National-ish artists : Victorio Edades and the founding of Filipino modern art
Abstract
Victorio Edades has long been regarded as the founding father of modern art in the Philippines.
For a long time, the artist’s devotion to this cause has been traced to a paradigm-altering
encounter with Post- Impressionist art in 1922 or 1923 at a travelling iteration of the New York
Armory Hall show which reached Seattle while Edades was a student at the University of
Washington. Closer examination of paintings and documentation relating to Edades’ time in
Seattle, however, reveal that this is almost certainly not the case. Strong evidence suggests both
that the New York Armory Hall show never reached Seattle and that Edades’ first encounter with
modernist art occurred at the University of Washington itself.
This thesis offers new analysis of Edades’ career as a modernist artist over several decades of
rapid social and political change. It re- examines the sources that influenced his practice as an
artist and art educator, situating his early work in relation to the art and ideas being circulated in
the Pacific Northwest in the 1920s and then in Southeast Asia through World War II,
decolonisation and the establishment of national and regional identity in the post- independence
era. It also interrogates the Armory Hall narrative that was constructed in defiance of the primary
sources, exploring possible reasons first for its creation and then for its endurance over some fifty
years of scholarship after the fact.
Finally, it explores the implications of this more complicated narrative of Filipino modernism for the
wider understanding of modern art in the Philippines, Southeast- Asia and in terms of colonial and
post-colonial networks which continue to shape the discourse within which the work of Edades and
his followers can be situated at national, regional and global levels.
Type
Thesis, PhD Doctor of Philosophy
Rights
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
Embargo Date: 2032-02-14
Embargo Reason: Thesis restricted in part in accordance with University regulations. Images restricted until 14 Feb 2032
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