Friday, May 15, 2015

MAYU SOLANO'S REMINISCENCES IN PASTEL SHADES

By Arnel Mirasol



Happy Thoughts is the title of Mayu Solano's collaborative show with Karen de Pano Picadizo at the Artologist Gallery. I remarked that their paintings must be of happy memories or events. Mayu agreed, and said that the happy events that are the subjects of her paintings are not necessarily memories of her childhood, but rather her recollections mostly of recent events in her life.

Although the movies and music are frequent sources of inspiration for her, Mayu confessed that she starts each painting with no definite motifs in mind yet. Her working method is impromptu. She begins by laying down on canvas the colors she likes until she sees on it the right combination of colors and form. It is only then that Mayu begins to delineate in greater detail the images that she thinks she sees on the canvas.


Toy balloons are recurrent motifs in Mayu's paintings, and candy-colored houses, too. Anime inspired characters, like the one-eyed creatures of her 2010 works, appeared in her paintings from time to time, which make it easy for us to guess who her influences were when it comes to art making. Mayu specifically mentioned the Japanese artist Yoshitomo Nara as one of her favorites. Nara is famous for his "portraits" of cartoony characters with big though menacing eyes. I mentioned Takashi Murakami, but Mayu said that she doesn't know of him. Well, Murakami is the founder of Superflat, a Japanese art movement that espouses the utilization of anime and Japanese kitsch imagery in paintings and sculptures. Takashi Murakami is Japan's own Jeff Koons - the American pop artist who inherited the mantle of pop art-stardom from Andy Warhol.



While Mayu's early works resemble the paintings of the Superflat artists, a shift had occurred lately in her style. Mayu had gravitated away from Superflat. The nuance may be indiscernible, but it is there. Her paintings can be categorized now as naif, or more to the point, as pop-naif., because she consciously adopted the child's way of limning forms and the pop artist' penchant for using loud colors and contemporary visual motifs.


The painting I am Lost in the Sound of Separation, But we Will Play Again, Sarah best exemplified pop-naif. The focal point in the painting, the girl holding a heart-shaped toy balloon - which is perhaps Sarah, or perhaps Mayu herself - was drawn in the way that any child untutored in art would draw it. The figure which is almost stick-like is also colored stridently which strongly suggested affinity with pop art. Sarah was Mayu's childhood friend. I gathered from her verbalizing on the nature of friendship that Sarah and Mayu may have drifted away from each other many years ago, but have now reconciled, and even became comadres. Happy ending, that - which enables this painting to conform precisely with the theme of an exhibition on happy thoughts.

             
You and Me, on the other hand, is a tribute to cats. Mayu belongs to that special  breed of human beings who are so kind and considerate of animals that they treat their pets as family. Kitty, Meow-meow, and Miki are the names of Mayu's cats. The cat on the lap of the girl in the painting is Sesire, Mayu's imaginary version of the Cheshire Cat character in Alice in Wonderland. Let's hear it straight from Mayu: " Yung pusa po sa paintng, version ko sya ni Cheshire Cat sa Alice in Wonderland. Gusto ko yung character nya -  whimsical, mysterious, hindi madaling madidiktahan yung nasa isip nya, pero naiintindihan nya yung nangyayari." Another happy painting, You and Me is a depiction of the tender bond that link the master, or mistress for that matter, to her cat. The pastel color scheme adds to the affectionate tone because pastels are the colors of endearment, and evoke memories of girlish crushes and the like.  




Mayu is a fine arts graduate from FEATI.  She grew up in Dasmarinas, Cavite where she and her family lives up to now. After graduation, she tried her hand for a while in sales - when she handled a certain brand of arts material, She now paints full time, facilitates art workshops, and dabbles a bit in writing stories for children. She was also into performance when she was in school, being an ardent enthusiast of the art of theater and dance, An artist as multifaceted as Mayu, may seem unfocused to some because of her myriad involvement in different disciplines. But that is not so in her case because we can see from her works that she managed to forge a link between painting and children's literature in the art she does - disciplines which occupies much of her time these days.

Mayu may not be aware of this, but this fusion of painting and children's literature in her artworks may yet define her as an artist. She is not the first painter to tackle literary themes. I could cite several whose subject matters are drawn from books. There were, for example,  the Pre-Raphaelites from an earlier era, like Dante Gabriel Rossetti, John Everett Millais, and William Holman Hunt - and Marcel Antonio, that brilliant contemporary artist who painted scenes from Shakespeare's plays, and even from Alice in Wonderland. Mayu's paintings are, by no means, as masterly as the paintings of the artists I mentioned. But they need not be, because her current style suits just fine the theme she loves to take up in her paintings, which are reminiscences in pastel shades of things past and charmingly girlish.








Wednesday, May 6, 2015

FRANCIS ARNAEZ' PSYCHOLOGICAL DISSECTIONS

By Arnel Mirasol




Painter Francis Arnaez (above) is a storyteller. His paintings are portraits of people whose stories he knew. They are in-depth narratives, a dissection as it were of his sitters' inner selves. Where most people tend to gloss over imperfections, Arnaez does the reverse and mars perfection.

That's what his impastos are for, said Arnaez - to uglify not only his models, but also the very painting itself. An objective this writer sees as not achieved, because the slashes of thick paint he slathers over parts of his model's faces only heightened the expressionist element in his "neo-surrealist" works, and makes them more beautiful, I must say.

Arnaez graduated recently from the Technological University of the Philippines (TUP), where he majored in advertising. He used to work as graphic artist for Wacom before he turned to painting full-time: a decision that's not easy to come by because of his parents' understandable disdain for jobs that don't give one a steady income. But Arnaez is a true artist, a very serious one it seems, because he stresses that he is not particularly interested in the business aspect of art. All he cares for he says is to win the appreciation and critical nod of his peers and other art enthusiasts. Thus, Arnaez isn't afraid to create works which is not of the usual commercial kind. His paintings go deeper than that because they are not meant to be mere adornments. Arnaez' paintings are veritable still theaters of the inner drama, complexes, turmoils, and rage he feels every time he sits in front of his easel.


Doubts on Paradise
Let us take his painting Doubts on Paradise as an example. Arnaez' family live in a house inside a compound somewhere in Ermita. He grew up in that neighborhood, and we can presume that the neighborhood shaped him into the kind of man he had become. Arnaez so loved the place that he came to look at it as some sort of paradise.

But as we all know, paradises are not forever; one gets evicted from it sooner or later. And that exactly was what happened to the Arnaez family. They received a notice from the owners telling them to vacate the place at some specific date. As Francis Arnaez' world crumbled, his painting Doubts on Paradise got created. The painting, a self-portrait, which he started while they were packing their belongings, is a lamentation about the unfairness of fate, and an expression of his latent wish that things stay as they were. Their old place, which once was paradise to him, no longer seem to be so. This would seem like sour-graping, but it is not exactly. That is just Arnaez' instinctive response to mitigate the hurt caused by what he probably interpreted as rejection.



Of the local artists, Arnaez admires Ronald Ventura the most. And rightly so. Arnaez is not the only one who admires him, because nowadays one can see proliferating in the art scene here a plethora of Ventura painting look-alikes. Probably, what many Ventura imitators admire (or envy) most was Ventura's reaching the pinnacle of commercial success despite the undiluted dark surreality of his early works. But Arnaez admires a different aspect of Ventura. He said that he like Ventura not because of his run-away commercial success, but "because of the way he thinks - iba eh."  Arnaez is so right there. And that perhaps is what linked Arnaez to Ventura. Both had the same propensity to tackle profound, and even dark, themes, whose depth and intensity are so scarce in these parts.

The very titles of his paintings (The Flesh is Willing But the Spirit is Weak, Your Spotlight on Subject's So Incorrect, As the Soul Contradicts the Flesh) hinted at something deeper than what the words suggest. From his explanations, I deduced that Arnaez' recurring themes are the inner conflicts that he underwent in this phase of his life when everything is on the balance, and he teeters on the edge of either failure or success. Another recurrent preoccupation is Arnaez'  psychological dissections of his sitters - best exemplified by the painting As the Soul Contradicts the Flesh - which portrays a woman he thought he knew well even before he got acquainted with her, but who turned out to be the opposite of everything he thought her to be. Arnaez' inclusion of slashes of thick paint on both sides of the woman's face was but his attempt to mask the flaws he thought he perceived in the woman's character.

I've gathered in the course of our conversation that Arnaez doesn't care one bit whether his artworks sell or not.  "I believe na hindi dapat gawing business ang art, eh," said Arnaez,  by which he meant, I presume, that artists shouldn't be too obsessed with making artworks that will surely sell. Arnaez is still young, and also single I suppose. He may not be in dire need of money now, but I'm sure that he will be when he faces the task of raising a family. Artists like most people need to eat. And the money their paintings make is what would put food on their tables and paints on their palettes.

But despite Arnaez' low regard for art that is decorative and therefore easy to sell,  Ron and Bambi de Castro, owners of the Artologist Gallery where he showed these paintings recently, obviously believe in the potential of Arnaez to make it big in the art scene. They have no doubt that with the kind of paintings he makes, which appeal not only to the eyes but to the intellect as well, Arnaez would be a run-away commercial success, too - whether he likes it or not.

As the Soul Contradicts the Flesh