Manuel Ocampo, God is my Copilot
"Identity is your own worst enemy."
-Manuel Ocampo
Manuel Ocampo: God is My Copilot, directed by
Phillip Rodriguez, is a one-hour film about the
career of a 33-year-old painter, Manuel Ocampo, who came into prominence amidst
the contemporary art world’s encounter with multiculturalism.
The film chronicles this hugely talented artist’s rise to popularity,
his mistrust of the art world that embraced him and his current efforts to recast
himself as a post-identitarian artist. Born in the Philippines, Ocampo came
to Los Angeles in the early 80’s where he worked at a Foto-Mat booth and
as a cook at McDonald’s before selling his first painting. His paintings,
for which he became known, conjured the pathology of the colonized psyche. These
works became largely popular with the wealthy white collectors, critics and
dealers who inhabit the art world.
Upon meeting and filming the story of Manuel Ocampo, Rodriguez
commented, "The problem for me was that once I got close to Ocampo, I realized
that he was in the midst of trying to transcend the work he had become semi-famous
for. Gone were the references to Spanish colonialism, the Catholic Church, the
swastikas. I asked him why he had changed the direction of his work and he said,
‘I was bored with that shit.’"
The film was shot on location in Seville, Spain where the artist was living,
as well as New York, Mexico City and Los Angeles, where the artist had recent
exhibitions. It includes interviews with players in the fine art business including
collector Dennis Hopper, artist Julian Schnabel, Mary Boone, gallerists and
other artists, critics and collectors.
The film has been honored at the AFI International Film Festival, Hawaii International
Film Festival, International Festival of New Latin American Cinema (Havana),
Centre Georges Pompidou Biennale internationale du film sur l'art, Museum of
Contemporary Art Los Angeles, Arco in Madrid, San Francisco International Asian
American Film Festival, Los Angeles Asian American Film Festival, and the Chicago
Asian American Showcase - Chicago Art Institute and many other venues.