In Pacita Abad’s lifetime, the Filipina American artist remodeled 5,000 works—influenced by her travels in additional than 60 nations—and exhibited in additional than 250 reveals, largely in Asia and Africa. Nevertheless it was her posthumous travelling retrospective—which opened in 2023 on the Walker Artwork Heart in Minneapolis, virtually twenty years after her dying in 2004 at age 58—that introduced Abad’s exuberant, multifaceted, 32-year artwork observe to the eye of US establishments.
Now Stanford College has acquired the artist’s archives, a present of the Pacita Abad Artwork Property, which has additionally offered funding to catalogue the 120 linear ft of archival containers full of images, correspondence, exhibition data and private artefacts.
“That is how artwork historical past will get written, from these primary-source supplies,” says Lindsay King, the top librarian of the Bowes Artwork and Structure Library, a part of Stanford College Libraries, which is stewarding the acquisition in collaboration with the college’s Cantor Arts Heart. King anticipates that the archive shall be out there to college students and students inside the subsequent 12 months.
Pacita Abad in San Francisco, 1971 Pacita Abad archives, Deptartment of Particular Collections and College Archives, Stanford College Libraries, Stanford, California
The acquisition of the Pacita Abad Archives furthers the mission of Stanford’s cross-departmental Asian American Artwork Initiative (AAAI). Conceived in 2018 and co-directed by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander, an affiliate curator on the Cantor, and Stanford’s assistant professor of artwork historical past Marci Kwon, the AAAI has made Stanford a pacesetter nationwide within the preservation, assortment, exhibition and examine of this subject.
“Stanford is the one college that’s made a give attention to Asian American artwork a ceaselessly dedication,” says Veronica Roberts, the Cantor’s director. (Round 25% of Stanford’s scholar physique identifies as Asian American.) Over the previous few years, the Cantor’s artwork assortment on this space has grown from round 30 works to greater than 800. When the museum initiated discussions with Abad’s widower, Jack Garrity, about buying artwork, he requested if the college can be desirous about her archives too.
Seventies Asian odyssey

Pacita Abada, If My Buddies May See Me Now, 1991 SFMoMA, buy, by change, via a present of Peggy Guggenheim. © Property of Pacita Abad
“For the final 20 years, we’ve been searching for the suitable place to archive the work,” says Garrity, the director of Abad’s property.
In 1973, he was a scholar at Stanford, when he met Abad, who had moved to San Francisco from the Philippines in 1970. As an alternative of going to regulation faculty as she had supposed, Abad determined to hitch Garrity on a year-long journey throughout Asia when she was impressed to turn into an artist. Largely self-taught, Abad labored at Stanford’s Medical Heart whereas Garrity completed his MBA. Her 1976 portray Foothill Cabin—acquired by the Cantor and at current on view—conveys their home pleasure on a ranch close to Stanford earlier than their prolonged travels to locations together with Bangladesh, Sudan, the Dominican Republic, Thailand and Indonesia for Garrity’s work as an economist.
The Cantor has additionally acquired one in all Abad’s signature “trapuntos”—her vibrant large-scale quilted work on textiles, stitched and stuffed somewhat than mounted on stretchers, that she started making in 1981. They typically pay tribute to the spirit world or marine life.
When Abad knew she was dying from most cancers, she informed Garrity: “You need to be certain that my work stay,” he recollects. “I had my marching orders.” He shepherded her work and papers from Singapore finally to California, the place he organised his storage as a library. “I knew that sooner or later there can be in all probability an Asian American curator desirous about Pacita’s work,” he says.

Pacita Abad engaged on Circles in My Thoughts exhibition for Singapore Tyler Print Institute, 2003 Pacita Abad archives, Division of Particular Collections and College Archives, Stanford College Libraries, Stanford, California
That decision ultimately got here from Victoria Sung on the Walker Artwork Heart. She spent intensive time in Garrity’s storage researching the retrospective that travelled to San Francisco Museum of Fashionable Artwork, MoMA PS1 in New York, and the Artwork Gallery of Ontario in Toronto.
Abad’s archives, which be a part of the papers of different vital Asian American artists at Stanford, together with Ruth Asawa and Bernice Bing, consists of “all of the letters Pacita wrote to museums all over the world for years, solely to get rejections”, Garrity says. Her work has now been acquired by round 45 museums; most lately the Whitney Museum of American Artwork in New York chosen a chunk that was proven on the 2024 Venice Biennale.
“We all know that there are individuals who selected Stanford for his or her PhD partly due to this archive,” says Roberts, “and due to Marci’s educating within the AAAI.” Kwon all the time brings her widespread Asian American artwork survey class to the Division of Particular Collections that may maintain the archive, says King.
“We have now people who find themselves prepared to leap in,” she provides, “as quickly because the Pacita Abad supplies can be found.”