Sixties Surreal

2025

Abstract artwork with swirling patterns and textured, feather-like elements on a blue and beige background.

Narrator: My Roots by Carlos Villa is a painting made of acrylic and feathers on canvas. This work is very large, measuring approximately 93 inches tall by 94 inches wide, with parts of the work protruding from the wall by as much as 8 inches. The canvas has been cut in an irregular shape, with slightly wavy edges and rounded corners. Feathers of varying density line the edges of the painting, blurring the edges of the canvas. 

This is an abstract, non-representational work, completely covered from edge to edge. The image appears as though there are many layers of ridged cylinders crawling over, under, and around each other. The cylindrical shapes are made up of concentric half circles in alternating browns, tans, and blues, and the full coverage of the canvas gives the impression that there is endless movement and depth to the scene. Variations on these forms appear in much of Villa’s work throughout the 1970s, and speak to his interest in pattern and texture.

Ribbons of small, soft-looking cream and brown feathers are layered thickly along the perimeter of many of the shapes, giving them a dense, furry outline. It feels as though the canvas is crawling with fuzzy caterpillars – plump, segmented and bending in wide arcs as they wander and writhe around the canvas. In the upper right hand corner, one oval is remarkable for being encapsulated in three layers of protruding feathers: the first, small, brown, and white; the second, downy and soft, in tones of beige; and the third, long, thin, and tapering to a point with bands of black on a warm brown background. This third layer of feathers reaches beyond the perimeters of the canvas, like fingers outstretched, or long twigs of a tall tree, radiating outward. Artist Eamon Ore-Giron, who studied under Villa from 1992 to 1996, comments on this work: 

Eamon Ore-Giron: “Where you see Carlos looking into the past and the title of the piece being, "My Roots". He's looking at his own art history, Filipino art history and art from Oceania. It's my favorite body of work. It's very visceral, it's very physical, and it evokes ideas about adornment and capes, but it also has this other dimension to it, these hazy brushstrokes of almost looking a bit serpentine. It looks like it's some kind of animal that's coiling behind the feathers.”


Carlos Villa, My Roots, 1970-71. Acrylic and feathers on canvas, 93 1/2 × 94 1/4 × 7 3/4 in. (237.5 × 239.4 × 19.7 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; purchase with funds from the Neysa McMein Purchase Award 72.21. © Carlos Villa Art Estate

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