Thursday, March 29, 2012

Geraldine Javier’s passion: To paint, sew, mend life’s little wounds

Would the Philippine contemporary art world be poorer had Geraldine Guillen Javier been so dutiful a daughter that she became more Florence Nightingale than her true self after she passed the nursing board exams and landed in the Top Ten? The answer is not “perhaps” but “certainly, definitely bereft.”

A middle child, the fifth of eight, Geraldine was born to parents who wanted their children to be in financially stable fields. Her mother is a retired public school teacher, who once dreamt of being a nurse, and her father, a doctor of medicine, whose own father died young so he never got to practice his profession but instead managed the family farm.

With much of the family’s land falling under agrarian reform, the Javiers stay home in Candelaria, Quezon, where they putter around the garden. Sometimes, they visit Geraldine and her brother, who stay at the family’s city house in Sampaloc, Manila, when it is time for their medical checkup. Or she’d visit them in the province that she calls “a sanctuary, a place where I can be me. Whenever I need a reality check, that’s where I am.”

While enrolled for her first degree in nursing, Geraldine used to ask her parents every semester if she could shift to fine arts. But she’d get the adamant response to continue her studies in nursing as it would translate to a sure-fire job. She recalls, “I found it hard to explain to them that there was no need for a fallback job if I was determined to excel in what I wanted to do.”

Even when she passed the board and decided to sign up for another degree, this time her heart’s desire: fine arts. She had no regrets. Her months involved in an allied medical profession at the Philippine General Hospital taught her “a holistic approach to problems, to empathize, not just sympathize, with a patient. Community service helped in my maturation.” She even used to buy medicine books for the sheer pleasure of reading them.

Perhaps her parents gave their grudging “yes” this time. By her senior year at the College of Fine Arts at the University of the Philippines Diliman, Geraldine was already active in group shows along with her batch mates Mariano Ching, Yasmin Sison, Keiye Miranda, Wire Tuazon. When she left school with a few units of electives undone so she could give her all to her calling, again her parents insisted that she finish the course on grounds that in case a full-time career was not feasible, she could be an art teacher.

She showed them…and how! With her works fetching good sums not just in her home country but abroad, her family has realized that a regular job she could report to is not all that necessary to survive, prevail with elan and contribute to the growth of Philippine art and culture.

She says, “My family is not only proud of what I have become, they are prouder of what I have not become—a monster!  At least, I’m not one yet. They fully understand how important my work is for me. They do their best to support me. Dad keeps a scrapbook of articles about me and my work. Often, I consent to interviews and features just so Dad would have a steady supply of materials, ha ha. Super Mom makes sure that I eat right and take care of myself. She tries her best to make life easier for me.”

In the process of doing the work she truly loves, she discovers that the trait of empathy, honed in nursing school, remains strong. She can pour herself, her emotions even into an object, not just a person, she is painting.

As her work developed from collages to combining photography and painting, then moving on to large-scale works, she brings in other things she loved from childhood like embroidery and crafts.

She says, “In grade school, I was always the first to finish projects in practical arts and would often do my other classmates’ works. I was not aware that I was being creative. It was pure enjoyment then. Now, I'm happy to incorporate this passion for thread work in my paintings and hope someday they can stand on their own, without the painting, and be accepted as art.”

Here is where she arrives at an insight. “After all, it is only ideas that separate art from crafts,” she says convincingly.

When asked if embroidery induces her to fall into a contemplative mood the way women’s “crafts” do and if it is a way to mend whatever it is she is hurting from, she replies, “I have many wounds. I love life so much that in my naivete, I oftentimes embrace it with total abandon. All I wish is for me to be able to always muster enough strength, courage and humility to accept the hits and blows with equal grace the way I do when I am receiving blessings.

Mindful not to let success get into her head but instead share her blessings with others, she collaborates in her embroidery with “angels” who were originally hired as house help.

She noticed that before noon, most of their duties were done. During their idle hours, Geraldine trained them in embroidery. “They had no knowledge of it at all but now, go to my next solo show here and you’ll see for yourself.”

Apart from their salaries, the angels in her life earn much more from embroidering. Two are studying. Their employer is arranging a schedule so eventually, all will be in school. She says of their courses, “Nothing ambitious; more on practical courses.”

She calls Myra Tocayon, Cherry and Jennifer Sulad “angels” because the previous strings of household help gave her nightmares and wore her out. Myra, Cherry and Jennifer she considers God-sent. She says, “They have good heads, are very sensible and nurture ambitions. I wouldn’t call them art associates yet. Maybe, when they start contributing ideas (I will), but I don’t treat them as just workers. I sometimes take them to exhibitions, tell them art-related issues that I’m concerned with. I discuss with them the ideas behind the works we’re making to impress on them the importance of hard work and putting out quality pieces. I do not give sermons. We just exchange stories.”

She applies herself with the same consistent discipline that enabled her to go this far. After rising for breakfast with her brother and kasambahay, she exercises in front of a video, a combination of aerobics and weight lifting. Her typical day is “working from morning till evening. I paint in the daytime, embroider at night,” lifting her head now and then to watch a DVD movie.

She says of her viewing face, “I watch light films and TV series because they’re easier to follow. Highly recommended is Weeds, a brave series about a single mother forced to sell weeds to support her dysfunctional family. Another is Numbers where the FBI enlists a mathematician to solve crimes. It’s very interesting but not recommended while sewing because one needs to focus all brain power to understand the theories.”

As part of her research for a group show that has elements of horror and suspense in it, she has been viewing again what she calls “the creepy children series” like The Shining, Children of the Corn, Pet Sematary, Amityville, The Exorcist. She is seeing them as an adult and checking if these movies “still have the power to scare me. The Shining is still powerful, especially the scene where blood gushes out of the walls. I can only watch The Exorcist if I have company. This is by far the scariest for me. If there’s anyone who wants to see this movie, feel free to join me.”

She rues, though, that she misses “the days when reading was part of my daily routine. There are so many things to do, and I don’t want to scrimp on sleep because it’s part of the discipline. I can only paint well if I have enough untroubled sleep. I’m reading Karen Armstrong’s book In the Beginning, a contemporary interpretation of The Book of Genesis. What makes this a great book are the insights. The Bible has always been a scary book for me because I get confused with the ways of both God and men.”

She was thinking of returning to The Bible to research for another show to find out “the many ways I can use trees and birds to illustrate stories, but I was hesitant to read it.” She discovered Armstrong’s book. It was “like experiencing epiphany. Everything made sense. She explains in simple terms why humans act the way they do, and they do after a rift with God. She’s not preachy. When she talks about creativity (she’s not referring to art), it’s how it can be used as a tool to overcome a conflict with God.”

Geraldine also enjoys historical fiction and is amazed “how writers can create a tapestry of stories and incorporate this in historical events. My faves are Alice Walker, Mo Yan and Anchee Min and lately, Orhan Pamuk. Someday, when I can read at leisure again, I want to reread books that fascinated me as a teenager—Carl Sagan’s Cosmos, Darwin’s Origin of the Species.” 

Her dream project is to interpret Boticelli’s “Primavera,” a work she admires for the way the artist painted the trees and blooms. I like the story of ‘Primavera’ because I love nature. I’m in awe of Boticelli. I’ll know when it’s the right time to do a particular work like ‘Primavera.’ It’s not yet time. This work is steeped in mythology, and I need a good story to make a contemporary interpretation of this masterpiece.”

What she plans on doing is to combine intricate embroideries with painting. She does not compromise with her materials even if she pays through the nose to order online assorted Italian threads to achieve different textures.

When she starts a work, she does not do preliminary sketches. “Drawing is not my thing,” she says. “My real talent is weaving together found images and creating a story. Often, the story comes first and I wait for the right images. Intuition comes into play in many of these works.”

Apart from the artists she admires, among them Frida Kahlo, the people in her milieu who influence her art-making are “great friends with great minds who also happen to be some of the most hardworking, passionate, intelligent people I know, not to mention the craziest.”:

Among them is Raymond Lee whom she calls “the Mother Lily of indie films, an award-winning scriptwriter, an art addict who is very dear to the art community here. I have collector friends whose bonds with me go beyond getting works from me. One is like an uncle, brother, friend, adviser, stylist. They keep me not only well-informed but grounded.”

The products of her early struggles, training, dreams, imagination and grace-filled life are being seen in places as near as Makati and as far as Singapore and Milan.

Despite the enviable life of a single successful woman, it isn’t one that is devoid of pain. She says, “When I embrace it, I don’t mean ceaseless, meaningless activities. Of course, I derive pleasure also from shopping, eating, enjoying the company of friends and family. However, life and art for me are inextricably linked. I do everything with passion. I work harder, love deeply, risk more and as a consequence, I tend to get hurt deeper when things fail to live up to expectations. I learn from these experiences. It’s not easy to continue living (when I’m hurt), but I don't withdraw. I embrace life again, and again, and again.”

It took some detours to arrive at what she wants to do with her life. But as a poet once said, it’s not the destination but the journeying that matters.-- Elizabeth Lolarga


A version of this article was first published in an issue of Contemporary Art Philippines, 2010.
Top: Ella Amo Apasionadamente Y Fue Correspondida
Bottom: "Blackbird Singing
Photos of Geraldine Javier's works from http://www.arcadja.com/auctions/en/javier_geraldine/artist/306258/

  

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