Fernando Zobel and the Making of the Ateneo Art Gallery: Modern Art, Postcolonial Statehood, and the Utopian Imagination in Twentieth-Century Philippines

Fernando Zobel de Ayala y Montojo is a towering figure in modern Filipino art and criticism. An award-winning artist and an astute theorist, he founded the Ateneo Art Gallery in 1960. Six years later, he established the Museum of Spanish Abstract Art in Cuenca, Spain. Art histories in the Philippine...

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Main Author: Veric, Charlie Samuya
Format: text
Published: Archīum Ateneo 2017
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Online Access:https://archium.ateneo.edu/paha/vol7/iss1/2
https://archium.ateneo.edu/context/paha/article/1215/viewcontent/PAHA_207.1_202_20Article_20__20Veric.pdf
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Institution: Ateneo De Manila University
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spelling ph-ateneo-arc.paha-12152024-11-28T06:36:03Z Fernando Zobel and the Making of the Ateneo Art Gallery: Modern Art, Postcolonial Statehood, and the Utopian Imagination in Twentieth-Century Philippines Veric, Charlie Samuya Fernando Zobel de Ayala y Montojo is a towering figure in modern Filipino art and criticism. An award-winning artist and an astute theorist, he founded the Ateneo Art Gallery in 1960. Six years later, he established the Museum of Spanish Abstract Art in Cuenca, Spain. Art histories in the Philippines and Spain are certainly unimaginable without Zobel, yet very little has been written about him. With the exception of a handful of articles, not much art historical discussion of Zobel exists, especially in the context of the rise of Filipino modern art and the development of Philippine postcolonial state as utopian phenomena. The essay fills this gap. In particular, I will argue that an understanding of Zobel and his influence must consider the mutual emergence of modern art and postcolonial statehood, events that cannot be dissociated from utopian sentiments defining the historical project of decolonization in the middle of the twentieth century. Moreover, I will argue that Zobel may be considered as a decolonizing voice, a touchstone in postcolonial Filipino art criticism. This essay not only fills a significant gap in the scholarship on Zobel but also hopes to reframe our understanding of modern art in the Philippines. 2017-03-31T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://archium.ateneo.edu/paha/vol7/iss1/2 https://archium.ateneo.edu/context/paha/article/1215/viewcontent/PAHA_207.1_202_20Article_20__20Veric.pdf Perspectives in the Arts and Humanities Asia Archīum Ateneo Fernando Zobel Ateneo Art Gallery Filipino modern art and criticism Filipino art history Philippine postcolonial statehood decolonization utopia
institution Ateneo De Manila University
building Ateneo De Manila University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider Ateneo De Manila University Library
collection archium.Ateneo Institutional Repository
topic Fernando Zobel
Ateneo Art Gallery
Filipino modern art and criticism
Filipino art history
Philippine postcolonial statehood
decolonization
utopia
spellingShingle Fernando Zobel
Ateneo Art Gallery
Filipino modern art and criticism
Filipino art history
Philippine postcolonial statehood
decolonization
utopia
Veric, Charlie Samuya
Fernando Zobel and the Making of the Ateneo Art Gallery: Modern Art, Postcolonial Statehood, and the Utopian Imagination in Twentieth-Century Philippines
description Fernando Zobel de Ayala y Montojo is a towering figure in modern Filipino art and criticism. An award-winning artist and an astute theorist, he founded the Ateneo Art Gallery in 1960. Six years later, he established the Museum of Spanish Abstract Art in Cuenca, Spain. Art histories in the Philippines and Spain are certainly unimaginable without Zobel, yet very little has been written about him. With the exception of a handful of articles, not much art historical discussion of Zobel exists, especially in the context of the rise of Filipino modern art and the development of Philippine postcolonial state as utopian phenomena. The essay fills this gap. In particular, I will argue that an understanding of Zobel and his influence must consider the mutual emergence of modern art and postcolonial statehood, events that cannot be dissociated from utopian sentiments defining the historical project of decolonization in the middle of the twentieth century. Moreover, I will argue that Zobel may be considered as a decolonizing voice, a touchstone in postcolonial Filipino art criticism. This essay not only fills a significant gap in the scholarship on Zobel but also hopes to reframe our understanding of modern art in the Philippines.
format text
author Veric, Charlie Samuya
author_facet Veric, Charlie Samuya
author_sort Veric, Charlie Samuya
title Fernando Zobel and the Making of the Ateneo Art Gallery: Modern Art, Postcolonial Statehood, and the Utopian Imagination in Twentieth-Century Philippines
title_short Fernando Zobel and the Making of the Ateneo Art Gallery: Modern Art, Postcolonial Statehood, and the Utopian Imagination in Twentieth-Century Philippines
title_full Fernando Zobel and the Making of the Ateneo Art Gallery: Modern Art, Postcolonial Statehood, and the Utopian Imagination in Twentieth-Century Philippines
title_fullStr Fernando Zobel and the Making of the Ateneo Art Gallery: Modern Art, Postcolonial Statehood, and the Utopian Imagination in Twentieth-Century Philippines
title_full_unstemmed Fernando Zobel and the Making of the Ateneo Art Gallery: Modern Art, Postcolonial Statehood, and the Utopian Imagination in Twentieth-Century Philippines
title_sort fernando zobel and the making of the ateneo art gallery: modern art, postcolonial statehood, and the utopian imagination in twentieth-century philippines
publisher Archīum Ateneo
publishDate 2017
url https://archium.ateneo.edu/paha/vol7/iss1/2
https://archium.ateneo.edu/context/paha/article/1215/viewcontent/PAHA_207.1_202_20Article_20__20Veric.pdf
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