they can help repair a kite once he
sees a kid badly needing assistance.
In these scenes, Jeffrey also pays tribute to his father who is not only a great teacher but a fine carpenter who taught him how to handle the saw and hammer a nail and build whatever his mind sets him to create or recreate.
In these scenes, Jeffrey also pays tribute to his father who is not only a great teacher but a fine carpenter who taught him how to handle the saw and hammer a nail and build whatever his mind sets him to create or recreate.
Buradol sa Uran. Mixed Media, 2014 |
Capturing every ethereal emotion Buradol sa Uran rekindles fond memories of Salon growing up in his hometown in the province. Starting with a frame in the form of a house, the kite shaped canvas features other activities he enjoyed as a child like idling on top of water buffaloes. He compliments the use of metallic colors like gold and silver mixed with primary hues like red and yellow. Typical to Salon is his clouds that places you in between a dreamy state or a foggy situation either which way he hopes one can get out of it. His clouds blend to the rustic primary finish he adopts as base–a semblance of decay with a promise of escape or epiphany, Salon is most effective in conceptualizing this.
Tanaw. Mixed media, 5x4ft. 2014 |
As December ushers the start of amihan, bringing coolness in the breeze, Salon recalls they would even extend up until the wee hours of the morning come yuletide season. Tanaw reverses the perspective and assigns the viewer as if one is being/feeling feted as a kite himself. As one surges upward, one notices how we are caught in the quagmire from below–from the larger picture of how largely polluted our oceans are or how densely populated our desperate metropolis to how families have been divided not material poverty but of the spirit. Despite having the freedom from above one opts to be spared from gory and even gruesome setting we may not see but be witnesses to. Although Tanaw is a self-portrait, Salon opts to cover his vision in the presence of inevitable bi-polar negative and positive vibes. There is always the silver lining (as his primary canvas) where the rainbow celebrates the brightness of a new tomorrow.
The Challenger. Oil on Canvas, 8x5 ft. 2014 |
The brilliance of Salon is how he
conceals his intents and purposes to his creative devices appointing his viewer
the subliminal connotations to his meanings. The rendering in The Challenger is apt for a children’s
book however see how his unified kites confront death as it explodes in an
almost cinematic progression beaming a skull from behind. The
allegory in the redness of flight/fight against what constitute progress wasted
on the young—ideals against technology etc.
The late Steve Jobs did not allow his children when
they were young to use computers at home. The inventor and Apple co-founder
believed that the best way for them to learn the rudiments was to be with
nature and play outdoors. With gadgets kids these days are losing their motor
skills, or just being in touch with the earth. Even with the recurring theme of
combat and violence, Salon’s realism may not be as political as social but they
imbibe empathy by examining your senses to a maximum reality.
As a visual artist, Salon has always
kept his ear to the ground in being considered the last generation who learned to play in the streets. Those
were summer spent without ipods, Cartoon Network, Twitter and Facebook but he
was pleased as unraveled in these latest works. His only worry that these
paintings don’t end up as instructional materials in a dusty museum in a not so
distant time.
Buradol is the 3rd Solo Exhibition of Jeff Salon. It is ongoing at the Nineveh Artspace in Sta. Cruz, Laguna as part of its 11th anniversary celebrations.
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