Streamlined , The Art of National Artist ARTURO LUZ , By CID REYES
Paul Klee, a Swiss artist, describes his fantasy works as 'taking a line for a walk'. It is a fundamental definition of drawing, which is the art of representing a figure or object by tracing its shape. Color, in contrast to this linear boundary of form, produces hues of varying lightness and saturation via pigments.
After a midday
meal during the Japanese occupation, 17-year-old Arturo Rogerio Luz began
drawing a portrait of his mother Rosario without provocation. Luz continued to
draw until his death. Drawing is the foundation of his art, representing linear
strength and elegance.
The multitude
of lines moves intricately, capturing in their tight web the astonishing
variety of his comparatively limited visual themes: cyclists, acrobats,
musicians, performers, ancient pottery, and Asian architecture.
The origins of
all these lean and attenuated figures can be traced back to a sight he
witnessed during a New Year's Eve celebration in the early 1950s. He noticed
three men riding a rickety bicycle, maintaining perfect balance as they passed
their street. Luz embellished the painting with a figure tooting a horn in the
background. Luz considers this painting to be the most important of all. It's
appropriately titled "Bagong
Taon. He realized
that the framework of all his future works would be linear and geometric. The
line was intended to function as both an ordering element and a system. Luz, a
meticulous draftsman, knew the importance of elegant and disciplined design.
Arturo Luz
enrolled in the College of Arts and Crafts in Oakland, California. Three and a
half years later, he enrolled in the Brooklyn Museum Art School after learning
that an artist he admired, Mexican Rufino Tamayo, was on the faculty.
Unfortunately, Tamayo had left the faculty a term before. Luz's early works,
including Labandera, Awit, and Madonna, reflected Tamayo's stylistic
influence.
LINEAR AUSTERITY
Luz, on the other hand, would be
sensitive to Paul Klee's linear austerity. Klee's carnival forms and cityscapes
will be distinguished by the electricity and energy they contain. He would give
his strictly disciplined compositions a "snap" and a
"spring." Moonscape, Nightglow, White Kingdom, Ciudad del Pasado, and Venezia show off a dense
field of spirited, acrobatic lines.
Throughout the
1950s and 1960s, Luz was preoccupied with the mastery of his image selection,
which included ancient pottery. Jars, bowls, and other vessel shapes arose from
his now-iconic linear style. The pottery images demonstrated that the artist
was more concerned with their essential, sensual forms than with the subject's
archaeological significance.
His decision
to pursue sculpture coincided with Luz's transition to total abstraction. Luz
created his first sculptures in the 1950s. He carved Christ's head and visage
out of adobe. When Luz first started sculpting, he was inspired by the forms of
pre-Hispanic deities known as anitos. He used Philippine hardwood blocks like molave,
balayong, and supa. He eventually recast some of the
anito figures in bronze.
LESS IS MORE
The "reclining" or horizontal pieces contrasted with the standing, upright anito sculptures, which were long, thick slabs of hardwood. Even in three dimensions, Luz adheres to the principle of "less is more," which originated in architecture and was popularized by German architect Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, a pioneer of the Modern Movement. The axiom implies that good design results from simplicity and clarity, which is achieved by eliminating excessive and unnecessary components.
This writer
once stated, "His virtuosity lies in his insatiable desire for design. The
greater triumph is that when a design moves from painting to sculpture, it
gains everything while losing nothing in its pursuit of plasticity and
objective form.”
Luz was
challenged and inspired by a wide range of mediums and materials, including
burlap, a coarse heavy fabric used for bagging. The artist brought this
unsightly material to life with stark black-and-white contrasts and subtle
tones of sienna and rust. Again, elegant, intelligent design shines through in
these burlap fragments, which are layered and composed to create vibrant, exciting
designs. Dynamic equilibrium and fluid tension drive each arrangement. The
gridded texture of the burlap added to the tactile appeal of these works.
Meanwhile, Luz
experimented with handmade paper. Sumi-e brushstrokes enhanced some of his
collages. Sumi-e, or "black ink painting," was introduced to Japan by
Zen Buddhist monks from China in the 16th century, and it has since become a
staple of Japanese aesthetics. Luz also allowed black paint to drip from the
tip of his brush, creating linear configurations and animating a space. He
splashed black acrylic pigments in whirling strokes before reining in opposing
blocks of solid color. Luz may have used gestural marks freely, but he did so
with remarkable restraint and refinement.
Luz used brass
and silver rods to create his cyclist and acrobat sculptures. He also
experimented with jewelry, creating gold from quartz, lapis lazuli, and black
onyx. Photography remained a constant in his work. As he traveled across the
Asian and Indian continents, his eyes were constantly drawn to the
breathtakingly beautiful scenery.
ASIAN TEMPLES,
FORTS, AND PALACES
Luz traveled on an annual basis,
introducing a new and exciting subject: Asian temples, forts, and palaces. He
captured the essence of these ancient and impressive buildings. Once again, the
artist used his linear mastery to imbue these massive structures with
lightness, airiness, and weightlessness. He titled the series "Cities of
the Past." These works began in the 1990s, transitioning from a rich and
opulent color palette of reds and gold to the stark severity of black and
white.
This prolific
output of work over decades is even more remarkable when we consider Luz's
various managerial responsibilities. He was the executive director of the
Design Center of the Philippines for 14 years, beginning in 1973. At the same
time, he served as director of the Metropolitan Museum in Manila, where he
presented 120 exhibitions over a 10-year period. He also served as director of
the now-defunct Museum of Philippine Art (MOPA). Despite these numerous
responsibilities, the eponymous Luz Gallery, founded in 1960, continued to
exhibit the works of the country's established and emerging artists. Despite
closing after four decades of operation, the Luz Gallery established itself as
the standard for newly opened commercial art galleries.
Luz received
appropriate recognition and awards for all of his accomplishments. Among them
are the Republic Cultural Heritage Award for Painting in 1966, the Chevalier of
the Order of Arts and Letters from the Republic of France in 1978, the Patnubay
ng Kalinangan Award from the City of Manila in 1980, the Gawad CCP Para sa
Sining for Visual Arts in 1989, and the City of Manila's Diwa ng Lahi in 1993.
In 1997,
Arturo Luz received the title of National Artist.
But he refused
to rest on his laurels.
In 2009, Luz
debuted a new series of large-scale sculptures in a show aptly named
"Monumental."
Corazon
Alvina, former executive director of the National Museum, extols his lifetime
work, writing:
"His art
is expertly crafted, and his treatment of themes, both Philippine and
universal, is eloquent and clear. Though logic prevails, visual pleasure is
evident. No artist in the Philippine landscape has ever had such a profound
influence on the pursuit of excellence and artistic integrity across such a
broad spectrum while maintaining the intellectual independence required of all
true artists."
Despite
widespread praise and admiration, National Artist Arturo Luz, the man who
streamlined contemporary Philippine art, maintained a humble demeanor. He
remarked, “In my own little world, I know precisely what I want to do. And for
me, the greatest satisfaction comes from creating works of art. Nothing can
compare to it."
National
Artist Arturo Luz died on May 26, 2021.
Cid Reyes, a
De La Salle University graduate, continued his education by studying painting
at the Accademia di Belle Arti in Rome and art history at the City Lit
Institute in London. From 1995 to 2004, he wrote the weekly art column
"Gallery-Hopping" for TODAY. Reyes authored the seminal interview
book, "Conversations on Philippine Art." He has authored or
coauthored more than 40 art books and nearly 1,000 artist notes. He contributed
to the books "TANAW: The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Art Collection"
along with "The Life and Art of Lee Aguinaldo." They were both
awarded the Alfonso T. Ongpin Prize for Best Art Book. His book, "MVP: The
Man and His Art," received a Gold Stevie International Business Award in
2021.
The Art
Association of the Philippines named Cid Reyes "Best in Art
Criticism" in 1978, and Art Quarterly Manila named him "Critic of the
Year" in 2001, 2002, and 2003. The "Most Outstanding Kapampangan in
the Arts" award was given to him in 2016. De La Salle University honored
him with a "Lifetime Achievement Award" in 2023.
He is the author of choice by five National Artists, namely: Arturo Luz, BenCab, J. Elizalde Navarro, Napoleon Abueva, and Fernando Amorsolo.
Cid Reyes, an
artist in his own right, has held twenty solo exhibitions. His paintings are in
the collections of the Cultural Center of the Philippines, the Bangko Sentral
ng Pilipinas, the Philippine Trade Center in New York, Equitable-BDO, Deutsch
Bank, PLDT, SMART, Meralco, and several private collections.
Cid Reyes is
the publisher of Art & Lifestyle.
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