Maia Cruz Palileo: The Answer is the Waves of the Sea

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Maia Cruz Palileo The Answer is the Waves of the Sea



Maia Cruz Palileo The Answer is the Waves of the Sea March 6 - April 10, 2021

Essay by Ellen Tani Edited by Staci Boris Photographed by Robert Chase Heishman

This catalogue was published on the occasion of Maia Cruz Palileo’s second solo exhibition at Monique Meloche Gallery, Chicago.

©2021





Table of Contents Introduction

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Essay

15

Installation views

23

Artworks

34

Biographies

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Introduction



moniquemeloche is pleased to present The Answer is the Waves of the Sea, an exhibition of new paintings by Maia Cruz Palileo. This is her second solo show with the gallery. Informed by her family’s Filipino heritage, Palileo investigates the malleable language of painting, offering a panoramic lens through which to investigate the larger questions pertaining to forgotten histories and how best to honor these stories in perpetuity. Divesting from the confines of a linear narrative, Palileo seeks to resurrect and memorialize the legacy of invisible histories, creating a reflective space to consider the potentials achieved when we invest in our ancestral inheritances. Through gestural layers Palileo collapses time and space, visually dissolving the borders between past and present, offering the emblematic ability to stand alongside her elders within one endless picture plane. The complex linework of her lush fauna serves as a compositional mechanism through which the eye can traverse the circular paths of each canvas; there is no start, no stop, just continuous progression of breath and life, unfettered by the confines of temporality. Further investigation into the dense layers of foliage reveals mysterious figures shrouded by overgrowth and shadow. Each disappearing form echoes the selective means through which history is presented, a nod to colonization’s conscious erasure of lineages and records less suited to the more dominant narrative. This disregard for an absolute history has allowed for cerebral weeds to overtake and whitewash the landscape of the past, disappearing the rich truths that also inform our present and future. As a remedy for this disparity, Palileo considers the universal energies that move throughout all living entities; the ontology of a harmonious existence rooted not in domination or extraction, but in a conscious and symbiotic connection to the land we inhabit. In opposition to the ambulatory and destructive nature of imperialism, she presents a reminder of the rich and diverse archive of stories saturated within the land we inhabit; a visual account through which she can interlace the visible and invisible, exploring the many possibilities of past lives both remembered and forgotten.

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Essay


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To Carry Them Forth by Ellen Y. Tani In the painting The Answer is the Waves of the Sea, by Maia Cruz Palileo, a man stands in contrapposto holding a bow-shaped net, known as a salambáw, that is traditionally used by indigenous fishermen in the Philippines. In it, fish of fluorescent greens, yellows, and blues are suspended against a low-slung sun that burns hot, irradiating the waterfront with orange light. The man stands at the front edge of a platform and at the threshold of the picture plane, the arc of his net framing the coastal view behind him – though it’s not clear whether the viewer stands on land or in water. As the net bends under the weight of its catch, green and blue fauna rise from the platform as expressive lines, uncanny extensions of undersea life above water. In precolonial Filipino spirituality, the water and its forms (the river, the sea, our bodies) are carriers of ancestral knowledge, present here in both painterly composition and the liquid-ity of gouache. In the feverish atmospheres of Palileo’s paintings, people are suspended between two worlds. They hold space as allegorical occupants of the archipelagic terrain of the Philippines, an unstable geography characterized by fungible boundaries between land and water and long fought over by the Spanish and Americans for its strategic location. They navigate the time of coloniality, whose half-life extends well into the present. Often partially obscured by sparse lattices of vines, fronds, and grasses, the inhabitants of these paintings stand firmly on the land and by each other; and, like the verdant flora and fauna around them, embody the vital energies within the place itself. Painterly color and gesture do not reflect a known environment but function as intuitive conduits for an animacy that transcends memory and futurity.

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Since 2017, Palileo has been working through a multifaceted archive of the Philippines: the late 19th c. colonial photographs of American zoologist Dean C. Worcester, the early 19th c. watercolor paintings of acclaimed Filipino painter Damián Domingo, a late 19th c. book of indigenous Filipino folklore, and her own family albums, which trace her family’s emigration from Manila in the 1960s to places like Texas, Ohio, and Illinois, where she grew up. Worcester was a zoologist whose research in the Philippines in the 1880s led to his appointment as the U.S. Secretary of the Interior in the Philippines from 1901 to 1913, during American colonial occupation. He sold much of his archive to the Newberry Library in Chicago, where Palileo first encountered it. She initially reacted to the violence of the colonial encounter—how Worcester’s archive objectified Filipino subjects as specimens or servants—with her own extractive tools, drawing figures and plants from the photographs onto cardstock, which she then cut out and filed away, collaging them later to make rubbings that functioned as sketches for painting compositions. Queering the archive, deconstructing and retooling it so as to engender its disidentification with scientism and stereotype, she restores autonomy to the photographs that were historically used as tools of American colonial occupation and plunder. 1 Through this technique of assemblage, figures, animals, plants, and other environmental elements entangle imaginatively in new scenes. Companionate figures are a recurring trope – twinned, like the two girls in We Walked for Hours or two men in There Are Warmer Days, or mirrored, like the pelicans who face each other in A Tender Spell. These doublings suggest ghosts, shadows, partnerships, or perhaps a metaphor for the dualism inherent to migration as a state of being a/part. The spirituality that connects the artist with this past seems immediate, as if the paintings host kindred souls separated by generations or states of mortality. The 2018 diptych painting Kambal (twin) suggests that both are true. In bold, jewel-toned organic abstraction, two faces appear as loose mirror images with distinguishing features that suggest their individuality. Each holds a fan to partially shade their multiple eyes, mouths, and noses. Each figure’s ear is adorned differently: a white circle suggesting a pearl at left, and a leafy frond strung through the lobe of the figure at right, whose large white ear resembles the nacre oyster shell in which the pearl grows. The pearl is a natural wonder, both a symbol of environmental vitality – a litmus test for the natural world’s ability to generate beauty – and a symbol of the Philippines, which is known for its large south sea pearls. 1

My use of the term “disidentification” draws on José Esteban Muñoz’s theory of disidentification as a strategy of resistance or survival for queers of color and other minority subjects. See Muñoz, Disidentifications: Queers of Color and the Performance of Politics (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1999)


Maia Cruz Palileo, Kambal (twin), 2018, Oil on canvas, 24 x 48 in, diptych

Whether suggestive of multiple selves, spiritual connections to higher powers, environmental symbiosis, intergenerational energies or kinship, the twinned figure vibrates with vitality in the face of colonial violence, extraction, and re-education. While the individuals portrayed in the Worcester photographs may be gone, their presence can be felt in these compositions as both protagonists and their protective agents. The landscape, too, holds an animistic agency: it seems to actively unfurl to reveal or enclose human figures, which are always semi-contained, occupying a space mediated by screens of architectural, botanical, or atmospheric nature. In the mural-scale triptych Through the Fronds There Were No Stars, this mediation situates a metaphor of loss within this sheltering – or suffocating – enclosure. In the colonial archive, the figures in this painting occupied contexts of vocational education: in woodworking class, military training, and agricultural work. The edification suggested by those photographs belies the psychological violence inflicted by the American re-education campaigns after the Philippine-American War at the turn of the 20th century, which demanded English as the only language of instruction. As Filipino historian Reynaldo Constantino reflects: “The most effective

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means of subjugating a people is to capture their minds. Military victory does not necessarily signify conquest.”1 Although there may be no sky visible from the captive figures’ perspectives through the fronds there are other sentinels: two female ghostly apparitions hover at the rear left of the central panel, watching over the foreground. These layers of ancestral presence restore a sense of ancestral kinship and spirituality that was flattened by the generalizing and ordered logic of the colonial archive. Palileo’s excision of the figures from their photographic site converts them from subjects of study to protagonists in scenes remembered and reimagined, drawing on memories of her childhood visits to Manila, folklore, and the fragmentary world of the archive. Recognizing that setting the record straight on an unrecoverable history was not possible, Palileo has of late invested in care over correction. Commuting to her studio past the Greenwood Cemetery during a year-long global pandemic—a time that we will remember for our renewed intimacy with death—she learned that the cemetery offered something called “perpetual care.” In the absence of kin or family, one could pay for the service of perpetual care of their own or another’s gravesite – keeping it clean, laying flowers, et cetera. This notion of care, as something untethered from family but rooted in traditions of kinship and devotional mourning, is one method of honoring the unknown, unrecoverable spirits of the past. The effort to not forget about the lives lived on the land we inhabit is a kind of wayfinding, as the artist has described, of finding yourself in what’s available and making your own story. Early on in her relationship with the Worcester archive, she was motivated by a desire for historical retribution, a need to show audiences the violence that was whitewashed from American imperialist history. But that story can neither be fully recovered nor disclosed; instead, it breathes through the ghostly figures that populate Palileo’s lush canvases, not as a gesture of retribution but rather in an act of perpetual care.

1 Renato Constantino, “The Miseducation of the Filipino” in Vestiges of War: The Philippine-American War and the Aftermath of an Imperial Dream, 1899-1999, ed. Angel Velasco Shaw and Luis H. Francia (New York: NYU Press, 2002), 178. Originally published as “The Mis-Education of the Filipino,” Journal of Contemporary Asia 1:1 (Autumn 1970), 20-36.


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Installation views



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Artworks


The Answer is the Waves of the Sea, 2020 Oil on Canvas 84 x 72 in 213.4 x 182.9 cm

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Detail


We Walked for Hours, 2021 oil on panel 40 x 30 in 101.6 x 76.2 cm

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37

Detail


Day Dreams & Ice Creams, 2021 oil on panel 40 x 30 in 101.6 x 76.2 cm

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Detail


The Smell of Sunshine, 2021 oil on canvas 48 x 60 in 121.9 x 152.4 cm

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41

Detail




Towards the Bay Shores Where Reeds Grow, 2021 oil on canvas 83 x 71 in 210.8 x 180.3 cm 42


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Detail


Flowers II, 2020 Acrylic on muslin 31 x 35 in



A Tender Spell, 2021 oil on canvas 36 x 104 in 91.4 x 264.2 cm

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Detail




Through the Fronds There Were No Stars, 2021 oil on canvas, triptych 67 x 162 in 170.2 x 411.5 cm

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Detail


Detail

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Detail




There Are Warmer Days, 2021 oil on panel 10 x 8 in 25.4 x 20.3 cm

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Mid-Morning Sun, 2021 oil on canvas 20 x 16 in 50.8 x 40.6 cm


All the Crossed Out Words, 2021 oil on panel 10 x 8 in 25.4 x 20.3 cm

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Night Crocuses, 2021 oil on panel 8 x 10 in 20.3 x 25.4 cm


My Short Brown Arm Learned at Last, 2021 oil on panel 16 x 20 in 40.6 x 50.8 cm

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Kumander, 2020 gouache on paper 19 1/4 x 15 1/2 in 48.9 x 39.4 cm

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Bulkan (Volcano), 2020 gouache on paper 19 1/4 x 15 1/4 in 48.9 x 38.7 cm


Flores, 2020 gouache on paper 19 1/4 x 26 1/4 in 48.9 x 66.7 cm

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The Field, 2020 gouache on paper 15 1/4 x 19 1/4 in 38.7 x 48.9 cm


Party Lights, 2020 gouache on paper 19 1/4 x 15 1/4 in 48.9 x 38.7 cm

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Meryendas, 2020 gouache on paper 16 1/4 x 13 1/2 in 41.3 x 34.3 cm


Pallbearer I, 2020 gouache on paper 15 1/4 x 11 3/4 in 38.7 x 29.8 cm

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Pallbearer 2, 2020 gouache on paper 9 3/4 x 10 3/4 in 24.8 x 27.3 cm



Biographies



Maia Cruz Palileo (American, b. 1979) is a multidisciplinary, Brooklyn-based artist. She completed her BA in Studio Art from Mount Holyoke College in 2001, and received her MFA in Sculpture from Brooklyn College in 2008. In 2015, she attended the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture, in Madison, ME. She is a recipient of the Nancy Graves Grant for Visual Artists, Art Matters Grant Fellowship, Jerome Foundation Travel and Study Program Grant, the Rema Hort Mann Foundation Emerging Artist Grant, the NYFA Painting Fellowship, the Joan Mitchell Foundation MFA Award, and the Astraea Visual Arts Fund Award. Ellen Tani is an art historian, curator, and critic based in Washington, DC who is invested in institutional change toward diversity and inclusion. Currently, she is the 2020-2022 A.W. Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in the Visual Arts at the National Gallery of Art. She received her PhD from Stanford University in 2015 from the Department of Art & Art History, and her research focuses on issues of race and ethnicity in modern and contemporary art, with a focus on conceptual art, black studies and feminist thought.

Monique Meloche Gallery is located at 451 N Paulina Street, Chicago, IL 60622 For additional info, visit moniquemeloche.com or email info@moniquemeloche.com

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