First stop, read my article about this three-man exhibit in Manila Bulletin's Monday issue for more details. *shameless plug* So, I titled my story "Encounters: Galleria Duemila presents the experiential art of Maria Cruz, Elizabeth Newman, and Gerardo Tan." You should be able to find it in the Arts and Culture subsection of the paper.
Anyway, I'm writing about my experience writing this story because I had a bit of a hard time cooking up words for this particular exhibit feature. I found it quite difficult to describe what their works actually represent because they are non-representational in the first place and are totally abstract pieces. Their works don't stand for anything familiar and are purely conceptual and all about exploring and pushing the boundaries materiality (form, space, color, texture, material).
I admit that although I'm an art writer, well at least I think I am, (I've been writing about art since 2008), it still takes a lot of effort for me to grasp and give meaning to works that belong to that very minimal, elemental, highly conceptual genre. It's so intimidating to find the ideal words to describe the artists' works without having fully comprehended why they have been made as such, why they tend or choose to create that kind of art, and what concepts and discourse are they trying to shed light on. Imagine a blind man trying to walk without his walking stick. That's how I felt writing this story. Sigh.
It took me the whole week and most of last night to finally piece together what I want to say about the exhibit. It also helped that the painters have given me ample interview material to work with as well as background exhibition notes from their previous shows. But still...
See, this is why I can't wait to formally study art this November. Hopefully, I'll be able to remedy this blind-man-walking-without-a-walking-stick thing when I take up Art Studies. I don't mean to sound pompous or what have you, but formally studying art and its multifarious concepts is the probably the only way I'll be able to sound really intellectual and truthful in my writing. Right now, I think I just sound sincere and very elegant. But hey, I think that's important, too, right?
Gerardo Tan, "After Patchwork 2", oil on canvas
Maria Cruz, "The Letter X in Color Wheels", oil on wood
Maria Cruz, "232 (#3)", indoor and outdoor stickers on PVC plastic
Elizabeth Newman, "Celebrate the Modern", fabric
Maria Cruz, "X2"
*All photos were taken with Hipstamatic.