
Installation view of “Pacita Abad” at MoMA PS1. From left: “Waiting in Washington” (1990), “Marcos and His Cronies” (1985-1995) and “Subali” (1983/1990). Kris Graves/MoMA PS1
Pacita Abad has not only not appeared in our pages before, but her work was rejected by plenty of institutions who probably should have known better. Now, if given the chance, most of us will choose not to miss the opportunity to experience her work:
Stitch by Stitch, Pacita Abad Crossed Continents and Cultures
The Filipino American artist is having her first retrospective at MoMA PS1 as the mainstream art world finally catches up to her work. “You will regret missing it,” our critic says.
From left, “Oceania Mask (Dancing Demon),” 1983/1990; “Hopi Mask,” 1990; “African Mephisto,” 1981; “Mayan Mask,” 1990; and “African Mask (Kongo),” 1990, on view at MoMA PS1. Kris Graves/MoMA PS1
About a year before she died of cancer, in 2004, at the age of 58, the artist Pacita Abad and a team painted a pedestrian bridge that crosses the Singapore River with exuberant colors and more than 2,000 circles. Surrounded by ho-hum hotels and apartment buildings, it radiates joy. Abad’s work is in museums throughout Asia, and in Manila, where she grew up, the National Museum’s holdings include a painfully lucid 1980 painting of two wary children, Cambodian refugees, holding each other.
However, in New York, where Abad lived briefly in the 1970s, while studying painting at the Art Students League, her work has been scarce. The Museum of Modern Art owns nothing by her, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art just acquired its first piece. During her life, she proposed shows to U.S. museums and received around 100 rejection letters, her family has said. Through Sept. 2, though, we are in luck. MoMA PS1 is hosting the first retrospective dedicated to Abad, which was organized by Victoria Sung at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, where it ran last year. It consists of more than 50 works, and while it should be two or four times larger — she was protean and prolific — it is still thrilling. If you miss it, you will regret it.
Abad’s signature works are her trapuntos, quilted paintings that she stuffed and stitched, a technique she learned from an artist-friend in Boston in the early 1980s. The pieces have a warm, confident presence, and they take many forms: hypnotically patterned abstractions, aquatic scenes that teem with plant and animal life (eight comprise a gemlike show, “Underwater Wilderness,” at the Tina Kim Gallery, through Aug. 16) and masks from numerous cultures…
Read the whole review here.
