Today, Filipino-Americans constitute
the second largest Asian-American group in the U.S. Yet today, stories
about our national history and immigration to this country are
rarely heard, and if so, are not often understood and appreciated in
their distinct political and human contexts. It is the awareness
of this particular lack of conversation in the cultural scene that propelled
me to start working on a visual narrative/commentary on the
Filipino saga. The story starts with two densely packed synopses of the major
colonial influences in the Philippines - Spanish for
more than three centuries, and American for half a century
- and how they have impacted the native culture.The third piece
deals with a little known fact that there were
Filipinos living in Louisiana as far back as 1763 and probably
earlier. Escaping Spanish galleon ships in Mexico, they found
their way to the bayous of that state. Shortly after
official American colonization of the country, large-scale immigration of Filipinos
to the United States of America. Cheap labor was
needed to fill the shortage resulting from the moratorium on Chinese
labor import.The first wave of immigrants consisted mainly of men, recruited
by labor contractors to work in Hawaiian pineapple and sugar plantations, agricultural fields
in the West Coast, and gold mines and fish canneries in
Alaska. Several paintings deal with the salient experiences of these workers as
gleaned from various historical sources. The work entitled "Pinoy" is an encapsulated
presentation of
the Pinoy, which is the informal term for Filipino. It shows the
wide gamut of racial characteristics that make up the ethnic group as well as
the various objects and artifacts that are
identified with the people.The last piece is an ironic
take on the infamous 3000 pairs of shoes
that Imelda Marcos was said to have owned when she
and her husband ruled the impoverished
nation.
This set of works constitutes an
initial portion of an on-going project that is meant to tell a
comprehensive story. I chose to work in a very accessible, shorthand
manner of storytelling. Juxtaposing graphic, painterly and collage
techniques help to create a hybridized stylistic mélange, which I
think, reflects the transmogrified culture of the Filipinos, the
result of the pervasive and diverse colonial pressures on native
society.
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