Monday, September 16, 2013
Loob Labas : A Group Exhibit
Wazzup Pilipinas!
LOOB | LABAS focuses on the use of man-made found and natural found materials.The artists tackle themes “within” and “without”(outside), such as self, childhood, home, community, environment and the natural world around us. Works are laid out within the China Hall of the GT-Toyota Asian Cultural Center, the Rear Garden, and extending to the building’s rooftop.
Using a combination of natural and manmade found objects, Reuben Ramas Cañete, art writer and professor at the Asian Center, creates a reflection of the cyclic aspect of existence: from germination, growth, decay and death, to rebirth, using leaves & branches, paper, and charcoal in his work “Sarcophagus”. For his installation work on the rooftop, he lays out a directional sign for magnetic north with the lingling-o motif—a prehistoric Philippine fertility symbol, with painted concrete tile, white pebbles and lights, to comment on contemporary regional problems.
Jake Salvador, a former photojournalist for the Manila Bulletin, burns plywood scraps to transform them into weapons of his childhood. Again using wood, he playfully turns dead tree trunks into what he calls “happycons,” providing rest to the weary beside living trees.
From his own work refuse, Fine Arts teacher and graphic designer Aman Santos creates a colorful impression of his body with rubber foam, a material used mainly in footwear; a material also heavily used in recent years by the UP College of Fine Arts (CFA). Turning his attention to this community for his installation work, he digs up seedlings that sprout on the ground from the fallen seeds of trees at the CFA. He replants the seedlings in paper cups used by the same community to provide the young saplings a better chance to grow, similar to the nurturing education provided by the college.
Yan Abeledo, an art teacher and video artist, derives inspiration from expended synthetic materials found in laboratories, arranging them into structures of bacterial, plant, and animal cells. He extends his explorations outdoors to create an installation illustrative of parasitism and symbiotic relationships.
Katti Sta. Ana, an awarded studio artist and illustrator, tackles domesticity in her work, using materials that provide security, sustenance, and protection in the home, while manifesting her uneasiness about the time eaten up by domestic duties on one’s possibilities. She also takes the bedroom outdoors, complete with banig and kulambo, bringing the private out in the open. The installation is reminiscent of the camping out of the carefree, or the living without shelter of the homeless.
Rita Aznar, an educational materials designer, for her part, hangs a curtain of plastic egg trays to create an artificial wall garden—a paradox of industrialized urban life: beauty and trash. She then plants faucets on soil using waste: aluminum duct, can clips, plastic soda bottles, nylon cords, wire, and aluminum foil, tapping into water as a source of life, its scarcity, at the same time its abundance in a denuded land.
For inquiries, call Dino Carlo Santos at 981-8500 loc 3580 or 9203535. LOOB | LABASs is made possible through the support of the UP Asian Center and the UP College of Fine Arts.
Opening, 4-7 PM, Wednesday
18 September 2013
Exhibit runs until 25 October 2013
China Room and Rear Garden
GT-Toyota Asian Cultural Center
Magsaysay Avenue cor. Guerrero Street
UP Diliman, QC
Featuring artworks by:
Yan Abeledo
Rita Aznar
Reuben Ramas Cañete
Jake Salvador
Aman Santos
Katti Sta. Ana
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