This significant “moving in” of art to a national palace and to the imagination of a potentially big audience, Filipino or otherwise, was celebrated by a formal turnover ceremony held at The Old Main Office, Kalayaan Hall, Malacañan Palace Compound. The rite was officiated by Director Edgar Ryan S. Faustino (Head of PML), and witnessed by Executive Secretary Salvador Medialdea (who stood on behalf of the President of the Republic of the Philippines).Aside from being the youngest artist whose paintings form part of the Malacañan Palace art collection, Montegrande is one of the few youngblood Filipino painters with an international reputation. He’s the first Filipino and also the first Southeast artist whose work are housed in the prestigious collection of Yusaku Maezawa, a Japanese tycoon and mega art collector who founded and currently directs the Contemporary Arts Foundation.After his recent solo exhibition at Malacañan—A Glimpse of Montegrande (Selections from the David Jonathan Bayot Family Collection)—which was open for all Palace visitors to view (from July 15 to August 16, 2019), Montegrande is back to present his 9th solo exhibition. The upcoming show entitled Obsession will take place at the highly significant occasion of “the national art fair of the Philippines” which is officially known as ManilArt—a flagship art event project of the National Commission of Culture and the Arts (NCCA) through its National Committee on Art Galleries (NCAG). The national event will open on October 9, 2019, 6:00 PM at the SMX Convention Center Aura (until October 13, 2019).Read More: Arts and Cultural Events That You Must Not Miss This OctoberAs an artist, Montegrande would say that his paintings are compelled by an inner (if not innate) obsession to create, express, and grow something on canvas or, in the words of Joan Miró— to “give birth to a world” and “reveal … something alive.” That inexplicable obsession to articulate the “indefinable” and to confer figure(s) on the intractable is surely a defining reason why Montegrande would often identify himself as an “abstract expressionist” (though he’s well aware of the perils of labels).
Like his fellow abstract expressionists—Jackson Pollock, Willem de Kooning, Helen Frankenthaler, and even Per Kirkeby—Montegrande often translates his obsession into large-scale works, thinking that via such artistic magnitude, he could maximize the physical impact of his paintings on his viewers and invite the latter to think and feel more deeply about one’s Self in relation to all that comes with life and living.
In the upcoming exhibition at ManilArt, aficionados and fans of Montegrande’s art will find this batch of large-scale art translation no less than awe-inspiring. This group includes pieces which range from 36 by 36 inches to 60 by 48 inches.