Last Monday, February 11, 2019 only then I realized that we have not kept all our heritage and really known our culture because of the colonization we have had from the Spaniards and even the Americans. By having seen this authentic sculptured Ifugaos and their primitive food storage and furniture we can prove of the richness of artist we have since the ancient times.
For the first time in the Philippines, an impressive collection of traditional Cordillera pieces will be seen in public alongside artworks by 20th and 21st-century Filipino abstract artists. Owned by Hong Kong-based AsianArt:Future (AA:F), which is chaired by Swiss Martin Kurer, some of the collection will be on display at 1335Mabini in Karrivin Plaza, Pasong Tamo Extension, Makati, from February 16 to March 2, 2019.
Aptly titled “JUXTA:POSITION”, the exhibition comes as a result of Kurer’s particular interest in the universal and widespread use of the aesthetics of reduction, something present he says in the carved wooden figures or bulul, which are closely associated with the Ifugao peoples of Northern Luzon.
A three-part book, JUXTA:POSITION (The Aesthetics of Reduction), will be made available to the public. In it, Kurer goes into greater detail on the aestheticism of the carvings of the Cordillera peoples, which he says can also be perceived and described utilizing an artistic vocabulary similar to the one of the Abstract Art movement. The second and third parts highlight the bululs, boxes, kinahu, and spoons of the Cordillera peoples, mostly from the 19th century and earlier, and a number of abstract paintings from Filipino artists, as photographed by At Maculangan of Pioneer Studios, Manila.
Similar exhibitions have been done before by the Museum of Modern Art, New York in 1988 and accompanied by William Rubin’s catalogue “The Primitivism of Modern Art”, and in 2009 at Fondation Beyeler in Riehen/Basel titled “Visual Encounters, Africa, Oceanic, and Modern Art”, which showed tribal masterpieces alongside works of Vincent van Gogh, Paul Cezanne, Vassily Kandisnky, Rousseau, Constantin Brancusi, Henri Matisse, Piet Mondrian, and Mark Rothko.
More recently, the exhibition of Les Collections Barbier-Muller “100 Years of Passion” showed tribal art pieces from Africa and Oceania in the context of contemporary art of Baselitz, Jeff Koons, and others.
“I am not looking at the use of these aesthetic principles from a scholarly point of view,” Kurer says. “Rather, I look at pieces of art from different backgrounds and periods, and attempt to search some aesthetic interaction or connection among them.”
Each bulul, a box or bowl from AsianArt:Future’s collection, most of which were gathered from oldcollections, assembled in the last century, will be shown with a corresponding artwork from José Joya, Federico Aguilar Alcuaz, H.R. Ocampo, Lee Aguinaldo, Cesar Legaspi, Arturo Luz, Fernando Zóbel, Lao Lianben, and Gus Albor, who created a painting specifically for the exhibition.
Kurer invites the audience to look at the partnered pieces and perhaps spark a
dialogue on the aesthetic vocabulary of the two genres of artistic creation, which, on
the face of it, may not have much in common.
Yet, through the simplicity, directness, discipline, the reduction to the essence,
understatement, and the ability to show a hidden reality, it does according to Kurer.
This approach, Kurer adds, is not to subordinate traditional Cordillera art to the
viewpoint of “modern” or “fine” art point of view but to allow both sources to be
looked at on the same level.
“That also means to avoid looking, in the traditional approach, at the Cordillera
pieces shown from the perspective of their anthropological, ceremonial, and
functional background and use,” Kurer says.
“What the exhibition and juxtaposition
focuses on is the artistic implementation of the carver’s dealings with the spiritual
world in their natural environment, and the search for the unconscious, and how it
co-relates or connects with the same search for aesthetics of their modern artistic counterparts.”
In the January/February 2017 edition of Asian Art Magazine, AsianArt: Future
published an article that looks in detail into the art of the Cordilleras people and
their counterparts around the globe. The write up points out that pieces they have
created match the quality of the pieces of African and Oceanic tribal art. Kurer also
published a book titled Simplicity.Ifugao Sculpture.Power (Hong Kong University
Press/Columbia University Press).
As a collector, Kurer remains fascinated by the fact that artists from different
continents, with very distinct cultural heritages, and from very different epochs,
could end up employing—or be perceived to be employing—very similar aesthetic
approaches and furthering this dialogue is what he hopes the exhibition will
achieve.
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