spot_img
28.4 C
Philippines
Thursday, April 25, 2024

A day at the atelier

- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -

Art Lounge Manila is once again working with the celebrated designer Robbie Santos to bring high fashion and fine art together. And this time, they’re producing an exhibit with younger fashionistas in mind. 

Artist Migs Villanueva (left) and Vares Jeune’s Robbie Santos

In A Day at the Atelier, pieces from Vares Jeune – Robbie Santos’s couture line for kids – serve as wearable canvases for artist Migs Villanueva’s paintings. 

After all, when it comes to nurturing an appreciation for art, it’s never too early to start. Likewise, parents can cultivate their kids’ sense of style from an early age. This belief is at the core of Vares Jeune’s brand philosophy. 

Santos’s little clients come to him for all kinds of special occasions – whenever they’re celebrating their birthdays, going to parties, or attending Halloween and Christmas events. Fashion is self-expression, and Santos takes his junior clients’ wishes as seriously as he would for any adult client. 

“Because we are custom-made-to-order, we make anything to the child and their parents’ delight,” Santos says. “For the child who wishes to have unique and special clothes, we are the brand that can help them achieve that.”

- Advertisement -

As someone whose art revolves around kids, Migs Villanueva is the perfect collaborator for this collection. A woman of many talents, the three-time Palanca Award winner ventured into visual art under the iconic artist Mauro “Malang” Santos’s tutelage. Her work is instantly recognizable thanks to her signature depiction of children’s faces using only three dots for the eyes and mouth. Nevertheless, she is able to convey the nuances of emotion through body language and the shape of the dots themselves, from a shy, guileless stare to a delighted smile. 

Migs Villanueva (left) and Vares Jeune’s Robbie Santos posing with the young models

This approach instantly gives her work a “kawaii” quality – whether it’s rendered in colorful pastels or muted tones, Villanueva’s paintings never fail to convey the joy, exuberance, and innocence of childhood. 

When asked who her subjects are, Villanueva says, “I really don’t paint specific children, unless it’s commissioned work. The kids in my painting are a composite of all the children I have known, including myself, from what I remember as a child. Through the years I’ve depicted all sorts of personalities of kids in my art, and the moods and attitudes somehow mirror my own at the time of doing the work, or what I dig up from my memory bank.”

Small wonder then, that each of Villanueva’s paintings takes the audience back to their own childhoods, or brings young loved ones to mind. Her aesthetic lends itself perfectly to kids’ fashion, and Villanueva is delighted to work with this new medium. 

Given the paints Villanueva used, the pieces in the collection are somewhere between wearable and mixed-media art. 

“The clothes the artist and I collaborated on may be worn, but they have to be washed delicately due to the painting on the garment,” Santos explains. “I think the clothes have to be worn and photographed on the child once, then have it stored or framed for posterity and for its added value.”

The exhibit and the show were also a collaborative effort between Art Lounge Manila and IMPRINT Media Group. Art Lounge Manila’s Cindel Tiaussas curated the exhibition while Tedrick Yau of IMPRINT Media Group directed the fashion show.

On the day of the event, Art Lounge Manila worked with One Hundred Ways Atelier and Early Learning Center to provide the kid models a fun time while getting ready for the show. This establishment is a beautiful learning environment for children and families located here in Molito Lifestyle Center, Alabang. 

- Advertisement -

LATEST NEWS

Popular Articles