Kim Atienza: At home with art and design

ATIENZA sits on a Charles Eames chair and ottoman, a gift from wife Felicia. In the background is mixed media triptych “Inspirasyon, Pagkaupos, Pagsusuka” by Alfredo Esquillo. PHOTOS BY PJ ENRIQUEZ
THE BUST of the late designer Joe Salazar, the former owner of the house, is displayed in the den which used to be Salazar’s office. PJ ENRIQUEZ

The house of TV celebrity and triathlete Kim Atienza is a veritable art gallery: sculptures, murals and artworks compete for attention with the vintage furniture.

 

Works by Julie Lluch, Jerry Araos, Alfredo Esquillo, Louie Cordero and Santiago Bose are placed side by side with Frank Gehry’s cardboard chair, Herman Miller’s sofa, Mies Van der Rohe’s Wassily chair, Marcel Breuer’s cantilevered chair, Warren Platner’s lounge chair and ottoman.

 

The warm colors of George Nelson’s marshmallow sofa and Charles Eames’ rocking chair pick up the yellows of Elmer Borlongan’s work and oranges from Geraldine Javier’s mural.

 

It takes a certain chutzpah to pull off this funky and eclectic style. And it all works because Kim and his wife, stockbroker-turned-educator Felicia Hung, are art collectors and design lovers.

 

Both enjoy sporty and intellectual pursuits as well. Atienza’s interests have ranged from astronomy to crystals, meteorites, scooters and plants. Felicia supports antipoverty programs and the protection of the Philippine eagle; she also appreciates good wine and attends conferences on continuing education.

 

Both love exotic animals and art.

 

Malate denizen at heart

 

Living in Malate, Atienza had taken to the bohemian lifestyle of the Manila district. Back then, he would hang out at Penguin, the watering hole for artists and writers. When the artists became his buddies, he would buy their small works, mostly black-and-whites.

 

ELMER Borlongan’s “LakLak,” a dark portrait of a man drinking alcohol, lends an ironic humor in the dining area whimsically furnished with various designer chairs, and with Frank Gehry’s pendant lamps. PHOTOS BY PJ ENRIQUEZ
THE MOLAVE counter was designed by Joe Salazar himself a few months before he died. The Cactus series by Julie Lluch and Elmer Borlongan’s sketch add character to the powder room.

For P150 a piece, Nunelucio Alvarado’s pen-and-ink drawings portraying fish, needles, spikes, ragged lines, and incised edges and heavily veined ambiguous humans could be purchased by any beginning art collector.

 

Jojo Legaspi’s charcoal drawings showed provocative images of sexuality, disease and death.

 

Hailing from Bacolod, Charlie Co was a Penguin habitué, and his paintings combined folk art and political statements.

 

Atienza also befriended the late Santiago Bose, who was like the “rock star of Cordillera artists” and whose tribal-inspired mixed-media works reflected his views on neocolonialism and the gap between the rich and the poor.

 

One day, Atienza raided the house of Borlongan to select works from the artist’s different periods. The pure abstractions, rendered during the artist’s student days, now pile up in the Atienza living room. They were a far cry from Borlongan’s representational works today for which he’s more known.

 

Atienza was also attracted to Esquillo’s surrealistic images imbued with strange and angry symbolism. He’s a proud owner as well of Javier’s early works that were marked by bizarre and fragmented juxtapositions of human callousness and stoicism.

 

“People would ask (former Negros Occidental Rep.) Charlie Cojuangco and me why we collected ‘ugly artists.’ Hindi ka ba nagkakabangungot? (Don’t  you get nightmares?) Now people are collecting these artists,” says Atienza.

 

“COLLECTING is an ongoing journey,” says Atienza. Francesca Enriquez’s artwork is displayed on the ceiling while Geraldine Javier’s early works with
bright colors are the focal point of the living room.

“I learned from these artists that art is about life, and life is not always beautiful,” he explains. “Hence, not all art is beautiful. The beauty is sometimes found in things that are ugly. Art has to be truthful.”

 

Asked if his children were frightened by the dark works, he replies, “They were born to it. They’ve become so accustomed to the images and they were also trained early to appreciate art. All three of them can paint.”

 

Long-distance romance

 

Atienza recalls that in the late ’90s, he was riding around Makati City in his vintage Vespa and went to a restaurant. Spotting Felicia, he knew that something was bound to happen.

 

“I had read about her,” he says. “She was one of those women to watch.”

 

He invited her to ride around Makati City on his Vespa. “Twenty minutes into the conversation, we were in love.”

 

THE RARE 1056 Vespa 160 Gs is a memento from Kim’s first date with Felicia.Wire Tuazon’s work is an homage to Mark Rothko.

The next day, Felicia left for London to work. Soon they were carrying on a long-distance romance. Upon her return in 2001 for a Merrill Lynch negotiation, they were married.

 

In the first five years of marriage, they would set aside a portion of their earnings to buy art from upcoming artists.

 

In 2006, as the family was growing, the Atienzas acquired the residence of the late couturier Jose Salazar. Although they retained the shell and the garden, some walls were knocked down to make it more spacious.

 

In redecorating the space, they used their well-honed eye for art. Every room has a collection of paintings and vintage furniture pieces that become pegs for the decoration.

 

The emphasis in the exuberant living room are the spirited colors and bold shapes of  mid-century furniture and the high-contrast tones and striking patterns in the paintings.

 

When Felicia gifted Kim with a Charles Eames chair and stool, he placed it in the most prominent part of the living room. He could sit on it and enjoy looking at Esquillo’s triptych “Inspirasyon, Pagkaupos, Pagsusuka.” He explains that the work is about the various stages of creation: enthusiasm, burnout and nausea. “When the artist has done too much and he’s had it, he pukes,” Atienza says.

 

Today, Kim’s art collecting is  no longer focused on the dark side of humanity. Louie Cordero, known for his surreal statements on social history, made a painting of a couple levitating with a heart in space as wedding gift.

 

As another present, Felicia gave Kim an abstraction of Asian temples by Arturo Luz.

 

Difficult artists

 

AN UNTITLED terra cotta by Joe Geraldo and Julie Lluch’s playful Cactus series lend a tactile quality to the living room. Felicia’s bust by Lluch and Araos put individual stamp on the space. The late Jerry Araos gave “Alang Alang Kay Jose,” a baby rocking horse, as a gift.

Part of Atienza’s attraction to art was the thrill of chasing a “difficult” artist. For instance, through Kenneth Esguerra, now Ayala Museum director, Atienza met the late sculptor Jerusalino Araos, who was known to be a snob. Still, Atienza managed to have breakfast with the sculptor after the TV emcee’s morning show at ABS-CBN. Araos was delighted with his company that he gave Atienza’s son a  rocking horse sculpture as baptismal gift.

 

One day, Araos went to Atienza’s house to trade his sculptures and old Land Rover tires  for the celebrity’s new tires.

 

In the living room, the jagged Cacti sculptures of Julie Lluch and Araos’ sculpted crocodile and human torso blend with the angsty figures of the social-theme dark paintings.

 

Lluch had given Atienza several of her pieces, among them a bust of the late Salazar. More than 20 years ago, Salazar commissioned his bust. Thinking that he looked too fat, Salazar rejected the piece and he and Lluch had a falling out. The bust remained in her factory until she learned that the Atienzas had bought his property.

 

THE KITCHEN becomes artsy with Louie Cordero’s dominant graphic painting, artworks by Santi Bose and sculptures by Julie Lluch and Arturo Luz. Jerry Araos sculpted the chairs.

When Atienza became a born-again Christian, he had to unload some of the disturbing artworks. Unframed, most of the paintings lean against the wall so that he could rotate the displays. The colors and patterns of the paintings seem to harmonize with the texture and grain of the hardwood tables,  narra flooring and the furniture finishes.

 

“I’ve toned down,” Atienza says. “Money is sacred. You have to use it correctly. But the money didn’t go to waste because the artworks have become investments.”

 

Yet, he believes that art is not commodity. He is not selling the works because they will become heirlooms for the next generation.

 

“I once thought fulfillment in art was deep until I turned to God,” he says. “I realized the real fulfillment is not in collecting but in giving.”

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