Sunday, April 28, 2013

19. PRE-WAR PORTRAITS BY GALVEZ & TECSON

In his preface to the exhibit of portrait paintings entitled “LARAWAN, Immortality & Identity in Filipino Portraiture” at the Ayala Museum in 1989, Jaime Laya wrote: “Portraits are challenges to mortality. The originals may have long become dust, but their likenesses remain—on marble, on canvas, paper, plaster—seeking to remind at least the next few decades after they pass on, that once they were here.

“ Before the advent of photography, the art of portrait painting was practiced by a few artists in the 19th c. like Justiniano Asuncion, Damian Domingo, Antonio Malantic and Simon Flores. Academically-trained artists followed suit, and notable among this group are Lorenzo Guerrero, Felix Resurreccion Hidalgo and of course, Juan Luna. Only the affluent and powerful could afford such artworks, considered as trappings of wealth. The subjects sat in his finest clothes for the painter, and he was often painted surrounded by symbols of his accomplishment and status—from silver-tipped canes, silk hankies to ostrich feathered fans and ivory santos on a marble-topped table.

 In-demand portraitists during the American period (1900-45) included Fabian de la Rosa, Miguel Zaragoza, Teodoro Buenaventura, Jorge Pineda and above all, FernandoAmorsolo, whose style would dominate the period.


 Pre-war portraits are hard to come by in the local market; families tend to keep them because of their personal connection with the subject. They are not exactly favorites of collectors either, preferring religious subjects and landscapes over these strange, nameless faces with stiff postures and icy stares. The Ayala exhibit opened many collectors’ eyes to the value of portrait paintings which are part of Philippine art history that began over 250 years ago.

 These two portrait paintings were discovered by chance in the warehouse of an occasional antique dealer whose main preoccupation is buying house parts, architectural details, and sometimes, its entire content, which would invariably include house décors such as paintings. They are significant finds in that they survived the war, saved for some slight scruffs and manageable tears, and they represent the early works of two award-winning Filipino artists who started painting during the American occupation and into the 80s. Whereas one went on to be written about in art books, and with works rising in value, the other remains virtually unknown outside of his province.


 The first painting which I randomly pulled out of a stack of paintings leaning against a wall showed the thin, almost gaunt face of an old grand dame, who, in her 70s, could be anybody’s lola. There, on the lower right had corner was the signature of the artist-- M. Galvez-- only 25 when he completed the painting on 13 September 1937. This portrait can be classified as coming from his Classical period (works from the 1920s-30s) when he painted genres and landscapes with carefully=studied compositions done in  impasto.


The portrait is a sharp departure from his usual landscapes, but nevertheless, the young artist painted in detail, the subject’s most notable features—her wide forehead, her bony cheeks and chinky eyes. Grandma here is forcing a smile, her eyebrows slightly furrowed, as if with worry. Indeed, one could almost detect a pained expression on her face.


 As realistic as the subject’s expression is the exquisite detail of her dress and accessories, starting with her gold criolla earrings and her gold necklace from which is suspended a small cross with the crucified Christ. Below her slender neck, she wears a seed pearl-encrusted pin to hold her baro in place. But the baro itself is even more amazing—the gossamer translucence of her embroidered baro of piña is captured beautifully with his brush, with four-petalled flowers and viney blue blossoms accenting her butterfly sleeves and panuelo.


The 73 year-old portrait was cleaned and restored, then –re-framed in an appropriate period frame. Galvez would later experiment with abstraction, cubism and expressionism in the 60s, but would later revert to straight realism for which he was always noted for.

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 The second painting was found hanging at the rear of the warehouse, possibly because the thin, fragile canvas had suffered a V shaped tear on the neck area of the subject, which, fortunately had not affected the face. There were also lots of paint losses, the most major of which was a vertical line that cuts through her shoulder area. The portrait had a painted 3-inch gray border and it came with its original heavy wood narra frame that also had a screwed-on wooden backing.


 Dated 1941, the portrait showed an elegant, robust lady seated on a chair inside her residence that showed the trappings of her wealth—there is a small landscape painting on the wall and an imported vase with gardenias on a plant stand. A heavy red velvet curtain falls on the painting’s left side, framing the lady’s importance.


Her hair in a neat bun, she is posed more casually but with a stare fixed on the painter. She is Filipina in every respect, from her morena complexion, rounder eyes and very full lips. Obviously a family matriarch, she cuts a commanding figure despite the simplicity of her baro’t saya, which consists of a diaphanous, spread-out baro matched with a plain brown saya that falls in drapes on the carpeted floor. Her only piece of jewelry is a plain wedding band on her finger.


 This portrait was signed L. D. Tecson Jr., Cabiao, N.E. , and when I asked the dealer about the provenance, he could only say he rescued the painting from an old house in Cabiao town in Nueva Ecija. It took me awhile to acquire this painting not only because of its damage but also because I did not know the artist. His name did not appear in local art books nor did it show on google search.


Finally, one contemporary art book yielded his name and a short biographical sketch—Lauro Dizon Tecson Jr. was born in Cabiao, Nueva Ecija in 1912—so he must have set up shop in his own neighborhood after his graduating from the University of the Philippines with a Fine Arts degree. Cabiao was a rich and vast farming town that had its share of hacenderos, so this must have been commission from a landed family in the town.


 Little else is known about Tecson, aside from the fact that he won First Prize in one art competition sponsored by the Art Association of the Philippines. His accomplishments have all but been overshadowed by J.D. Castro, his contemporary and fellow Nueva Ecijano who settled and did good business in Baliwag.


In a special way, these women continue to live on through these recovered portrait paintings, providing us with a permanent memory of how they looked while opening a window to their past world for us to witness and see: from their manner of grooming and dressing , their personal taste for adornments, to the social class they belonged in, as well as hints of their wealth and identity. It is simply amazing how one can summon hidden memories and conjure stories just by looking at a face on a canvas. Such is the power of the art of portraiture.

4 comments:

  1. LAURO D. TECSON, SR.

    BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH

    Name: LAURO DIZON TECSON, SR.
    Born: August 18, 1912
    Address: Cabiao, Nueva Ecija
    Graduate: School of fine Arts, University of the Philippines Class 1934-1939 Scholar 1936-1938

    AWARD CERTIFICATES

    Medalist - Elementary Drawing - 1934
    Honorable Mention - Decorative Art (Advance) - 1940
    Honorable Mention - Perspective - 1938
    Honorable Mention - Landscape - 1938-1939
    Advance Landscape - Painting - 1940
    3rd Prize Winner - FEU National Art Contest - November 26, 1950
    1st Prize Winner - Pencil Sketch (Art Association of the Phil) Art in action Contest
    Paradise Farm - May 13, 1956

    PROFESSORS - U.P. School of Fine Arts - 1934 - 1939
    Don Fabian dela Rosa - Director
    Prof. Ambrosio Morales - Still Life (Charcoal)
    Prof. Guillermo E. Tolentino - Sculpture and Modelling
    Prof. Ramon Peralta - Still Life (Oil)
    Prof. Ireneo J. Miranda - Water Color; Decorative Art I & II
    Prof. Pablo C. Amorsolo - Painting from Life (Oil) & Composition (Pastel)
    Prof. Vicente Rivera y Mir - Composition II Oil
    Dr. Toribio Herrera - Anatomy, Perspective and History of Art
    Prof. Fernando C. Amorsolo - Drawing from Life (Charcoal) and Landscape (Oil)

    WORK EXPERIENCE

    U.S.O. Fort Stotsenburg - 1945 - 1947 Sketch Portrait Artist
    Freelance Portrait Artist - Drawing from Life (Charcoal) and Landscape (Oil)



    The life, love and romance of Lauro Dizon Tecson, Sr. with painting and the arts started to bloom 50 years ago when, as a restless young man with exuberant dreams, he discovered his innate talents to capture vivid visions in canvass forms. Encourage by those who saw him great potentials as an artist, he eventually enrolled at the then School of fine Arts, University of the Philippines in 1934. Five years later, he received his formal diploma in painting with flying colors.

    Mr. Tecson's talent in the arts soon earned for him awards and citations even while still a student at U.P. He was a medalist in elementary drawing in 1934, receiving honorable mention in perspective arts in 1938. His "landscape" entry in 1939 also won for him honorable mention.

    Another honorable mention citation came his way in 1940 during a contest for advance decorative art competition. he also won a prize in advance landscape painting in the same year.

    In a pencil sketching contest sponsored by the Art Association of the Philippines in 1950, he romped away with the first prize. Also in the same National Art Contest organized by the Far Eastern University in the same year, his entry won third prize. From 1945 to 1947, Mr. Tecson was commissioned by the United Service Organization (USO) to do sketch portraits at Fort Stotsemburg.

    A fine arts scholar who haw been painting for the past 50 years, Mr. Tecson specializes in oil portraits, landscapes, still life and decorative art. He credit his successes to three great Filipino notables whose names are now part of Philippine cultural history: Fernando Amorsolo, Fabian dela Rosa and Guillermo Tolentino.

    "I feel very fortunate and highly honored to have been tutored by these distinguished professors in U.P. who have imparted to me the finer points, the lasting motivations so essential in every budding artists." says Mr. Tecson.

    Now a resident of California, Mr. Tecson fondly recalls his farewell one-man art exhibition in the land of his birth when ever a thousand painting afficionados gathered to admire his work at the City Gallery of Rizal Park (Luneta), Manila, in October of 1982.

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    2. For more Lauro D. Tecson's paintings please visit:

      FB/CABIAO DIGITAL PHOTO ARCHIVE:
      https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=oa.844638898895388

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  2. Ikaw ba Mark ang author nito, kasaysayan na ito na dapat ay nasa history ng cabiao


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