Performing Luna: In Celebration of Juan Luna’s 165th Birth Anniversary” featuring the Far Eastern University Dance Company and Scholars from the Friends for Cultural Concerns of the Philippines (FCCP)

Join us for a FREE performance-led tour at the National Museum of Fine Arts this October 23!

In celebration of Museums and Galleries Month and the 165th birth anniversary of our country’s foremost Filipino painting master, Juan Novicio Luna on October 24, the #NationalMuseumPH invites you to a performance-led tour of the Spoliarium Hall and the Far East Bank and Trust and Company – Andres and Grace Luna de San Pedro Memorial Hall (Gallery VI) of the National Museum of Fine Arts (NMFA) on October 23, 2022, Sunday.

This activity will show a glimpse of the artistic life of Juan Luna through his masterpieces in these exhibition galleries, providing an enhanced visitor experience at the National Museum of Fine Arts. Dancers, singers, and instrumentalists will come from the Far Eastern University Center for the Arts and scholars from the Friends for Cultural Concerns of the Philippines (FCCP) led by FCCP President and Director Mr. Martin Lopez.

See you this Sunday at your #NationalMuseumPh!

Choral Performance at the Museum featuring the UP Manila Chorale

To complete the lineup of performances for the third week of the Museums and Galleries Month celebration at the National Museum of the Philippines, the University of the Philippines Manila Chorale will perform for the museum visitors of the National Museum of Natural History on Sunday, October 26.  A short museum-themed repertoire is set to anchor the collections and exhibitions of the Museum of Natural History and the theme of this year’s MGM celebration.  

These performance-led activities at the museum intend to offer visitors different and augmented museum experiences and aim to explore various creative and alternative ways of promoting Filipino Heritage, particularly the NMP collections, exhibitions, and its advocacies making it interesting and relevant to various museum audiences.

The UPMC is the multi-awarded official performing group for choral music of the University of the Philippines Manila, presently led by its music director, Mr. John Steven Verrosa.

Make sure to be at the Museum in the afternoon to witness their choral performance!

Happy Museums and Galleries Month!

#NationalMuseumPh

#MGM2022

Alfredo Evangelista Death Anniversary Commemoration

We commemorate Alfredo Evangelista – archaeologist, anthropologist, educator, and former assistant director of the #NationalMuseumPH, on his 14th death anniversary #OnThisDay, October 18.

Assistant Director Evangelista ca. 1973 during the 1st ASEAN Field School in barrio San Piro, Balayan, Batangas. Photo from the NMP archives.

Considered one of the pioneering Filipino archaeologists, Evangelista’s interest in the discipline started during his undergraduate studies at the University of the East, under the mentorship of Wilhelm Solheim II. He has since been involved in several archaeological explorations and excavations of the following sites: Batungan Cave and Kalanay Cave in Masbate (with Solheim); Bato Caves in Sorsogon, and Cagraray, Albay in Bicol; and Sta. Ana, Calatagan and San Piro, Balayan in Batangas. His well-known archaeological undertaking is perhaps the Duyong Cave excavation in Palawan in the 1960s, where the oldest evidence of betel nut chewing in the country, associated with a primary Neolithic burial, was discovered.

Assistant Director Evangelista (center) inspecting the instructional materials in “Educational Loan Kit,” as part of the educational project of the NMP ca. 1985. Photo from the National Museum Annual Report 1985.

Evangelista was responsible for acquiring 4 National Cultural Treasures (or NCTs)—the Calatagan Ritual Pot, Laguna Copperplate Inscription, Marinduque Celadon Jar, and Banton Cloth. A model employee who allegedly did not file for even a single day of leave of absence, he started his career at the National Museum of the Philippines (NMP) as a laboratory aide in 1951 and retired as a Director III in 1991. He pursued graduate studies at the University of Chicago in Illinois, under a Fulbright scholarship, and at the University of Hawaii. Throughout his lifelong career, he also accepted teaching appointments at the University of the Philippines-Diliman and the University of Santo Tomas.

Assistant Director Evangelista (leftmost) during the opening of an exhibition in October 1980 in line with the celebration of National Museum Week. Photo from the National Museum Annual Report 1980.

In recognition of Evangelista’s contributions to Philippine archaeology, one of the 5 National Archaeological Repositories maintained by the NMP-Archaeology Division was named after him.

CLICK links to learn more about the NCTs featured in previous #TrowelTuesday posts of our #MuseumFromHome series:

Calatagan Ritual Pot –  https://tinyurl.com/CalataganRitualPot

Laguna Copperplate Inscription –  https://tinyurl.com/LagunaCopperplateInscription

Marinduque Celadon Jar – https://tinyurl.com/MarinduqueCeladonJar

#MGM2022
#AlfredoEvangelista
#PioneeringFilipinoArchaeologist

Article by Maricar Belarmino and poster by Timothy James Vitales | NMP Archaeology Division

© 2022 National Museum of the Philippines

References:

Evangelista, A. 2001. Soul Boats A Filipino Journey of Self Discovery (Selected essays of Alfredo

E. Evangelista). Manila: National Commission for Culture and the Arts

Peralta, J. 2010. Obituary: Alfredo Esguerra Evangelista, Essential Archaeologist in AghamTao:

Journal of the Ugnayang Pang-Aghamtao, Inc (UGAT)/ Anthropological Association of

the Philippines. Vol. 19: 81-83

Solheim II, W. 2009. Obituary: Alfredo E. Evangelista (1926-2008) in Hukay. Vol. 14: 114-120

Legaspi, A. 1974. Bolinao: A 14th-15th Century Burial Site. Museum Publication No. 7. National

Museum

82nd Birth Anniversary of Manlilikha ng Bayan Estelita Bantilan

The #NationalMuseumPH celebrates the life of #ManlilikhaNgBayan Estelita Tumandan Bantilan on her 82nd birthday. 

MB Estelita Tumandan Bantilan, also known as Labnai, is a renowned master weaver of Blaan mats called igêm and was conferred with the Manlilikha ng Bayan award in 2016. She advocates traditions, including the indigenous way of creating her masterpieces, from the careful selection, drying, and stripping of romblon (Pandanus sp.) leaves to dyeing and weaving. She passes on the tradition by training the younger generation of Blaan weavers in her community with the assistance of her daughter at the GAMABA Cultural Center in Malapatan, Sarangani.

On 11 May 2022, an igêm with sulif design by Bai Labnai was part of the newly donated works of Manlilikha ng Bayan, which the GAMABA Executive Council of the National Commission for Culture and the Arts turned over to the National Museum of the Philippines. Sulif is a two-colored pattern of wavy stripes representing the act of swimming, diving in, and going back to the surface of the water—a reflection of the influence of the natural environment of Sarangani on her work. Her other signature designs are sangbangkil (wavy patterns of quadrilaterals), sulong-sulong (windows), and daksina (propeller-like pattern). 

Learn more about MB Labnai and her works by visiting the Manlilikha ng Bayan Hall at the 3F National Museum of Anthropology in Manila as we reopen soon.

#EstelitaTumandanBantilan
#GAMABA
#Igem

Article and poster by the NMP Ethnology Division and the GAMABA Executive Council

© 2022 National Museum of the Philippines

SANTA MONICA CHURCH COMPLEX IN ALBUQUERQUE, BOHOL

Although we all know of Albuquerque (‘Albur’ as it was colloquially known) in Bohol for its ‘Asin tibuok’, a type of rare artisanal sea salt from the Boholano people made from filtering seawater through ashes, lesser known is that immediately across where these salt beds are found is a church complex whose walls are the oldest witness to the burning coconut husks in which salt is derived. As in many Philippine pueblos, the town started humbly as described by Regalado Trota Jose in his book Visita Iglesia Bohol

      “This parish had its beginning as a visita, an extension of the parish of Baclayon.  The settlement was then known as ‘Sagunto’, named after a town in Catalunya, Spain.  Upon the request of one of the settles, Doña Mariana Irag, a chapel, convento, and school were erected in 1842, on the land which she herself preferred.  The church complex stood at the boundary between Baclayon and Loay.  The site was made a town in 1861, separate from Baclayon and with some land taken from Loay.  This time it adopted a new name, Albuquerque, after a town in Badajoz, Spain.  The parish was formally inaugurated in 1869; it was under the care of the Augustinian Recollects until 1898 when the clergy took over”.

Compared to its adjacent town church complexes (La Purissima Concepcion del Virgen Maria Parish Church in Baclayon and Santissima Trinidad Parish Church in Loay), which are designed as church fortresses, the church complex in Albuquerque is more of an open park, partly because the parish was canonically erected in 1869 and during that time, a church fortress is less necessary since Moro (pirates) attacks are less frequent. The church complex includes the church, the arcade that leads to the convent, and the convent. A property left of the church is the original twin building for the Escuela de Niños y Niñas.  

From its humble beginnings in wood and bamboo as a capilla visita from Baclayon in 1842, to a larger and studier shed-type church in 1856, to a more permanent structure with tabique walls in the 1880s; the present three-aisled plan church in coral stone was commenced by Fr. Manuel Muro in 1885 and construction continued until 1896 and finally the tower bell-gable (espadaña) type façade in the 1920s thru the 1930s.  

Most noticeable in Bohol churches are the interior ceiling paintings, a replacement made by Guy Custodio of the original Ray Francia is what we see today. Remnants of the original painting are framed and scattered all over the church’s sacristy and other auxiliary rooms for the parish.  Ray Francia is the most prolific artist in Bohol and Cebu and has many commissions in the 1920s and 1930s. The baroque-inspired retablos by Arsenio Lagura Jr. and his team are also new (2015), none of the original main retablo remains, while two neo-gothic side retablos survived prior to its replacement.

Noteworthy is the unique arcade that links the church and the convent. Remnants of unfinished construction suggest that there is a plan to develop the area probably an extension of the church or the convent.  The convent has a façade and grand scale typical to those of an Ayuntamiento rather than an enlarged bahay na bato that is archetypal in the islands.

On 13 October 2013, the provinces of Bohol and Cebu were stuck by a 7.2 magnitude earthquake, and the church was moderately damaged. Cracks, detachment of facing stones, and collapsed parts are visible within the perimeter of the unreinforced masonry walls of the church.

A proposal for restoration work for the damaged built heritage in Bohol and Cebu was immediately funded by the national government thru cultural agencies (National Commission for Culture and the Arts (NCCA), National Museum of the Philippines (NMP) and the National Historical Commission of the Philippines (NHCP).  The conservation for Santa Monica Church Complex in Albuquerque, Bohol was assigned to the NMP. The restoration was completed on 18 August 2018. 

The collective efforts of the national government through its cultural agencies, the Local Government Unit of Albuquerque, and the Provincial Government of Bohol, show an ideal collaborative work for the protection of built heritage and sites.  We are assured that the architecture, art and values of which these built heritage and sites represent are available for everyone to learn and appreciate. 

Article by Architect Benjamin Concepcion Empleo. Photos by the NMP Architectural Arts and Built Heritage Division.

© 2022 National Museum of the Philippines

Manlilikha ng Bayan Eduardo Mutuc 73rd Birth Anniversary

How does one become a master of his art? For Manlilikha ng Bayan Eduardo Mutuc, it takes practice and sheer hard work that entails committing mistakes and honing one’s skills. We give tribute to MB Eduardo Mutuc on his 73rd birth anniversary #OnThisDay, for his exceptional mastery of metalwork on religious and secular art pieces. 

Conferred as Manlilikha ng Bayan in 2004, MB Mutuc dedicated his life to creating religious and secular art in silver, bronze, and wood. He took inspiration from traditional religious designs and infused them with his ideas, which are seen in the intricacy of his retablos, mirrors, altars, and carosas found in churches and private collections. One of his first commissions was a tabernacle for Monsignor Fidelis Limcauco for a parish in Fairview in Quezon City. 

Some of his works are large, exceeding 12.19 meters, while others are tiny and feature very fine and delicate craftsmanship. Most of the time, his creation demands large and expansive designs to make them stand out from afar. Careful detailing is done, requiring close observation before the design becomes evident. 

In metalsmithing, mistakes are costly as brass and silver are expensive. For this reason, MB Mutuc believes that craftsmanship begins with respect to one’s tool and medium. The first lesson he teaches his students is the proper handling of chisel and hammer for ease of use and prevention of mistakes. More importantly, he cautions against working with an eye toward easy money. For him, the improvement of one’s skill is through the immersion of oneself, learning the technique, and practice—only in the perfection of one’s craft can there be a real reward. 

To know more about MB Eduardo Mutuc and see his silver-plated artwork with a calado design, visit the Manlilikha ng Bayan Hall at the 3/F of the National Museum of Anthropology once it reopens this October in time for the #MuseumsandGalleriesMonth.

#ManlilikhangBayan
#GAMABA
#EduardoMutuc

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

© 2022 National Museum of the Philippines