Contemporary Arts in The Philippines
Contemporary Arts in The Philippines
the Philippines
National Artist Award
Painting
Fernando Amorsolo Paco, Manila 1972 (++)
Carlos V. Francisco Angono, Rizal 1973 (++)
Victorio C. Edades Dagupan, Pangasinan 1976 (+)
Vicente S. Manansala Macabebe, Pampanga 1981 (++)
Jeremias Elizalde Antique 1999 (++)
Navarro
Jose T. Joya Manila 2003 (++)
Fernando
Amorsolo
Fernando Amorsolo y Cueto (May 30,
1892 – April 24, 1972) was one of the
most important artists in the history of
painting in the Philippines.
Ang Kiukok,
"Thinking Man,"
1979, Watercolor
on Paper
Ang Kiukok,
“Cockerel,”
1976,
Watercolor on
Paper
Benedicto
R. Cabrera
(BenCab)
Benedicto R. Cabrera, who signs his paintings “Bencab,”
upheld the primacy of drawing over the decorative color.
Bencab started his career in the mid-sixties as a lyrical
expressionist.
His solitary figures of scavengers emerging from a dark
landscape were piercing stabs at the social conscience of a
people long inured to poverty and dereliction.
Bencab, who was born in Malabon, has christened the
emblematic scavenger figure “Sabel.”
For Bencab, Sabel is a melancholic symbol of dislocation,
despair and isolation–the personification of human dignity
threatened by life’s vicissitudes, and the vast inequities of
Philippine society.
Dancer, 2006
Benedicto Cabrera
Mi Ultimo Adios, 1996
Abdulmari Asia Imao, a native of Sulu, is a sculptor,
painter, photographer, ceramist, documentary film maker,
cultural researcher, writer, and articulator of Philippine
Muslim art and culture.
Through his works, the indigenous ukkil, sarimanok and
naga motifs have been popularized and instilled in the
consciousness of the Filipino nation and other peoples as
original Filipino creations.
His U.P. art education introduced him to Filipino masters
like Guillermo Tolentino and Napoleon Abueva, who were
among his mentors.
With his large-scale sculptures and monuments of Muslim
and regional heroes and leaders gracing selected sites
from Batanes to Tawi-tawi, Imao has helped develop
among cultural groups trust and confidence necessary for
the building of a more just and humane society.
"Sarimanok ng Bayan na Mapayapa" 36" x 48" Oil
on Canvas 2006
Federico Aguilar Alcuaz was a 20th-century
Filipino painter known for his Cubist-inspired
paintings.
Most often depicting nude women,
interiors, still lifes, and landscapes, Alcuaz’s
work is characterized by its soft blurred
edges coupled with bold lines and shapes.
This contact between forms creates
distinctively dynamic spatial overlaps
throughout his compositions, resulting in
lively and memorable images.
Federico Aguilar Alcuaz
Seascape, 1977
Federico Aguilar Alcuaz
Cinco Marias (Tres Marias Series),
FranciscoCoching, acknowledged as the
“Dean of Filipino Illustrators” and son of
noted Tagalog novelist and comics illustrator
Gregorio Coching, was a master storyteller –
in images and in print.
His
illustrations and novels were products of
that happy combination of fertile
imagination, a love of storytelling, and fine
draftsmanship.
Hesynthesized images and stories informing
Philippine folk and popular imagination of
culture. His career spanned four decades.