Maia Cruz Palileo

Contemporary Filipino American Art Exhibition

Photography by Ligaiya Romero  Courtesy of the artist and Monique  Meloche Gallery, Chicago
Photography by Ligaiya Romero 
Courtesy of the artist and Monique 
Meloche Gallery, Chicago
 

Website:

https://www.maiacruzpalileo.com/

Gallery Representation: Monique Meloche https://www.moniquemeloche.com/

Biography: 

Maia Cruz Palileo (b. 1979, Chicago, IL) is a multi-disciplinary, Brooklyn-based artist. Migration and the permeable concept of home are constant themes in their paintings, installations, sculptures, and drawings. Influenced by the oral history of their family’s arrival in United States from the Philippines, as well as the history between the two countries, Maia infuses these narratives using both memory and imagination. When stories and memories are subjected to time and constant retelling, the narratives become questionable, bordering the line between fact and fiction, while remaining cloaked in the convincingly familiar. 
Palileo has had solo exhibitions at the Kimball Arts Center, Park City, Utah (2022), the CCA Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts, San Francisco (2021); the Katzen Arts Center, Washington D.C. (2019); Monique Meloche Gallery, Chicago (2019); Pioneer Works, Brooklyn (2018); Taymour Grahne Gallery, New York (2017); and Cuchifritos Gallery + Project Space, curated by Jordan Buschur, New York (2015). Upcoming group shows include Ghost of Empires, Ben Brown Gallery, Hong Kong (2022) The Outwin 2022: American Portraiture Today, National Portrait Gallery, D.C. (2022) Jeffrey Deitch Gallery, New York, NY (2022), Wave Hill Public Garden and Cultural Center, New York, NY (2022), Our Blue Planet: Global Visions of Water, Seattle Art Museum, Seattle, WA (2022). Palileo’s work has been included in exhibitions at Jessica Silverman Gallery, San Francisco (2019); Perrotin, New York, (2019); The Rubin Museum of Art, New York (2018); St. Joseph’s College Gallery, Brooklyn (2017); Corridor Gallery, Brooklyn (2016); and the Bronx Museum of the Arts (2011). Palileo is a recipient of the Joan Mitchell Foundation Painters & Sculptors Grant, Jerome Foundation Travel and Study Program Grant, Rema Hort Mann Foundation Emerging Artist Grant, NYFA Painting Fellowship, Joan Mitchell Foundation MFA Award, and the Astraea Visual Arts Fund Award. The artist received an MFA in sculpture from Brooklyn College, City University of New York and BA in Studio Art at Mount Holyoke College, Massachusetts. Palileo has participated in residencies at Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture, Madison, Maine; Lower East Side Print Shop, New York; Millay Colony, Austerlitz, New York; and the Joan Mitchell Center, New Orleans. Their work is in the collections of The San Jose Museum of Art, CA, The Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University, NC, The Speed Museum, KY and The Fredriksen Collection in Norway. 
 

Artist Statement: 

Influenced by the oral history of my family’s arrival in the United States from the Philippines, as well as the colonial relationship between the two countries, my paintings infuse these narratives with memory and care. Figures appear and disappear in lush landscapes, domestic interiors, and colonial structures. Deep blues and reds suggest dark realms where superstition, myth, and history blur. Evoking a hybrid sense of place, they serve as metaphors for migration and assimilation. 
In 2017, at Chicago’s Newberry Library, I researched Damián Domingo’s watercolor album, Isabelo De los Reyes’ El Folk-lore Filipino, and the Dean C. Worcester photographic archive. The Worcester archive was commissioned by the US government to document the imperialist project of William McKinley’s “Benevolent Assimilation” and Rudyard Kipling’s “White Man’s Burden”. Together, these sources presented an image of Filipinos constructed through native eyes and through the eyes of the other. 
I was drawn to the people in the pictures and felt the impulse to remove them from this historical framework. With the detailed and loving care of Domingo’s watercolors in mind, I drew figures, plants, and other elements from the archive. Then, I cut out each drawing, creating a new library of cutouts: people, animals, foliage, moons, and mountains. The pieces were then placed in various arrangements and recorded via graphite rubbings. This process allowed for the cutouts to be combined into potentially infinite visual narratives and led to the generation of full color oil paintings. 
Improvisation through color and composition mimic the spontaneous manner in which oral histories are recounted. Figures mingle with specters with defiance and gentleness. In contrast to the heavily captioned US photographic archive in which a westerner claims a singular narrative about a group of people, these paintings seek to resist such categorization, with agency, without explanations or captions.
 
 
A Sighting, 2020 
Gouache on paper 
15” x 11” (framed 16” x 20”) 
Image courtesy of the artist and Monique Meloche Gallery. 
Collection of Tad Freese.
Gatekeeper, 2020 
Gouache on paper 
15” x 11” (framed 16” x 20”) 
Image courtesy of the artist and Monique Meloche Gallery. 
Collection of Tad Freese.