about us
 
contact us
 
login
 
newsletter
 
facebook
 
 
home hongkong beijing shanghai taipei tokyo seoul singapore
more  
search     
art in asia   |   galleries   |   artists   |   artworks   |   events   |   art institutions   |   art services   |   art scene   |   blogs

Enlarge
Discordant
by The Drawing Room Contemporary Art Singapore
Location: The Drawing Room Contemporary Art
Artist(s): Miguel AQUILIZAN
Date: 27 Jun - 27 Jul 2014

The development of Miguel Aquilizan’s new series of work began in the second hand and junk stores of his native Philippines. Deep in the racks and shelves of Quezon City, Japanese surplus and rejected items abounded and had increased significantly in the last few years. Intrigued, Aquilizan undertook personal research and discovered that the amount of second hand trade between Japan and the Philippines had risen after the 2011 tsunami, flooding and collapse of the Fukushima nuclear reactor. Rumour suggested that the ephemera came from mixed sources; deceased estates, distraught families and general debris. In rare cases, it has even been suggested that vestiges of radiation might still remain in some of the items brought to the Philippines.

For Aquilizan, second hand objects function as ‘societal heirlooms’. Rebranded in the contemporary era as ‘vintage’, the market for used objects is big business. It is commonplace for vintage buyers and collectors to source their stock from across the globe. Second hand items transition on a macro level between cultures, countries and situations. On a micro level, these objects also move between people – carrying with them a trace of their experiences and uses. Taking advantage of the Japanese surplus, Aquilizan has collected a phalanx of traditional-style Japanese figures including geisha, samurai and noblemen. Playing or building upon stereotypical Japanese imagery, these objects have been removed from their protective glass display cases and intervened with by the artist. Each statue has been tweaked with accoutrements or overabundant accessories, including paper umbrellas and floral bells. The colouring, and structure of each figure’s outfit and appearance has provided inspiration for Aquilizan’s material response, creating a series of forty unique characters in the process.

The sheer mass of surface detail and embellishment functions like a mutation, multiplying and shifting across the skin of the figures. As if burdened by their cultural transition between Japan and The Philippines, the statues struggle to remain erect, trapped between two cultural oversimplifications – Japan as a minimal, elegant society rooted in its traditions and The Philippines, a brash, maximalist conglomeration of island cultures and tribal groups. These sculptures are as much about the difficulties of cultural translation as they are about the complicated history of interaction between two distinct societies. We see Aquilizan’s additions then as a patina; a sort of alchemical effect of proximity.

-The Drawing Room Singapore

Image: © Miguel Aguilizan
Courtesy of the artist and The Drawing Room Singapore

Digg Delicious Facebook Share to friend
 

© 2007 - 2024 artinasia.com