MM Yu, Jonathan Ching, At Maculangan, and Cos Zicarelli at Silverlens

MM Yu, "Beliefs II", detail

Another terrific trio opened at Silverlens last week, three shows that also relaunched the gallery as a single space with three exhibit areas.  SLab and 20Square opened in 2008 as two distinct galleries under the Silverlens group, envisioned for non-photography exhibits.  These two spaces and the original photography gallery will now all carry the Silverlens name, with a soon-to-open Silverlens Singapore in the pipeline for the last quarter of the year. Continue reading


On The Range at Blanc Compound

Mariano Ching, "Under The Western Sky Series 3"

The exhibit’s title did puzzle me, but it should have clued me in.  Clint Eastwood in Hats On, Bottoms Off shows works inspired by Westerns—the cowboys and Indians variety, an odd, unexpected choice of concepts.  But a chat with artist Allan Balisi, who had thought this up with Cos Zicarelli, revealed that there is nothing more to this than a bunch of cowboy movie enthusiasts getting together to produce work.  Everyone in the group was game enough to stick to the plan. Continue reading


Jonathan Ching Finds Botero's Leg

Jonathan Ching, "Living With Botero's Leg"

I wanted to see this show because its title intrigued me.  Why does  Jonathan Ching need to search for Botero’s leg?  It turns out that he intends for the exhibit to play on memories, random thoughts and experiences that cross his mind, including recollections

Found: Botero's Leg

of his own past work. A favorite computer game, Where In The World Is Carmen San Diego, inspired the exhibit’s title, along with the show’s biggest piece.

Jonathan Ching, "Topiary Of My Mind"

In the first three panels of Living With Botero’s Leg, a multi-media quadriptych, Jon depicts distinctive footwear:  two styles of cowboy boots and a pair of silk Chinese slippers for bound feet.  None of them would suit the hefty proportions of a Fernando Botero subject, an approximation of which he places on the piece’s fourth panel.  Here we find the elusive leg, portly as expected,  cast in metal,  and crowned with tin embellishments used for altarpieces. With this piece, Jon continues his series of incorporating objects within his paintings,  a device he used extensively for his show at Blanc Compound in April.

Smaller canvases make up the rest of the show, most of them oval-shaped.  Jon felt

Detail, "Topiary Of My Mind"

that his personal reminiscences called for these intimate sizes.  On two of these, Topiary Of My Mind and Chimes, he integrates sculpted blackbirds fabricated from polymer clay.

Exhibit Installation

The pieces I find most interesting are the three free-standing sculpture of black swans that hearken to origami, the Japanese art of creating figures from folded paper.  Constructed from GI sheets and finished with automotive paint, the swans reference his past work, an installation of numerous folded birds from his 2003 two-man show with Christina Dy at the now-defunct Surrounded By Water.  I don’t exactly know how these three pieces fit in with his paintings, and perhaps they don’t.  However, I think it would be great to see him take his origami sculpture further, explore different patterns, even experiment with textures.  Maybe next time, at some future show, Jon can allow his sculpture to take center stage.  But of course, I am usually more partial to sculpture.  So perhaps my biases are showing.

Jonathan Ching, "Two Rivers"

Where In The World Is Botero’s Leg runs from 9 July to 2 August 2010 at Finale Art File, Warehouse 17, La Fuerza Compound, 2241 Pasong Tamo, Makati. Phone (632) 813-2310 or visit http://www.finaleartfile.com or visit http://www.jonching.com

Jonathan Ching, "Chimes"

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WS1RsnyzlP4




West End Boys: Jonathang Ching, Kaloy Olavides, Lawrence Bersoto, and Dennis Gonzales

I set out early from Makati on the day I caught West Gallery’s opening of four shows, one for each of its exhibit spaces.  I arrived

Jonathan Ching with his pieces, "Deja Vu (After Edouard Manet)"

Jonathan Ching with his "Deja Vu (After Edouard Manet)"

just as they set up the coffee station, the aroma of freshly-brewed beans keeping me company as I criss-crossed the gallery’s rooms, taking in the works on the walls.  Quite a melange from relatively young artists  with very distinct styles and subject matter.

Jonathan Ching continues his series on immortality which he first explored in his show in KL a few months ago.  In the main wall of his space, three portraits lend their

Jonathan Ching, "Gang of Four:  Larry, Moe, Curly, and Me"

Jonathan Ching, "Gang of Four: Larry, Moe, Curly, and Me"

titles to the show, If Its White and In a Bottle, It Must Be Milk.  These paintings depict Princess Diana and the late rap superstar Francis Magalona in life, and the last, the Dalai Lama.  As Jon explains, the title comes from the words of  Alexandre Dumas as he delves on the difference between perception and reality, especially the reality that these immortals had to contend with vis-a-vis their high profile lives.

Jonathan Ching, "If It's White and In a Bottle, It Must Be Milk" series

Jonathan Ching, "If It's White and In a Bottle, It Must Be Milk" series

I thought that the mixed media piece, Deja Vu (After Edouard Manet), which combines a cast iron bull positioned above Jon’s depiction of Manet’s slain matador came off as the most interesting.  It may even have the potentials of spinning off into another show, perhaps the beginning of a series of similar mixed media wall works.

"You Are A Moment" and Lawrence Bersoto

"You Are A Moment" and Lawrence Bersoto

Lawrence Bersoto and Dennis Gonzales stick to what they’ve done before.  Lawrence captures photographic moments with his usual skill.  Dennis reveals hidden lives and desires.

Lawrence Bersoto, "April 202009"

Lawrence Bersoto, "April 202009"

Dennis Gonzales, "Eat All You Can"

Dennis Gonzales, "Eat All You Can"

You can just imagine how much work Kaloy Olavides puts into his collages.  He begged, borrowed, and, maybe, stole magazines from family, friends, and strangers to gather enough photographs to complete his pieces.  Kaloy works with repetitive images painstakingly put together.  In his Need Extension series, he has hundreds of hands appearing to reach out to man’s three basic needs of food, clothing, and shelter.  In Etherealscape, the eyes have it.  As with the hands, he cut, pasted, and lacquered more than 100 eyes for this one piece.

Dennis Gonzales, "Princess" and "Finding Bambi"

Dennis Gonzales, "Princess" and "Finding Bambi"

If Its White and Its in a Bottle It Must Be Milk by Jonathan Ching, Chaotic Serenity by Kaloy Olavides, Nothing New Under the Sun by Dennis Gonzales, and You Are A

Kaloy Olivades, "Etherealscape" (detail)

Kaloy Olavides, "Etherealscape" (detail)

Moment by Lawrence Bersoto runs from 13 August to 14 September 2009 at West Gallery, 48 West Ave., Quezon City.  Phone (632) 411-9221 or visit

http:// www.jonching.com http://www. westgallery.org

Kaloy Olivades, "Etherealscape"

Kaloy Olavides, "Etherealscape"

Kaloy Olivades, "Need Extension" Series

Kaloy Olavides, "Need Extension" Series

Kaloy Olivades, "Need Extension" (detail)

Kaloy Olavides, "Need Extension" (detail)


Power Tripping with Don Salubayba and Jonathan Ching

Don Salubayba, "Fast Food Nations"

Don Salubayba, "Fast Food Nations"

Two shows this week, one in Manila, the other in Kuala Lumpur, both by Filipino visual artists, explore the concept of power. Don Salubayba examines how we wield it in our everyday lives. Jonathan Ching observes the effects of power that has diminished over time.

Don Salubayba, "The Epitome of Pogi Points"

Don Salubayba, "The Epitome of Pogi Points"

THE UNOFFICIAL THEORY OF POWER, DON SULABAYBA

I first encountered Don Sulabayba’s art in in 2004. He transformed one gallery in the third floor of the CCP into Spoonful Discard, an installation of plastic spoons and used pre-paid cellphone cards. I found his materials a bit rough, but even then, thought him an artist that

Don Salubayba, "The Great Delude"

Don Salubayba, "The Great Delude"

should bear watching. How gratifying to see a more mature body of work in this show, paintings that still bear his signature drips, predominantly faceless subjects, and floating layers of objects, but rendered in richer, deeper hues.

People who only see Don as a visual artist working with paintings overlook his contributions to his other passions, performance art via Anino Shadowplay

Don Salubayba, "A Scheme of Order"

Don Salubayba, "A Scheme of Order"

and his social involvement with TutoK. His multi-faceted interests exert obvious influence in his works on canvas. You will always get some commentary on political or religious issues. But never too heavy, always nimbly handled, usually with a touch of humor. Here he muses on the control held over us by material and non-material substances, the power that innocuous objects have on our daily routines.

The Epitome of Pogi Points comments on how Henry Ford’s Model T, the first vehicle marketed under a brand name, has been transformed from a necessary means of transportation into an object to showcase one’s social standing or even as a chick magnet. The car then becomes a tool of power: the flashier the car, the more goodlooking or socially-acceptable its owner.

Don Salubayba, "The Art of Misdirection" and "The Manipulation of an Inanimate Object"

Don Salubayba, "The Art of Misdirection" and "The Manipulation of an Inanimate Object"

The haunting Fast Food Nations illustrates Don’s thought process on the bombing of Nagasaki, the first time man used an atomic bomb to show power over another race. How ironic that the Americans used a bomb nicknamed Fat Man to subdue the Japanese sixty years ago, when today, we know that many Americans suffer from obesity brought about by their penchant for the calorific fried delights of their fast food chains. As these fast food chains have proliferated all over the world, Fat Man brings destruction of a different sort, killing through heart disease and other health concerns.

The story of Adam and Eve as narrated in the Book of Genesis is the subject of  The Great Delude. Here Don tackles the power of a story from the bible which, from constant telling and retelling, we have forgotten has no basis in fact.  It remains a myth.  Scheme of Order likewise takes on the effect of religious beliefs.  Don portrays a ladder of indulgences, an image found in medieval art, to illustrate the control of the Catholic Church.  We believe ourselves forgiven from sin if the church so grants this forgiveness,

Don Salubayba, "The Death of Imagination" and "The Epitome of Pogi Points"

Don Salubayba, "The Death of Imagination" and "The Epitome of Pogi Points"

even if in the past, the influential purchased clemencies as they saw fit.

Don departs for Sydney this week on a residency grant for his involvement with shadow plays.  As always, we wish him luck as we look forward with anticipation to the work he will produce when he returns.

The Theory of Power by Don Salubayba is on view from 30 May to 20 June 2009 at The Drawing Room, 1007 Metropolitan Ave, Metrostar Bldg, Makati City.  Ph (632)897-7877 or visit www.drawingroomgallery.com

DAYS OF THUNDER, JONATHAN CHING

Jonathan Ching, "Days of Thunder"

Jonathan Ching, "Days of Thunder"

In his first solo exhibit outside Manila, Jonathan Ching paints images of larger-than-life personalities who have to face the waning of their influence and confront their own mortality.   He does this through a series of large scale canvases, each one pairing a legendary notable with a portent of his doom.   We see former dictator Ferdinand Marcos asking for more life as he sees his legacy and hold over a society crumble.  His famous gigantic cement bust falls to ruin due to the ravages of time and the disgust of a populace he once held absolute sway over. In the exhibit’s title piece, Days of Thunder, Jon paints Evel Kneivel, paunchy and middle-aged, still attempting to sail over a mountain of used cars, unable to

Jonathan Ching, "Maybe Immortality is Just a Matter of Remembrance"

Jonathan Ching, "Maybe Immortality is Just a Matter of Remembrance"

let go of his celebrity.  Another large canvas depicts a proud matador and a bull, each one the nemesis of the other, fates intertwined.  One’s loss is the other’s gain, no one will triumph without undoing the other.

Jonathan Ching, "Though Paradise May Be Merry and Bright"

Jonathan Ching, "Though Paradise May Be Merry and Bright"

Jon Ching, "We Were Immortals (I am the Greatest)"

Jon Ching, "We Were Immortals (I am the Greatest)"

He dubs his smaller canvases his We Were Immortals series.  He paints Muhammed Ali, once the greatest, now wasting away with a crippling condition. Jon portrays the Lone Ranger as an aging superhero reliving his glory

Jonathan Ching, "We Were Immortals( I Was Always the Action Hero)"

Jonathan Ching, "We Were Immortals( I Was Always the Action Hero)"

days.  Yul Brynner looks out from a tv screen, speaking against the effects of smoking in an infomercial released posthumously. And closer to home, Jonathan depicts his father as a younger man, at the age when to his son he seemed invincible.

In a bit of a departure from the rest, he does a portrait of himself asleep, dreaming of a childhood when he had no fears to limit him.

“Look at them now” may very well have been the catchphrase he used to jumpstart his discourse on power and immortality.  If he asks that of himself, well, what would he see?  A Civil Engineering

View of "We Were Immortals" series depicting Jonathan's dad as a younger man and of himself asleep

View of "We Were Immortals" series depicting Jonathan's dad as a younger man and of himself asleep

graduate who pursued his dream of becoming an artist, and look at him now.

Days of Thunder by Jonathing Ching is on view from 30 May to 13 June at Valentine Willie Fine Arts in Kuala Lumpur.  Visit www.vwfa.net
or www.jonching.com

Jonathan Ching, "We Were Immortals"

Jonathan Ching, "We Were Immortals (I Was Magnificent)"


Homecoming From Beijing

Push and Pull by Jose John Santos III

Push and Pull by Jose John Santos III

In the great CS Lewis classic, The Lion, The Witch, and the Wardrobe, Professor Kirke’s seemingly run-of-the mill armoire becomes the portal to enchanted, magical Narnia.  Upon entering its doors, four children transport from war-ravaged Britain into a world of pathos, quest, achievement, adventure. Continue reading