• Ideas
  • Feb 19, 2013

Art Fair Report: Gabriel Barredo at Art Fair Philippines

In February, the reclusive and gentle sculptor Gabriel Barredo (b. 1957) opened the doors to his studio south of Metro Manila to preview Asphalt, a nine-meter-long installation that has occupied his days—and nights—in the months leading up to the inaugural Art Fair Philippines (2/7–10). The installation, which was commissioned by the fair, is in fact several dozen intricate installations presented on metallic tables of varying heights, suggesting a cabinet de curiosités. Unlike his previous artworks—often crafted from melted plastic into fanciful furniture and figurative sculptures with golden baroque flourishes—Asphalt delivers an unsettling sense of violence and anguish, marking a new and decidedly darker phase in the artist’s career. When asked about this sinister turn in his practice, he stated: “The world today is filled with suffering.” 

For Asphalt, Barredo dissected and reassembled objects—manual clocks, toy rockets, mechanical devices—into a multilayered contraption that depicts hundreds of strange and ominous scenes. In one, a fat drop of plastic blood, a recurring symbol in the piece, falls from the neck of a two-headed geisha. Elsewhere, a plastic toy frog latches onto a gas-mask sculpture with huge speedometer eyes. In yet another section, photographs of veiled women stare at the image of an enslaved man bound in chains, with a photo of a 19th-century industrialist looming in the background.