DON SALUBAYBA (1978-2014)
This lot is offered without reserve. 具象視野:重要東南亞藝術亞洲收藏
唐‧薩盧貝巴 (1978-2014)

對抗荒謬

細節
唐‧薩盧貝巴
唐‧薩盧貝巴 (1978-2014)
對抗荒謬
油彩 畫布
182.5 x 132.5 cm. (71 7/8 x 52 1/8 in.)
2008年作
款識︰SALUBAYBA 2008 (左下)
來源
亞洲 私人收藏
注意事項
This lot is offered without reserve.

榮譽呈獻

Ada Tsui (徐文君)
Ada Tsui (徐文君)

拍品專文

Human depiction can be seen in art as early as the Paleolithic age, the most famous of which was the 'Venus of Wineldorf'. Artistic dimensions of the human form highlight cultural values and societal attitudes toward gender, figurative art, and the relationship between humanity and the fundamental nature of knowledge, reality, and existence. Representations of the human body in art, whether identified as religious or secular, raise questions concerning structures of power, ideology, and identity. Artistic renderings and religious interpretations of the human body privilege it as a symbolic value and a political agent, especially during periods of protest against societal norms and definitions of gender as sexual identification. It is thus unsurprising that the human figure has been a subject of visual representation for artists seeking to explore the human condition through art over the decades, and has even developed into key tropes such as portraiture and the Nude, recognized in the canon of art history.

This season, Christie's is pleased to present Figurative Visions: Contemporary Southeast Asian Art from an Important Asian Collection, a group of works that ask the questions: Where do we come from? What are we? Where are we going? The role and meaning of the human body incorporates a diverse range of cultural forces, including but not limited to art and religion. Different cultures and eras interpret the meaning and value of the human body in distinctive ways.

Filipino artists Yasmin Sison, José Legaspi, Maya Muñoz, and Don Salubayba obfuscate the faces of their subjects as a way to create a sense of surrealism to present various perspectives to create an dystopian world based on reality. Femininity and questions of what it means to be a woman is at the forefront of Salubayba's Fighting Absurdity (Lot 458), and whose work is generally idiosyncratic and anchored in allegory.

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