Monday, November 3, 2014

The Cave

invite image by Czar Kristoff

"This is an attempt to self-reflection. A process which involves a strong will to self-recovery. For the past months, I have become my self, far more liberated than my old 'self', who I am trying to be with again. We were apart far too long that I felt so alone. I need to be him again to move on. Not to start over but to continue in this journey. To be intact again. To answer more to the questions of existence - in discovering the 'self' by determining the current state of being."- May 12, 2013 journal entry, Zeus Bascon


Barboza
10.75 x 8 in | acrylic and lacquer on canvas, chain and crafting materials
2014


Matsing
39.25 x 37.25 in | charcoal on paper
2013-14




Untitled
8.5 x 11.75 in | mixed media on paper
2014


Strength of Being
9 x 12 in | acrylic and oil on canvas
2013-14


Untitled (Recurring elementals)
7.5 x 13.5 in (framed) | mixed media on paper
2012-14


Untitled (Screaming figure)
4.5 x 6.25 in | mixed media on paper
2012


Untitled (Fold)
7.5 x 22 in (framed) | mixed media on paper
2012-13


Pretty visitors

56 x 85.25 in | permanent markers on curtain, stainless rod

2014


Portal
23.25 x 17 in | acrylic on canvas
2013-14

Sense of Place

24.25 x 18.25 | acrylic on canvas

2013-14

Spirit warrior
size variable | ink and spike studs on clothing
2014

Giyang
27.5 x 40 in | acrylic and oil on canvas
2013


Apple
size variable | note enclosed in found object, covered with collage and lacquer
2014


photo by Art Informal

Saturday, November 1, 2014

Let's do the craft!













Craft instantaneously translates to something made by hand or to work with hands or, almost unanimously synonymous to physical labor done through a certain duration of time which is becoming quite rare in these fast-paced times that’s continually being gobbled up by the manufactured and the factory-made. 

According to writer Bruce Metcalf : “Historically the discourse considering craft as an art form states that craft must be a physical object made by hand using traditional methods and because of this it limits the art work’s aspect and meaning.” Adding further that, “the craft world accepts the meanings of felt experience and the body, whereas the art world remains dedicated to meaning embedded in texts and discourse.”

The intensive engagement with material that understandably march with time, renders craft as a purely durational exercise induced to an evolving mastery. The meaning that artists derive from employing craft is more experiential rather than purely rational, the approach to material being more instinctual as well. Combined with the vicissitudes of art idioms, the twinning of material and craft renders their work a conceptual layer, and by which the artists of Hand Job rearticulates craft, subverting the decorative arts and the fine arts in a mash-up of pure form and everyday life

These are palpably extrapolated from a discourse on the nature of labor and authorship via Bascon’s wired detailed instructions for his family to execute his work; to a mitigation of material weaving disparate surfaces such as plastic and photographic print with embroidery in Villanueva’s reiteration of selected quotes from Foster Wallace’s The Pale King, and in Lim’s repurposing of industrial, synthetic material to fashion flesh-like underwear; to drawing parallelisms between ecstatic catharsis through physical pain in Garcia’s gilded and embroidered panels that explore BDSM themes that uses religious iconography, thus elucidating craft as an exercise in endurance. 

The rest of the works are driven by exuberance and jouissance for the craft, as its ritualistic routine through the manic paper folding of Tamoria’s modular origami sculptures, to the whimsical crocheted pieces of See, and to the cutting dark humor of Gallardo’s stuffed dolls.

What threads them together perhaps is their unwavering pursuit for all possible medium, technique and format and use them as their practice allow them as part of the language in their art works. In a rather oblique and radicalized approach and homage to these traditional craft techniques, they ensure the continuum of such practice, embedding them further with new meaning and a broadening avenue for what’s possible in contemporary art.

Curated by Lena Cobangbang


Curtains (Into the No land)

Positivity Mantra

Fortune No. 1

POWER

Family Romance
SIPTCA

Lena also prepared an online zine so you can view all the artists' works and details.