Gallery III – Paintings of the Philippine Colonial Tradition of the Sacred Arts (National Museum of Fine Arts, Manila)

Gallery III- Paintings of the Philippine Colonial Tradition of the Sacred Arts

Gallery III – Paintings of the Philippine Colonial Tradition of the Sacred Arts, at the third floor of the National Museum of Fine Arts, exhibits the paintings that show images of saints, the Blessed Virgin and the Holy Family. It features polychromes and paintings of early religious images interpreted by local Filipino artists and artisans.

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Gallery entrance

One of the prominent pieces in the collection is La Apoteosis de Sto. Tomas Aquino (1819, oil on panel), an artwork dedicated to the Dominican College of Seville and one of the few works of Damian Domingo (1796 – 1834), the Father of Filipino Painting, that survive today.

La Apoteosis de Sto. Tomas Aquino (Damian Domingo, 1819, oil on panel)

Another notable painting is the Nuestra Senora del Rosario (ca. 1860, oil on linen) of Antonio Malantic y Arceo (1820 – 1885), one of the famous portrait painters in the Philippines.

Nuestra Senora del Rosario (Antonio Malantic y Arceo, 1860, oil on linen)

Simon Flores y de la Rosa (1839 – 1902), the first Filipino to garner a prize from an international exhibition (silver medal in 1876 at the Philadelphia Universal Exposition for his painting La Musica del Pueblo), has two works at the gallery –  El Bautismo de Jesus por San Juan Bautista (late 19th century, oil on canvas) and San Roque (1893, oil on panel).

El Bautismo de Jesus por San Juan Bautista (Simon Flores y de la Rosa, late 19th century, oil on canvas

San Roque (Simon Flores y De la Rosa, 1893, oil on panel)

Faustino Quiotan (1770 – 1825), a Chinese mestizo master from Sta. Cruz District in Manila and one of the first Filipino artists to show emotions in his subjects, has two works on display –  San Isidro Labrador (late 18th or early 19th century, oil on canvas) and San Albino de Angers (late 18th or early 19th century, oil on canvas).

Top left: San Isidro Labrador (Faustino Quiotan, late 18th or early 19th century, oil on canvas). Bottom left: San Albino de Angers (Faustino Quiotan, late 18th or early 19th century, oil on canvas). Right: San Cristobal (Mariano Asuncion y Molo, mid tolate 19th century, oil on canvas)

 

Left San Bonifacio, Obispo y Martir (Juan Arceo, 1830, oil on panel). Top CenterSta. Leogarda de Jesus (Nicolas Luis). Bottom Center San Pedro Apostol (Jose Domingo Gabor, late 19th century, oil on panel).

The other known artists whose works are featured include Jose Domingo y Gabor (son of Damian Domingo, ca. 1790 – 1832), Nicolas Luis, Francisco Domingo y Casa, Hilarion Asuncion y Eloriaga (ca. 1840 – ?), Isidro Arceo (1840 – 1900), Juan Arceo (1795 – 1865), Justiniano Asuncion y Molo (1816 – 1896, a prized pupil of Damian Domingo in Academia de Dibujo y Pintura), Mariano Asuncion y Molo (1802 – 1885, brother of Justiniano), Vicente Villasenor (1825 – ?), Juan Senson (an Angono artist), Castor Resurrecion and Adorable Castro Andrade.

El Transito del Glorioso Patriarca San Jose (Francisco Domingo y Casa, oil on canvas)

Nuestra Senora de Guadalupe (Castor Resurrecion, oil on canvas)

Half of works on display are by unknown artists.  The collection belongs to the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Collection.

La Coronacion de la Virgen (unknown Leyteno artist, mid 19th century, oil on panel)

La Paloma (La Coronacion de la Virgen) (Vicente Villasenor, oil on panel)

Gallery III – Paintings of the Philippine Colonial Tradition of the Sacred Arts: Ramon and Milagros Del Rosario Family Hall, South Wing Galleries, 2/F, National Museum of Fine Arts (NMFA), Padre Burgos Avenue, Ermita, Manila 1000, Metro Manila. Tel: (632) 8527-1215 and (632) 8298-1100.  Email: inquiry@nationalmuseum.gov.ph.  Website: nationalmuseum.gov.ph.  Open Tuesdays to Sundays, 9 AM – 4PM. Admission is free.  Coordinates: 14°35′13″N 120°58′52″E.

Visitors shall be limited to 100 per museum per session. Visitors are required to pre-book online at https://reservation.nationalmuseum.gov at least a day before the visit. Confirmation of booking will be sent through email. Group reservations are limited to five (5) persons only.  Walk-in visitors will NOT be accommodated.

Gallery II – Gallery of the Via Crusis of an Unknown Bohol Master (National Museum of Fine Arts, Manila)

Gallery II – Gallery of the Via Crusis of an Unknown Bohol Master

Gallery II – Gallery of the Via Crusis of an Unknown Bohol Master, at the second floor of the National Museum of Fine Arts, features 14 paintings depicting the Stations of the Cross (Via Crusis).

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Gallery entrance

These masterpieces were done by an unknown master from Bohol and the particular church where these paintings originated is also unknown.

Station I (Jesus is Condemned to Death)

Station II (Jesus Carries His Cross).  Check out the Chocolate Hills” in the background

Inscribed with the year 1830, they are among the oldest surviving complete (most were sold individually) series of depictions of the Stations of the Cross in the Philippines.

Station III (Jesus Falls the First Time)

Station IV (Jesus Meets his Mother)

Done on wood panels, they depict the Passion of Christ in great detail in the folk and native style primarily due to the simplistic rendering and flatness of the plane.

Station VI (Veronica Wipes the Face of Jesus)

Station VII (Jesus Falls the Second Time)

Interesting characteristics include the depiction of the distinctive Boholano landscape of conical hills (known in the mid-20th century as the “Chocolate Hills”).

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Station VIII (Jesus Meets the Women of Jerusalem)

Station IX (Jesus Falls the Third Time)

This landscape can be seen in Station II (Jesus Carries His Cross), Station III (Jesus Falls For the First Time), Station IX (Jesus Falls the Third Time), Station X (Jesus is Stripped of his Garments), Station XI (Jesus is Nailed to the Cross) and Station XIV (Jesus is Laid in the Tomb).

Station X (Jesus is Stripped of his Garments)

Station XI (Jesus is Nailed to the Cross)

There are also references to the Medieval practices of portraying damned souls by means of grotesque features such as elongated noses (redolent of the snouts of swine) of those Roman soldiers and other persons who, without  mercy or remorse, contribute to the suffering of Jesus.

Station XII (Jesus Dies on the Cross)

Station XIII (Jesus is Taken Down from the Cross)

These paintings are entirely unique and outstanding in its cultural significance particularly as they are the only such works held in a public collection and kept in perpetual trust for the Filipino people. 

Station XIV (Jesus is Laid in the Tomb)

Gallery II – Via Crusis of an Unknown Bohol Master: Friends for Cultural Concerns of the Philippines, Inc. (FCCP) Hall, 2/F, National Museum of Fine Arts (NMFA), Padre Burgos Avenue, Ermita, Manila 1000, Metro Manila. Tel: (632) 8527-1215 and (632) 8298-1100.  Email: inquiry@nationalmuseum.gov.ph.  Website: nationalmuseum.gov.ph.  Open Tuesdays to Sundays, 9 AM – 4PM. Admission is free.  Coordinates: 14°35′13″N 120°58′52″E.

Gallery I – Religious Art from the 17th to 19th Centuries (National Museum of Fine Arts, Manila)

Gallery I – Religious Art from the 17th to 19th Centuries.  In the foreground are nearly life-size wooden statue of an Augustinian monk and St. Dominic.  At the back is the huge, 18th century, Neo-Classical retablo mayor (altar piece) of the Church of St. Nicholas of Tolentino in Dimiao, Bohol, now a National Cultural Treasure

Gallery I: Religious Art from the 17th to 19th Centuries, at the second floor of the National Museum of Fine Arts, features Christian themed art from the 17th-19th centuries that show the faith and devotion of Filipinos to Christianity.

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Gallery entrance

Displayed at the sides of the gallery are a free-standing crucifix, a door of a tabernacle and a Pieta hanging from a wall; carved, free-standing wooden statues of saints or santos (St. John the Evangelist, St. Mary Magdalene, St. Dominic, St. Anne, St. Isidore the Laborer, St. Rita of Cascia,  St. Catherine of Alexandria, St. Roche, St. James Matamoros, etc.), the Christ Child (Santo Nino), angels and the Virgin Mary (La Immaculada Concepcion); and wooden Corinthian pillars, all made by unknown artists.

Hanging on the wall is a door of a tabernacle, a Pieta and an angel. In front is a free-standing crucifix flanked by angels

At the middle of the gallery are two, nearly life-size wooden statues of St. Dominic (San Domingo de Guzman), founder of the Dominican Order, and an Augustinian monk.

Wooden statues of San Isidro Labrador, San Roque and San Domingo de Guzman

A notable exhibit here, near one end of the hall, is the huge 18th century, Neo-Classical retablo mayor (altar piece) of the St. Nicholas of Tolentino Church in Dimiao in Bohol which was declared as a National Cultural Treasure by the National Museum of the Philippines on July 18, 2011.

Wooden statues of Santo Ninos (Christ Child)

Gallery I – Religious Art from the 17th to 19th Centuries: Luis I. Ablaza Hall, 2/F, National Museum of Fine Arts (NMFA), Padre Burgos Avenue, Ermita, Manila 1000, Metro Manila. Tel: (632) 8527-1215 and (632) 8298-1100.  Email: inquiry@nationalmuseum.gov.ph.  Website: nationalmuseum.gov.ph.  Open Tuesdays to Sundays, 9 AM – 4PM. Admission is free.  Coordinates: 14°35′13″N 120°58′52″E.

Gallery XIV: Pillars of Philippine Modernism (National Museum of Fine Arts, Manila)

Gallery XIV (Pillars of Philippine Modernism)

Gallery XIV: Pillars of Philippine Modernism, a permanent exhibit at the third floor of the National Museum of Fine Arts, features Philippine modern art from the 1920s-1970s.

 

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On display are works of five of the revolutionary Thirteen Moderns  (a group of artists that broke away from the Conservatives led by Fernando Amorsolo) – Victorio C. Edades (1895-1985), Diosdado Lorenzo (1906-1984), Galo B. Ocampo (1913-1985), Anita Magsaysay-Ho (1914-2012) and Ricarte Puruganan (1912-1998).

The Sketch (Victorio Edades, 1928, oil on canvas)

National Artist for Painting (1976) Victorio Candido Edades, the “Father” of Modern Philippine Art,” was an artist influenced deeply by his studies and exposure to the style in the United States.

Modern Maria Clara (Victorio C. Edades, oil on canvas)

He presented figures in muddy earth colors (yellow ochres and raw sienna accented by bold black contours), his subjects were distorted figures (those whose proportions defy classical measure) and his brush strokes were agitated and harsh as reflected in his oils on canvas – The Sketch (1928) and Modern Maria Clara (1958).

An Old Woman with Mortar (Diosdado M. Lorenzo, 1937, oil on board)

Nueva Ecija (San Isidro)-born Diosdado Magno Lorenzo, who had already spearheaded Philippine Modernism even before its emergence became mainstream in Philippine arts, painted in different media and genres.

Barrio Scene (Diosdado Lorenzo)

A Barrio Girl (Diosdado M. Lorenzo, 1946, oil on board)

The imagery of his work consisted, for the most part, of the countryside of San Isidro – its guileless, uncorrupted people; its magnificent trees and its pristine environment.

Gumamela (Diosdado M. Lorenzo, 1975, oil on canvas)

Landscape (Diosdado M. Lorenzo, 1966, oil on board)

This imagery can be seen in five of his paintings displayed in the gallery – Barrio Scene (1970, oil on masonite board), An Old Woman with Mortar (1937, oil on board), Landscape (1966, oil on board) Gumamela (1975, oil on canvas) and A Barrio Girl (1946, oil on board).

Portrait of Lucio R. Ildefonso, Alejandra Tagle Ildefonso and their Children (Diosdado M. Lorenzo, 1936, oil on canvas)

Also on display is his commissioned oil on canvas painting of Portrait of Lucio R. Ildefonso, Alejandra Tagle Ildefonso and their Children (1936).

Portrait of Enrico Costamagna (Diosdado M. Lorenzo, ca. 1930, plaster of paris)

Self Portrait (Diosdado M. Lorenzo, ca. 1930, plaster of paris)

Displayed together are two plaster of paris busts, titled Kiss,” sculpted by the artist himself during a sojourn in Italy in the early 1930s – Self Portrait (when Lorenzo was a young man in his 20s) and Portrait of Emilio Costamagna (a portrait of the father of Mario Costamagna, Lorenzo’s friend and fellow student at the Academy of San Luca in Italy).

Self Portrait (Galo B. Ocampo, 1982, oil on canvas)

Pampanga (Santa Rita)-born Galo B. Ocampo was also known for rejecting academic tradition and embracing Western modernism. Stylistically, his paintings, often blending Christian themes with references to Filipino indigeneity, showcase the influence of Cubism, Surrealism, and Expressionism on his works.

Portrait of a New York Lady (Galo B. Ocampo, 1947, oil on canvas)

On display oil on canvas paintings of his Self Portrait (1982) and Portrait of a New York Lady (1947), gifted by Ocampo’s family to the nation in 2013.

The Black Nazarene of Quiapo (Ricarte M. Puruganan)

Ilocano (Dingras, Ilocos Norte) painter Ricarte Madamba Puruganan, using bold strokes of thick impasto for which he was known, preferred fusing Philippine folk art themes with Modernist techniques, painting scenes closest to his heart – the rustic, the indigenous; quaint seascapes and evocative agricultural. On display are his The Black Nazarene of Quiapo (1937, oil on canvas) and Graveyard Scene (undated, oil on canvas)

Graveyard Scene (Ricarte M. Puruganan, undated, oil on canvas)

Filipina painter Anita Magsaysay-Ho, the only female member of the “Thirteen Moderns,” specialized in Social Realism and post-Cubism in regard to women in Filipino culture. Her work appeals to Modernism by utilizing more abstract designs and styles rather than realistic approaches.  The Portrait of Marylisde Jesus Sevilla (1958, oil on canvas), the first work of the artist to be included in the national collection, was generously gifted, by the sitter, to the nation in 2013.

Portrait of Marylisde Jesus Sevilla (Anita Magsaysay Ho, 1958, oil on canvas)

Also represented in this gallery are painters of the Neo-Realist school, the second wave of Philippine Modernists.  This post-war group of artists advocated a style that is representational in form but more open to various degrees of abstraction.  They include Manuel Antonio Rodriguez Sr. (1912-2017), Romeo V. Tabuena (1921-2015), and Nena L. Saguil (1914-1994).

Carabaos in Pink (Romeo V. Tabuena, 1957, oil on board)

Romeo Villalba Tabuena, whose works primarily features figures pieced together from muted, monochromatic shapes, is best known for depictions, in oil acrylic and watercolor media, of Philippine rural landscapes (farms, carabaos, nipa huts, etc.) such as Nipa Huts on Stilts (1952, oil on canvas) and Carabaos in Pink (1957, oil on board).

Nipa Huts on Stilts (Romeo V. Tabuena, 1952, oil on canvas)

Simplicia “Nena” Laconico Saguil, considered a pioneer of Filipino abstract art, is most known for her cosmic, organic, and spiritual abstract works depicting internal landscapes of feeling and imagination. Saguil created impressionistic and naturalistic figurative works, including landscapes and still lifes.  On display at the gallery is A Filipina Maiden (oil on canvas)

A Filipina Maiden (Nena Saguil, oil on canvas)

Filipino printmaker Manuel Antonio Rodriguez Sr., also known by his nickname Mang Maning, was dubbed as the “Father of Philippine Printmaking.”  The first Filipino to have exhibited his prints in international biennial shows, Rodriguez had a unique and unparalleled knack for abstract and figurative forms.

Returning From the Fields (Manuel Rodriguez, Sr., 1949, oil on canvas)

The graphic quality of his oil on canvas works (Returning From the Fields, 1949; and Feeding Time, 1967), borrows from his forte of printmaking.

Feeding Time (Manuel Antonio Rodriguez, Sr., 1967, oil on canvas)

Another Modernist painter featured in the gallery is Spanish-born (b. 1929, Reus, Catalonia) painter Juvenal Sanso, one of the foremost masters of Modernism in Philippine Art.

Blue Floral (Juvenal Sanso, 1965, acrylic on canvas)

The graphic, textured works of Juvenal Sanso, best known for his surreal landscapes, are full of lush plant life and tropical skies painted in a bright palette culled from his idyllic childhood in the Philippines as seen in his Blue Floral (1965, acrylic on canvas).

Man with a Hoe (Juvenal Sanso, 1950, oil on masonite)

His unusual Man with a Hoe (1950, oil on masonite), painted after World War II, features a naked man holding a hoe with his head downwards.  It may be interpreted to depict the emotions and the traumatic experiences of the artist.  Another of his works featured is Muscle Bound (1960, pen and ink on paper).

Muscle Bound (Juvenal Sanso, 1960, pen and ink on paper)

Seemingly out of place in the gallery is Nestor Garcia Leynes (1922-2016), regarded as one of the leaders of the “Magic Realist” movement of the Philippines.  Typically, he painted idyllic scenes of Philippine rural life, much like his mentor Fernando Amorsolo, ranging from women sifting rice to harvest scenes, depicting romantic scenes in painstaking detail. However, his oil on canvas piece A Peasant’s Funeral (1948) is not representative of his work.

A Peasant’s Funeral (Nestor G. Leynes, 1948, oil on canvas)

Gallery XIV – Pillars of Philippine Modernism: 3/F, National Museum of Fine Arts (NMFA), Padre Burgos Avenue, Ermita, Manila 1000, Metro Manila. Tel: (632) 8527-1215 and (632) 8298-1100.  Email: inquiry@nationalmuseum.gov.ph.  Website: nationalmuseum.gov.ph.  Open Tuesdays to Sundays, 9 AM – 4PM. Admission is free.  Coordinates: 14°35′13″N 120°58′52″E.

National Museum of Fine Arts (Manila)

The National Museum of Fine Arts (FilipinoPambansang Museo ng Sining), an art museum formerly known as the National Art Gallery, is  housed in the Old Legislative Building and is located on  across from the National Museum of Anthropology (former Department of Finance Building) in the eastern side of Rizal Park. Owned and operated by the National Museum of the Philippines, the museum was founded in 1998 and houses a collection of paintings and sculptures by classical Filipino artists such as Juan LunaFélix Resurrección Hidalgo and Guillermo Tolentino.

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The author at the National Museum of Fine Arts

The National Fine Arts Collection (NFAC), the growing collection of visual arts and archives, constitutes a large part of our country’s artistic patrimony and featuring the achievements and aspirations of Filipino visual artists. It is composed of a significant number of paintings, sculptures, icons, sketches, mixed media, painted photographs, prints, drawings, studies, installation art, sculptures, documents, memorabilia and photographs by Filipino visual artists who significantly impacted the nation’s artistic heritage.  It includes important works of unknown artists of the 18th century, masters of the 19th century, National Artists, up to the leading modern artists of the 1990s to the 21st century.

Its increasing photography collection, by renowned art photographers, is a recent development.  It includes the contemporary works of Isa Lorenzo, Neal Oshima, George Tapan, Bengy Toda, and Ferrante Ferranti.

The present National Museum of Fine Arts houses 29 galleries (most offered to sponsors and patrons, individuals or corporations, for the naming right) and hallway exhibitions comprising of 19th century Filipino masters, National Artists, leading modern painters, sculptors, and printmakers. Also on view are art loans from other government institutions, organizations, and individuals.

First Floor: The Judiciary Floor

  • The Government William H. Taft Entrance
  • The Architect Juan M. Arellano Foyer
  • The Sandiganbayan Reception Hall
  • Seminar Rooms
  • The National Fine Arts Repository
  • The National Archaeological Repository
  • Auditorium (North Annex)
  • Administrative Offices (South Annex)

Second Floor: The House of Representatives Floor

  • The Padre Jose Burgos Entrance
  • The President Manuel Roxas Foyer
  • The Spoliarium Hall
  • Gallery I: Religious Art from the 17th to 19th Centuries (Luis I. Ablaza Hall)- features Christian themed art from the 17th-19th centuries.
  • Gallery II: Gallery of the Via Crusis of an Unknown Bohol Master (Friends for Cultural Concerns of the Philippines, Inc. Hall) – features 14 paintings depicting the Stations of the Cross (Via Crusis).
  • Gallery III: Paintings of the Philippine Colonial Tradition of the Sacred Arts (Ramon and Milagros Del Rosario Family Hall) – exhibits the paintings that show images of saints and the Holy Family.
  • Gallery IV: Paintings of the Philippine Colonial Tradition of Portraiture (Fundacion Santiago Hall) – exhibits more than 30 portraits that showcase the status of the living and memories of the dead.
  • Gallery V: The National Hero in Art (Dr. Jose Rizal Hall) – displays sculptures and paintings made by the Philippine National Hero, Dr. Jose P. Rizal, as well as the artists who created paintings, portrait busts, and sculptures of the National Hero.
  • Gallery VI: Gallery of Paintings of Los Dos Pintores Juan Luna and Felix Hidalgo (Far East Bank and Trust Company – Andres and Grace Luna de San Pedro Memorial Hall) – features major works and oil studies by Juan Luna as well as Félix Resurrección Hidalgo, Luna’s contemporary and friend.
  • Gallery VII (Special Exhibition Hall)
  • Gallery VIII (Silvina and Juan Laya Hall) – features paintings by Filipino artists who want to show the painful and hard life during the Imperial Japanese Occupation during 1941 to 1945, liberation of the Philippines by American and Filipino forces and the damage that happened in Manila during the war.
  • Gallery IX (Early 20th Century Philippine Portrait Hall) – features a collection of works of portraiture and Filipino types by artists under the Classical Realist School during 1903 to 1960 and works of artists that are the pioneer and prolific during that period.
  • Gallery X (Museum Foundation of the Philippines Hall)
  • Gallery XI: Drawings of Fernando C. Amorsolo (Society for the Preservation of Philippine Culture Hall) (SPPC Hall) – features over 100 black-and-white pencil and ink sketches and oil studies of the National Artist Fernando Amorsolo before creating his masterpiece.
  • Gallery XII – Eskultor ng Lahing Filipino:  Honoring the Life and Work of Guillermo Tolentino (Security Bank Hall) – features the work of National Artist of the Philippines for Sculpture (1973) Guillermo E. Tolentino.
  • The President Sergio Osmena Function Hall – houses the Madonna with Angels (ca. 1946), a plaster relief  by Francesco Riccardo Monti, donated by the heirs of Petronillo L. Del Rosario, Sr.

Check out “Gallery I: Religious Art from the 17th to 19th Centuries,” “Gallery II: Gallery of the Via Crusis of an Unknown Bohol Master,” “Gallery III: Paintings of the Philippine Colonial Tradition of the Sacred Arts,” “Gallery IV: Paintings of the Philippine Colonial Tradition of Portraiture” “Gallery V: The National Hero in Art,” “Gallery VI: Gallery of Paintings of Los Dos Pintores Juan Luna and Felix Hidalgo,” “Gallery VIII,” “Gallery IX,” “Gallery XI: Drawings of Fernando C. Amorsolo” and “Gallery XII – Eskultor ng Lahing Filipino:  Honoring the Life and Work of Guillermo Tolentino

Third Floor: The Senate Floor.

  • The President Manuel L. Quezon Foyer
  • Gallery XIII (Vicente and Carmen Fabella Hall) – features works by National Artist for Sculpture (1976) Napoleon Veloso Abueva (1930-2018) and a monumental painting by National Artist for Painting (1973) Carlos V. “Botong” Francisco (1912 – 1969).
  • Gallery XIV: Pillars of Philippine Modernism – features Philippine modern art from the 1920s-1970s, most notably Victorio C. Edades, an artist who started the Modern Art in the Philippines.
  • Gallery XV (Emilio Aguilar Cruz Hall) – is dedicated to the life and works of Emilio Aguilar Cruz (1915-1991).
  • Gallery XVI (Philippine General Hospital Hall) – is dedicated to The Progress of Medicine in the Philippines, a set of four large-scale paintings by celebrated muralist and National Artist Carlos V. “Botong” Francisco (1912-1969) that depicts the evolution of healing practices in the Philippines from the pre-colonial period tribal practices to the modern period.
  • Gallery XVII (Special Exhibition Hall Dedicated to Women’s Art)
  • Gallery XVIII: Pillars of Philippine Modernism – features Modernist art pieces from the 1940s to 1980s, with works by a number of National Artists such as Carlos V. “Botong” Francisco (1912-1969), Jose T. Joya (1931-1995), Cesar T. Legaspi (1917-1994), and Abdulmari Asia Imao (1936-2014). Also displayed are palettes of Jose T. Joya and Mauro Malang Santos (1928-2017).
  • Gallery XIX (Philippine Modern Sculpture Hall)
  • Gallery XX (Placuna Placenta: Capis Shells and Windows to Indigenous Artistry)
  • Gallery XXI (GSIS North Hall) – features National Artist Federico Aguilar Alcuaz’s (1932-2011) Art Protis from the collection of the Government Service Insurance System (GSIS). Art protis or non-woven tapestry is a unique process developed in Brno, the second biggest city in the Czech Republic. There, Alcuaz met a Czech artist who introduced him to the new textile collage technique. This exhibition shows Alcuaz’s skills and talent in using this foreign technique to create outstanding collage artworks.
  • Gallery XXII (International Rice Research Institute Hall) – features two large-scale paintings and their watercolor studies by National Artist Vicente S. Manansala (1910-1981) from the collection of the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI).
  • Gallery XXIII (GSIS Northwest Hall) – pays homage to the works of National Artist for Painting Vicente S. Manansala (1910-1981). It contains his works from the National Fine Arts Collection and the Government Service Insurance System (GSIS) art collection.
  • Gallery XXIV (Philam Life Hall) – shows seven large paintings by National Artist Vicente S. Manansala (1910-1981) commissioned in the 1960s by the Philippine-American General Life Insurance Company (Philam Life) for its building at United Nations Avenue, Ermita, Manila. Also featured here are rural-themed wood reliefs by renowned sculptor, Jose P. Alcantara (1911-2005), which previously adorned the Philam Life Theater.
  • The Senate Session Hall (Main Level) – features modern and contemporary Philippine art from the 20th to the 21st centuries. All the ornamentation and decoration in this Hall was done by Isabelo Tampinco.
  • The Senator Claro M. Recto Function Hall

Gallery XIII,” “Gallery XIV: Pillars of Philippine Modernism,” Gallery XV,” “Gallery XVI,” “Gallery XVIII: Pillars of Philippine Modernism,” “Gallery XIX,” “Gallery XXI,” “Gallery XXII,” “Gallery XXIII” and “Gallery XXIV

Fourth Floor: The Executive Floor.

  • The Senator Benigno S. Aquino Jr. Foyer
  • Gallery XXV
  • Gallery XXVI
  • Gallery XXVII (Special Exhibition Hall)
  • Gallery XXVIII (Special Exhibition Hall)
  • Gallery XXIX (Philippine Modern Sculpture Hall)
  • The Senate Session Hall (Mezzanine Level)
  • The President Jose P. Laurel Function Hall
  • Management Offices

Check out “Circa by Impy Pilapil” and “Placuna Placenta: Capis Shells and Windows to Indigenous Artistry

National Museum of Fine Arts: Padre Burgos Avenue, Ermita, Manila 1000, Metro Manila. Tel: (632) 8527-1215 and (632) 8298-1100.  Email: inquiry@nationalmuseum.gov.ph.  Website: nationalmuseum.gov.ph.  Open Tuesdays to Sundays, 9 AM – 4PM. Admission is free.  Coordinates: 14°35′13″N 120°58′52″E.

Church of St. John Bosco (Makati City, Metro Manila)

Church of St. John Bosco

The Church of St. John Bosco, probably one of the famous churches in the city and now one of the most famous landmarks of Makati’s Central Business District, is noted for its unique and breathtaking geometric architecture.

This church, standing humbly amid the skyscrapers of Makati City, was designed by the late National Artist for Architecture (2014) Jose Maria V. Zaragoza, one of its parishioners and a daily mass goer.

Plaques expressing gratitude to the patrons and sponsors of the church

The relatively new parish was established on March 2, 1976 (just a year after I graduated high school in adjacent Don Bosco Technical Institute), with Fr. Godrey Roozen as the first parish priest.

Plaques paying tribute to the late church architect and National Artist Jose Ma. Zaragoza (left) and the 35 anniversary of the church’s dedication (right)

Zaragoza, one of the well-known architects of the 1970’s, was commissioned by the Salesian Congregation because of his remarkable use of concrete which show unstagnant flow of forms.

The church interior

One of a significant body of ecclesiastical architecture of about 45 religious structures across the country designed by Zaragoza, he was the same architect behind the postwar Santo Domingo Church, the old Union Church of Manila nearby, and the 15-storey Meralco Building, among others.

The starburst tabernacle and its anahaw leaf-inspired backdrop

Though not be as prominent as the aforementioned works of his, Zaragoza’s work on the church is still an iconic one.

The suspended metal and wood cross designed by the late sculptor Eduardo Castrillo

For the design of the church, Zaragoza employed a clamshell-inspired contemporary design with a semicircular interior layout. Cardinal Jaime  Sin laid the cornerstone of the church on April 15, 1977 and, on its completion, also dedicated it on March 4 1978. Its exterior is reminiscent of the edge of a leaf.

Statue of St. John Bosco and St. Dominic Savio (Eduardo Catrillo)

The distinctive and iconic concave interior features flowing lines.  The starburst tabernacle has a golden anahaw or footstool palm (Saribus rotundifolius) leaf as its dramatic backdrop.

Statue of the Madonna and Child (Eduardo Castrillo)

Above the altar, series of widening ripples evoke the graces streaming from the Blessed Sacrament and flowing into the vaulted ceiling.

Cross beams

The exposed white ceiling, accented with diagonal, crisscrossing concrete beams (sort of a stylized net for the “fishers of men”), also gives an impression of outward rays.

Confessionals

The treatment of the ceiling adheres to Pier Luigi Nervi’s thrust in dealing with circular covers or roofs.

The church grounds

A gallery of religious statuary

The statues (St. John Bosco with St. Dominic Savio, the Madonna and Child) and the suspended crucifix (which seemingly rides the crest of a magnificent wave) that adorn the church were done by the late sculptor Eduardo Castrillo.

Statue of St. John Bosco, Dominic Savio and Laura Vicuna

At night, this awe-inspiring interior looks better because of the lighting.

The resurrected Christ

A Station of the Cross

Church of St. John Bosco: Antonio Arnaiz Ave. (formerly Pasay Rd.) cor. Amorsolo St., Makati City 1200, Metro Manila. Tel: +63-2-8894-5932 to 34. Website: www.sjbmakati.com.  E-mail: info@sjbmakati.com.

Sanctuario de San Antonio (Makati City, Metro Manila)

Sanctuario de San Antonio

The Sanctuario de San Antonio, in the heart of upscale Makati City, was built by the Franciscans after the San Francisco de Asis Church, their mother church in Intramuros was destroyed during the 1945 liberation of Manila in World War II.

The Baroque-style church was built on 2 hectares of once-idle grassland in Forbes Park that was donated by Joseph McMicking of Ayala Corporation (the pioneer behind the rise of Makati as the country’s premier financial district that it is today) in July 17, 1951.

The church interior

On August 24, 1951, the Most Rev. Gabriel M. Reyes, Archbishop of Manila, granted permission for the church’s construction and, August 1, 1951, the cornerstone was laid.

The main altar and retablo

Built in the Californian Mission style, the church was completed and blessed by the Most Rev. (later cardinal) Rufino Santos, Archbishop of Manila, on December 8, 1953 and was given the name Santuario de San Antonio.

The left-side altar

The right side altar

The late National Artist Fernando Amorsolo was commissioned to create the pair of hand-painted mural paintings, based on the paintings done in the 13th century by the Italian artist Giotto for the Basilica of St. Francis in Assisi, located on opposite sides near the church entrance.

The Stigmatization of St. Francis (Fernando Amorsolo)

One painting, The Stigmatization of St. Francis depicts the stigmata or the wounds of Christ received by St. Francis of Assisi (the founder of the Franciscans Order) while the other is The Sermon of the Birds which depicts St. Francis and another preaching to the birds.

The Sermon of the Birds (Fernando Amorsolo)

On August 26, 2014, a contract agreement was signed with the Roberto M. Lopez Conservation Center of the Lopez Museum for the art restoration of these two works of art.  The restoration was completed in 2015.

Baptistery

The nearly 70 old church features cross-shaped layout with a dome-shaped ceiling.

The candle gallery

A century-old statue of St. Anthony of Padua (after whom the church is dedicated), a war survivor from the patio of the original San Francisco Church in Intramuros, can be found in the central plaza between the church and the multipurpose hall.

The century-old statue of St. Anthony of Padua

Aside from masses, the church is now a popular venue for weddings (especially for couples belonging to some of the country’s most influential families) in the Makati area.

The central plaza

 

Santuario De San Antonio Church:  3117 McKinley Rd, Forbes Park, Makati City 1220, Metro Manila. Tel: (632) 8843-8830 to 31.  Website: www.ssaparish.com.  Feast of St. Anthony of Padua: June 13.

Church of St. Alphonsus Mary de Liguori (Makati City, Metro Manila)

Parish Church of St. Alphonsus Mary de Liguori

The Parish Church of St. Alphonsus Mary de Liguori in Magallanes Village in Makati City, also known as Magallanes Church has, for a long time now, been a big part of our family life.  On August 1, 2003, my son Jandy and daughter Cheska were both confirmed here while my grandson Kyle was baptized here on September 29, 2012.

Jandy and Cheska after their August 1, 2003 confirmation at the old Magallanes Church

It was also Cheska’s and my son-in-law Bryan’s first choice for their wedding venue but they had to settle for the Shrine of St, Therese of the Child Jesus as their preferred time slot was already taken.  However, they did get Fr. Lorenzo Ruggiero, Magallanes Church’s parochial vicar, to officiate at their December 14, 2019 wedding.  We also frequently attend the Saturday (6 PM) anticipated masses here and, even during this pandemic period, patronized their online mass.

Kyle’s baptism at the church baptistery on September 29, 2012

The church, then and now, is a showcase of works of a number of National Artists of the Philippines. The original, intimate and low structure, started on July 11, 1968, was designed by my late uncle and National Artist for Architecture Leandro V. Locsin in his signature Brutalist-style.

The then 800 sq. m. parish church, much like a smaller version of the former Folk Arts Theater (now the Tanghalang Francisco Balagtas), had a perfect square plan (28 m. each side), with a 4 m. high wooden coffered ceiling and a central aisle that ran along the diagonal of the square. The church, with narra pews, had a seating capacity of 300.

The concrete buttresses

Along the perimeter were 28 massive, 4 m. high concrete buttresses, wide at the base and narrow at the top, which actually just supported a tall parapet wall (not a roof slab) that shielded the corrugated G.I. roof. Later, a PhP12 million airconditioning system was installed.

Within its 36 years of existence, Makati grew to become the country’s financial capital and it became one of the busiest churches in Metro-Manila. In 1991, the 22-storey Asia Pacific college building (on the lot once occupied by the Karilagan Finishing School) was built across it and the South Superhighway beside it became a two-level highway. On March 24, 2002, Palm Sunday, the Garden of the Way of the Cross, designed by late 2006 National Artist for Architecture Ildefonso P. Santos Jr. during the tenure of Monsignor Ernesto Cruz, was dedicated.

The church after the September 9, 2004 fire.  The carillon beside it survived unscathed (photo: www.stalphonsusrebuilds.blogspot.com)

On the morning of September 9, 2004, a fire (starting around 2 AM and extinguished 5:32 AM) gutted the nearly four decade old church. While the interior was razed, there was only minimal damage to the façade, with only the glass windows destroyed.

The church interior after the fire (photo: www.stalphonsusrebuilds.blogspot.com)

However, several small images of Mother Mary used in the procession celebrating the Feast of the Virgin Mary, some made of expensive ivory, were also consumed by the fire. Miraculously, a wooden statue of the Crucified Christ was recovered, relatively unscathed, from the fire and has been restored and again installed inside the rebuilt church.

The relatively unscathed wooden statue of the Crucified Christ recovered from the fire

After much deliberation, the parish decided that it would be more economical and symbolically pithy to preserve the concrete structure that survived the fire by salvaging the 28 buttresses that remained, rather than demolishing them and starting from scratch. The parish commissioned Dominic Galicia (who also designed the church’s Adoration Chapel in 2000) to lead the church rebuilding project with Ronald Santiago as the structural engineer.  During the duration of the construction, masses were held in a bahay kubo (originally a venue for social gatherings) at the back of the rectory.  The new church was dedicated on August 1, 2007, the feast day of St. Alphonsus Mary de Liguori.

Dedication plaque

The new rebuilt church, a symbol of a community transforming tragedy into grace, has an aesthetically pleasing facade, with a soaring roof that increased it height from 6 m. to 28 m.. A new mezzanine was added to increase seating from 300 to 900.

The new mezzanine

Spiral stairs leading up to the mezzanine

The existing structure was reused as the springboard for the soaring roofs. The new structure consists of 13 roof vaults (thin-shell concrete membranes clad in unglazed clay tiles, which will help reduce heat gain), representing Jesus and the 12 Apostles, resting on new composite columns.

The ascending vaults of the soaring roof

The 28 hollow buttresses, originally designed for aesthetic effect, now fulfill a new structural purpose as they were filled with concrete to of providing lateral support to the new composite columns. The 8 m. wide central roof vault, traveling the longest distance (which is the diagonal of the square plan), rises to a height of 28 m..

The roof vaults seen from the interior of the church.  The vaults are cladded with acoustic ceiling boards (for sound absorption) on aluminum T-runners

Independent, 4.5 m. wide roof vaults, ascend parallel to it on either side, beginning at 11 m. from ground level, then 14 m., 16 m., 18 m., 21 m., and 25 m., like the 12 apostles who accompanied Jesus Christ. The vaults are separated by clear glass windows which, in the upper reaches of the building, are also operable. The presence of these windows now provides a bright interior.

The massive church doors

The wooden church doors, featuring carvings of scenes from the life and death of Christ, were inspired by the 13th century frescoes by the Italian painter Giotto and made by the seasoned craftsmen of Betis (Pampanga).

The well lit church interior

The Art Deco-inspired interior features a simple wooden and glass altar, modern, Minimalist-looking pews and high ceilings.  The altar wall, made with wood-clad concrete, incorporates stained glass panels which depicts the burning bush where God appeared before Moses. Above it is the dove which represents the Holy Spirit. The altar pews are oriented so that all attention is on the altar, an arrangement somewhat reminiscent of the Church of the Holy Sacrifice in Diliman (Quezon City), another Locsin masterpiece.

Check out “Church of the Holy Sacrifice

The altar wall with its stained glass depiction of the Burning Bush

September must be an unlucky month for the church as, on September 23, 2009, flash floods inundated the church at the height of Tropical Storm “Ondoy” (Typhoon Ketsana). The baptistery, a separate facility in the area, was was completed and blessed in October 2009. 

The Minimalist-style carillon.  In the background is the Asia Pacific College where Jandy finished college

Nest to the church entrance is the unique and splendid,  Minimalist carillon with four pointed steel arches of increasing height, the tallest at 17 m., which follows the design of the roof vaults of the main church facade. Dedicated on December 14, 2002 and spared from the 2004 fire, it carries 18 bronze bells from the Netherlands.

The Garden Way of the Cross

The Garden of the Way of the Cross, containing 14 Stations of the Cross (each a work of a noted artist, two of which are National Artists) is, outside the local community is practically unknown, despite being kept in a garden along one of the country’s busiest thoroughfares.

Station I – Last Supper (Napoleon V. Abueva)

Station II – Agony at the Garden by Abdulmari “Toym” Imao. His art is known for its commentary on Filipino social conditions, as well as for its pop culture sensibilities. Among his most notable early sculptures include the Tandang Sora National Shrine (Quezon City), the Andres Bonifacio National Shrine (Maragondon, Cavite), and the Dr. Jose P. Rizal statue (Carson City, California), ] In 2015, his exhibition “Desaparecidos” at the Bantayog ng mga Bayani was widely recognized as an important commemoration of the abuses of Martial law under Ferdinand Marcos.

Dedicated on March 24, 2002, it has glass canopies that shield them from rain and falling branches. A 1 m. wide running stream separates the sculptures from a reaching hand, without blocking the view and a wall of black java helps secure the garden and minimizes the noise coming from the highway.

Station III – Jesus is Condemned by Rosalio “Ros” B. Arcilla Jr.)

Station IV – Crowning with Thorns (Raphael Arcilla)

Parishioner and landscape architect Ildefonso P. Santos Jr., assisted by landscape architect Cecile Herras Tence, planned the plants that would go with the sculptures and designed a curvilinear landscape to soften their sculpture’s hard materials. A persisting threat to these prized artworks is the dust, grime and air pollution coming from the nearby South Luzon Expressway (SLEX).

Station V – Jesus Carries the Cross (Tito Sanchez)

Station VI – Jesus Falls (Jose M. Mendoza)

The stations, commemorating Jesus Christ’s Passion and Death through 14 contemplative markers, feature masterpieces by a virtual Who’s Who of contemporary Philippine art. All the sculptures were limited to 4 ft. in height, minus the base and all but one of the works were commissioned by the parishioners and donated to the church.

Station VII – Simon of Cyrene Helps Jesus (Ramon Orlina)

Station VIII – Jesus Meets the Women of Jerusalem (Juan Sajid Imao)

Mary and John at the Foot of the Cross (Station XI), a metal tableau of Mother Mary and the Apostle John at the foot of the cross, was a donation from the late artist himself, Solomon Saprid.  The Last Supper ( Station I), a creation in stone, was done by the late 1976 National Artist for Sculpture Napoleon V. Abueva, hailed as the father of modern Philippine sculpture.

The 1 m. wide running stream

The Agony in the Garden, another bronze statue of Christ, was done by the late 2006 National Artist for Sculpture Abdulmari “Toym” Imao. Jesus Dies (Station XII), a bronze of Jesus nailed to the cross, was fashioned by the late Eduardo Castrillo, the man behind the Edsa People Power Monument. Simon of Cyrene Helps Jesus (Station VII) is a chunk glass depiction of the encounter between Christ and Simon of Cyrene on the way to Calvary, was rendered by the renowned glass sculptor Ramon Orlina.

Station IX – Jesus is Nailed to the Cross (Francisco Verano)

Station X – Jesus Forgives a Thief at the Cross by Priscillano “Jun” Vicaldo Jr.. A native of Camarines Sur, Jun is dept in both classical and modernist styles. A graduate of the University of the Philippines (U.P.) College of Fine Arts (CFA), studied along with other noted artists such as Agnes Arellano and Peter Tiamzon de Guzman, under National Artist for Sculpture Napoleón Isabelo “Billy” Veloso Abueva. Vicaldo continued his studies at the La Salle SIA School for the Arts, in Singapore; and worked under Manuel Casal. His commissioned works include pieces at the Subic and Olongapo, Adamson University, National Historical Commission Building, Naga City Robredo Museum, Naga Cathedral and Penafrancia Shrine.

Jesus is Nailed to the Cross (Station IX), by Francisco Verano, depicts a muscular but proportionately formed Jesus Christ fastened to a large cross attached diagonally (instead of the usual upright) on a slab of slanting concrete.

Station XI – Mary and John at the Foot of the Cross (Solomon Saprid)

Sation XII – Jesus Dies (Eduardo Castrillo)

Jesus Meets the Women of Jerusalem (Station VIII), by Juan Sajid Imao, the younger brother of Abdulmari Imao, evokes the scene in a narrative composition. Two stations were also done by brothers, the  late Rosalio “Ros” B.  Arcilla Jr. (Jesus Is Condemned, Station III) and Raphael Arcilla (Crowning with Thorns, Station IV).

Station XIII – Jesus is Laid in the Tomb (Antonio T. Mondejar)

Station XIV – Resurrection (Dominic Galicia)

The Resurrection (Station XIV), a marble and black granite interpretation done by Dominic Galicia himself, features a black granite fountain that resembles a tabernacle with a wide, white marble basin on its top. A local marble wall, behind it, has a niche on the side that represents the empty cave following Christ’s resurrection.

The other stations were done by Tito Sanchez (Jesus Carries the Cross, Station V), Jose M. Mendoza (Jesus Falls, Station VI), Priscillano “Jun” Vicaldo Jr. (Jesus Forgives a Thief at the Cross, Station X), and Antonio T. Mondejar (Jesus is Laid in the Tomb, Station XIII).

Garden of the Risen Christ

Beyond the Stations of the Cross is the Garden of the Risen Christ, an impressively-designed memorial garden, surrounded by rows of tombs, featuring a sculpture of a risen Jesus Christ above a pond.

St. Alphonsus Mary de Ligouri Church: Humabon Place,  Lapu Lapu St., Magallanes Village, Makati City 1232. Tel: (02) 8851-0275, 8852-2750 and 8852-8228. Email: info@saintalphonsus.ph.

Chapel of Sto. Niño de Paz (Makati City, Metro Manila)

Chapel of Sto. Nino dela Paz

The modern, dome-shaped, open-sided Chapel of Sto. Niño de Paz (Holy Child of Peace), set amidst the verdant lushness under the leafy canopies of the tree-filled Greenbelt Park, a green oasis in the heart of the concrete jungle and chaos of the city.

Checked out “Greenbelt Park”

Amidst skyscrapers in the financial district, it stands as a quiet retreat floating in the middle of a pond and accessible by a narrow pathway through dense vegetation. It has. Surrounded by a tranquil pond, green plants and spectacular sculptures, the park is an idyllic escape from the cacophony of the city.

The church’s open air interior

Commonly called the Greenbelt Chapel, it is perhaps the only church hidden in the lush and landscaped gardens of a bustling retail, dining and commercial center and is one amongst the most impressive and outstanding buildings of the city. It is also one of only two known round chapels in the country (the other is the Church of the Holy Sacrifice in Diliman, Quezon City).

Check out “Church of the Holy Sacrifice

 Unlike traditional Roman Catholic churches with thick enclosed walls, this chapel is open air and it mostly resembles a pavilion, with a roof built in the shape of a soldier’s cap and a covered walkway leading to the center of the church from the entrance.

The lagoon

Originally, the church was not part of the plans of owner Ayala Corporation, developer of the country’s financial capital. In the 1970s, the chapel’s site used to be an aviary, a particular attraction at Greenbelt Park, then the breathing space of the old Makati Commercial Center.

Dominating the landscape then were spacious parking lots, a popular supermarket and stand-alone restaurants and shops. Today, the Greenbelt Chapel is the only existing landmark among its contemporaries in the park within the steel and concrete enclave of Makati.

The author

The chapel was a brainchild of Ms. Fanny Del Rosario Diploma (a cancer survivor) and her husband, Atty. Nordy Diploma. Coming from a wealthy family, they decided to build a chapel as thanksgiving for Fanny’s new lease on life.

Jandy

Approaching the Ayalas, they offered to build a church if a site was made available for them in the largely still undeveloped Central Business District. After seeing seen the master plan, Fanny pointed at a very unlikely place to build anything – the center of the lagoon.

The Ayalas agreed, on condition that nothing permanent would be built on the site.  Anytime it was needed, the chapel can be removed. Contrary to popular belief, the Greenbelt Chapel was not made of thin shell concrete and was not designed by National Artist for Architecture Leandro V. Locsin. For this very special project, the couple called their architect, Enrique “Jess” Dizon (architect-on-record) who, in turn, called the young Topy Vasquez, his former staff who was, at that time, working for Architect Gabriel Formoso. Dizon rendered the circular pattern of the building while Architect William Fernandez designed the structure.

The suspended cross

Given the condition that the structure be temporary, both architects used a simplistic yet amazing design that featured a steel-framed dome clad with staggered 6 mm. (1/4”) thick marine plywood (at the time, the Diplomas owned one of the largest plywood manufacturing companies), waterproofing and paint. In case Ayala Corporation decided to assert their right over the “temporary” chapel’s site, it can be lifted and moved by helicopter.

One of the confessionals

Originally, the design called for a dome that would seem to float over water plus a basement (to be ventilated underneath the concrete cantilevers, just above the water line) where the sacristy and offices would be housed. However, due to budget constraints, the basement was scrapped.  Instead, small extensions at the sides and back of the dome were built for the sacristy and offices.

The Mudrass Cross

During the construction, Ramon Orlina, another young architect, approached Architect Dizon and proposed glass sculptures (Orlina further studied glass sculpture techniques in Europe) to become part of the chapel. Complementing the simple yet powerful architecture of the chapel, the now renowned master glass sculptor fabricated the ceiling, the Dove of Peace, tabernacle, sacristy, the Mudrass Cross (the cross at the entrance outside the chapel), the altar table (made of glass and narra wood) with its tabernacle (that seems to miraculously rise out of nowhere) and the God the Father resin image (made with plexiglass wood) on the dome.  All these dazzling commissioned artworks, beautifully integrated into the architecture, has not seen before in any church by the secular population.

God the Father resin image (Ramon Orlina)

A year after the chapel was granted a 30-year contract by the Ayala Corporation to use its present site at the Greenbelt Park, the chapel was completed and inaugurated and dedicated on July 28, 1983 by His Eminence the late Cardinal Jaime Sin with Jaime Zobel de Ayala, Atty. Nordy and Fanny Diploma and numerous benefactors and guests.

The church bell

In the last 30 years, the dome-shaped chapel has seen the completion of the high-end, Ayala owned Greenbelt Chain of Malls around it.  When the chapel’s lease contract with Ayala Corporation expired on March 31 2012, Ayala Land Inc., its property arm, decided to retain the chapel in its present location, turning over its management to the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Manila.

The chapel offices

The beautiful chapel’s unorthodox design sports a domed ceiling that curves all the way to the ground in places. Today, Fanny’s temporary open-air chapel has outlived her and the chapel remains untouched and looks exactly the way it was designed in the early 1980s (the only practical additions were the corner office cubicles and the roofs at bridge entrances). It is now recognized as one of Makati’s tourist attractions. 

Chapel of Sto. Nino de Paz: Greenbelt Park, Ayala Center, Makati City, Metro Manila.  Tel: (632) 7729-8173.

Church of St. Andrew the Apostle (Makati City, Metro Manila)

The modern, tent-like Church of St. Andrew the Apostle

The modern, beautifully designed Roman Catholic Church of St. Andrew the Apostle, a unique monument of sorts that honors a community’s Catholic faith, a legacy of a visionary businessman, and the artistry of the Filipino, all rolled into one, has the eye-catching form and a unique layout that reflects the ingenuity of its creator, my late uncle and National Artist for Architecture (1990) Leandro V. Locsin and, overall, the church structure  pays homage to the Space Age era of the ’60s.

The author with the church in the background

In 1965, a group of residents belonging to the village communities of San Miguel and Bel-Air dreamed of having a parish that they could call their own.  Rufino Cardinal Santos approved the establishment and formation of the parish and appointed Msgr. Emilio Bularan as the first parish priest.

There dream came true when Don Andrés Soriano Jr., President of the conglomerate  San Miguel Corporation, offered to have a church built in honor of his late father, the loved and respected Don Andres Sr.. The parish was to be named after St. Andrew the Apostle, the patriarch’s namesake (“Andres” is Spanish for “Andrew”), the patron saint of Metro Manila and Bel-Air Village in Makati.

My son Jandy

On February 8, 1967 (the 69th birth anniversary of the late Don Andres Soriano the Feast of St. Andrew), the cornerstone of the proposed church was laid at the 3,494-sq. m. (37,610 sq. ft.) lot donated by the Ayala family through the Makati Development Corporation.

The church interior

The construction of the church employed the round, concrete-heavy design of Leandro V. Locsin, then an up and coming architect, whose first notable work was the Church of the Holy Sacrifice in the University of the Philippines Diliman campus, itself a round concrete church completed in 1955. It’s interesting to note that, around this time, the future National Artist for Architecture was also busy in the design of the Cultural Center of the Philippines Main Theater, considered his magnum opus.

Check out “Church of the Holy Sacrifice

The halo-like chandelier above the altar

After about a year’s time, on November 30, 1968, St. Andrew the Apostle Parish was formally opened at half past eight in the morning.  The unveiling of the church marker was witnessed by Andres Soriano Jr. (San Miguel Corporation); Jose Ma. Soriano (Chairman and President of A. Soriano y Cia); Enrique Zobel (President of the Ayala Corporation); and other donors from Roxas y Cia.

Commemorative plaque

In 2002, Msgr. Emmanuel Sunga supervised the improvement of flooring, the provision of airconditioning, building of Parish Office annex, refurbishment of halo chandelier, the altar of the church and the construction of the carillon bell tower.

The copper cross (Vicente Manansala)

Aside from Leandro V. Locsin, the Church of St. Andrew the Apostle also boasts works of two other renowned Filipino National Artists. For instance, the copper cross that hangs on top of the altar is a work of the late Vicente Manansala, National Artist for Visual Arts – Painting (1981).

The white baptismal font designed by Napoleon Abueva

The baptistery also boasts works of the late Napoleon V. Abueva, National Artist for Visual Arts – Sculpture (1976), who designed the white baptismal font. Additionally, the late Eduardo S. Castrillo also created the sculpture as well as the blue baptismal font at the baptistery.

The blue baptismal font designed by the late sculptor Eduardo Castrillo

The sculpture, done by the late sculptor Eduardo Castrillo, of the Baptism of Christ by St. John the Baptist

This project was to be one of many collaborations between Abueva and Locsin.  Aside from this church, they also collaborated on the abovementioned Church of the Holy Sacrifice in Diliman (Quezon City), the Church of the Immaculate Heart of Mary in Quezon City (1975), and the Church of St. Alphonsus Mary de Liguori in Makati City (1968).

Check out “Church of St. Alphonsus Mary de Liguori

The unique cross shape at the top of the church

The design of the unique cross shape, seen in the church’s peak, is symbolic of the manner the martyr died crucified on an X-shaped cross, formally called a saltire.  Christian tradition states that Andrew, one of the 12 disciples/apostles of Jesus Christ, was put to death by crucifixion on such a cross as he felt he was unworthy to be crucified on the regular cross (also called the Latin cross) that Christ was crucified onto. Today, this type of cross has also come to be known as the “St. Andrew’s cross.”

The church carillon

An example of biomorphic architecture, it resembles coconut leaves bundled together to make a giant native salakot.  This parish church is flanked by curved concrete walls while the curved shell is made of thin-shell concrete, considered revolutionary during its time.  The pews surrounding the altar form an octagon.

The arrangement of the church pews

The tent-like church’s butterfly shaped floor plan emanates from this cruciform. A symbolic feature is the giant customized circular chandelier suspended over the cross and the altar which is reminiscent of a saintly halo.

Statue of St. Andrew the Apostle

Church of St. Andrew the Apostle: 62 Constellation cor. Nicanor Garcia St. (formerly Reposo St.), Bel-Air VillageMakati City 1209 Metro Manila. Tel: (02) 8890 1796 and 8890-1743. E-mail: saapoffice@gmail.com, secretariat@saaparish.com and media@saaparish.com.  The parish territories are Bel-Air Village and Salcedo Village in Barangay Bel-Air, Rizal Village and Santiago Village in Barangay Valenzuela, and San Miguel Village in Barangay Poblacion.