Manuel Ocampo
oil, cigarette butts and collage on canvas, plexiglass and artist’s frame
78 x 57 in. (198 x 147 cm)
oil on canvas
20 x 16 inches (51 x 4 cm)
oil, paint peelings and collage on canvas
74 x 78 in. (188 x 199 cm)
oil on canvas
74 x 78 in. (188 x 199 cm)
oil and collage on canvas
74 x 78 in. (188 x 199 cm)
oil, crumpled tissue and collage on canvas, plexiglass and artist’s frame
70 x 50 in. (178 x 127 cm)
oil, gel medium,screws and collage on canvas, plexiglass and artist’s frame
61 x 61 in. (155 x 155 cm)
acrylic on canvas
48 x 36 in. (122 x 91 cm)
oil on Canvas
64 x 48 in.
oil on Canvas
80 x 75 in.
Acrylic on Canvas
60 x 36 in.
oil on Canvas
64 x 48 in.
Oil on canvas
96 x 132 in (244 x 335 cm)
Oil on canvas
48 x 96 in (122 x 244 cm)
Oil on canvas
84 x 60 in. (213 x 152 cm)
Oil on canvas
66 x 76 in (168 x 190 cm)
Oil on linen
78 x 94 in (197 x 237.5 cm)
oil on linen, 48 x 96 in., collection of the Asian Art Museum, San Francisco
Gift of Malou Babilonia, 2007.78. Image courtesy of the Asian Art Museum, San Francisco
oil on linen, 77 x 87 in., collection of the Asian Art Museum, San Francisco
Gift of Malou Babilonia, 2007.79. Image courtesy of the Asian Art Museum, San Francisco
View of Ocampo's works in the exhibition
Manuel Ocampo has been a vital presence on the international art scene for over twenty years and is now the most internationally active contemporary artist from the Philippines. Currently based in Manila, he spends significant time working in the US and Europe, particularly Germany, Luxembourg, and France. Recently, Ocampo presented a new body of work in the Asia Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art at the Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art in Brisbane, Australia (2013). He presented his second solo exhibition at Tyler Rollins Fine Art, The View Through the Bull of a Manual Laborer of Menagerie Gussied Over White Ground: 20 Years of Self-Loathing and Intestinal Mishaps (2012). Concurrently, he curated a group exhibition of Manila-based artists, entitled Bastards of Misrepresentation, at several venues in New York City.
Ocampo’s first solo show, which took place in Los Angeles in 1988, set the stage for a rapid rise to international prominence. By the early 1990s, his reputation was firmly established, with inclusion in two of the most important European art events, Documenta IX (1992) and the Venice Biennale (1993). Also in the early 1990s, he participated such museum exhibitions as Individual Realities in the California Art Scene at the Sezon Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo (1991); Helter Skelter: L.A. Art in the 1990s at The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (1992); and Jean-Michel Basquiat & Manuel Ocampo at the Henry Art Gallery, Seattle (1994). He has subsequently participated in numerous museum exhibitions and biennials around the world, including the biennials of Gwangju (1997), Lyon (2000), Berlin (2001), Venice (2001) and Seville (2004). In 2011, Ocampo was a featured artist in the Dublin Contemporary 2011 and had solo shows in Melbourne, Australia; Vigo, Spain; Copenhagen, Denmark; and Graz, Austria.
Ocampo is known for fearlessly tackling the taboos and cherished icons of society and of the art world itself. During the 1990s, he was noted for his bold use of a highly charged iconography that combined Catholic imagery with motifs associated with racial and political oppression, creating works that make powerful, often conflicted, statements about the vicissitudes of personal and group identities. His works illustrate, often quite graphically, the psychic wounds that cut deep into the body of contemporary society. They translate the visceral force of Spanish Catholic art, with its bleeding Christs and tortured saints, into our postmodern, more secular era of doubt, uncertainty, and instability.
Of late, his works have featured more mysterious yet emotionally charged motifs that evoke an inner world of haunting visions and nightmares. His 2010 exhibition at Tyler Rollins Fine Art, An Arcane Recipe Involving Ingredients Cannibalized from the Reliquaries of Some Profane Illumination, saw Ocampo looking back to his earlier fascination with religious symbols, which now reappear alongside some of his more personal, idiosyncratic motifs, such as teeth, bones, and fetuses. The subdued palette of greys, blacks, and whites seen in so many of these works heightens the feeling that we are looking into a nocturnal dream world, one that we can see only obscurely, as if through a veil. It is a world that invites the viewer to enter, but at his own risk, offering no comfort, but perhaps some promise of redemption.
CATALOGUE
Please click here to view the exhibition catalogue for The View through the Bull …
