Theatrum Bestiarum (Animal Theater) (2012) Peinture par Paul Hilario

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  • Œuvre d'art originale Peinture, Huile
  • Dimensions Hauteur 1,5in, Largeur 35,8in
  • Catégories Abstrait
Each character in this painting presents an animal association. It is typical in Filipino society to call people animal references depending on their personalities. We are like animals in a play called life. Cat and dog (aso’t pusa) – people who don’t get along Snake (ahas) – someone who will steal your partner away or in some[...]
Each character in this painting presents an animal association. It is typical in Filipino society to call people animal references depending on their personalities. We are like animals in a play called life.

Cat and dog (aso’t pusa) – people who don’t get along
Snake (ahas) – someone who will steal your partner away or in some cases someone who steals opportunities from you
Chicken (manok) - a nagger “Putak ka ng putak!”
Pig (baboy) – a slob
Rat/mouse (daga) – someone who is poor
Crab (talangka) – someone who pull people down and doesn’t want others getting ahead of him
Shrimp (hipon) – someone whose attractiveness is only confined to her/his physique
Crocodile (buwaya) – someone who wants everything for himself, a corrupt politician
Chameleon (hunyango)– someone you can’t readily understand, someone with shifting personalities or alliances

The water buffalo (kalabaw), who stands for strength and industriousness, is unique among the other characters. He is contemplating why people use animals to denote negative traits when in contrary the association is a big insult to the animals themselves. If these animals can only talk what will they say?

Thèmes connexes

PhilippinesPinoyPhilippineCulturePaul Hilario

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I paint visual narratives. I try to create stories with themes that range from the blissful to the brooding. Typically, my compositions are laden with common and personal symbolism.  My works seem to have disconnected[...]

I paint visual narratives. I try to create stories with themes that range from the blissful to the brooding. Typically, my compositions are laden with common and personal symbolism.  My works seem to have disconnected elements but they are linked in the way that I see them. To the audience, however, they are like puzzles; open to varied personal interpretations.

I wouldn’t say I like to confine myself in a box.  Some days I paint social commentaries. On other days I just paint my observations of issues that pertain to almost anything under the sun - this can be political, social, environmental, religious, cultural, and even agricultural.   I try to paint realities in, out, and of life.

Early in my career as a painter, I was mostly doing rice field landscapes and rice farmers in an impressionist manner influenced principally by Vincent Van Gogh. I didn’t paint rice fields because it was popular but rather because of my heritage and professional background. My grandfathers were fittingly a rice farmer and an artist. I worked for a rice-centered international organization for 14 years before moving on full-time to my creative passion.

 In 2021, one of my artworks, Toil Today Dream Tonight, a rice-scape artwork, went viral when it was mistakenly attributed to Vincent Van Gogh in various countries. Many enterprises unknowingly created merchandise from the image of my work.

 Largely self-taught, I was mentored early in my professional art career by one of the Philippines' most respected artists – Marcel Antonio.

For painting methods, I prefer to use a modified Byzantine-era painting technique that helps me create layers of colors developed through multiple glazing. Shadow colors are richer, hard and soft edges have increased contrast, and I am able to create a sense of melodic feel to the painting.

 It’s an often repeated story, almost a cliché, but discovering where my heart and mind truly belong was a process of almost four decades.  I never really planned to be a painter, but that was my destiny after all.  It was a calling I couldn't resist.  

 Aside from the Philippines, my works have found their way to Australia, Canada, Denmark, Dubai, Germany, Italy, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, Netherlands, New Zealand, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, Switzerland, the UK, and the USA.

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