National Artist
National Artist
National Artist
JOYA
BIOGRAPHY:
JOSE TANIG JOYA (b. Manila, June 3, 1931 d.
1996)
National artist Jose Joya was a pioneer
modern and abstract artist who was active as
a painter, printmaker, mixed-media artist and
ceramicist. It has been said that it was Joya
who spearheaded the birth, growth and
flowering of abstract expressionism in the
Philippines. His mature abstract works have
been said to be characterized by calligraphic
gestures and linear forces, and a sense of
color vibrancy emanating from an Oriental
sensibility. Joyas sense of color has been
said to have come from the hues of the
Philippine landscape, and his use of rice paper
in collages demonstrated an interest in
transparency.
Jose Tanig Joya was born on June 3, 1931, the
son of Jose Joya Sr. and Asuncion Tanig. He
began sketching at the age of eleven. At a young
age, he became interested in studying
architecture, but found that he did not have the
aptitude for the math and science that
architecture would require. While attending the
University of the Philippines he was introduced to
the paintings of Fernando Amorsolo, and began
his study of painting. He was initially schooled in
the traditional tradition in which the standards
had been set by Amorsolo and Tolentino but
gradually was influenced by American
abstraction and by the emerging trends in
Philippine modernism. He was mentored by
Guillermo Tolentino, Ireneo Miranda, Domindaor
Castaneda and Virginia Agbayani.
Abstractionist Jose T. Joya was
posthumously proclaimed a National
Artist by President Gloria Macapagal-
Arroyo on May 26, 2003.
Joya, named as a National Artist for
Visual Arts, was cited because his
art constitutes an important landmark
in the development of Philippine
modern art. His legacy is a large body
of work of consistent excellence
which has won the admiration of
artists both in the local and the
international scene.
Joya graduated from the University of the
Philippines (UP) in 1953 with a Bachelors Degree
in Fine Art, earning the distinction of being the
universitys first Magna cum Laude. In 1954 the
Instituto de Cultura Hispanica of the Spanish
government awarded him a one year grant to
study painting in Madrid. Travel/study
scholarships to Madrid which came about
through the influence of PAG member Fernando
Zobel de Ayala were also given to other PAG
artists including Arturo Luz, Nena Saguil and
Larry Tronco. After returning from Spain, Joya
finished his Masters Degree in Painting in 1956
at the Cranbrook School of Art in Michigan, with
the assistance of a Fulbright Smith-Mundt grant.
His early works were representational paintings
that showed the influence of Vincente Manansala
and Anita Magsaysay-Ho. During the late 1950s, as
he became involved in the Philippine Art Gallery
founded in 1950 by a group of women writers led
by Lyn Arguilla he became one of the new
wave of artists who developed abstract paintings.
His first one make show appeared at the Philippine
Art Gallery in 1954, and in March of 1958 he won
first prize for his non-objective Painting in the
11th Annual PAG Art Exhibition, held at the
Northern Motors Showroom. He won more prizes in
1959 (Second place for Space Transfiguration),
1960 (Third place for Horse of Life) and 1962
(Third place for Cathedral).
Joya was often present a the Saturday Group
which met for weekly art discussions at the Taxa
de Oro Restaurant in Manila. In 1962, when Joya
was serving as the President of the Art
Association of the Philippines, he and Napolean
Abueva represented the Philippines in the
prestigious Venice Biennale: it was the first time
that the Philippines had participated. He displayed
a 1958 horizontal abstraction titled Granadian
Arabesque, a painting which features powerful
swipes of impasto mixed with sand, and which is
now in the collection of the Ateneo Art Gallery.
Joya later wrote about participating in the
Biennale, and reported on the novelty, desire to
shock and dazzle of the work on view.
In the late 60s received grants from the John D. Rockefeller
III Fund and the Ford Foundation, which allowed him to paint
and study at the Pratt Institute in New York between 1967
and 1969. Among the positions he held were:
President of the Art Association of the Philippines (AAP)
1962-65
Dean of the UP College of Fine Arts 1970-78, where he
modernized curriculum and established scholarships.
Chairperson of Philippine Delegations to China, 1961 and
1972
In the 1970s Joya executed two large murals, Lanterns of
Enlightenment and Mariveles which display vivid interplays
of shape and tone. When traveling overseas he often made
rapid, on the spot sketches in pencil, charcoal or pastel.
Joya was also a holder of the Amorsolo Professorial Chair in
UP in 1985. He served as chairperson of the National
Committee on Visual Arts, of the National Commission on
Culture and the Arts from 1987 until his death.
In 1981 a retrospective of some 200 of Joyas works was held
at the Museum of Philippine Art. In1987 the French
government awarded him membership in the Order of
Chevalier des Arts et Lettres.
In creating an art work, Joya once stated the
artist is concretizing his need for communication.
He has an irresistible urge to reach that level of
spiritual satisfaction and to project what he is and
what he thinks through his work.
Joya died in May of 1995 at the age of 63 after
complications from a prostate operation.
In 2003, eight years after his death, he was
conferred the title of National Artist for his
pioneering efforts in developing Filipino abstract
art. A retrospective of his work was held in August
of 2011 at the National Museum.
WORKS:
Manila 1968
Manila 1968 II
Tres Marias
Tap Room
Paisaje
Bodegn
AWARDS:
1st Prize, UPCFA Art Competition, 1953
1ST Prize, Roadside Squatters, 4th
SNSAC Modern Painting Category, 1954
1st Prize, Montcada Award Barcelona,
1957
Francisco Goya Award, Cercle
Maillol Barcelona, 1958
Republic Cultural Heritage Award, 1965