Julie Lluch
Julie Lluch was born on March 5, 1946 in Iligan City, Philippines. She completed a degree in Philosophy at the University of Sto. Tomas in 1967. Julie Lluch is one of the foremost exponents of terracotta in the Philippines today. Her, highly personal art finds perfect expression in Philippine indigenous clay to which she refers as a most “sensuous and pleasurable” feminine medium. Her ideologically informed works of sculptured women performing various domestic chores, mostly auto-biographical originate sharp feminist commentary on the circumstances of women’s lives. She later works deal with spiritual themes, particularly the Christian paradox of death and rebirth, faith and vulnerability as depicted in her praying women series.
In the recent past, she is also known because of her public sculpture commission which is the bronze statue of former Manila Mayor Arsenio Lacson along Roxas Boulevard and monuments of Chief Justices Jose Abad-Santos and Cayetano Arellano, commissioned by the Supreme Court of the Philippines on Padre Faura St., Manila.
In her art, she mostly used clay, like in her feminist advocacy work. Her process of creating a masterpiece involves using a buff-coloured, groggy clay mixture, which she manipulates with her bare hands. To her, creating sculpture with the clay reminds her of her childhood where she used to play dirt. It seems like it revive the old instincts in the past.
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