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Media people hungry for sensational news created this furor which now threatens artistic freedom.  It all began when a television crew sneaked into the Main Gallery of the CCP and took shots of selected elements of Mideo’s work and immediately showed these clips to a prominent Catholic religious figure for a reaction.  It was a blatant attempt at generating conflict which was good copy and revenue for them. 



Mideo’s art may be viewed as strange for most, but desecration of  religious objects have, through times been created by artists who have strong feelings about religion and its role and influence in their lives. Indeed Mideo’s approach may have been quite grossly exaggerated which probably was intended in the first place, to hit at the collective nerve.


The role of the artist in society is like an antenna.  It picks up signals from its collective psyche. It is beyond the material, mental, emotional and spiritual realm of this collective.  Art seeks to express in symbols that which affects this collective. The role of art usually serves as a tool to evolve our consciousness on certain issues surrounding its society --- in matters of politics, economics, religion, etc.  Mideo was simply critiquing on  the power of the Church and its position on matters that concern him and his society.
Mideo’s use of religious objects that he aligned with popular and  consumerist symbols is his way of saying that all these has become one and the same for him  and that the religious objects have lost their spiritual meaning in the lives of many --"the collapse of cultural cannons within the society".
Mideo’s concern is legitimate because as an artist it spoke from his heart and mind about the things of this world that concern him. Maybe he outdid himself in utilizing these objects of worship by using too much of it, almost at the point of outright anger and disgust.  He utilized the condom and the phallic upon these objects to editorialize on the issue regarding the RH Bill -- assigning the images of worship as a symbol to refer to the Catholic Church, known  to be critical of this proposed Law.  Bold and expressive artists are usually known to be open-minded about matters of faith and religion.  It is part of their psychic make-up.  They put all their thoughts, feelings and time in the creation of their works without inhibition. 
Media should have balanced their coverage by not only asking the priests and the man on the street about specific elements of Mideo’s work but should also have consulted art critics and academicians to explain the work to them for a more balanced perspective. However, even if it were explained to them, they will only see the surface and Mideo will still be misunderstood.
Art is a reflective activity that communicates new ideas towards the formation of new world views that eventually affects the future. A good artist has a profound understanding and awareness of his time and can act as an early-warning system of changes to come. Art that creates powerful symbols through its imagery is effective in speaking to the hearts and minds of people in a subliminal manner, its codes revealed only upon introspection.   The impact of Mideo’s art cannot be discounted due to its persistent presence in media today who has in fact unwittingly (again) assisted in allowing Mideo's message to seep into the sublime sphere of the collective psyche. Despite the fact that this has generated so much debate and anger and pain on all fronts, Mideo’s art  has obviously stirred up the collective sentiment and often, such incidents may result in a shift in culture. 
 Rudolf A. Treumann notes this phenomena in his article, The Cognitive Map and the Dynamics of Information --- “It is only afterwards when the public has digested art and internalized it to the degree where no one is conscious of its strangeness, that rational thinking awakens..”


Media’s pervasive exposure of Cruz' art to the public generated so much interest and curiosity, people --who usually stayed away from art exhibits --  began trekking to the CCP to view the show ( before it was ordered closed).  When they begin to ask themselves  why this art is so….then in a subliminal way, Mideo may succeed as a catalyst for future change. * * *
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From Religion to Idol Worship

 

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For a week or so, the media and the Internet became electric with debates, discourse, insults and analysis. Christian groups and senators demanded blood. Heads rolled and lawsuits bloomed. Death threats and vandalism followed. And for what?  An artwork.

The point of contention is an installation work by Mideo Cruz titled “Poleteismo,” part of the “Kulo” group exhibition  at the  Cultural Center of the Philippines (CCP) launched on  June 17 to  celebrate the 150th birth anniversary of national hero Jose Rizal.

As the CCP backgrounder states, “Because all the (32) participating artists had a common educational background, all having studied at the (University of Santo Tomas), they felt it fitting that the theme of Jose Rizal also reflect the heritage and culture represented by the 400-year-old university.”

But media coverage of the exhibit by a major TV network focused on Cruz’s installation, with the resulting outcry quickly burying the exhibit’s laudable intent.  “Poleteismo” was alternately denounced as “offensive,” “vulgar,” “sacrilegious,” “pornographic,” “sick and sickening,” “disrespectful of the Christian faith,” and so on, with the barbs targeted at the artwork’s use of phallic symbols and contemporary pop icons like Mickey Moore to portray Jesus Christ.

“Poleteismo” so incensed one unidentified couple that they sneaked into the CCP to vandalize the artwork and even attempted to set fire to the exhibit. This in turn prompted the CCP to hold a forum on the issue, a jampacked gathering of religious and lay Christian groups, teachers, students, artists, art educators and activists where emotions ran high and heated exchange ruled the day.

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College students attend an exhibition, which includes a poster of Jesus Christ with a wooden penis on His face, at the Cultural Center of the Philippines on Aug. 3 (AFP Photo)

Finally, with several politicians weighing in on the controversy, notably CCP founder and former First Lady Imelda Marcos who expressed disgust over the artwork, the CCP decided to shut down the exhibit.

In its statement, the CCP acknowledged the “numerous e-mails, text messages and other letters sent to various (CCP officials) and the artists themselves (and the) increasing number of threats to persons and property,” and cited these as the basis for their decision to close down the Main Gallery where the Kulo Exhibit is on display.

The statement added:  “Following serious discussion, the Board members agreed on the common objective, to nurture freedom of artistic expression, while recognizing the responsibilities that go with it.”

The furor has also led to the resignation of Karen Flores, CCP’s head for its Visual Arts Division.

In a Catholic country, such reaction might perhaps be expected, with detractors citing the Revised Penal Code’s provision on “offense against religion,” while the art community staunchly defended the exhibit as an exercise of the constitutional provision on freedom of expression.

Ironically, “Poleteismo” has been exhibited since 2002 in such venues as the Ateneo de Manila, UP Vargas Musueum and Kulay Diwa Galleries, but hardly provoked controversy.

Its artist too has earned recognition and awards prior to this outcry, among them the Ateneo de Manila Art Awards in 2006 and the Cultural Center of the Philippines’ Thirteen Artists Awards in 2003.  The performance, media and visual artist has also exhibited extensively in the art centers of Asia, Europe and the US since 1996, and has received numerous prestigious international art grants.

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Jampacked forum at the CCP’s Main Gallery (photo by Stephanie Mayo)

Cruz has been described as a provocateur who uses art to generate a strong reaction from his audience. A performance show once featured him lying on a slab covered in blood, with a gigantic rosary hung across his neck.  An exhibition catalogue once described his work as “distinguished for his provocative multi-disciplinary interventions straddling the irreverent, the blasphemous and the subversive.”

Artist/writer Philip Paraan decribes Cruz as “one unrelenting artist-activist, a facile generator of anxiety and debate, and is skilled in the production of excitingly intellectual images and forms within the unorthodox as seen in his art practice teeming with imitable social and political commentary.”

What Cruz has done in “Poleteismo” was an obvious attempt to shock.  In art, shock value is the “potential of an image, text or other form of communication to provoke disgust, shock, anger, fear, or similar negative emotions.”

Throughout the history of art, there have been artists who deliberately attempted to shake the status quo, to provoke a strong reaction, to challenge the establishment. At times they manage to capture the public attention, but sometimes they have been known to resort to the manipulation of events and circumstances to produce their desired results – all for the purpose of finding ways to be heard or maybe gain some spotlight amidst the highly competitive art world.

In this case, media has contributed significantly to create the ruckus.  What should have been kept within the “sacred” halls of art galleries and museums where previous works of the same nature as Cruz’s are a common fare, was irresponsibly laid by media on a public largely unfamiliar with art’s esoteric ideals.  These types of work should first be critically examined, interpreted and filtered by art critics, art historians and academicians before they are served to the public.

As it is, some of society’s more conservative sectors were confronted with a raw experience of having their objects of worship defiled, again not uncommon in the art world. But what the religious groups should have been concerned about was not the merits or demerits of Cruz’s art, for they are not qualified to do so, but to ask why someone like Cruz has intentionally and publicly declared his irreverence for such icons of worship that have been revered for the last 500 years, considering that he himself was educated in a Catholic institution.

In an e-mail interview with SIM, Cruz explains himself:
SIM: In a TV interview, you said you couldn’t help it if people object to or are provoked by some of your ideas.  Knowing that you have indeed offended some sectors, can you describe how you feel today?

MC: Judging from the recent forum at the CCP, I feel that some people are at least a century behind. I was surprised that some people would argue that their standard of beauty is taken from Thomas Aquinas or that their basis of contemporary aesthetics is from Luna and Hidalgo or even, more recently, from Amorsolo.  I think people should behave in harmony with contemporary developments.

The images presented in my work for “Kulo” are what we are creating subconsciously in our culture. We need to realize that it is a mirror of our society and of ourselves. The uproar it created might be the unconscious denial of seeing ourselves truthfully in the mirror. The realities in our society are the real blasphemy of our own image, the blasphemy of our sacred self. Sadly, it seems that we don’t want to consciously look into ourselves; we’d rather ignore or deny it.

SIM: Can you describe the history of “Poleteismo?” In your exhibition note, it was mentioned that the work began in 2002.

MC: Several versions of “Poleteismo” have been shown in various venues starting in 2002 at the UP Vargas Museum with (artist) Jose Tence Ruiz as the curator.  The second time I did it was in a music video in 2007, and the third was for the group show “tutoK Nexus,” also in 2007. The most recent is at the CCP where I also included some works from the Kulay Diwa exhibition like “Relic,” “Poon” and “Altar.”

The show in Kulay Diwa was featured in Spanish TV Telecinco. Similarly inspired projects were done in Zurich, Switzerland; Taipei, Taiwan; Sardinia, Italy; Hong Kong, China and Vancouver, Canada.

SIM: How did you come up with the idea?  What was your intention?  Has your intention remained the same from 2002?

MC: I grew up seeing my mother posting all our family pictures, certificates, and medals on the walls of our house. I’ve seen similar things in our neighbors’ houses – with posters, calendars, photos of politicians and celebrities adorning their walls. I tried to recreate the idea behind these things in the same aesthetic manner. I see it as a methodology of how people show their accomplishments, connections, attachments and devotion. It is also a subtle way on showing how we want ourselves to be seen on the surface. So this is a sort of reflection: mere representations of things we see of ourselves – how we build ourselves through our idols vis-a-vis how these things have shaped and molded us.

The basic concept of “Poleteismo” is still the same but the work is constantly changing both in concept and in form. In the present setup in CCP, you can look in the center of the relic (the cross) and you will literally see your reflection from the convex mirror attached to it and the wall collage behind you, which is figuratively another reflection. This is to denote the continuous cycle of history.

One signifier that has been newly adopted in my piece is the symbol for “source of power.”  At the UP Vargas Museum in 2002, I initially signified power with the use of a line of electrical sockets shaped into a cross and installed light bulbs all over the wall which was plugged into the “electric cross.” This time in CCP, I used the phallic symbol to denote power, a symbolism that can be attributed to patriarchy and feudalism.

I feel that some people just want to look at the surface – they forget that some of the phalluses wore election wrist bands to symbolize political power. (A lot of them though went missing after the opening.)

SIM:  Have you always used religious images in your work?  It seems that your work used up a lot of Catholic imagery, something like 60 percent of the installation. Does this mean that on a personal level, religion has been a strong experience for you?

MC: Religion plays a big part in our history. We cannot escape it after 300-plus years of Spanish colonization. It plays a big part in the formation of our culture as Filipinos. It is unavoidable to include these images when we tackle subjects concerning our society.

SIM: Catholic imagery seems to have lost its spiritual power over you as you have often reduced it to mere objects of idolatry.  When did this spiritual transformation happen? Can you describe your current religious views?

MC: I was raised a Catholic, part of the 80 percent Catholic (population) in the country. I grew up believing in Santa Claus like everyone else.  But as you grow up, you gain more knowledge about the world you live in. You learn about things that separate myth from reality.

 

http://lifestyle.inquirer.net/10443/from-religion-to-idol-worship

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I Had a Dream….


My daughters were on a street that looked like any other street in San Juan. We were waiting for a tricycle to take us home. Then one stopped before us driven by a nice old man, with a rounded face and cheerful eyes. My girls and I managed to squeeze ourselves into the side car as we began to travel through the streets. 

We suddenly found ourselves inside a very long tunnel but the trip was smooth and fast. Then I saw a small break in the tunnel which revealed the scene outside. I saw a storm and a lady struggling with her umbrella. I felt we were lucky to be inside that tunnel.

After the tunnel we entered a small village and turned left into a narrow street. The village looked like a squatters’ area with tiny, makeshift houses. 

At the end of the street I saw a small house made of fragile wood decorated with colorful symbols and filigree art like a Muslim house of worship, all made of thin wood. The house had been torn down by the harsh storm and I felt a bit sad, not for the loss of those who worshipped there…but more for the art that had gone wasted.

We finally reached our destination, our home. It was a tiny, bright white adobe house sitting on top of a hill, away from the dreary scene of the poverty and destruction below.

In the next scene I saw myself happily and peacefully sweeping the floor of my austere home as my husband, my Master, sat nearby, writing on his book. My husband actually looked like the nice old tricycle driver --- small and plump, with the kindest, gentlest face wearing a tiny set of spectacles. 

All the walls inside and outside the tiny adobe house were white. There were no decorations on the wall. The house was almost bare. The room where I was sweeping had an old crude dining table made of sturdy wooden planks where my husband sat as he wrote on his book. The windows were crude but made in perfect squares and from these, we see the blue, clear sky. 

It was all so quiet and peaceful. Not a sound was heard. My husband and I did not speak a word to each other but felt each other’s peaceful company.

I felt quiet love and humble submission inside my heart. I wore a housedress made of thin white cotton that simply covered my nakedness.

Then my daughter Jessica came to ask her Father some money, and they climbed a few steps up to a bedroom. I followed to take a look. Her father opened a bedside drawer and inside was an old worn out purse filled with gold coins.

I turned my back to the sight of the money which did not interest me at all despite of the simple life we led. I also knew that my husband had a secure source of income that came from an endless source. Though my house was bare, I felt I had all I ever wanted from life…. * * *



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Towards the Hermeneutics of Culture

 

(Inspired from the essays of:   Karin Barnaby and Pellegrino D'Acerino in  C. G. Jung and the Humanities: Toward a Hermeneutics of Culture)


 

The coming of age of the archetypal movement

through its convergence with postmodern thought

along with a commensurate insistence on Jung’s

transpersonal psychology or

the psychology of the unconscious.

 

 

 

OBJECTIVE:  To bring together a cultural movement that criticizes Capitalism and Postmodernism utilizing the penetrating psychological analysis of Jungian thought in reshaping the pervading narcissistic phenomena that plague the contemporary art world.

 

 

“ It was the artists engaged in the work of revision – in the work of transforming the artistic inheritance rather than obliterating it – who ultimately effected the profoundest changes, for it was they who altered irrevocably our sense of the past; it was they who liquidated its authority in the very process of harnessing its energies.”

 

 

Formation of the Archetypal Art Movement

 Where Art Becomes Universal

 

"An attempt is here made to bring psychological analysis and reflection to bear upon the imaginative experience communicated by great art, and to examine those forms or patterns in which the universal forces of our nature there find objectification"

 

Archetypal Art, that which contains images from the collective unconscious, or the unconscious of the human race becomes the basis for what makes art a universal experience.

 

Archetypal theory is principally shaped by the multidisciplinary theories behind:

Religion, philosophy, mythology, psycholinguistics.

 

Archetypal theory is based on depth-psychological (or the psychology of the soul) structures posited by Jung.  Jung termed his own theory "analytical psychology," as it is still known especially in Europe, commonly referred to today in all disciplines as "archetypal psychology."

 

Archetypal theory took shape principally in the multidisciplinary journal refounded by Hillman in 1970 in Zurich, Spring: An Annual of Archetypal Psychology and Jungian Thought. According to Hillman, that discourse was anticipated by Evangelos Christou's Logos of the Soul (1963) and extended in religion (David L. Miller's New Polytheism, 1974), philosophy (Edward Casey's Imagining: A Phenomenological Study, 1976), mythology (Rafael Lopez-Pedraza's Hermes and His Children, 1977), psycholinguistics (Paul Kugler's Alchemy of Discourse: An Archetypal Approach to Language, 1982), and the theory of analysis (Patricia Berry's Echo's Subtle Body Contributions to an Archetypal Psychology,1982).


These archetypalists focused on the imaginal and making central the concept that in English they call "soul," assert their kinship with Semiotics and Structuralism but maintain an insistent focus on psychoid phenomena, which they characterize as meaningful.

 

Their discourse is conducted in poetic language; that is, their notions of "soul-making" come from the Romantics, especially William Blake and John Keats. "By speaking of soul as a primary metaphor, rather than defining soul substantively and attempting to derive its ontological status from empirical demonstration or theological (metaphysical) argument, archetypal psychology recognizes that psychic reality is inextricably involved with rhetoric" (Hillman).

            Jung described "Archetypes," as patterns of psychic energy originating in the collective unconscious and finding their "most common and most normal" manifestation in dreams.  Jung was also more preoccupied with dreams and fantasies, because he saw them as exclusively (purely) products of the unconscious.

 

A primordial image is a part of the collective unconscious, the psychic residue of numberless experiences of the same kind, and thus part of the inherited response-pattern of the race by a theory of a collective unconscious.

 

Archetypal criticism based on Jung was never linked with any academic tradition and remained organically bound to its roots in depth psychology: the individual and collective psyche, dreams, and the analytic process.

 

Indeed, myth criticism seems singularly unaffected by any of the archetypal theorists who have remained faithful to the origins and traditions of depth, especially analytical psychology --- James Hillman

 

Hillman locates the archetypal neither "in the physiology of the brain, the structure of language, the organization of society, nor the analysis of behavior, but in the processes of imagination".

 

Feminist Archetypal Theory (A Sample)

 

This last text explicitly named the movement and demonstrated its appropriation of archetypal theory for feminist ends in aesthetics, analysis, art, and religion, as well as in literature.

 

Feminist archetypal theory, proceeding inductively, restored Jung's original emphasis on the fluid, dynamic nature of the archetype, drawing on earlier feminist theory. as well as the work of Jungian Erich Neumann to reject absolutist, ahistorical, essentialist, and transcendentalist misinterpretations.

 

Thus "archetype" is recognized as the "tendency to form and reform images in relation to certain kinds of repeated experience," which may vary in individual cultures, artists, authors, and readers.

 

The archetypal concept can  become a useful tool for artistic analysis that explores the synthesis of the universal and the particular, seeks to define the parameters of social construction of gender, and attempts to construct theories, of the imaging, and of meaning that take gender into account where each artistic product can elicit a personal, affective, and not "merely intellectual" response.

 

Archetypal theory, then, construed as that derived from Jung's theory and practice of archetypal (analytical) psychology, is a fledgling and much misconstrued field of inquiry with significant but still unrealized potential for the study of art and of aesthetics in general.

 

* * *

 

“…Since every part, however blazingly new, fails to affect us as doing more than hold the ground

for something else,some conceit of the bigger dividend, that is still to come, so we may bind up the aesthetic wound, I think, quite as promptly as we feel it open.  The particular ugliness is no more final than the particular felicity…The whole thing is the vividest of lectures on the subject of individualism, and on the strange truth, no doubt, that this principle may in the field of art…often conjure away just the mystery of distinction which it sometimes so markedly promotes in the field of life.”

 

--- Henry James

 

“…neo-avant-garde, or postmodern art at once mocks and denies the possibility of therapeutic change. As such, it accommodates the status quo of capitalist society, in which fame and fortune count above everything else. Stripping avant-garde art of its missionary, therapeutic intention, neo-avant-garde art converts it into a cliché of creative novelty or ironic value for its fashionable look. Moreover, it destroys the precarious balance of artistic narcissism and social empathy that characterizes modern art, tilting it cynically toward the former.”

------ Donald Kuspit

“The Cult of the Avant-Garde Artist”

 


 

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