JIM ABUAN

Contemporary Artist

Jim Abuan is a contemporary artist whose work examines identity, representation, and abstraction through a process-driven engagement with the human figure and printed imagery. Born in the Philippines and raised in California’s Central Valley, his early experiences as an immigrant and farmworker continue to inform a practice grounded in observation, restraint, and deliberate material choice.

Abuan’s artistic formation began in the Central Valley, where he earned his BFA from California State University, Stanislaus, before completing his MFA at the Otis Art Institute of Los Angeles County in the mid-1970s. After several years exhibiting in Los Angeles and working in commercial art, he returned to the Central Valley, where he taught graphic arts and photography for nearly two decades before returning full-time to his studio practice.

Since resuming painting in 2011, Abuan has worked primarily with figuration, using the human form in flattened, nontraditional spatial environments. Drawing source material from print publications, he often incorporated image transfer techniques to embed found imagery directly into his paintings. His approach reflects a conscious resistance to conventional aesthetic appeal.

His materials are equally intentional. Abuan frequently employed acrylic latex house paint, selecting colors from industrial paint charts rather than traditional artist pigments. Since late 2023, his work has shifted toward fully abstract compositions created through image transfers using transparent acrylic medium, eliminating paint pigment and figuration altogether.

Abuan has exhibited widely in California, including solo exhibitions at Blueline Arts in Roseville and School Street Gallery in Lodi, as well as earlier exhibitions at Otis Art Institute in Los Angeles. His evolving practice reflects a sustained inquiry into process, material, and the tension between recognition and erasure.

 “I’m trying to eliminate what makes the painting appealing. For me, it’s more about what makes it different.”