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PHILIPPINE ART IN THE MODERN ERA

PHILIPPINE ART IN THE MODERN ERA. Modern Art in the Philippines. It has evolved into wide variety of expressions and medium turning the country into a situation of creative upheavals. It is a search for a new. It is doing what no one has done before. Modern Art in the Philippines.

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PHILIPPINE ART IN THE MODERN ERA

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  1. PHILIPPINE ART IN THE MODERN ERA

  2. Modern Art in the Philippines • It has evolved into wide variety of expressions and medium turning the country into a situation of creative upheavals. • It is a search for a new. • It is doing what no one has done before.

  3. Modern Art in the Philippines • The modern Filipino has more freedom to explore on his own. • The most interesting works of our contemporary artist show his love for country and evolving culture. • His style is from cross-cultural exposures in the Eastern and Western world yet he has not forgotten his Filipino roots.

  4. Modern Art in the Philippines • The forms maybe universal but the content is local. • Many artist use color for their emotional rather than intellectual values.

  5. Some Philippine Artists • Jose T. Joya • Vicente Manansala • Napoleon Abueva • Carlos “Botong” Francisco • Mauro Malang Santos • Hernando R. Ocampo • Prudencio L. Lamarrosa

  6. Jose T. Joya • National Artist, Visual Arts, 2003 • Foremost Filipino Abstract painter • He said “ Its useless to try to make out familiar objects in my paintings”. • How he paints is, “I squeeze my paint tubes directly throw my paints is calculated gestures, swirl my loaded brushes, slash my paint paste with spatula and hurl it on my canvass in a wild attempt to depict the on-rushing tempo of the present jet-age modernity.

  7. Vicente Manansala • National Artist, Visual Arts, 1981 • Give Us This Day Our Daily Bread • He invested each human figure with inner fortitude, making each one a stoic figure of human dignity.

  8. Napoleon Abueva • National Artist, Sculpture, 1976 • Foremost modern sculptor today • He produced towering abstract in metal , steel and wood. • Allegorical Harpoon • Its memorable, swivel piece pegged to its rifle-shaped horizontal torso, impresses with its elegant but enigmatic appearance.

  9. Carlos “Botong” Francisco • National Artist, Sculpture, 1973 • Foremost Filipino Muralist • He contributed towards developing a Filipino imagery drawing inspiration from customs and traditions of the people. • He used the people of Angono, where he lived, as models for his paintings of heroes and legends and characters of our myths.

  10. Mauro Malang Santos • He shows highly original approach to figurative paintings. • A large plant stands in the midst of the urban landscape.

  11. Hernando R. Ocampo • National Artist, Visual Arts, 1991 • As a neorealist, he aimed to de-emphasize a life-like representation with the natural world. • He was interested in how shapes, values, textures and lines interact with the one another in space rather than in capturing a realistic semblance of nature.

  12. Prudencio L. Lamarrosa • Amburayan Princess is an example of Lamarrosa’s intellectual approach to paintings. • He is different from the artist of his generation because of his intellectual detachment amid all the-ill effects of technology on the world environment.

  13. Roberto Rodriguez Chabet • Shanghai is only work that does not have a drop of paint on the surface. • It is an assemblage. • His guiding principles are traceable to cubism and dadaism. • From cubism has come the emphasis on art as concept rather than skill. • From Dadaism has come the delight in ready-made objects as part of the artistic activity.

  14. Ibarra de la Rosa • Intramuros creates a symphony of colors. • The subject gives him the basic pattern that allows him to see the effect of different color combinations-how essentially the same scene could bring out a different mood, an ever changing feeling.

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