PRESS, LINKS & PUBLICATIONS
Please follow the links that appear below the “Press” tab or click on the links below for other publications and/or web articles related to Patricia Eustaquio.
Popping Up, Exploring the Relationship between 2D and 3D, exhibition catalogue (request for pdf version)
Space Philippinesa feature interview written by Marc Gaba
The Swank Stylea feature article on the artist’s studio
Manila Art Blogger a short piece on Dear Sweet Filthy World
ArtePinas http://artepinas.blogspot.com/2009/09/patricia-eustaquio-2009-ateneo-art.html
My Manila http://manila-photos.blogspot.com/2009/09/aaa-2009-silent-ode-to-bach.html
Business World (Sam Marcelo) http://www.bworldonline.com/content.php?section=Arts&Leisure&title=–Sleight-of-mind&id=31866
Wall Street Journal Blog (Filipino Art, The new hot thing?) http://blogs.wsj.com/scene/2011/06/02/hong-kongs-biggest-auction-yet-the-take-away/?mod=google_news_blog
Below is an essay written by Patrick Flores, Ph.D., director of the Vargas Museum and professor of art history, theory and criticism at the University of the Philippines; delivered as a talk, Philippines: The Last Ten Years for Christie’s in Hong Kong, 2009.
Patricia Eustaquio
The impulse is to fabricate and the subject of fascination is appearance. Maker of clothes and visual artist, Patricia Eustaquio finds herself in a unique position to spin the narratives of adornment and vanity, at the crossroads between still life and the interior, schemes that have preoccupied her mind and hand. This multifaceted talent, which is quite rare among contemporary artists in the Philippines so absorbed either in skill or worn-out conceptual masquerades, leads her to calibrate a language that articulates insights into both craft and embodiment, the process of making and the performance of taking on habits. This disposition could be discerned early on when for her thesis in the university, she made canvas shoes, wore them, walked around the city leisurely and aimlessly, and presented the peripatetic inscriptions on the soles, imprints of which she also painted.
Craft here pertains to fabric, leather, ceramic, crochet, and upholstery, within the range of the homespun and the industrial. And embodiment gestures toward fashion, a film noir narrative of a violence or crime, and poetry written in neon. Here the sensibility is nostalgic, looking back at fragments of memory, totems, reminders of her kin, specifically her grandmother whose annotation in one of her photographs the artist would quote and include in the painting of the memento: “They stood right in front of my only blooming shrub & hid the flowers.” This nostalgia runs through cast of shoes, embroidery on a found ironing board, recipes and chocolate cake served on opening night, painting that captures moment of demise like a dead pheasant or a pig slaughtered and the blood blooms and permeates the canvas.
Vanity is not incidental in this situation; rather, it is central. It foregrounds the furniture of culture and the architecture of personal memory: intricate and dense crochet imitating a chair; a faux piano encased in carved leather; and Dutch still life repainted on shaped canvas. In these flashes of objects scattered across a room, we glean the choreography of presence, but one that treads on shifting ground because the manifestation is so contrived and therefore so insecure of its survival as image. This is why the trope of the still life and the interior is salient: it portrays the production of property, its worldliness, on the one hand, and the ephemeral nature of things, on the other. The inclusion of game, or hunted animals, in painting and drapery in domestic fixtures speaks of this possibility of vanishing. Having said that, the tableau is also exceptionally “contemporary” and “present” because it indexes quotidian economy, its “pop” culture in a manner of speaking, and the objects leap out of the frame to engage the otherwise passive consumer of commodities.
This is most telling in her first one-person exhibition Split Seam Stress (2003) in which she installs in the gallery paintings of clothes, clothes in the closet, and actual clothes made up of assorted vintage pieces. The latter may reference the surplus stores in tropical countries where winter accoutrements are sold all-year round. In Swine (2004), this takes on an edgier dimension as the project becomes fully installative, with the space transformed into a scene of an interior: a chair, a refrigerator, a painting, and a peculiar wall piece that conjures a duck sewn in all sheerness. In another foray, she would interact with the memorabilia of a Filipino collector-politician who collaborated with the Japanese puppet government in the Philippines during the Pacific War.
Eustaquio romances an artisanal effect in many of her projects, finding affection in marginalized forms or the so-called minor arts that privilege decoration as an aesthetic culmination. She explores the nuances of this mentality in Death to the Major Viva Minor (2008), inspired by Bach’s canonical The Well-Tempered Clavier, a template for harmonies in western tonal music. This resonates with the ceramic work Arteria Axilliaris (2008), a dissected arm in the mode of an anatomical study that is also a violin, still well within an examination of the fetish for the folly of perfect measure: body, music, art.
Eustaquio’s predilection as a designer of clothes is important in understanding her calling because it crosses the gaps between a feminine everyday life and an ethical zone in the art world that takes issue with the virtues of rationality, conceptualism, and indifference to hand-made, time-consuming, labor-intensive things. It also nudges her closer to the source of fabric’s wonder: motif, pattern, repetition, and the meditative quality of painting through the grid and the thin brush. Her current interest in ceramics should take her to more uncharted trails in this intersection between the daily and the deliberate, as she paints, installs, designs for film, theater, dance – and dresses up intrepid fashionistas and daring brides.
