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Philippine Tree Shrews

Feature Creature from the Philippine Mammal Collections Drawer: Philippine Tree Shrews

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Do you want to know what’s inside the Philippine Mammal Collection drawers?

Here are study skins of Philippine Tree Shrews being sorted in the National Museum of Natural History. These study skin specimens are part of the zoological collection in the new compactor system facility of the NMNH. 

Below are two species of Philippine tree shrews — the Palawan tree shrew (Tupaia palawanensis) and the Mindanao tree shrew (Tupaia everetti). Philippine tree shrews are slender, squirrel-like animals with long furry tails, long pointed snout and large eyes. They live in tropical forests and are diurnal or active during daytime. They are omnivores feeding on insects, earthworms, fruits and sometimes small vertebrates. While the Palawan tree shrews are more abundant in lowland forests up to 1400 m, the Mindanao tree shrews are more common in montane forests from 1200 to 1800 m elevation.

Each of these specimens are being updated in the electronic catalog. Important data such as catalog number, locality, date collected, collector, field notes, and scientific name are updated and verified in the catalog. Some specimens’ names were changed after a series of reviews and studies. Such as the Urogale everetti, which is now placed under the genus Tupaia based on a molecular phylogeny in 2009. These kinds of changes are being modified in our electronic catalog for updating the specimen labels. However, old and original labels remain with the specimen forever. 

Text and photo layout by Zoology Division

Photo of Tupaia everetti by Danilo S. Balete, FMNH

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1st Death Anniversary of Manlilikha ng Bayan Yabing Masalon Dulo

The #NationalMuseumPH pays tribute to Manlilikha ng Bayan Yabing Masalon Dulo.

MB Yabing Masalon Dulo, also known as Fu Yabing in the community, has left us a great legacy upon her passing. She was a master weaver known for being excellent in making the Blaan tabih (woven abaca cloth), a craft she has learned from a very young age before her death on 26 January 2021. Her exemplary skills paved the way in her receipt of the Gawad sa Manlilikha ng Bayan (GAMABA) in 2016, together with two other awardees from Mindanao.

The National Commission for Culture and the Arts (NCCA) granted Fu Yabing a GAMABA Cultural Center that enabled her to teach the next generation of weavers of the Blaan community in Polomolok, South Cotabato. The transmission of such intangible knowledge through mentorship is important as it ensures the existence of a tradition. With her passing at the age of 106, Fu Yabing’s teachings continue to be carried on by her family, students, and the Blaan community in Barangay Landan in Polomolok.

Selected works of Fu Yabing are exhibited and housed at the #NationalMuseumPH. One of which is a tabih that she made when she was twelve years old and donated by Ms. Silvana Ancellotti-Diaz in February 2009 to the Filipino people. The rest of the collections under Fu Yabing’s name were gifts to the nation that were turned over to the #NationalMuseumPH through the NCCA, and are currently on display at the Manlilikha ng Bayan Hall and Hibla ng Lahing Filipino galleries at the National Museum of Anthropology in Manila.

#YabingMasalonDulo

#GAMABA 

#ManlilikhaNgBayan

#MuseumFromHome

Text and poster by the NMP Ethnology Division and NCCA GAMABA Executive Council.

Photograph of Manlilikha ng Bayan Yabing Masalon Dulo courtesy of the NCCA GAMABA Executive Council

© National Museum of the Philippines 2022

Birth Anniversary of Napoleon Abueva

The #NationalMuseumPH celebrates the 92nd birth anniversary of National Artist for Sculpture Napoleon V. Abueva, born #OnThisDay in 1930.

Napoleon V. Abueva (1930-2018) was recognized as the Father of Modern Philippine Sculpture. His modernist approach can be seen in his exploration of various media such as molave, acacia, langka, ipil, kamagong, palm, adobe, cement, marble, bronze, iron, brass, among others. It is also apparent in the monumental character of his outdoor and public sculptures and the promotion of Philippine themes in his subject matter. His works adorn public buildings such as the altar and hanging crucifix at the UP Diliman Chapel, mural at the National Center for Mental Health, and façade relief at the Insular Life Building in Makati. He also created the memorial cross reliefs at Dambana ng Kagitingan in Mt. Samat Bataan, Sandugo Monument in Tagbilaran Bohol, and Balangiga Encounter Monument in Balangiga Samar. His sculptures can also be seen in public spaces such as La Mesa Eco Park (“Neptune and Aphrodite”), Eternal Gardens Memorial Park (“Transfiguration”), UP Visayas (“Ang Diwata at Ang Dagat”), UP Los Baños (“Pegaraw”), and UP Diliman (“Nine Muses,” “Magdangal,” and “Tres Marias”). Some of his sculptures involve movable components like the “Allegorical Harpoon” at the Cultural Center of the Philippines and “The Spirit of Business” at the UP Diliman campus.

The National Fine Arts Collection has seven Abueva sculptures, including the Manila Pavilion Reliefs “Rajah Sulayman, His Court and the Palisades of Maynilad” (1967) and “Legaspi and the Founding of Manila” (1967). This set of molave relief sculptures is a Gift to the Nation by the Manila Pavilion Hotel. It is exhibited, along with other Abueva’s works, at the National Museum of Fine Arts, Gallery XIII (Vicente and Carmen Fabella Hall). 

Abueva was born on January 26, 1930, in Manila and grew up in Duero, Bohol. When he was young, he showed interest in art and surprised his siblings and friends with his beautiful wooden sculptures. The 1950s marked the beginning of his prolific artistic practice. He enrolled at the UP College of Fine Arts in 1950 as a Pura Villanueva-Kalaw scholar, where he was mentored by National Artist Guillermo Tolentino (1890-1976). While studying at UP, he was already winning in the Art Association of the Philippines (AAP) competitions, such as first prize in the 1951 AAP Semi-Annual Competition and the top prize in the 1952 AAP Annual Art Competition. In 1955, he took up Master of Fine Arts at the Cranbrook Academy of Art sponsored by the Fulbright Travel Grant and Smith-Mundt Scholarship. He also finished a postgraduate course at the University of Kansas. He took up summer courses at Harvard University in 1956. His education made him highly skillful in both classical and abstract representations. This is manifested in his numerous outstanding works that contribute to the development of Philippine modern sculpture.

He was awarded National Artist for Sculpture in 1976 and was the youngest artist to receive the prestigious award. Abueva’s skill, dedication, and passion for art inspired him to produce numerous works until he passed away on February 16, 2018, in Quezon City. 

We are now open! To visit the National Museum of Fine Arts, you may book a tour through this website. Please note the guidelines for visiting. You may also view the 360 degrees virtual tour of select NMFA galleries on the link https://www.nationalmuseum.gov.ph/nmfa360/HTML5/NMFA360.html. See you at the National Museum!

#NapoleonAbueva

#OnThisDay

#BeatCOVID19

Text by NMP-FAD

Photo by Bengy Toda

© National Museum of the Philippines (2022)

Santa Cruz and Lena Shoal Shipwreck Pen Boxes

This week on #MaritimeMonday features the Chinese blue and white porcelain pen boxes from the Santa Cruz and the Lena Shoal shipwrecks, Southeast Asian trade vessels that sank in the Philippines around 1488–1505 CE (Common Era). To learn more about the Santa Cruz shipwreck, please see https://tinyurl.com/3z7hxfm4. For Lena Shoal shipwreck, please see https://tinyurl.com/2p9f8rkn

Part of both shipwreck ceramic assemblages were very limited quantities of Chinese blue and white porcelain pen boxes. They are considered scholarly objects used to store reed calligraphy pens and assorted paraphernalia to write Arabic and Persian. They are thickly potted pieces with covers that have a rectangular form with rounded ends and are painted in dark cobalt blue with a bluish glaze. The interior of the pen box is divided into compartments to fit an inkwell, a porcelain container for sand and a silk or linen thread porcelain container. The exterior side is decorated with lotus scrolls, classical scroll borders, lotus petal panels, floral branches and sprays, and waves. 

Pen box shapes are traditionally non-Chinese and may have been produced following Islamic metalworks that began to appear in the 12th century CE in the Middle East and/or Central Asia. As shipwreck objects, these were certainly destined for Muslim scholars and civil servants in the littoral societies of Islamic Southeast Asia, the Indian Ocean, and maybe in the Middle East during the late 15th century CE. 

In compliance with the recent announcement of the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Infectious Diseases (IATF), placing the National Capital Region (NCR) under Alert Level 3, the National Museum Complex in Manila will only be accepting fully vaccinated adults (ages 18 to 65 years old) starting January 3, 2022, in a limited capacity.

Admission is FREE but all visitors are required to RESERVE ONLINE by clicking BOOK A TOUR on this website at least a day before the visit. 

#SantaCruzShipwreck

#LenaShoalShipwreck

#ChineseBlueAndWhitePorcelainPenBox

#StaySafe

#BeatCOVID19

Text, Poster, and Photos by the Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage Division

© The National Museum of the Philippines (2022)

Pasalamat Festival of Pagadian City

To conclude the series on the celebration of the feast of Santo Niño this month, the #NationalMuseumPH introduces another festival, the Pasalamat Festival – a festivity commemorating the arrival of the Santo Niño image in the Philippines and in Pagadian City, Zamboanga del Sur in Western Mindanao. 

Like the Kahimunan Festival of Butuan City and the Sakay-Sakay Festival of Maasin City, Pasalamat Festival is held during the 3rd week of January. From the word “pasalamat”, the festival is held to give thanks for the blessings they have received throughout the year. The 500th anniversary of the arrival of the Santo Niño image in the Philippines was celebrated in 2021, making it the oldest Catholic icon in the country. 

The festival’s highlight is a fluvial parade (regatta), along with trade exhibitions, as well as Mutya ng Pagadian City. However, the majority of the festival’s activities were canceled from 2020 to 2021 with the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. A motorcade was held in place of a procession and the number of people allowed to hear novena masses was also set to a minimum in 2021. The same activity was held on January 6, 2022 wherein an image of the Sto. Niño was paraded from the city center to the Sto. Niño Cathedral Parish Church.

Last January 15, 2022, the vibrant ritual dance showdown featuring street performers and festival queens holding the image of the Santo Niño in different garbs were held. With the ongoing pandemic, only fully vaccinated participants and guests were allowed to participate. Physical distancing was observed and the performers could only remove their masks during their presentation. 

Ever wondered why the majority of the Sto. Niño festivals are held in January when the image supposedly arrived first in Cebu on April 1521? One of the known reasons for this is that Rome granted the Philippines special permission to celebrate the feast of Sto. Niño every 3rd Sunday of January.  Perhaps you may have some ideas too? Let us know and follow the #NationalMuseumPH for more features about our rich and colorful celebrations. 

#PasalamatFestival

#PagadianCity

#SantoNiño

#PhilippineFestival

Text and poster by the NMP Ethnology Division

Photo courtesy of the Asenso Pagadian Facebook Page (City Public Information Page of the Local Government of Pagadian)

© The National Museum of the Philippines (2022)

Birth Anniversary of National Artist Vicente Manansala

The #NationalMuseumPH celebrates the 112th birth anniversary of National Artist Vicente Silva Manansala, born #OnThisDay in 1910.

Macabebe, Pampanga-born and 1981 National Artist for Painting, Vicente Silva Manansala was the son of Perfecto Manansala and Engracia Silva. He spent his childhood in Intramuros, Manila and grew up with fellow artists Antonio Dumlao and Jose Alcantara. He worked as a newsboy, a distributor of programs in movie houses, and a billboard painter. He also took drawing lessons under Ramon Peralta (1877-1940), a renowned scenographer.

In 1930, he earned his fine arts degree at the University of the Philippines. After college, he worked as an illustrator for the Philippines Herald. He formed associations with Carlos ‘Botong’ Francisco, Cesar Legaspi, and Hernando Ocampo, who would eventually become National Artists. After almost two decades, Manansala received a UNESCO scholarship grant to study at Ecole de Beaux Arts in Montreal, Canada for six months. In 1950, he went to France and studied at the University of Paris under a French government scholarship. He was mentored by French artist Fernand Léger who advised him to simplify the shapes and colors in his works. He eventually rendered figures and objects and simplified them into basic geometric shapes while applying layers of colors. This style, which he pioneered and developed, is called transparent cubism. 

His renowned subjects include Philippine urban and rural themes, the Filipino family, mother and child, woman, chickens, and carabao (water buffalo). Exhibited at The Philippine Center New York (PCNY) Core Collection of 1974: A Homecoming Exhibition located in Galleries XXVII to XXVIII of the National Museum of Fine Arts (NMFA) is his 1965 watercolor entitled “Kalabaw.” This is the only work of Manansala on display in this exhibition gallery. 

Manansala died on August 22, 1981, in Makati City.

You may view other works of National Artist Vicente Manansala at the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) Hall, the Government Service Insurance System (GSIS) Northwest Hall, and the PHILAM Life Hall. These are all found on the Third Floor of the National Museum of Fine Arts.  Check the 360 Tour of the PCNY Homecoming Exhibition on this website, or reserve a slot for your visit.

Text and photo by NMP-FAD

#VicenteManansala

#OnThisDay

#MuseumFromHome

©National Museum of the Philippines (2022)