Long Time Coming

Monday, October 24, 2011




What arrives in Long Time Coming, the first solo exhibit by Rick Hernandez, is not just a form of departure from the artist’s earlier works which emphasized the end product and its evident rootedness to the material world in its investigation of history and the nature of memory. Here is a body of work which risks the fantasy of moving into the conceptual, into privileging process, in order to make evident its understanding of the past: that history is not just a mere pastiche or a presentation of a perceived whole based on an amalgam of fractured facts—in the case of Hernandez’s collages, bits and pieces from magazines, books, and other ephemera dating as far back as the 1940s—but that it is also a course of action, the mode of scrutiny itself, the means by which the artist makes sense of the rubble gathering at his feet. In this lies the affinity of Hernandez’s collection to the paintings of Mark Rothko, more than the geometric shapes and the grids which characterized the latter’s abstractions and which is now also visible in the surfaces of Hernandez’s works.

“Forgetting is so long,” the poet Pablo Neruda said, if not altogether impossible. The act of forgetting becomes a possibility only if violence is involved, if the mind is traumatized enough as to cause dislocation or a transitory erasure of images. We don’t really forget, we just have the “tendency to forget”. For Hernandez, violence lies underneath the Zen-like calm displayed in his works. The collage of texts, the reorganized debris of the past, physically remains but is buried underneath layers upon layers of paint—a literal exposition of the idea that one cannot really erase the past, it can only be “buried”. The relics by which history becomes material and by which Hernandez makes sense of his own embeddedness in history, along with its accumulated value over time, become invisible with the seemingly arbitrary stroke of putting paint over texts and images, thus rendering them flat and worthless. By this singular act, Hernandez critiques history with his bold refusal to remember it—that in this contemporary age marked by the super-abundance of information, it is the vision of the moment that is most relevant.


by Oliver Ortega







This won't make a good wall paper

Saturday, October 01, 2011

152.4cm x 121.92cm
Giclée print on canvas with serigraph
2010

The relation of things

91.44cm x 152.4cm
Giclée print on canvas with acrylic
2010

No walls to divide

60.96cm x 60.96cm
Giclée print on canvas with Serigraph
2010

Pilipinas

60.96cm x 91.44cm
Collage on canvas
Collection of Bencab
2010

What the past gives you...


76.2cm x 101.6cm
Assemblage
Collection of Mr Ross Capili
2009

Sixty

45.72cm x 60.96cm
Collage on canvas
2009

Machina



91.44cm x 91.44cm
Giclée print with acrylic and assemblage
Collection of Mr Richie Aquino
2008

Lose/Gain



22.86cm x 30.48cm
Giclée print with serigraph on paper
2008

Lecturas en Español

22.86cm x 30.48cm
Collage with monoprint
Collection of Mr and Mrs Benipayo
2007

Tools

22.86cm x 30.48cm
Collage with monoprint
Collection of Mr and Mrs Benipayo
2007

Manila 1964

22.86cm x 30.48cm
Collage with monoprint
Collection of Mr Conrado Fernandez
2007

Of splashes, paste Ups and overlays


“The survival of the most free and enlightened elements of our civilization depends
on developing this culture of revolt out of our aesthetic heritage and finding new
forms for it.”¹

Julia Kristeva

Presenting a seemingly infinite compendium of lyrically pigment effects, the blotches, streaks, splashes, scribbles, the graphics, various processes, the techniques in the exploitation of primary grounds, and interrogation of materials that seem more like the abstracted results that accommodate the spontaneity of willful experiments are the recent works of three contemporary young artists: Dennis Demosthenes Campos, Rick Hernandez and Resty Tica.

Campos focuses on the use of varied range of materials exploiting the corporality and substantiality of various mediums’ inherent qualities. Piece by piece and layer by layer, Campos directs his attention toward a highly personal world- the artist’s confession on his observation of the degeneracy of the surroundings. Campos’ controlled randomness in the treatment of the painted surface manage to create field of unpredicted qualitative differences. Titles such as “Landscape”, “Re-Project” and “Grounding” stroll on his personal reflection of construction and re-construction of living ground.

Hernandez’ collage works reconstruct the treasures of the past using collected old manuscripts, printed manuals and discarded book papers with underlying theme of cultural history. Titles directly derived from the snippets of text appearing on the surface of the ground reclaimed and reconnected us to humble memories of the past. The artist employs graphic technique in the interference patches of colors seemingly erased, painted and pasted, in the process blurring of boundaries between natural and man-made while creating a dialogue between time and space.

Tica’s digital prints on canvas imitates with equal temerity the spirit and corporality of conventional painting, exploring the parallels with the aesthetics of painting and mimicking the layered gestural marks resulting to transformation of expression. The artist creates an illusionary space of what is real and what is not. Understanding science as tool in painting had gained traction. This is evidently explored in contemporary society with some fashion in reaction to customary art practices.

Finding their own contemporary voice between the streaks, doodles, and splashes of paints, between the cuts in the collages in the subject understood to be specific and global, it will be interesting to see how these representations of young artists develop in their works as time goes by. 

Notes by Noëll EL Farol



From 'On Common Ground Uncommon Grounds' 3-man exhibition
featuring Demosthenes Campos, Rick Hernandez and Resty Tica
GalerieOne Workshop
2007