Art Appreciation - Cams
Art Appreciation - Cams
Art Appreciation - Cams
Camote Diggers, an oil canvas painting by Botong Francisco is somewhat similar to the
Tagalog folk song “Magtanim Ay ‘Di Biro”. It showcases the same concept and mentality of hard
work and how a person bends over just to plant or harvest to ensure a better future for one’s self
and their family. Francisco’s “Camote Diggers” was made in 1969, not a little longer before his
passing due to a heart attack, hence leaving the canvas unfinished. The piece, which was
painted after World War II, is about "art after the war" at a time when the nation is still healing
from the conflict. The painting illustrates an old woman who happens to be a forlorn, and
woeful-looking young man digging for camote. The old woman undertakes a substantial amount
of physical activity as she is the one doing the work while the young man holds the camotes —
one of the staple foods — for her. The camote diggers, a rural subject wearing only simple
clothes against an unfinished backdrop, is the embodiment of hard labor and perseverance. The
two subjects also showcase hunger and poverty by the way they are bent to harvest their meal.
The collarbone below their necks is projecting, making the diggers appear practically skeletal.
Further analysis suggests that the two subjects, who are bowed by poverty, their hands and feet
lumped by starvation, and their backs crushed by life, indicate how poverty can extend to
several generations (Nakpil, 2019). The painting makes me reflect on our country and society.
How many Filipinos are like the subjects in the painting? How many camote diggers could there
possibly be? To think that this painting is dated back to 1969, a whole 53 years, and yet it is still
relevant to us as viewers of today’s society. Camote Diggers is also somewhat similar to Vincent
van Gogh’s painting, ‘The Potato Eaters’, wherein it illustrates the grim reality of rural existence.
He gave his subjects bony, hard-working hands and coarse faces, just like the old woman and
young man in Francisco’s painting. Both the “Camote Diggers” and ‘The Potato Eaters’ share
the same painting style. Botong Francisco created Camote Diggers in a social realism style
while Van Gogh’s ‘The Potato Eaters’ is within realism and expressionism. The larger unfinished
canvas shows half the background in a bold red color and the other half in a serene beige.
Ironically, the bold red color is in the background of the forlorn old woman which sends a
message of determination, hardship, and the war on poverty; that even if you work hard and
make an effort, most times, it is not enough. That is the sad reality of it, especially for plain folks
such as farmers and fishermen. The serene beige background sends a message of simplicity,
sensitivity, and resiliency that even if the subjects are in a poor situation, they still try their best
to fight and endure for them to be able to survive. The red, white, and blue in the background,
as per historian and curator Ambeth Ocampo, is intended to depict the Philippine flag as a
reference to "our tragic nation, both then and now”. The painting depicts the reality of a Filipino
who must work hard to meet his or her demands while also appearing to be left behind in our
nation due to rapid advancements.