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[av_heading heading=’The visual poetry of Ilonggo artist Bryan Liao’ tag=’h3′ style=’blockquote modern-quote’ size=’30’ subheading_active=’subheading_below’ subheading_size=’18’ padding=’10’ color=” custom_font=” av-medium-font-size-title=” av-small-font-size-title=” av-mini-font-size-title=” av-medium-font-size=” av-small-font-size=” av-mini-font-size=” admin_preview_bg=”]
BY RHICK LARS VLADIMER ALBAY
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February 10, 2018
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They fill the room with poetry: these intricate installations and bare-faced geometric pieces âall tessellating and multiplyingâgilded wood grain reflecting delicate yet sharp-edged shadows on the walls, the lights flickering on and off with the movement of its audience.
This is how 27-year-old Ilonggo artist Bryan Liao saturates a room with visual poetry: by tapping into natureâs innate geometry, channeling Islamic mosaic, and paying tribute to his late mother.
The self-taught installation artist expands his foray into conceptual artin his second solo show âExploration and Exploitationâ which exhibited at gallery i â housed on the second floor of Iloiloâs iconic heritage site the Eusebio Villanueva Building, at the heart of the metroâs downtown city proper.
âThereâs a thin the line separating âexploringâ from âexploitingâ something â from societal, environmental, and individual, among others â it takes on many forms,â explains Liao, a marketing management graduate and full-time entrepreneur, whose passion remains rooted in art.
A PORTRAIT OF ONE
âWe are all basically looking for something and in this endless process of exploration,â shares the artist from Antique, who unflinchingly mines his own life experiences to produce his honest and awe-inspiring art.
Liao begins his journey with âA Portrait of One,âwhich the artist describes as a tribute to his late mother who was stricken by cancer.
âTo me, itâs a portrait of my mom. Thereâs a certain fondness and gentleness to the piece, as if sheâs greeting the guests entering the room: âWelcome, have a look around,ââ muses the artist.
But, holding the most sentimental value for Liao is âMeager Exploitations,â wherein he usespieces of mahogany wood bought by his own mother before her untimely passing nearly 10 years ago.
âThe piece âMeager Exploitations,â has some sentimental value for me, since most of the wood I used were already a decade old, and were even bought by my mom before she passed away,â retells Liao. âShe bought it around 2008, intending to have them made into chairs or cabinets, a year before she passed away in 2009.â
âThe fact that this was the same wood she bought and left us gives it more value to me more than any other piece. I am sentimental like that,â he says brushing off a notion of loss.
UNSTRAINED ABUNDANCE
At first glance, it may be easy to overlook that all eight of Liaoâs wall-mounted installations are complex permutations of the same basic blocks: mahogany prisms, all cut in the same size.
Liao held up two of these small pieces of wood during the showâs opening night, explaining the pain-staking three months it took him to assemble âExploration and Exploitationâ while also busy with his day job. Itâs by this precise unit that the artist has shaped and set the limits and breadth of his gestalt pieces.
âThe whole is greater than the sum of its parts. It started with the first wooden block I used and how it somehow pushed me to my limits, searching for other ways to present it,â Liao relates. âI realized how much exploring and searching I had to go through to create the initial blocks.â
âI wanted to see how far I could push myself to come up with these different pieces of art relying on just the same basic building block,â shares the artist, as heâs been encouraged by his friends and decorated Ilonggo art veteran Rock Drilon to delve deeper into his woodcraft.
Audiences often enter âExploration and Exploitationâ with wide-eyed wonder, and leave walking to the stride of their thoughts, grappling with what theyâve just seen â affected by Bryan Liaoâs visual poetry.
Liao is a member of Rahmag Visual Arts group in Antique, and the Hubon Ilonggo artists collective./PN
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[…] UNSTRAINED ABUNDANCEAt first glance, it may be easy to overlook that all eight of Liaoâs wall-mounted installations are complex permutations of the same basic blocks: mahogany prisms, all cut in the same size.Liao held up two of these small pieces of wood during the showâs opening night, explaining the pain-staking three months it took him to assemble âExploration and Exploitationâ while also busy with his day job. Itâs by this precise unit that the artist has shaped and set the limits and breadth of his gestalt pieces.âThe whole is greater than the sum of its parts. It started with the first wooden block I used and how it somehow pushed me to my limits, searching for other ways to present it,â Liao relates. âI realized how much exploring and searching I had to go through to create the initial blocks.ââI wanted to see how far I could push myself to come up with these different pieces of art relying on just the same basic building block,â shares the artist, as heâs been encouraged by his friends and decorated Ilonggo art veteran Rock Drilon to delve deeper into his woodcraft.Audiences often enter âExploration and Exploitationâ with wide-eyed wonder, and leave walking to the stride of their thoughts, grappling with what theyâve just seen â affected by Bryan Liaoâs visual poetry.Liao is a member of Rahmag Visual Arts group in Antique, and the Hubon Ilonggo artists collective. (First published on Panay News) […]