Art & Design

Agnes Arellano’s ‘Project Pleiades’: The world is ending but feminine goddesses could save the day

Words by Marga Magalong | Photos by Miguel Tarrosa

Agnes Arellano, known for her surreal, sometimes erotic, and always thought-provoking sculptures, joins this year’s Art Fair Philippines as a commissioned artist. In “Project Pleiades,” she acknowledges the failures of a humanity living in a patriarchal society and, through her sculptures, proposes a matriarchal solution.

Sculptor Agnes Arellano at Art Fair Philippines 2017
Sculptor Agnes Arellano at Art Fair Philippines 2017

Arellano’s “Project Pleiades,” in which “Pleiades” refers to the Seven Sisters of Greek mythology, is a wish to the world that is rightfully cross-cultural. Agnes brings together deities of different backgrounds, such as Isis of Egyptian mythology, the Bicolana moon goddess Haliya, the Mesopotamian goddess Inanna, and the often misunderstood Mary Magdalene, and brings them to life through sculptures stained in Chinese tea, their bodies molded after Arellano’s own, three decades ago.

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Processed with VSCO with g1 preset

Arellano explaines how men and women have abided by patriarchal society for so long that humanity has lost the motherly element in all of us: “I specifically focused on the goddesses because there’s an overload of the masculine element. Everything is rational, scientific, very linear. You have to be on top. You have to compete. But the goddess mindset is completely different; you don’t think about the rational side, you think about the intuitive.”

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Processed with VSCO with g1 preset

Arellano’s sculptures all have an open third-eye to represent the value of intuitiveness. “Being intuitive can be many things because, yeah, you can see or read, but yung intuition goes beyond,” she says. As masculinity pressures mankind to suck it up in the name of business, Agnes encourages humanity “to start looking for the goddess inside ourselves, whether you’re a man or a woman.” She adds, “Diba may Yin-Yang ang bawat tao? It’s time to look at the more feminine aspect; the one that’s more nurturing, caring, and inclusive.”

 

Catch Agnes Arellano’s Project Pleiades at the 6th floor, the Link, Makati City in this year’s Art Fair Philippines. Art Fair is open today until February 19. For more information, visit http://www.artfairphilippines.com, Facebook/artfairph, Twitter artfairph, Instagram @artfairph.

 

 

 

1 comment on “Agnes Arellano’s ‘Project Pleiades’: The world is ending but feminine goddesses could save the day

  1. Pingback: AGNES ARELLANO’S ‘PROJECT PLEIADES’: THE WORLD IS ENDING BUT FEMININE GODDESSES COULD SAVE THE DAY | The Life and Times of Manila's Watercowboi

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