“Some Are Smarter than Others” comprises newly commissioned sculpture, photographs and printed textiles that reference fine and decorative art objects owned or commissioned by the Marcoses during their rule, such as photographs of prized Georgian silverware appropriated from a 1991 Christie’s auction catalogue or cheap, bamboo-framed canvas prints of under-par paintings from the Italian Renaissance period.
Depicting the paternal and maternal figureheads of the Marcoses ‘new society’, an imposing, up-scaled replica of an original statuette depicts the primordial Filipino couple Malakas (the strong one) and Maganda (the beautiful one), icons that Ferdinand and Imelda often and immodestly used to represent themselves. Bringing together these artworks-cum-artefacts, Abad reveals the inconsistency of their ideologies and the irony of the Baroque fantasy they sought to cultivate: an irony driven home further by a large, red flag adorned with a Soviet-style hammer and sickle, in which the hammer representing the workers has been replaced by an auction gavel.
A text written by the artist further places the Marcoses lavish lifestyle and subsequent exile in context, charting the repercussions that their narcissistic approach to government had for the post-authoritarian era attempts at agricultural reform.
Recounting the ups and downs of this period in an appropriately sensationalist fashion, Abad reveals how their extravagant taste served to legitimate their celebrity and how the creole iconography that they promoted in public murals and reliefs throughout Manila – a wild combination of traditional Filipino folklore, Hollywood archetypes and classical European cultural heritage – helped them appear anti-communist enough for the West to tolerate their version of democratic authoritarianism for two decades.
from September 12 until November 16, 2014
Pio Abad
Some Are Smarter Than Others
Gasworks
155 Vauxhall Street, London