Lesson 1-2
Lesson 1-2
FILIPINO
IN THE ARTS
IDENTITY
FILIPINO
The word "Filipino" is spelled with an "F" because it's derived from
the Spanish name for the Philippine Islands: Las Islas Filipinas. ("Philip"
is Felipe in Spanish.) In English, however, the name was translated from
the Spanish as "the Philippine islands" or "the Philippines.”
ROOTING
ONE’S SELF
Create an Essay of what you
want to be in the next 10 years
and how does that dream helps
our community or country.
Personhood,
the Community
and the Arts
Pangarap Kong Maging
Rodelio “Toti” Cerda
What do we want to be?
What do we want for our
country and community?
FR. ALBERT E. ALEJO
Filipino Jesuit Priest theorizes on interiority
or loob as a way to engage with issues on
Filipino identity. His research Tao po! Tuloy!
Isang Landas ng Pag-unawa sa Loob ng Tao is
an attempt to seek answers to questions on
personhood. For Alejo, the loob subsumes all
properties of consciousness such as thinking
and feeling.
FR. LEONARDO N. MERCADO
Wrote a philosophical text that explains social
interactions based on Filipino worldviews (1994). In
The Filipino Mind (Mercado, 1994), his analysis of
identity and commonalities among Filipinos is based
on phrases used in everyday interactions. An
example is the aesthetic notion of beauty, elucidated
through the usage of the word "ganda." Mercado's
essay proposes that identity is inseparable from the
arts.
JAIME VENERACION
Filipino identity is not necessarily lost or non-existent.
There is no need to suffer an identity crisis. Historian
Jaime Veneracion asserts that even before the arrival of
Spanish colonizers vis-à-vis the Christianization of
several archipelagic inhabitants, links between interior
and coastal communities were already established (1997).
For Veneracion, the formation of the sambayanan (not
necessarily equivalent to a nation-state) is a long
historical process.
FLORO C. QUIBUYEN
For the hero Jose Rizal, there is a need for a kind of ethics that
transcends the imperatives of the state. For Rizal scholar Floro C.
Quibuyen, Rizal envisions a nation constituted by a proactive civil
society, not one burdened by the monstrosity of a nation-state that
dominates people at the expense of the underserved (1999). The
desired civil society is one guided by the moral and intellectual
leadership of the enlightened sector. For Quibuyen, the idea of an
internationally educated, Hispanic Rizal that desired assimilation was
only something manufactured under the American colonial project.
However, it must be noted that based on the exchanges between
Marcelo del Pilar and Rizal, the latter desired not assimilation but
total independence.
"Culture is not only beneficial to
cities; in a deeper sense, it’s what cities
are for. A city without poets, painters
and photographers is sterile."
-Rebecca Solnit
PLACE-BASED ARTISTIC INTERVENTIONS
A Napoleon Abueva masterpiece outside the Commission on Audit in Quezon City. Photo by JOHN PAUL OLIVARES
PLACE-BASED ARTISTIC INTERVENTIONS
“Homage to Noguchi” by Arturo Luz at the Ayala Center in Makati City. Photo by JOHN PAUL OLIVARES
EXAMPLE OF PLACE-BASED ARTISTIC
INTERVENTIONS
Ilocos is home to
artists who continue to
imbibe the pulse of
their locale in their art
practice.
FIDEL GO
Fidel Go of Vigan, Ilocos Sur continues the tradition
of burnayan.
Its name, Pagburnayan, comes
from the root word burnay. It
refers to the hand-crafted
earthenware pots made from
Vigan. Bantog clays, these are
called. They’re dug from the
western barangays of the city.
FIDEL GO
In 1998, he was one of the 100 Filipino artist given the
Centennial Award, a once-in-a-lifetime recognition for
local arists. The National Commission for Culture and
Arts declared him as a National Folk Artist.
Eas
QUIZ TIME rk !
y as p h e pa
ie! in t
a l k
Aw
Q1 It was created primarily as a result of pre-
colonial cultures, colonial influences and
foreign traders intermixing and gradually
evolving together.
a) Hispanic b) Austronesian
c) Malays d) Filipino
Q3 This means freeman or freedman were the
feudal warrior class in ancient Tagalog
society in Luzon, the Philippines.
a) Hispanic b) Austronesian
c) Maharlika d) Malaya
Q4 The Philippines is and the Filipinos are
called ___________ but not as
conventionally as Latin America and
Latinos.
a) Hispanic b) Austronesian
c) Maharlika d) Malays
Q5 Filipinos is considered as ______________
being the natives of the Philippines,
Indonesia, Malaysia and Brunei.
a) Hispanic b) Austronesian
c) Maharlika d) Malays
It is an integrative approach to urban planning
Q6 and community building that stimulates local
economies and leads to increased innovation,
cultural diversity, and civic engagement.
A B. C.
.
This Historian Priest said that “Filipino identity is not
8 necessarily lost or non-existent. There is no need to suffer an
identity crisis.”
A B. C.
.
For Him the idea of an internationally educated, Hispanic Rizal
that desired assimilation was only something manufactured
9 under the American colonial project.
A B. C.
.
For him the Filipino "identity is inseparable from the arts"
10
A B. C.
.
II. Direction: Identify the following.