‘Living well is the best revenge’ taunts the first drawing of Pio Abad’s latest series, It Seems We Have Developed A Taste for Each Other’s Weaknesses. With these eighteen works on paper, Abad identifies and depicts pill boxes from the collections of the former heads of state, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom Margaret Thatcher and United States President Ronald Reagan to offer a provocative insight into these leaders’ most private vulnerabilities. At once charming and unsettling, this latest phase of Abad’s ongoing series Notes on Decomposition incriminates the two late politicians in today’s global crisis with elegance and wry cheek.
Abad’s tactility renders the eerie pill boxes in his signature graphic style, transforming the kitschy ornaments into beautiful and satirical illustrations. The intimacy of his artistic process mirrors the intimacy of these objects wherein both occur in domestic spaces. Symbolic flora and animals – occasionally augmented by acerbic idioms – adorn the tops of many vessels. Others feature corny displays of patriotism such as the Pledge of Allegiance encircled by American flags or London’s Big Ben and St. Paul’s Cathedral. Among this assemblage, Abad also manages to pinpoint and render a blue pill box, featuring the US Presidential Seal encircled by five five-point stars, in Thatcher and Reagan’s respective collections; gifted to them both by Ambassador and Mrs. Charles H. Price II – a small yet fateful commonality, further echoing their enduring partnership.
In keeping with Notes on Decomposition, which centres on auction as archaeological site, Abad excavates his source material from the catalogues of Mrs Thatcher – Property from the Collection of The Right Honourable The Baroness Thatcher of Keveston, LG, OM, FRS (Christie’s London, 2015) and The Private Collection of President and Mrs. Ronald Reagan (Christie’s New York, 2016). The auction is the ‘primary venue for objects to be fetishized, laundered and mythologized,’ according to Abad. I echo his sentiment, having worked at Christie’s for several years, and add my observation that the auction is a passive institution wary of taking any ideological stance, thus allowing legally permissible, yet controversial sales to occur.
When collections such as those Abad considers for Notes on Decomposition (Ferdinand and Imelda Marcos, Lehmann Brothers, Jeffrey Archer, Thatcher and Reagan) pass through the sale room – usually due to the three D’s: Divorce, Debt, or Death – they undergo a transformation from private homeware to temporary public artefact. Once bought, the object tends to vanish into the collection of its new owner with only the auction catalogue providing proof of its existence. These publications therefore function as tombstones, providing Abad with the ideal excavation site to uncover the network of political parties liable for historic, economic and political crises. These relationships, which may initially appear superficial, are rendered authentic when domestic objects reveal personal connections. Abad’s chosen medium – drawing – manifests this mapping in praxis by tracing the contours of Christie’s photography unto new paper with pen and gouache and creating a cartography of neoliberal fantasy through these decorative objects.
Abad embarked on It Seems We Have Developed A Taste For Each Other’s Weaknesses while confined to his London home during the UK’s national Covid-19 lockdown and amid conditions of rising casualities and economic uncertainty. In choosing to portray Thatcher and Reagan’s pill boxes at this time, the artist shrewdly shatters the pair’s temporality and connects them to the present global pandemic. Beginning with Thatcher and Reagan, Professor Vicente Navarro of Johns Hopkins University outlines the consequences of neoliberalism in the present pandemic; he points to the UK and US governments’ ‘deregulation of globalization of capital and labour, alongside policies of social austerity,’ and the ‘cutting of public funds for services that guarantee the population’s well-being’ as the main factors that have allowed this pandemic to persist. I even speculate the complex commodification of foreign workers stemming from neoliberal globalization has likely contributed to the disproportionate number of causalities among Filipino healthcare workers.
With these culpabilities in mind, one might experience a naughty satisfaction in Abad’s It Seems We Have Developed A Taste for Each Other’s Weaknesses, which indeed titillates a dry affinity for Thatcher and Reagan’s fragilities. These vibrant drawings of pill boxes, exhumed from auction, betray the two’s projected mental fortitude and conviction by implying their abject mortality and sickness. Abad’s drawings briefly offer guilt-free delight at these figures’ demise by incriminating their complicity in today’s tragedy. Further gratification might be found in the notion the heirs sardonically fulfilled their parents’ own neoliberal legacies by reducing traces of their private lives to fiscal commodities. However, the wicked realization that their progeny gained millions of dollars from these sales is sobering – a stark contrast to the millions of citizens reeling from the legacies of the Iron Lady and the Gipper.
Text by Marv Recinto