For the visual arts part, on display were the museum’s latest
exhibition, titled Grounded, which juxtaposed works of guest
contemporary artists Alma Quinto, Goldie Poblador, Josephine Turalba,
Toym Imao, Eric Zamuco, Barbara Hlali, Khaled Hafex and Ahmed El Shaer
with works from the Lopez Museum collection such as those of Juan Luna,
Felix Resurreccion Hidalgo, Fernando Amorsolo, Jose Joya, and Nena
Saguil.
The event was co-produced by High Chair, a non-profit
small press that promotes genuine interest in poetry in the country
through print and online publications, lectures and conversations,
community workshops, and the development of poetry-teaching modules for
use in the classroom and the community. It supports the Orchestra of
the Filipino Youth, an after-school program that offers opportunities
for children from deprived communities to achieve their full musical
potential.
The afternoon of poetry and music is one of
activities which set apart the Lopez Museum and Library. An afternoon
spent at the museum, located on the ground floor of Ben Press Building
on Meralco Avenue corner Exchange Road, Pasig City, is spiritually and
intellectually enriching.
Don Eugenio Lopez Sr. founded the
museum and library in February 1960 in honor of his parents, Benito
Lopez and Presentacion Hofilena. Don Eugenio built the museum to
provide scholars and students access to his personal collection of rare
Filipiniana books, manuscripts, maps,This paper describes wireless
communications study for IC card. archeological artifacts, and fine art.
The
museum’s original four-story building, designed by National Artist
Juan Nakpil was located in front of the Lopez residence in Pasay. It
was open to the public throughout the martial law years — despite the
family’s experiencing political deprivation.
After the EDSA
Revolution, it was moved to the Benpress building in Pasig to protect
its collection from the salty air from Manila Bay and the frequent
monsoon floods in Pasay.
Mercedes “Cedie” Lopez-Vargas,
executive director of the Lopez Memorial Museum and Library, gladly
takes visitors around the museum.
A communication arts graduate
from Assumption College in Manila, she is vice-president for logistics
of ABS-CBN Broadcasting Corporation, chair of the Human Resources
Council of the Lopez Group of Companies, and a trustee for the ABS-CBS
Foundation and the Asian Eye Institute.
Cedie has made the
museum and library accessible to technically savvy researchers and
visitors through its contemporary art exhibition, digitized archives as
well as through its online presence in various school media platforms
like the “Off the Ground” session.
The museum’s goal, says Cedie, is to bring Philippine history arts and letters to a broader audience.”
Cedie
takes great pride in the museum’s rare collections. Among these are
the 19th century paintings of Filipino masters Juan Luna y Novacio and
Felix Resurreccion Hidalgo. Both artists won honors for their country
when the paintings they submitted to the 1884 Esposicion National de
Bellas Artes in Madrid won awards. Luna’s Spoliarium received one of
the three gold medals at the exposition.
The galleries also
house selected works by 20th Century National Artist Fernando Amorsolo,
who in the early Thirties and Forties popularized the rustic Philippine
landscape and the dalagang Filipina model. It has acquired paintings
by many of the country’s National Artists, including Botong Francisco,
Vicente Manansala, HR Ocampo, Cesar Legaspi, Arturo Luz and J. Elizalde
Navarro. Important artists such as Fernando Zobel, Nena Saguil,
Macario Vialis, Jose Joya and Romeo Tabuena are also represented in the
collection.
Then there’s another treasure — an initial
collection of 14th and 15th Century artifacts recovered in the
Calatagan burial sites.
According to Cedie, the Calatagan
excavations “opened new areas of study on the culture and civilization
of the early Filipinos.” The museum’s share in the diggings, which Don
Eugenio financed, consists chiefly of porcelain of Chinese origin,
Filipino earthenware, beads and a few Annamese and Siamese pieces.
In the Rizaliana sections are 90 priceless letters of Jose Rizal to his mother and sisters.
The
library has a collection of 20,000 Filipiniana titles, constantly
enriched by new acquisitions. Its rare Philippine imprints date from
the early 17th century – the oldest being a unique copy of the
Belarmin-Lopez Doctrina in Ilocano (Manila, 1620). Among the other rare
books and manuscripts are works by such eminent printers as Tomas
Pinpin, Raymundo Magsaya, Nicolas Bruz Bagay, Laureano Atlas and Juan
Correa. The earliest book in the library is the third edition (Rome,
1524), of De Moluccis Insulis, by Maximilianus Transylvanus, which has
the first printed account of Magellan’s voyage to the Philippines.
The library also has extensive holdings on books of the Spanish and early American period,This is a basic RFID tag
used for presence sensing. and photo albums of Philippine flora,
fauna, Philippine urban and rural environs, and microfilms of
manuscripts.
With its goal of preserving and promoting
Philippine arts and letters, the Eugenio Lopez Foundation publishes
Filipiniana material intended for scholars and the general public. Its
publications include the Philippine Insurrection Against the US, edited
by Renato Constantino; Juan Luna: The Filipino as Painter by Santiago
A. Pilar, Orchidiana Philippiniana by Helen Valmayor, Philippine
Rariora by Mauro Garcia and Fernando Zobel by Rod Perez-Paras.
没有评论:
发表评论