Paolo Arao's "Devotion"

"The lyricism of Devotion plays out in textile drawings where geometric patterns are hand stitched into appliquéd patchworks in a symphony of color. Viewers’ eyes follow varied visual thread weights and move along the intricate line work as if reading sheet music.
 
'For me, the most direct link to musicality and textiles comes through the instruments used to create music and cloth,” Arao says. “The loom is like a piano. And I think of weaving as a way of making threads sing. There is a somatic rhythm to weaving on a loom that feels connected to playing music on a piano.'”

 

– "Threads Sing in Paolo Arao’s Devotion to Textiles," Joseph Sgambati III, Design Milk
 
Read in Design Milk

 

 

"While researching for Devotion, Arao (who was born in the Philippines) learned that Indigenous Filipino cloth patterns were individually designed to offer spiritual protection to whomever is holding or wearing the textile. Each work in Devotion depicts one of Arao’s friends or family members, complete with characterizations of the subject’s personality. Étude (Mandarin) represents Arao’s husband, whose favorite color is orange. 'Years ago, he made this comment about why I never used orange in my paintings, and he was absolutely right,' Arao says. 'After that, I started introducing orange into everything that I made, even if it was just a little speck of orange hidden somewhere, because it’s like, I’m doing this for you.' As Arao constructed these portraits during the winter, hand-stitching by the light of his fireplace, the name of the exhibition became clear to him. 'There’s so much happening inside each of these works, an immense world encapsulated on such an intimate scale,' he says. 'Making something by hand requires patience and love and care, and I wanted to put all of that into these pieces. It became a devotional act.'”

 

– "Acts of devotion," Noelani Kirschner, The American Scholar

 

Read in The American Scholar
Mayo 7, 2024