Friday, June 29, 2012


Finding Pepe
by Junette Soriano-Bax
            Once upon a time, a young man went to Europe to get higher education. Liberte’ was the air of the times. In this atmosphere of free self-expression, he wrote 2 novels about the social condition in his country, titled Noli Me Tangere and El Filibusterismo. As the cliché’ goes:”The rest is history.”
       Jose Protasio Rizal Mercado y Alonzo Realonda was a certified polymath exhibiting degrees of proficiency in various fields including architecture, anthropology, sociology, ethnology, economics, cartography, dramatics, fencing, pistol shooting and martial arts.
                    At age 25, Rizal had obtained his degree in Medicine from the Universidad Central de Madrid, with a second doctorate from the University of Heidelberg. He was a polyglot, conversant in at least ten languages. He was a poet, essayist, novelist, sculptor, farmer, historian, playwright and journalist. 
        Anecdotes of his vivacity survived. Evidence of his skill as cartographer crossed continents. His voluminous correspondence was a boggle.  The impression he left on friends, colleagues, lovers and acquaintances baffle the historian. 
        To describe him as a genius is to miss the man.
        Honored as the Greatest Man of the Brown Race, the singularity of Jose Rizal as Asia’s L’uomo universali remains unchallenged to this day. 
        Arguably, Rizal is simply archival. To the IT generation, he could well be redundant.
         In the aftermath of the Japan’s nuclear leak or in the face of Filipino diaspora, Jose Rizal is half-remembered, at best. His life and achievements, memorialized in many parts of the world, are, nowadays, learned by rote to pass the subject as mandated in the Philippine educational curriculum.
        Over the last century, this great man who travelled to many distant lands in search of higher knowledge, slipped, sliding away from collective familiarity to cloudy memory.
         Jose Rizal is neither celebrity nor contemporary notable - until a Filipino finds him in a foreign land, honored alongside other towering figures in history.
         Standing before a Jose Rizal memorial, therefore, near Sydney Central Bus Station, is a delightful surprise. The plaque reads:
DR. JOSE PROTACIO RIZAL
(1861 – 1896)
Born on June 19, 1861 at Calamba, Laguna
and died as a martyr on 30 December 1896

Dr. Rizal was the first to inspire Filipinos
to regard themselves as a nation and to
cherish the Philippines as their fatherland.
He wrote two inspiring novels.
Noli Me Tangere and El Filibusterismo.
        This tribute was commissioned by the John Holland Co. in the Philippines to sculptor Holdane Sinclair Lewis (Order of the Australian Medal) and was presented as a gift to the City of Sydney. It was unveiled at the Ibero-Americana Plaza by President Fidel Ramos in 1995. 
        There are other monuments around the world where Jose Rizal is honored. Shrines, too, memorialize his persona. On the one hand, it brings home the reality of the changing times, when OFW is bagong bayani (new heroes) instead of brain drain; at the other, as a reminder of the cosmopolitan aspirations of many Filipinos, past and present.
        To the many homesick souls in distant shores, his monument is a morale boost.
        Indeed, finding Pepe in Australia is a gentle embrace of home, and homecoming is NEVER archival or redundant.
*****
Published  at the Philippine PANORAMA
June 19, 2011

FINDING PEPE

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

ART AND X-DEALS


Art and X-deals
By JASoriano


Trust an art aficionado to turn art into business.

          Provenance CEO-Senior Partner Andre Urbina recently staged a coup by brokering three major art pieces in exchange for shareholdings at a very prestigious nail salon situated in the heart of the Makati Business District.

It is arguable whether deals of this estimation have been done in the art world before. It is noteworthy in the sense that transactions of this type have just been signaled as official company strategy at Provenance Fine Art Brokers, Inc.

Businessmen can now own priceless collector’s items in lieu of cash thru sales of stocks and bonds, outright exchange of art pieces, project management, even motor vehicles. The art works come with Certificate of Authentication and cataloguing references.

Currently under negotiation are projects with the Committee for the 4th UST centennial,   Meanwhile, art works for the auction-for-charity project of Xavier University have also been established with the working group of said event.

Another exciting offering from the Provenance group is the cataloguing services of the company.  For these, art pieces can be negotiated as payments for services rendered.

Young as it is, Provenance is true to form of being at the forefront of systematic art brokering, It is bold in its move towards the high end direction of art management.


*August 2007 article, Business Mirror

ART-RAGEOUS


NotaBene

ART-RAGEOUS
by Junette A. Soriano 

There are painters and there are Painters.  Naturally, the capital letter belongs to those who have been elevated in the altars of the Muses. Locally, the spelling is national artist award plus a portfolio of print releases.

These Painters are collectively tagged as "brand names" and their oeuvres are priced at museum levels and/or as investments, well beyond the affordability of mortals like you and me. 

It leaves us with THE painters. They are in the R-O-F-L category, at least in terms of behavior. Here go some of these.

In the early eighties, when Ibarra de la Rosa was an art professor at Feati University, a group of his students banded themselves as ALITIKTIK. De la Rosa was their mentor and friend.  Shortly since bonding season, them students started dressing in tattered jeans, and began sporting the ponytail - ala' Ibarra. Footwear was strictly optional. Naturally, like their mentor, they were impressionists.

They have since disbanded.  They went their ways to many parts of the world.  The few who stuck it out in the visual arts number less than five.

            An artist from the Alitiktik group, nOLI eSPANOLA, walked from Divisoria to Las Pinas, via the South Super Highway, a distance of about 45 km.

He knocked at our door, politely requested to have some water and coffee and proceeded to go home via the same route - still on foot. I found out about it two years after! Espanola became popular with the pen and ink medium and did a sold-out show at Casa Manila. Some of his works now hang at Max’s in Alabang Town Center. He is presently underwater - a series in oil.

Have you ever known a person who became elated when his feet got infected? Artists only.

Noriel Alfonso, genre painter from eastern Rizal, developed allergy in both his feet.  He could not walk, much less put on shoes or slippers.  He stayed indoors for 6 months.  And he was happy because he could paint without being disturbed.

Then, there is the tall tale about the "father of surrealism" in the Philippines, Ricky Laxamana.  It was rumored that in one fit of artistic 'madness', he locked himself up for several months.

The late Robert Villanueva, a surreal buddy of Ricky, slept with his pet hamster for a while. Another pet, a white mouse joined him at the table during mealtimes. It must have been havoc when he brought girlfriends home. I don't know about the others but I ran out of his studio screaming.

We all know that *Van Gogh cut off his ears. He was insane. But he was a great artist.

The level of artistry can not be qualified in terms of outrageous behavior, though. Outrageous behavior is never art. When a painter allows his behavior to flow into his art, the resultant art piece is something else.

Let us take a look.

 Currently considered by some as the enfant terrible of modern painting in the Philippines, Jeffrey Tan is as good as they come by way of synthesizing his attitude into compositions on canvass.  Angst-y is the closest description one can give to his oeuvres, which come in huge proportions - 3 ft by 5 ft. Word on the grapevine is that he can hardly handle his liquor, which gives way to a violent streak. As for his paintings, there is strength in color handling.  The quasi-allegorical /biographical elements are ideal study for a Jungian advocate.

Artists are really capable of unpredictable conduct - for the laughter, for the books, for blogs and for art.

Once you start delving into this world, you will inevitably encounter them in that wonderful realm inhabited by madmen and geniuses alike. Take them as you will.  The works of true artists invariably thrill.

Ciao. . .


*Nota Bene:  Vincent Van Gogh (van go); 1853 – 1890, Dutch painter whose works made him the fountainhead of modern expressionist painting.













Nota Bene (Definition)


NotaBene –  Latin, meaning note well; observe what            
                         follows; take notice.  Abbr., N.B., n.b.,
Weblog site of Junette A. Soriano @ www.     provenanceph.com  
                            

N.B. Junette A. Soriano -  art critic, poetess,      scholar, reforestation advocate, computer idiot, kundiman addict. (See photo for details)