China Collage

Photograph of Roberto Chabet's China Collage (undated).

Excerpt from Carina Evangelista, Roberto Chabet: China Collages, King Kong Art Projects Unlimited, 2012:

'Of all of Chabet’s works, nothing demonstrates the monstrous and the marvellous of the times more than his sustained practice of collaging. The countless cut-out and hand-torn pieces of paper from books, newspapers, magazines, comic books, art students’ plates, maps, and stamped envelopes bear witness to the wealth of visual material and the photographic march of history that the artist shreds with both love and violence.'

'The China Collage series is titled after the maps of China, Mongolia, and Korea that were used as a base for the first collages, with the overleaf of the opened map explaining their peculiar inverted L shape. A grid of coordinates for islands, rivers, mountains, and paths served as the expanse subsequently smothered with layers of paper to create a topography littered with the thick confetti of chaotic visual information.'

Chabet made over 300 China Collages from 1980 until the 1990s; they have become a source book for the imagery in his works. Described by the artist as his 'picture morgue,' they are 'a cumulative transformation of the desirée into the déchiré—a threshing of the treasured. Some torn pages still bear the puncture marks of thumb tacks, evidencing previous lives as bulletin board pin-up specimens for study, fond regard, or critical rumination. Now torn, plastered in layers, and framed, these strips of paper so wilfully ripped aren’t discarded but preserved. The composed visual detritus anticipates the mash-up, suggesting that all—Buddha, Superman, and the swastika—are fair game or that the varying reds of a tomato, a dab of cadmium paint, a flattened McDonald’s pouch for fries, and of the Biblical burning bush are all equal in formal or allegorical value in a massively complex contemporary time.'

The first few works in the series were shown at Alegria Gallery in 1981 and at Luz Gallery in 1982. This particular work was a part of Roberto Chabet's solo exhibition, 'China Collages: 1980 - 1990,' at the Cultural Center of the Philippines in 1992.

Access level

Online

practitioner
Keywords
Publication/Creation date

Undated (circa 1980s - 1990s)

Creation place

Philippines

Medium

Collage

Dimension

107.9cm x 98.7cm

Content type

artwork documentation

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Rights statement

In Copyright

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This item is covered by one or more copyrights. It is available for research only or use within Hong Kong’s fair dealing rules. Please do not copy, re-use or reproduce this item without the permission of the copyright holder.

China Collage