REVIEWER-CPAR-1st-SEM-Q1.docx
CPAR
Humanities
Contemporary art
Contemporary Performance
THE SUBJECT OF ART
Different Ways of styles depicting a subject
ELEMENTS OF ART
1. Space -In visual arts, space pertains to emptiness which may either be positive space or negative space
2. Line - is the extension of a point, a short or long mark drawn or carved on a surface. It is an implied path suggesting – (a) direction: vertical, horizontal, diagonal (b) character: jagged, curved, series of dots or broken lines
3. Shape and Form
Shape can be described as a figure separate from its surrounding area or background. It can either be geometric (angular) or organic (curvy).
Form is slightly similar to shape. It is an enclosed line, a figure separates from its background. But, remember that shape is two-dimensional, while form is three dimensional. For instance, the square is an example of shape; the cube is a form. The circle is a shape; the sphere is a form. ..
4. Color - In visual arts, color is associated with the natural phenomenon in our environment. Scientifically, when a light passes through a prism, it will produce different hues of different wavelengths. These colors may pertain to lightness, darkness, coolness, or warmth
5. Value - In visual arts, value is the degree of lightness and darkness of a color. In music, it is called pitch, which is the highness or lowness of a tone. The tone color or timbre refers to the quantity of the sound.
6. Texture - is the surface of an artwork. It can be actual or tactile, meaning, it can really be felt by touch; or it can be simulated or illusory, which means it can only be seen, not felt. In music or writing, texture is the quality or style of a composition. The sound from different musical instruments allow one to hear texture in sound.
Principles of Design
It refers to the wholeness of the design, the pleasing arrangement of parts, and the agreement between parts of composition, resulting in a united whole
It pertains to the assortment or diversity of a work of art.
This refers to the repetition of certain elements to produce a pattern. In visual arts, repeated design elements may create a certain flow and may lead the viewer’s eyes.
refers to the relationship of the size of elements in a body of art.
In arts, movement is the illusion of motion in a painting, sculpture design, or in a piece of art.
refers to the even and equal distribution of elements
is a principle which may refer to the greater impact given on a certain element.
PHILIPPINE ARTS
art forms were primarily influenced by the area where our ancestors prosper
influenced by religion and secularization.
mainly influenced by education and governance
VARIOUS ARTS FORMS FOUND IN THE PHILIPPINES
Through migration and trade during pre-colonial period, there was a lively cultural interchange between the Philippines and other Asian countries. This helped the Philippines to develop their own way of living, their own culture such as pottery, weaving, wood carving, jewelry, etc. That they could use for their everyday living.
FORMS OF PAINTING
the easel painting is perhaps the most common form
of painting which involves applying color to a board or
canvas that is fixed on an upright support called an
easel. these are meant to be framed and hanged on a
wall after creating them.
a mural is described as a huge wall-sized painting used
to impart messages to the public. a new form of.
mural which is a portable mural, was developed in
order to prevent the mural from being erased from the
wall which was created by using bold strokes in
applying bright colors on pieces of cheesecloth or
a telon is describes as a backdrop or background for
the stage which are used for komedya, sarswela, and
sinakulo, the popular forms of theater in the country.
This refers to a form of painting that involves combine
Images in a single artwork. This entails cutting and
Pasting materials such as paper, fabric, tin foil and
Other relatively flat materials onto a board or canvas
TYPES OF FILIPINO DANCE
its sides contribute to the overall form of the sculpture.
EXAMPLES:
GENERAL KINDS OF SCULPTURE
FORMS OF SCULPTURE
FAMOUS POTTERY IN VARIOUS REGIONS
EXAMPLES:
FORMS OF CONTEMPORARY ARCHITECTURE: DOMESTIC BUILDINGS AND HOUSES
ETHNIC HOUSES
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
Any tool or device that produces a sound - consists of an array of
Shapes and styles from simple to complex
- examples of which are kulintang, gangsa, kutyapi and guitar
NATIONAL ARTIST
GAWAD SA MANLILIKHA NG BAYAN (GAMABA)
Like the National Artists, an artist must have special qualities to become a Manlilikha ng Bayan. Below are the Criteria.
1. The artist should be an inhabitant of an indigenous/traditional, cultural community anywhere in the Philippines that has preserved indigenous customs, beliefs, rituals, and tradition and or has syncretized whatever external elements that have influenced it.
2. The artist must have engaged in a folk-art tradition that has been existence and documented for at least fifty years.
3. The artist must have consistently performed or produced works of superior and distinctive quality over a significant period.
4.The artist must possess a mastery of tools and materials needed by the art and must have an established reputation in the art as master and maker of works of extraordinary technical quality.
5.The artist must have passed on and or will pass on to other members of the community his/her skills in the folk art for which the community is traditionally known
A traditional artist who possesses all the qualities of a Manlilikha ng Bayan candidate but is now incapable of teaching further his/her craft, may still recognized given the following.
1.The artist has created a significant body of work and or/has consistently displayed excellence in the practice of his/her art, thus achieving important contributions for its development.
2.The artist has been instrumental in the revitalization of his/her community artistic tradition.
3.The artist has passed on to the other members of the community the skills in the folk art for which the community is traditional known.
4.The community of the artist has recognized him/her as master and teacher of his/her craft.
WORLD-CLASS ARTISTS
The Philippine contemporary arts have so developed and matured that our artists can now stand proudly on the world stage.
Philippine arts today are active and vibrant because of the Filipino artist’ talent, creativity, skill and their perseverance even in times of turmoil that drive them to pursue their dreams.
FILIPINO ARTISTS’ ROLES AND IDENTIFY THEIR CONTRIBUTION TO CONTEMPORARY ARTS
Various art forms before contemporary era
Drawing, Painting, Sculpture, Calligraphy. Photography
Various contemporary art forms integrative arts
ARTIST - one who professes and practices an imaginative art.
Roles:
Distinct Roles
The Filipino Artist
Few women were recognized before the contemporary era
Anita Magsaysay-Ho was a pioneering artist and one of the first modernists in the Philippines.
One of a handful of Filipino artists to delve into abstraction in the 1950s, Nena Saguil was the only woman to feature in an unprecedented exhibition of non-objective art organized by the Philippines’ first art critic, Aurelio Alvero, in 1953.
Purita kalaw-ledesma (b. 1914, manila; d. 2005) was a seminal figure in philippine art. She was an artist and a writer, a curator and cultural worker, a patroness and collector.
She was the founder and the first president of the longest surviving art organization in the country, the Art Association of the Philippines (AAP), established in 1948 after the end of the Second World War
Women in Contemporary Arts
Imelda is a painter and installation artist,an art curator, founder of Kasibulan Foundation (group of artist)
FEMINISM
Ofelia-hailed from Ilo-ilo, UP Fine Arts Advocate of southern arts
Brenda is a Professor Emeritus of the UP Diliman Philippine Folklore, legends and mythology, pen and ink Multi-awarded artist
NATIONAL ARTIST OF THE PHILIPPINES:
•Proclamation No. 1001s. 1972
• Highest award conferred by the President of the Philippines to a nations artist
Fernando Amorsolo y Cueto (1892-1972)
•First National Artist1972
•"Grand Old Man of Philippine Art”
QUALIFICATIONS OF NATIONAL ARTIST OF THE PHILIPPINES:
STEPS IN BECOMING A NATIONAL ARTIST OF THE PHILIPPINES:
PRIVELEGES OF A NATIONAL ARTIST OF THE PHILIPPINES:
Lifetime emolument & material & physical benefits comparable in value to those received by the highest officers of the land:
The Order of National Artists
National Living Treasures Award Gawad sa Manlilikha ng Bayan (GAMABA)
Philippine traditional crafts are still found in many Filipino homes and are used in fashion and the tourism industry.
Honors artists who are engaged in folk or traditional arts and who have reached a high level of technical skill and artistic excellence
Categories:
Folk architecture; maritime transport; weaving; carving; performing arts; literature; graphic and plastic arts; ornament; textile or fiber art; pottery; and other artistic expressions of traditional culture
Institutionalized by 1992 Republic Act No. 7355
Manlilikha ng Bayan is a traditional Filipino artist with a significant body of work, and is crucial in the transfer of artistic tradition.
GAMABA CRITERIA
The artist should be an inhabitant of an indigenous/traditional cultural community anywhere in the Philippines that has preserved indigenous customs, beliefs, rituals, and traditions and/or has syncretized whatever external elements that have influenced it.
The artist must have engaged in a folk art tradition that has been in existence and documented for at least fifty years.
The artist must have consistently performed or produced works of superior and distinctive quality over a significant period.
The artist must possess a mastery of tools and materials needed by the art, and must have an established reputation in the art as master and maker of works of extraordinary technical quality.
The artist must have passed on and/or will pass on to other members of the community his/her skills in the folk art for which the community is traditionally known.
How to recognize those who are incapable of teaching his/her craft:
The artist has created a significant body of works and/or has consistently displayed excellence in the practice of his/her art, thus achieving important contributions for its development.
The artist must have been instrumental in the revitalization of his/her community’s artistic tradition.
The artist has passed on to the other members of the community the skills in the folk art for which the community is traditionally known.
The community of the artist has recognized him/her as master and teacher of his/her craft.
National Living Treasures Awardees (1993-2012)
Indigenous Group: Hanunuo Mangyan (Mansalay, Panaytayan, Oriental Mindoro)
Cultural Contribution: Poet; preserved Ambahan, a Mangyan tradition of singing or chanting, poetry
Additional Information: Ambahan is form of poetic literature which is made up of seven-syllable lines used to communicate messages through metaphors and imagery
Indigenous Group: Pala’wan (Makagwa Valley, Brookes Point, Palawan)
Cultural Contribution: Musician, epic chanter like tuturan (myths), tultul (epics) and sudsungit (narratives), and storyteller; mastered of basal, kulilal, and bagit; played aroding and babarak
Additional Information: Tuturan, Tultul, and Sudsungit are the distinct Palawan folk literatures
Indigenous Group: Magindanaon (Mamasapano, Maguindanao)
Cultural Contribution:Musician; mastered of kutyapi (musical instrument) and served as a master teacher; popular town barber and imam
Indigenous Group: T’boli (Lake Sebu, South Cotobato)
Cultural Contribution: Master textile weaver of the traditional t’nalak (T’boli cloth –abaca fibers); honing her skills at the age of 12; her distinct designs – kabangi(butterfly), bankiring (hair bangs), and bulinglangit (clouds)
Additional Information: Traditional T’boli weaving uses two distinct sets of threads that are knitted at right angles to create an elaborate design.
Indigenous Group: Bagobo (Bansalan, Davao del Sur)
Cultural Contribution: Preserved the dying art of Bagobo weaving or inabal (ikat-dyed woven abaca (Musa textilis) cloth) (abaca-ikat); binuwaya (crocodile) as her beloved design
Indigenous Group: Kalinga (Lubugan, Kalinga)Cultural Contribution: Musician and dancer; mastered in playing Kalingainstruments and dancing patterns and movements associated with rituals; and advocated the Kalinga philosophies; honed his skills through observation; established Kalinga Budong Dance Troupe
Indigenous Group: Sulod-Bukidnon (Calinog, Iloilo)
Cultural Contribution: Epic chanter; mastered 10 epics (like Labaw Dunggonand Humadapnon); documented their oral literature; advocated the preservation of their traditions; considered him as bantugan (person who achieved distinction) and manughusay(intermediary of conflicts)
Indigenous Group: Yakan (Lamitan, Basilan)Cultural Contribution: Musician: mastered and taught several Yakan instruments (like kwintangankayu, gabbang, and agung) / partially blind
Additional Information: The Yakan people believed that instrumental music is deeply connected to life and agriculture cycles, and social undertaking
Indigenous Group: Tausog(Parang, Jolo, Sulu)Cultural Contribution:
Textile weaver; mastered of traditional pissyabit (hood by the Tausugs)
Indigenous Group:Kapampangan (Apalit, Pampanga)
Cultural Contribution: Metal smith; sculptor of religious and secular art in silver, bronze, and wood, intricate church retablos and carosas
Indigenous Group: Sama (Ungos Matata, Tandubas, Tawi-tawi)
Cultural Contribution:Mat weaver; mastered of Sama women tradition of mat weaving (sasaand kima-kima)
Additional Information: Mat weaving in the Sama community is a task for the women.
Indigenous Group:Ilocano (San Quintin, Abra)
Cultural Contribution: Casque maker; Mastered of making tabungaw / headpiece
Indigenous Group: Ilocano (Pinili, Ilocos Norte)
Cultural Contribution: Textile weaver; mastered of Ilocos abel weaving (traditional blanket); traditional patterns of sinan sabong (flowers), kusikos (spirals), and binakol inuritan(geometrics) Magdalena
ART CRITICISM
STEPS IN ART CRITICISM:
By determining the subject in an artwork, will make you realize what it represents.
Provides you with the sensual and substantial features of an art form.
COMPARING AND CONTRAST
What are the things to consider in comparing and contrasting art works?
Contemporary Fine Arts
Contemporary Painting
Contemporary Sculpture
Contemporary Architecture
Contemporary Visual Arts
Contemporary design in Art Crafts
EXAMPLES OF COMPARING AND CONTRAST
CPAR
Humanities
Contemporary art
Contemporary Performance
THE SUBJECT OF ART
Different Ways of styles depicting a subject
ELEMENTS OF ART
1. Space -In visual arts, space pertains to emptiness which may either be positive space or negative space
2. Line - is the extension of a point, a short or long mark drawn or carved on a surface. It is an implied path suggesting – (a) direction: vertical, horizontal, diagonal (b) character: jagged, curved, series of dots or broken lines
3. Shape and Form
Shape can be described as a figure separate from its surrounding area or background. It can either be geometric (angular) or organic (curvy).
Form is slightly similar to shape. It is an enclosed line, a figure separates from its background. But, remember that shape is two-dimensional, while form is three dimensional. For instance, the square is an example of shape; the cube is a form. The circle is a shape; the sphere is a form. ..
4. Color - In visual arts, color is associated with the natural phenomenon in our environment. Scientifically, when a light passes through a prism, it will produce different hues of different wavelengths. These colors may pertain to lightness, darkness, coolness, or warmth
5. Value - In visual arts, value is the degree of lightness and darkness of a color. In music, it is called pitch, which is the highness or lowness of a tone. The tone color or timbre refers to the quantity of the sound.
6. Texture - is the surface of an artwork. It can be actual or tactile, meaning, it can really be felt by touch; or it can be simulated or illusory, which means it can only be seen, not felt. In music or writing, texture is the quality or style of a composition. The sound from different musical instruments allow one to hear texture in sound.
Principles of Design
It refers to the wholeness of the design, the pleasing arrangement of parts, and the agreement between parts of composition, resulting in a united whole
It pertains to the assortment or diversity of a work of art.
This refers to the repetition of certain elements to produce a pattern. In visual arts, repeated design elements may create a certain flow and may lead the viewer’s eyes.
refers to the relationship of the size of elements in a body of art.
In arts, movement is the illusion of motion in a painting, sculpture design, or in a piece of art.
refers to the even and equal distribution of elements
is a principle which may refer to the greater impact given on a certain element.
PHILIPPINE ARTS
art forms were primarily influenced by the area where our ancestors prosper
influenced by religion and secularization.
mainly influenced by education and governance
VARIOUS ARTS FORMS FOUND IN THE PHILIPPINES
Through migration and trade during pre-colonial period, there was a lively cultural interchange between the Philippines and other Asian countries. This helped the Philippines to develop their own way of living, their own culture such as pottery, weaving, wood carving, jewelry, etc. That they could use for their everyday living.
FORMS OF PAINTING
the easel painting is perhaps the most common form
of painting which involves applying color to a board or
canvas that is fixed on an upright support called an
easel. these are meant to be framed and hanged on a
wall after creating them.
a mural is described as a huge wall-sized painting used
to impart messages to the public. a new form of.
mural which is a portable mural, was developed in
order to prevent the mural from being erased from the
wall which was created by using bold strokes in
applying bright colors on pieces of cheesecloth or
a telon is describes as a backdrop or background for
the stage which are used for komedya, sarswela, and
sinakulo, the popular forms of theater in the country.
This refers to a form of painting that involves combine
Images in a single artwork. This entails cutting and
Pasting materials such as paper, fabric, tin foil and
Other relatively flat materials onto a board or canvas
TYPES OF FILIPINO DANCE
its sides contribute to the overall form of the sculpture.
EXAMPLES:
GENERAL KINDS OF SCULPTURE
FORMS OF SCULPTURE
FAMOUS POTTERY IN VARIOUS REGIONS
EXAMPLES:
FORMS OF CONTEMPORARY ARCHITECTURE: DOMESTIC BUILDINGS AND HOUSES
ETHNIC HOUSES
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
Any tool or device that produces a sound - consists of an array of
Shapes and styles from simple to complex
- examples of which are kulintang, gangsa, kutyapi and guitar
NATIONAL ARTIST
GAWAD SA MANLILIKHA NG BAYAN (GAMABA)
Like the National Artists, an artist must have special qualities to become a Manlilikha ng Bayan. Below are the Criteria.
1. The artist should be an inhabitant of an indigenous/traditional, cultural community anywhere in the Philippines that has preserved indigenous customs, beliefs, rituals, and tradition and or has syncretized whatever external elements that have influenced it.
2. The artist must have engaged in a folk-art tradition that has been existence and documented for at least fifty years.
3. The artist must have consistently performed or produced works of superior and distinctive quality over a significant period.
4.The artist must possess a mastery of tools and materials needed by the art and must have an established reputation in the art as master and maker of works of extraordinary technical quality.
5.The artist must have passed on and or will pass on to other members of the community his/her skills in the folk art for which the community is traditionally known
A traditional artist who possesses all the qualities of a Manlilikha ng Bayan candidate but is now incapable of teaching further his/her craft, may still recognized given the following.
1.The artist has created a significant body of work and or/has consistently displayed excellence in the practice of his/her art, thus achieving important contributions for its development.
2.The artist has been instrumental in the revitalization of his/her community artistic tradition.
3.The artist has passed on to the other members of the community the skills in the folk art for which the community is traditional known.
4.The community of the artist has recognized him/her as master and teacher of his/her craft.
WORLD-CLASS ARTISTS
The Philippine contemporary arts have so developed and matured that our artists can now stand proudly on the world stage.
Philippine arts today are active and vibrant because of the Filipino artist’ talent, creativity, skill and their perseverance even in times of turmoil that drive them to pursue their dreams.
FILIPINO ARTISTS’ ROLES AND IDENTIFY THEIR CONTRIBUTION TO CONTEMPORARY ARTS
Various art forms before contemporary era
Drawing, Painting, Sculpture, Calligraphy. Photography
Various contemporary art forms integrative arts
ARTIST - one who professes and practices an imaginative art.
Roles:
Distinct Roles
The Filipino Artist
Few women were recognized before the contemporary era
Anita Magsaysay-Ho was a pioneering artist and one of the first modernists in the Philippines.
One of a handful of Filipino artists to delve into abstraction in the 1950s, Nena Saguil was the only woman to feature in an unprecedented exhibition of non-objective art organized by the Philippines’ first art critic, Aurelio Alvero, in 1953.
Purita kalaw-ledesma (b. 1914, manila; d. 2005) was a seminal figure in philippine art. She was an artist and a writer, a curator and cultural worker, a patroness and collector.
She was the founder and the first president of the longest surviving art organization in the country, the Art Association of the Philippines (AAP), established in 1948 after the end of the Second World War
Women in Contemporary Arts
Imelda is a painter and installation artist,an art curator, founder of Kasibulan Foundation (group of artist)
FEMINISM
Ofelia-hailed from Ilo-ilo, UP Fine Arts Advocate of southern arts
Brenda is a Professor Emeritus of the UP Diliman Philippine Folklore, legends and mythology, pen and ink Multi-awarded artist
NATIONAL ARTIST OF THE PHILIPPINES:
•Proclamation No. 1001s. 1972
• Highest award conferred by the President of the Philippines to a nations artist
Fernando Amorsolo y Cueto (1892-1972)
•First National Artist1972
•"Grand Old Man of Philippine Art”
QUALIFICATIONS OF NATIONAL ARTIST OF THE PHILIPPINES:
STEPS IN BECOMING A NATIONAL ARTIST OF THE PHILIPPINES:
PRIVELEGES OF A NATIONAL ARTIST OF THE PHILIPPINES:
Lifetime emolument & material & physical benefits comparable in value to those received by the highest officers of the land:
The Order of National Artists
National Living Treasures Award Gawad sa Manlilikha ng Bayan (GAMABA)
Philippine traditional crafts are still found in many Filipino homes and are used in fashion and the tourism industry.
Honors artists who are engaged in folk or traditional arts and who have reached a high level of technical skill and artistic excellence
Categories:
Folk architecture; maritime transport; weaving; carving; performing arts; literature; graphic and plastic arts; ornament; textile or fiber art; pottery; and other artistic expressions of traditional culture
Institutionalized by 1992 Republic Act No. 7355
Manlilikha ng Bayan is a traditional Filipino artist with a significant body of work, and is crucial in the transfer of artistic tradition.
GAMABA CRITERIA
The artist should be an inhabitant of an indigenous/traditional cultural community anywhere in the Philippines that has preserved indigenous customs, beliefs, rituals, and traditions and/or has syncretized whatever external elements that have influenced it.
The artist must have engaged in a folk art tradition that has been in existence and documented for at least fifty years.
The artist must have consistently performed or produced works of superior and distinctive quality over a significant period.
The artist must possess a mastery of tools and materials needed by the art, and must have an established reputation in the art as master and maker of works of extraordinary technical quality.
The artist must have passed on and/or will pass on to other members of the community his/her skills in the folk art for which the community is traditionally known.
How to recognize those who are incapable of teaching his/her craft:
The artist has created a significant body of works and/or has consistently displayed excellence in the practice of his/her art, thus achieving important contributions for its development.
The artist must have been instrumental in the revitalization of his/her community’s artistic tradition.
The artist has passed on to the other members of the community the skills in the folk art for which the community is traditionally known.
The community of the artist has recognized him/her as master and teacher of his/her craft.
National Living Treasures Awardees (1993-2012)
Indigenous Group: Hanunuo Mangyan (Mansalay, Panaytayan, Oriental Mindoro)
Cultural Contribution: Poet; preserved Ambahan, a Mangyan tradition of singing or chanting, poetry
Additional Information: Ambahan is form of poetic literature which is made up of seven-syllable lines used to communicate messages through metaphors and imagery
Indigenous Group: Pala’wan (Makagwa Valley, Brookes Point, Palawan)
Cultural Contribution: Musician, epic chanter like tuturan (myths), tultul (epics) and sudsungit (narratives), and storyteller; mastered of basal, kulilal, and bagit; played aroding and babarak
Additional Information: Tuturan, Tultul, and Sudsungit are the distinct Palawan folk literatures
Indigenous Group: Magindanaon (Mamasapano, Maguindanao)
Cultural Contribution:Musician; mastered of kutyapi (musical instrument) and served as a master teacher; popular town barber and imam
Indigenous Group: T’boli (Lake Sebu, South Cotobato)
Cultural Contribution: Master textile weaver of the traditional t’nalak (T’boli cloth –abaca fibers); honing her skills at the age of 12; her distinct designs – kabangi(butterfly), bankiring (hair bangs), and bulinglangit (clouds)
Additional Information: Traditional T’boli weaving uses two distinct sets of threads that are knitted at right angles to create an elaborate design.
Indigenous Group: Bagobo (Bansalan, Davao del Sur)
Cultural Contribution: Preserved the dying art of Bagobo weaving or inabal (ikat-dyed woven abaca (Musa textilis) cloth) (abaca-ikat); binuwaya (crocodile) as her beloved design
Indigenous Group: Kalinga (Lubugan, Kalinga)Cultural Contribution: Musician and dancer; mastered in playing Kalingainstruments and dancing patterns and movements associated with rituals; and advocated the Kalinga philosophies; honed his skills through observation; established Kalinga Budong Dance Troupe
Indigenous Group: Sulod-Bukidnon (Calinog, Iloilo)
Cultural Contribution: Epic chanter; mastered 10 epics (like Labaw Dunggonand Humadapnon); documented their oral literature; advocated the preservation of their traditions; considered him as bantugan (person who achieved distinction) and manughusay(intermediary of conflicts)
Indigenous Group: Yakan (Lamitan, Basilan)Cultural Contribution: Musician: mastered and taught several Yakan instruments (like kwintangankayu, gabbang, and agung) / partially blind
Additional Information: The Yakan people believed that instrumental music is deeply connected to life and agriculture cycles, and social undertaking
Indigenous Group: Tausog(Parang, Jolo, Sulu)Cultural Contribution:
Textile weaver; mastered of traditional pissyabit (hood by the Tausugs)
Indigenous Group:Kapampangan (Apalit, Pampanga)
Cultural Contribution: Metal smith; sculptor of religious and secular art in silver, bronze, and wood, intricate church retablos and carosas
Indigenous Group: Sama (Ungos Matata, Tandubas, Tawi-tawi)
Cultural Contribution:Mat weaver; mastered of Sama women tradition of mat weaving (sasaand kima-kima)
Additional Information: Mat weaving in the Sama community is a task for the women.
Indigenous Group:Ilocano (San Quintin, Abra)
Cultural Contribution: Casque maker; Mastered of making tabungaw / headpiece
Indigenous Group: Ilocano (Pinili, Ilocos Norte)
Cultural Contribution: Textile weaver; mastered of Ilocos abel weaving (traditional blanket); traditional patterns of sinan sabong (flowers), kusikos (spirals), and binakol inuritan(geometrics) Magdalena
ART CRITICISM
STEPS IN ART CRITICISM:
By determining the subject in an artwork, will make you realize what it represents.
Provides you with the sensual and substantial features of an art form.
COMPARING AND CONTRAST
What are the things to consider in comparing and contrasting art works?
Contemporary Fine Arts
Contemporary Painting
Contemporary Sculpture
Contemporary Architecture
Contemporary Visual Arts
Contemporary design in Art Crafts
EXAMPLES OF COMPARING AND CONTRAST