National Art of The Philippines and Their Contribution
National Art of The Philippines and Their Contribution
National Art of The Philippines and Their Contribution
PABLO S. ANTONIO
National Artist for
Architecture (1976)
(January 25, 1902 – June 14,
1975)
LEANDRO V. LOCSIN
National Artist for Architecture, 1990
(August 15, 1928 – November 15, 1994)
Locsin’s largest single work is the Istana Nurul Iman, the palace of the
Sultan of Brunei, which has a floor area of 2.2 million square feet. The CCP
Complex itself is a virtual Locsin Complex with all five buildings designed by
him — the Cultural Center of the Philippines, Folk Arts Theater, Philippine
International Convention Center, Philcite and The Westin Hotel (now
Sofitel Philippine Plaza). https://ncca.gov.ph/about-culture-and-
arts/culture-profile/national-artists-of-the-philippines/)
JUAN F. NAKPIL
National Artist for Architecture, 1973
(May 26, 1899 – May 7, 1986)
Among others, Nakpil’s major works are the Geronimo de los Reyes
Building,Magsaysay Building, Rizal Theater, Capitol Theater, Captain Pepe
Building, Manila Jockey Club, Rufino Building, Philippine Village
Hotel, University of the Philippines Administration and University Library,
and the reconstructed Rizal house in Calamba, Laguna.
https://ncca.gov.ph/about-culture-and-arts/culture-profile/national-artists-
of-the-philippines/)
that has included hundreds of parks, plazas, gardens, and a wide range of
outdoor settings that have enhanced contemporary Filipino life.
Santos, Jr., who grew up in Malabon, made his first mark with the Makati
Commercial Center where he introduced a new concept of outdoor shopping with
landscaped walks, fountains and sculptures as accents. Santos, Jr.’s
contribution to modern Filipino landscape architecture was the seminal public
landscape in Paco Park. Santos, Jr.’s most recent projects were the Tagaytay
Highland Resort, the Mt. Malarayat Golf and Country Club in Lipa, Batangas,
and the Orchard Golf and Country Club in Imus, Cavite.
https://ncca.gov.ph/about-culture-and-arts/culture-profile/national-artists-
of-the-philippines/)
FRANCISCO T. MANOSA
National Artist for Architecture and Allied Arts (2018)
Birthday: 12 February 1931
For all his more than 60 years of architecture life, Arc. Bobby Mañosa
designed Filipino. From the 1960s in his landmark design of the Sulo Hotel until
his retirement about 2015, he courageously and passionately created original
Filipino forms, spaces with intricate and refined details. But what is most
valuable is that Mañosa was in the heart and soul of a Philippine architectural
movement. He has developed a legacy of Philippine architecture, which is
essential to our Filipino identity and at the same time, deeply appreciated and
shared in our world today.
Major Works:
San Miguel Building, Ortigas Center, Pasig City (designed with the Mañosa
Brothers)
Chapel of the Risen Lord, Las Piñas City
Our Lady of Peace Shrine, EDSA, Quezon City
World Youth Day Papal Altar, Quirino Grandstand, Manila, 1995
Metrorail Transit System Stations for LRT 1, circa 1980s
Quezon Memorial Circle Development Plan
Lanao del Norte Provincial Capitol, Tubod, Lanao del Norte
Tahanang Pilipino (Coconut Palace), CCP Complex, Manila
MODULE: HCMA22_CONTEMPORARY MUSIC AND ARTS
LAMBERTO V. AVELLANA
National Artist for Theater and
Film (1976)
(February 12, 1915 – April 25,
1991)
Lamberto V. Avellana,
director for theater and film, has the
distinction of being called “The Boy
Wonder of Philippine Movies” as early as 1939. He was the first to use the motion
picture camera to establish a point-of-view, a move that revolutionized the
techniques of film narration.
Sakay was declared the best picture of 1939 by critics and journalists alike
and set the tone for Avellana’s career in film that would be capped by such
distinctive achievements as the Grand Prix at the Asian Film Festival in Hong
Kong for Anak Dalita (1956); Best Director of Asia award in Tokyo for Badjao,
among others. Avellana was also the first filmmaker to have his
film Kandelerong Pilak shown at the Cannes International Film Festival. Among
the films he directed for worldwide release were Sergeant
Hasan (1967), Destination Vietnam (1969), and The Evil Within (1970).
LINO BROCKA
National Artist for Film and Broadcast Arts (1997)
(April 3, 1939 – May 22, 1991)
Catalino “Lino” Ortiz Brocka, director for film and broadcast arts,
espoused the term “freedom of expression” in the Philippine Constitution. Brocka
took his social activist spirit to the screen leaving behind 66 films which breathed
life and hope for the marginalized sectors of society — slum-dwellers, prostitutes,
construction workers, etc. He also directed for theater with equal zeal and served
in organizations that offer alternative visions, like the Philippine Educational
Theater Association (PETA) and the Concerned Artists of the Philippines (CAP).
MODULE: HCMA22_CONTEMPORARY MUSIC AND ARTS
At the same time, he garnered awards and recognition from institutions like the
CCP, FAMAS, TOYM, and Cannes Film Festival.
ISHMAEL BERNAL
National Artist for Cinema (2001)
(September 30, 1938 – June 2, 1996)
Ishmael Bernal was a filmmaker of the first order and one of the very
few who can be truly called a maestro. Critics have hailed him as “the genius of
Philippine cinema.”
Among his notable films are “Pahiram ng Isang Umaga” (1989), “Broken
Marriage” (1983), “Himala” (1982), “City After Dark” (1980), and “Nunal sa
Tubig” (1976). He was recognized as the Director of the Decade of the 1970s by
the Catholic Mass Media Awards; four-time Best Director by the Urian Awards
(1989, 1985, 1983, and 1977); and given the ASEAN Cultural Award in
Communication Arts in 1993.
The image of the underdog was projected in his films such as Apollo
Robles(1961), Batang Maynila (1962), Mga Alabok sa Lupa (1967), Batang
Matador and Batang Estibador (1969), Ako ang Katarungan (1974), Tatak ng
Alipin(1975), Totoy Bato (1977), Asedillo (1981), Partida (1985), and Ang
Probisyano (1996), among many others. The mythical hero, on the other hand,
was highlighted in Ang Alamat (1972), Ang Pagbabalik ng Lawin (1975)
including his Panday series (1980, 1981, 1982, 1984) and the action adventure
films adapted from komiks materials such as Ang Kampana sa Santa
Quiteria(1971), Santo Domingo (1972), and Alupihang Dagat (1975), among
MODULE: HCMA22_CONTEMPORARY MUSIC AND ARTS
others. Poe was born in Manila on August 20, 1939. After the death of his father,
he dropped out of the University of the East in his sophomore year to support
his family. He was the second of six siblings. He married actress Susan Roces in
a civil ceremony in December 1968. He died on December 14, 2004.
KIDLAT TAHIMIK
National Artist for Film (2018)
Birthday: 3 October 1942
Kidlat Tahimik has continually invented himself through his cinema, and so his
cinema is as singular as the man. His debut film, Mababangong Bangungot
(1977), was praised by critics and filmmakers from Europe, North America, Asia,
and Africa and is still considered by many as a pioneering postcolonial essay
film. Tahimik’s intense independence as an artist and, at the same time, the film
itself called for Filipinos to actively live out their independence and not allow
their culture to be imperialized by the west. Kidlat’s “imperfect” film is an
exemplar of what is worldwide known as “Third Cinema,” a cinema that is critical
of neocolonial exploitation and state oppression.
Notable Works:
FERNANDO AMORSOLO
National Artist for Visual
Arts
(May 30, 1892 – April 24,
1972)
Among others, his major works include the following: Maiden in a Stream(1921)-GSIS
collection; El Ciego (1928)-Central Bank of the Philippines collection; Dalagang
Bukid (1936) – Club Filipino collection; The Mestiza (1943) – National Museum of the
Philippines collection; Planting Rice (1946)-UCPB collection; Sunday Morning Going
to Town (1958)-Ayala Museum Collection.
HERNANDO R. OCAMPO
National Artist for Visual Arts (1991)
(April 28, 1911 – December 28, 1978)
GUILLERMO TOLENTINO
National Artist for Sculpture (1973)
(July 24, 1890 – July 12, 1976)
His comic strips spiced up the slices of Filipino lives with witty illustrations
executed throughout his 56 years of cartooning. He created over 500 characters
and 20 comic strips in widely circulated publications. Alcala’s most iconic
work, Slice of Life, not only made for decades long of widely circulated images of
Filipino everyday life, it also symbolically became an experiential way for his
followers to find a sense of self in the midst of an often cacophonic, raucous and
at odds environment that Filipinos found themselves amidst.
Notable Works:
Slice of Life Weekend 1980-1986
Asiong Aksaya, Daily Express, Tagalog Klasiks, 1976-1984
Smolbatteribols, Darna Komiks 1972-1984
MODULE: HCMA22_CONTEMPORARY MUSIC AND ARTS
FRANCISCO ARCELLANA
National Artist for Literature (1990)
(September 6, 1916 – August 1, 2002)
EDITH L. TIEMPO
National Artist for Literature (1999)
(April 22, 1919 – August 21, 2011)
A poet, fictionist, teacher and literary critic, Edith L. Tiempo is one of the
finest Filipino writers in English. Her works are characterized by a remarkable
fusion of style and substance, of craftsmanship and insight. Born on April 22,
1919 in Bayombong, Nueva Vizcaya, her poems are intricate verbal
transfigurations of significant experiences as revealed, in two of her much-
anthologized pieces, “The Little Marmoset” and “Bonsai”. As fictionist, Tiempo is
as morally profound. Her language has been marked as “descriptive but
unburdened by scrupulous detailing.” She is an influential tradition in Philippine
literature in English. Together with her late husband, Edilberto K. Tiempo, she
MODULE: HCMA22_CONTEMPORARY MUSIC AND ARTS
BIENVENIDO LUMBERA
National Artist for Literature (2006)
As a librettist for the Tales of the Manuvu and Rama Hari, he pioneered the
creative fusion of fine arts and popular imagination. As a scholar his major books
include the following: Tagalog Poetry, 1570-1898: Tradition and Influences
in its Development; Philippine Literature: A History and Anthology,
Revaluation: Essays on Philippine Literature, Writing the Nation/Pag-akda
ng Bansa.
VIRGILIO S. ALMARIO
National Artist for 2003
He is also known as Rio Alma, is a poet, literary historian, and critic, who
has revived and reinvented traditional Filipino poetic forms, even as he
championed modernist poetics. In 34 years, he has published 12 books of poetry,
which include the seminal Makinasyon and Peregrinasyon, and the landmark
trilogy Doktrinang Anakpawis, Mga Retrato at Rekwerdo and Muli, Sa
Kandungan ng Lupa. In these works, his poetic voice soared from the lyrical to
the satirical to the epic, from the dramatic to the incantatory, in his often severe
examination of the self, and the society.
MODULE: HCMA22_CONTEMPORARY MUSIC AND ARTS
RAMON L. MUZONES
National Artist for Literature (2018)
(20 March 1913-17 August 1992)
Ramon Muzones was a Hiligaynon poet, essayist, short story writer, critic,
grammarian, editor, lexicographer, and novelist who authored an unprecedented
61 completed novels. A number of these represent groundbreaking “firsts’ in
Hiligaynon literature such as the feminist Ang Bag-ong Maria Clara, the roman
a clef Maambong Nga Sapat (Magnificent Brute,1940), the comic Si Tamblot
(1946), the politically satirical Si Tamblot Kandidato Man (Tamblot is Also a
Candidate, 1949), the 125- installment longest serialized novel Dama de
Noche (1982-84), etc. Hailed by his peers as the longest reigning (1938-1972)
among “the three kings of the Hiligaynon novel,” Muzones brought about its most
radical changes while ushering in modernism. With a literary career that
spanned fifty-three years (1938-1990), his evolution covers the whole history of
the Hiligaynon novel from its rise in the 1940s to its decline in the 1970s.
Muzones tried his hand at a variety of types and proved adept in all as literary
fashions. In the process, he not only extended with remarkable versatility and
inventiveness the scope and style of the Hiligaynon novel, but he also enriched
Hiligaynon literature’s dramatis personae.
Notable Works:
Shri-Bishaya (1969)
Malala nga Gutom (Malignant Hunger,1965)
Babae Batuk sa Kalibutan (Woman Against the World,1959)
Ang Gugma sang Gugma Bayaran (Love with Love Be Paid, 1955)
Si Tamblot (1948)
Margosatubig (1946)
RAMON VALERA
National Artist for Fashion
Design (2006)
(August 31, 1912 – May 25, 1972)
Using zipper in place of hooks was already a radical change for the
country’s elite then. Dropping the panuelo–the long-folded scarf hanging down
the chest, thus serving as the Filipina’s gesture of modesty–from the entire
ensemble became a bigger shock for the women then. Valera constructed the
terno’s butterfly sleeves, giving
them a solid, built-in but
hidden support. To the world,
the butterfly sleeves became
the terno’s defining feature.
SALVADOR F. BERNAL
National Artist for Theater
Design (2003)
(January 7, 1945 – October
26, 2011)
Salvador F. Bernal designed more than 300 productions distinguished for their
originality. Sensitive to the budget limitations of local productions, he harnessed
the design potential of inexpensive local materials, pioneering or maximizing the
use of bamboo, raw abaca, and abaca fiber, hemp twine, rattan chain links and
gauze cacha.As the acknowledged guru of contemporary Filipino theater design,
Bernal shared his skills with younger designers through his classes at the
University of the Philippines and the Ateneo de Manila University, and through
the programs he created for the CCP Production Design Center which he himself
conceptualized and organized.
CARLOS QUIRINO
National Artist for Historical
Literature (1997)
(January 14, 1910 – May 20,
1999)
FRANCISCA REYES
AQUINO
National Artist for Dance
(1973)
(March 9, 1899 – November
21, 1983)
RAMON OBUSAN
National Artist for Dance (2006)
(June 16, 1938 – December 21, 2006)
multifarious aspects and dimensions of the art of dance. mong the full-length
productions he choreographed are the following: “Vamos a Belen! Series” (1998-
2004) Philippine Dances Tradition“Noon Po sa Amin,” tableaux of Philippine
History in song, drama and dance“Obra Maestra,” a collection of Ramon
Obusan’s dance masterpieces“Unpublished Dances of the Philippines,” Series
I-IV
“Water, Fire and Life, Philippine Dances and Music–A Celebration of Life.
Saludo sa Sentenyal”“Glimpses of ASEAN, Dances and Music of the ASEAN-
Member Countries”“Saplot (Ramon Obusan Folkloric Group): Philippines
Costumes in Dance”
ALICE REYES
National Artist for Dance (2014)
Her masterpiece Amada to the modern dance classic Itim-Asu, to her last
major work Bayanihan Remembered which she staged for Ballet Philippines
Among her major works: Amada (1969), At a Maranaw Gathering (1970) Itim-
Asu (1971), Tales of the Manuvu (1977), Rama Hari (1980), Bayanihan
Remembered (1987).
LUCRECIA REYES-URTULA
National Artist for Dance (1988)
(June 29, 1929 – August 4, 1999)
ANTONINO
BUENAVENTURA
National Artist for Music
(1988)
(May 4, 1904 – January 25,
1996)
In 1935, Buenaventura
joined Francisca Reyes-
Aquino to conduct research
on folksongs and dances that
led to its popularization.
Buenaventura composed songs, compositions, for solo instruments as well as
symphonic and orchestral works based on the folksongs of various Philippine
ethnic groups. He was also a conductor and restored the Philippine Army Band
to its former prestige as one of the finest military bands in the world making it
“the only band that can sound like a symphony orchestra”. This once sickly boy
who played the clarinet proficiently has written several marches such as the
“Triumphal March,” “Echoes of the Past,” “History Fantasy,” Second
Symphony in E-flat, “Echoes from the Philippines,” “Ode to Freedom.” His
orchestral music compositions include Concert Overture, Prelude and Fugue in
G Minor, Philippines Triumphant, Mindanao Sketches, Symphony in C Major,
among others.
MODULE: HCMA22_CONTEMPORARY MUSIC AND ARTS
JOSE MACEDA
National Artist for Music (1997)
(January 31, 1917 – May 5, 2004)
LUCRECIA R. KASILAG
National Artist for Music
August 31, 1918 – August, 2008
1960 to 1968, and the Manila Chamber Soloists from 1966 to 1970. He
completed a music degree in piano and cello from the University of Santo Tomas
where he also taught for decades until his death in 1988. His songs and ballads
include “Nahan, Kahit na Magtiis,” and “Diligin Mo ng Hamog ang Uhaw na
Lupa,” “Pilipinas,” “Inang Bayan,” “Isang Dalangin,” “Kalesa,” “Bato sa
Buhangin” and “Gaano Kita Kamahal.” The latter song shows how Cuenco has
enriched the Filipino love ballad by adding the elements of kundiman to it.
RYAN CAYABYAB
National Artist for Music (2018)
Birthday: 4 May 1954
Notable Works:
DAISY H. AVELLANA
National Artist for Theater
(1999)
(January 26, 1917 – May 12,
2013)
ROLANDO S. TINIO
National Artist for Theater and Literature (1997)
(March 5, 1937 – July 7, 1997)
Wilfrido Ma. Guerrero is a teacher and theater artist whose 35 years of devoted
professorship has produced the most sterling luminaries in Philippine
performing arts today: Behn Cervantes, Celia Diaz-Laurel, Joy Virata, Joonee
Gamboa, etc. In 1947, he was appointed as UP Dramatic Club director and
served for 16 years. As founder and artistic director of the UP Mobile Theater,
he pioneered the concept of theater campus tour and delivered no less than
2,500 performances in a span of 19 committed years of service. By bringing
theatre to the countryside, Guerrero made it possible for students and
audiences, in general, to experience the basic grammar of staging and acting
in familiar and friendly ways through his plays that humorously reflect the
behavior of the Filipino. His plays include Half an Hour in a Convent, Wanted:
A Chaperon, Forever, Condemned, Perhaps, In Unity, Deep in My Heart,
Three Rats, Our Strange Ways, The Forsaken House, Frustrations.