Friday, January 20, 2017

A TRIBUTE TO ILOILO'S VIBRANT ART SCENE






Iloilo is a junction over which Malay, Spanish, Chinese, and American cultures have met in the course of centuries. This stretches back to a rich pre-colonial culture, and the arrival of settlers, the Malayans sometime in May 1212.
It is this multi-cultural milieu that Ilonggo artists have found their true “voices”, expressed in their respective styles.
Many earlier Ilonggo artists were self- taught because of the absence of fine arts courses in the province.  What harnessed their talents and skills was the role of the art group Hubon Madiaas, which served as the prime mover of cultural activities in Panay.
With that, Ilonggo artists are products of the admixture of natural endowment in art, presence of cultural activities to participate, challenge of peers and a courageous resolve to continue  their art regardless of the lack of patronage by the public in general.
Today, with the rise of local schools offering courses in the arts, Iloilo, has been considered as the second best next to the National
Capital Region in terms of visual arts maturity and development based on the National Commission on Culture and the Arts survey. And it is on its way to becoming a viable center for contemporary art.
A joint project of SM, the Metropolitan Museum of Manila, Shell Philippines, The Philippine Star, with support from the National Commission for Culture and the Arts and Centerstage Productions, My City, My SM, My Art is a celebration of Philippine visual arts – painting, sculpture, printmaking, photography, and filmmaking.
The campaign brings art and people together by showcasing the works of masters, modernists, and millennials in a road show around the SM Supermalls. Advocating art for all, the team works with communities to mount exhibits, workshops, and contests in key cities around the Philippines.

Guests who attended the event were the family members of master artist Ed Defensor, sister-in-law and Iloilo Province First Lady Cosette Defensor, and sister Suzette Tonogbanua, Councilor Jay Treñas, and Iloilo City Executive Assistant for Tourism Ding Co.
SM officials led by SM Senior Vice President for Marketing Millie Dizon and SM City Iloilo Mall Manager Gilbert Domingo welcomed them.
Guests enjoyed the program, which included an AVP presentation hosted by  Atty. Richard Bermejo Perillo featuring the master artists of Iloilo and their amazing works.  These works were exhibited in and around the My Art Gallery, which was inspired by the Panay House.

Some of the featured artists during the launch were Kris Brasileño an artist with a purpose. While skilled in painting and drawing in both traditional and digital mediums, he also aims to help create a thriving art community in his hometown;  


Kat Malazarte, a Cum Laude graduate of the University of San Agustin, where she took a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Painting course, Kat says that it is her ultimate dream to make artworks that inspire people, make them feel the light, and stay wide-eyed and child –like;  


Alex Ordoyo , a visual Arts teacher in Iloilo National High School for the Art who hopes to pass on his proficiency in and passion for  the arts to  his students;  


Ethel Mae Reyes, a visual artist, photographer and an award winning filmmaker; and Cezar Arro, whose works are inspired by heavy metal music, and with that, reflect the morbid, the dark, and the struggle of everyday life, and now have embraced modern contemporary art with less dark subjects.


Other artists featured are Jose Jeline Laporga, whose works have won numerous awards including First Place in the prestigious 2012 GSIS National Open Art Competition in the Abstract category;  


Sculptor Martin Genodepa who was born and raised in a serene and close to nature environment in Guimbal, derived his spirituality and creative energy from an alchemy of nature and awakened consciousness further stimulated by artists affiliated with the academe;  


Jeanroll Ejar grew up watching artisans making wooden furniture for his family’s business. Today, he can carve almost anything from wood –in the family owned foundry in Bitoon, Jaro;  


Gina Apostol  who began her foray into the arts with ceramics and  terracotta using local clay found in Lemery and Sara near Iloilo city. In 2006, she held a one woman show, a Celebration of Panay Churches, rendered in clay relief;  


Marrz Capanang, A BS Fine Arts graduate of the University of San Agustin, Marzz describes himself as an inspirational painter. He draws inspiration from nature, daily activities of the Ilonggos and their everyday lives, 


Vic Fario who is known for his murals in different provinces like the Quezonian Mural in Quezon Province, which was unveiled by then President Gloria Macapagal Årroyo in 2005, the Tiagon Mural in Camarines Sur, and the Our Lady of the Angels Chapel Mural in Tibauan, Iloilo;  


 PG Zoluaga, a visual artist who has won numerous awards: the 1998 Philippine Arts Awards Jurors' Choice winner, the 1999 Philippine representative to the ASEAN Arts Awards in Hanoi, Vietnam, and had the 1998 Best Entry in the Centennial Painting Competition of the Art Association of the Philippines; Young artist  


Harry Mark Gonzales who has brought much honor to his hometown when he was awarded as the Grand Prize Winner in the 2007 Metrobank Art and Design for Excellence competition; 


and Pierre Patricio who currently represents the Philippines in the United Buddy Bears World Tour Exhibition in aid of UNICEFF. His paintings and sculptures are in private and public collections throughout Asia, Europe, the Middle East and North America.
Highlight of the event is the tribute for master artist Ed Defensor. He is the founder for the group “Hubon Madiaas” in the 1980s when he was asked by then UPV Chancellor Rola to help artists in Iloilo. The group has inspired many of the Ilonggo artists and have  led the way for them in the region’s cultural and arts scene. In the first workshop of Hubon, National Artist Joya, his mentor in UP Diliman, was the resource person.  The group later held exhibits in their gallery in Jaro with visitors from Manila.  Today, Hubon Madiaas is the oldest and most accomplished art group in Iloilo.



The man behind Hubon, master artist Ed Defensor, remembers that he used to play with ant hill soil in his hometown in Mina, Iloilo. He molded them into toys of his choice until the childhood hobby ceased to be a play and was transformed into a well-acclaimed artistic career.

Although he initially resisted taking a fine arts course – finishing Comparative Literature in UP Iloilo and later a Master’s degree in UP Diliman instead – he eventually made way for his art inclinations by painting stage backdrops, becoming  an artist of the UP monthly, and getting involved with the theater group.
But one’s love for art conquers all, and since that time, Defensor has had a fulfilling career as an associate professor in the Division of Humanities in UP Visayas, and is a visual and performing artist as well.



Certainly one of the most active working in Iloilo today, he commutes between several art media: the theater and visual arts, particularly sculpture and painting.
Much of Defensor’s work can in fact be traced to a dance, a performance medium he used in his theater productions.   


Whether in sculptural or painting mediums, the figures have the intensity of expression, graceful movements that can be gleaned from the hands, feet, heads, and overall drama of the composition.
With its aim of bringing art and people together, My City, My SM, My Art also conducted Woodcut Printmaking workshop. Carvin Traspaderme won the top prize, for which he received P5,000 worth of SM Gift Certificates.


     My City, My SM, My Art is a take-off from the previous My City, My SM campaign which promotes tourism, My City, My SM, My Cuisine, which highlights regional culinary specialties, and My City, My SM, My Crafts, a celebration of traditional art and modern Philippine design in cities where SM has malls.  My City, My SM, My Art’s next stop will be in SM City Clark.