Filipino mixed-media artist Keb Cerda combines traditional forms of painting with digital technology such as augmented reality and video games. His works are enjoyable, witty, and humorous, but convey biting social criticism on history and modern society.
Read MoreBeneath its whimsical intrigue, Cerda's practice examines themes of war, exploitation, consumerism, greed, and control. In Untitled (2012), the artist examined the complexities of history and conflict by reworking an image of Japanese prisoners to give the prisoners and captors superhero masks that reflect their respective cultural origins, challenging the concepts of heroes and villains in war. Similarly, in the artist's solo exhibition Powerplay (Cultural Center of the Philippines, Manila, 2015) the artist inserted colour images of modern fairground amusements such as a ball pit into copies of historical war photographs as a comment on the attitude of military leaders to warfare and modern culture's desensitisation to violence.
Cerda undertook similar interventions digitally in his artwork with the series 'OOTD' (2016), which parodies fashion photography and the phrase 'Outfit Of The Day' (OOTD). For the work, modern apparel is digitally overlaid onto recorded images of highland people. The artist developed the augmented reality mobile app Omniscope as a platform for these interventions, using the phone's camera and screen to add greater depth to his artworks. Omniscope's offerings vary from basic animations—as seen in 'OOTD'—to arcade-style side-scrolling games such as the 'Super Nardo' (2018) series, played out on the painting's surface. More than a gimmick, in 'Super Nardo' the artist utilises the classic video game cliché of collecting coins but lays it over war imagery to explore the links between gold, war, and economy. The artist's seemingly faithful painted reproductions and amalgamations of historic imagery gain new meaning by exploring a completely modern digital language.
Cerda's recent series, 'Dahlia' (2019), marks a new direction, turning from historical source material to a dystopian setting—shady back alleyways, solitary parks, and arrays of graffitied billboards, all painted in the eerie purple and blue tones of twilight—Omniscope projects a game where all-encompassing surveillance and technology are dominant and overpowering.
Cerda graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Advertising from the Technological University of the Philippines in 2011. His work since has been exhibited in many galleries beyond the Philippines, in Taiwan, Singapore, and the United States, and at art fairs such as VOLTA in New York in 2018. He often collaborates and exhibits with other digital artists in The Working Animals Art Projects, especially the curator and painter Ruel Caasi. In conjunction with receiving a Fernando Zóbel Prize for Visual Art at the 16th Ateneo Art Awards in 2019, he was awarded a residency at Liverpool Hope University in England.
Michael Irwin | Ocula | 2019