By Combined-Media Quilts, Pacita Abad Dives Into the Lush Marine Ecosystems of the Philippines — Colossal



Artwork
Nature

#fish
#combined media
#pacita abad
#Philippines
#quilts

August 9, 2024

Grace Ebert

By Combined-Media Quilts, Pacita Abad Dives Into the Lush Marine Ecosystems of the Philippines — Colossal

“Shallow Gardens of Apo Reef” (1986), oil, acrylic, mirrors, plastic buttons, cotton yarn, rhinestones on stitched and padded canvas, 132 x 137 1/2 inches. All pictures courtesy of Tina Kim Gallery, shared with permission

After a traumatic childhood second by which she almost drowned, Pacita Abad (1946-2004) developed a profound worry of water. The massively prolific Filipina-American artist determined to beat her trepidation within the Nineteen Eighties and signed up for diving classes on the British Sub-Aquatic Membership in Thailand. There, she discovered to soundly plunge into the depths of the ocean, finishing greater than 80 dives throughout the Phillippines in her lifetime.

On view at Tina Kim Gallery in New York is a vivid sequence of trapunto work—a quilting approach that entails including stuffing for puffed layers—impressed by Abad’s love for swimming. Titled Underwater Wilderness, the exhibition presents eight large-scale works made between 1985 and 1989. Plastic buttons, rhinestones, glitter, and sequins add textured dimension to the dense prismatic seascapes of tropical fish and crops. Proof of Abad’s fascination with the plush ecosystems, the mixed-media works sew collectively a vibrant tapestry of what lies beneath the floor.

As famous within the gallery’s assertion concerning the exhibition, these work are broadly thought to be the artist’s least political physique of labor, though their position in her follow is extra nuanced. The textual content explains:

The sequence can maybe be learn as Pacita’s bridging of non-public and political histories and the “manifold lived realities” of the Philippines. After she led pupil demonstrations in opposition to dictator Ferdinand Marcos within the late ’60s, her mother and father inspired her to finish her research overseas after her household house was sprayed with bullets. She was solely in a position to return to reside within the Philippines in 1982 after twelve years away and began this physique of labor the 12 months earlier than the autumn of the kleptocratic regime in 1986.

That is the primary time the works have been exhibited collectively since 1987. Underwater Wilderness is up by means of August 16.

 

a vibrant underwater ecosystem with plants and fish

“Dumaguete’s Underwater Backyard” (1987), oil, acrylic, glitter, gold thread, buttons, lace, sequins on stitched and padded canvas, 85 1/4 x 118 inches

detail of a vibrant underwater ecosystem with plants and fish made of beads

Element of “Dumaguete’s Underwater Backyard” (1987), oil, acrylic, glitter, gold thread, buttons, lace, sequins on stitched and padded canvas, 85 1/4 x 118 inches

a vibrant underwater ecosystem with plants and fish

“Sepoc Wall” (1985), oil, acrylic, mirrors and buttons on stitched and padded canvas, 139 1/2 x 132 inches

a vibrant underwater ecosystem with plants and fish

“The Far Facet of Apo Island” (1989), oil, acrylic, gold thread, plastic buttons, lace, sequins on stitched and padded canvas, 88 1/4 x 69 inches

a vibrant underwater ecosystem with plants and fish

“Hundred Islands” (1989), oil, acrylic, glitter, gold thread, buttons, lace, sequins on stitched and padded canvas, 79 x 118 inches

detail of a vibrant underwater ecosystem with plants and fish

Element of “Hundred Islands” (1989), oil, acrylic, glitter, gold thread, buttons, lace, sequins on stitched and padded canvas, 79 x 118 inches

a vibrant underwater ecosystem with plants and fish

“Anilao at its Finest” (1986), oil, acrylic, mirrors, plastic buttons, and rhinestones on stitched and padded canvas, 115 3/4 x 124 7/8 inches

detail of a vibrant underwater ecosystem with plants and fish

Element of “Anilao at its Finest” (1986), oil, acrylic, mirrors, plastic buttons, and rhinestones on stitched and padded canvas, 115 3/4 x 124 7/8 inches

a brown woman with braids and scuba gear in a gallery

The artist

#fish
#combined media
#pacita abad
#Philippines
#quilts

 

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