Group 3 Contemporar y Arts
Group 3 Contemporar y Arts
Group 3 Contemporar y Arts
American Colonial
Period (1898-1940) to the
Postwar Republic (1946-
1969)
Major Art Movements
The independence that the Philippines gained after the
revolution of 1896 was cut short with the establishment of the
American colonial government in the Philippines. Bound by the
Treaty of Paris in 1898, Spain “surrendered” the Philippines to
the United Sates. From 1899 to 1913, the bloody Philippine-
American war occurred, claiming the lives of many Filipinos.
Beginning with the institution of government and education
systems, the new colonial government took charge of initiating
the natives into the American way of life, creating a lasting
influence on Filipino culture.
What were the changes brought about by American
colonization? How are they different from the religious
forms of the Spanish colonial period?
Vaudeville
- originated from France
- another form of theater which the Americans introduced that
became popular in the Philippines during 1920s.
20th Century
A new urban pattern that responded to the secular goals of
education, health and governance was imposed.
Daniel Burnham
- an architect and urban planner who was commissioned by the
American government top design Manila and Baguio, while;
William Parsons
- implemented the Burnham Plan.
City Beautiful Movement
- introduced in 1983 at the Chicago World Fair
- a new urban design employed Neo-classic architecture for its
government edifices and integrated parks and lawns to make the city
attractive by making its buildings impressive and places more inviting for
leisure amid urban light.
Tomas Mapua
Juan Arellano
Andres Luna de San Pedro
Antonio Toledo
In 1909, a year after the establishment of the University of the
Philippines, its school of Fine Arts was opened.
Fabian de la Rosa
- He succeeded the peninsulares Rafael Enriquez as director.
- His naturalists paintings characterized by restraint and formality
in brushwork, choice of somber colors, and subject matter.
Planting Rice, 1921
El Kundiman, 1930
Peninsulares is a term used particularly during the colonial
period to refer to Spanish-born residents of the
Philippines.
Fernando Amorsolo
- a prolific artist
- produced numerous portraits of prominent individuals
- He was known for his romantic paintings that captured
the warm glow of the Philippine sunlight.
- Genre scenes highlighting the beauty of the
Dalagang Filipina, idyllic landscapes; and historical
paintings
- Professor at the UP School of Fine Arts
- He was posthumously declared National Artist on
1972
- a graphic artist who rendered drawings for the
textbook series The Philippine Readers as well as
illustrations for the Newspaper The Independent.
“Amorsolo School” influenced:
* Irineo Miranda
Torribio Herrera
Cesar Buenaventura
Dominador Castañeda
Guillermo Tolentino
- He was Amorsolo’s counterpart in sculpture.
- He studied Fine Arts in Rome.
- Credited for the Iconic Oblation (1935, original/1958,
bronze cast found at the UP Oblation Plaza) of the UP
and the Bonifacio Monument, in Caloocan.
- He proclaimed as National Artist in 1973
Academic
- (a term referring to the kind of art that was
influenced by European academies) tradition of
painting and sculpture in the manner of Amorsolo
and Tolentino prevailed in the art scene.
Victorio Edades (National Artist)
- Modern Art movement profoundly influenced him.
Slogans such as “Asia for Asians” made its way to the public through
posters, ephemera, comics, and Japanese sponsored publications such as
Shin-Seiki, and in newspapers and magazines such as Liwayway and
Tribune. The production of images, texts, and music underwent scrutiny.
Felipe P. De Leon
In music, the composer National Artist De Leon was said
to have been commanded at the “point of the gun” to
write Awit sa Paglikha ng Bagong Pilipinas. Declared as
the anthem specifically for the period, it conveyed
allegiance to the nation reared in East Asia, where Japan
was actively asserting its political power.
Amorsolo’s painting many of which showed little or
no indication of war’s atrocities, continued to be
favored. Examples include Harvest Scene, 1942 and
Rice Planting, 1942.
Sa Kabukiran, hit song of Sylvia La Torre, written in Tagalog in
the 1940s by he acclaimed composer Levi Celerio (National
Artist for Music and Literature, awarded 1997). La Torre’s
operatic singing along with an energetic tempo offered an
escape from the troubles war. Commissioned portraits of high
officials such as His Excellency, Jorge B. Vargas, Chairman of
the Philippine Executive Commission, 1943 and
“Independence this Year”, said His Excellency, Premier Tojo,
1943 were also produced at this time.
Portraits representing different ethnolinguistic
groups were produced, and this is exemplified by
Crispin Lopez’s Study of an Aeta, 1943.
Two years later, the rift between the “conservatives” or those who subscribe to the
Amorsolo and Tolentino style of painting and the “Moderns” led by Edades would
resurface in the AAP art competition as most of its winners had modernist
inclinations. Feeling that judges’ decisions were biased, the artists who continued to
practice in the conservative tradition walked out as a form of protest and exhibited
their works on the streets.
This 1950s also saw the construction of modern architectural
structures, particularly churches that modified or veered away
from traditional cruciform designs. Within the UP Diliman
Campus, examples are:
Church of Holy Sacrifice, 1955
Church of the Risen Lord
The Folk Arts Theater which became the venue of the first Ms.
Universe Pageant in the Philippines in 1974.