MANILA, Philippines - Jewelry artists Kristine Dee, Michelline Syjuco and Paul Syjuco are launching their collections of inspired pieces in the show “Triad: An Approach to Futurism,” which opens on Oct. 22 at Firma in Greenbelt 3. The show is presented in cooperation with Ayala Malls. Futurism comes naturally to these forward thinkers who always come up with progressive design but with a deep-seated respect for the past. Futurism for them is also a concern for the common good by doing things a little better along the way. And most importantly, it’s creating new things with imagination and creativity. No wonder then that for the opening reception, they even embarked on a creative collaboration with Ciçou Restaurant chef Cyrille Soenen who will create special desserts inspired by the artists’ collections.
The different design eras and paradigms expressed the future in different ways. The early Twenties to Forties envisioned a future rife with airplanes and flight as well as abstraction. Mid-century futurism contained visions of monorails and superhighways. There seemed to be a fixation on organic alien life forms, lasers, UFOs and space exploration in the Sixties and Seventies as well as parallel universes of mythical beings and objects in the Eighties. However, these “Retro-futurist” pegs aren’t exactly what the artists wanted to pay tribute to. It is the constant attempt to experiment, the pushing of the mind to create concepts of external objects not present to the senses. And while we all know that most concepts of the past didn’t quite make the cut, being relegated to archives at best, it is the spirit of creativity and resourcefulness that is held high. After all, a lot of our perceived realities today were long ago only considered fantasies.
For information, call Firma at 757-4009 telefax 757-4010, or e-mail firma2@vasia.com. Firma is at the ground floor of Greenbelt 3, Ayala Center, Makati City.
Kristine Dee: Factoring in flux and finesse
Kristine explains, “Combining these with the future’s longing for peace and serenity, I am able to come up with pieces that are current, yet timeless in appeal. They allow the viewer to experience a feeling of lightness.”
Kristine, who obtained her master’s degree in industrial design from The Pratt Institute in New York and studied Scandinavian furniture design at the Denmark Design School in Copenhagen, has had her works exhibited at the famed Manhattan Center in New York and at the Salone International Del Mobile International Furniture Fair in Milan.
Her designs for the New York-based design consultancy firm Prime Studio have been used by, among others, Banana Republic, Polder, M&M’s, and The MoMa Store.
Michelline Syjuco: Future sense
Michelline’s unusual choice of materials and textures have been known to include cultivated rust, gnarly pearls, pointed steel studs, crushed tin cans, deep acetylene burns, bullet shells, and strange rocks from outer space.
Definitely bordering on the blasphemous and edgy, Michelline’s take on futurism is more Flash Gordon than George Lucas, more sword and sorcery than outer space. “This is the staple I grew up with. Mad Max and Beastmaster were very important to me,” she says.
Still, Michelline’s future looks auspicious. Her first solo exhibition “Armadillon” was a short-listed finalist in this year’s Ateneo Art Awards — a first for local jewelry design. “The jewelry I make is one of a kind. It’s a piece of my brain,” she explains. “I suppose it’s a little more expensive because of that.”
Paul Syjuco: ACCESSORIES for the day after
Paul took the essence of futurism to create endless options and possibilities.
He says, “I pegged period science fiction films like Metropolis and War of the Worlds as well as recent films like Sky Captain and The World of Tomorrow for that elegant art deco feel. I also looked into space travel and deep space elements like orbits and nebulae, incorporating some soul into it, interplaying some pieces with jade Buddha carvings. Some designs are based on computers and their internal components like motherboards, microchips and schematics.”