Showing posts with label reproductions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label reproductions. Show all posts

Thursday, January 16, 2020

335. SANTOS FROM THE MUSEUM OF THE INCARNATION

CAPTIVE CHRIST

Along Pariancillo St., in Malolos, Bulacan, and right across an ancestral house coverted ino a Meralco office, is another heritage home of the Tiongson Family, that has been repurposed into a  Museum.


The Museum of the Incarnation was the brainchild of Mr. Leo Cloma, a finance executive who is a native of Bulacan. After securing the agreement of the Tiongsons, he proceeded to restore the house and convert it into a museum where “the sacred is made real”.
 
SAN MIGUEL
SAN PEDRO
BUST OF CHRIST

It houses some of the most stunning processional images and other ecclesiastical art pieces displayed using old mesa altars and antique reproductions of urnas, from his own commissioned collection, as well as centuries-old images of noted santero, Francsico Vecin. There are also “retired” images (those that are no longer processed) from Bulacan families.

DEATH OF SAN JOSE
A DAY AT THE MUSEUM
A SANTA AND A TABLEAU

The images in the specious museum house are most Semana Santa images and tableaus—from Mater Dolorosa, the Tres Marias, to whole Calvario scene, the kiss of Judas, and the Last Supper. But there are also non- Holy Week images like the death of St. Joseph, the Nativity,and individual images of santos like St. Joseph, Immaculate Conception and San Miguel.

MATER DOLOROSA
BETRAYAL OF JUDAS
PACIENCIA

The museum complements the other “museum house” of the Reyes family which also contains collections of restored images as well as stunning processional carrozas.

SCOURGING AT THE PILLAR
STA. MARTA, SALOME, MAGDALENA, VERONICA
ORACION, SAN JUAN, SAN PEDRO, ATBP.
CALVARIO

On this spread are pictures of santos from the Museum of the Incarnation. As it is a private museum, appointments should be made with the Museum admin people.

AGONY IN THE GARDEN
AGONY IN THE GARDEN 2
LA PIEDAD

 MANY THANKS TO MR. LEO CLOMA FOR THE INVITATION 
TO VISIT THE MUSEUM OF THE INCARNATION. 

Sunday, January 6, 2019

329. BAGUIO'S ANTIQUE TRADE, TODAY.



The antique fever that swept Manila in the 1960s and 70s prompted the rise of numerous antique shops in such places as Vigan, Lucena, San Pablo, Iloilo, Bacolod and Zamboanga.  Though old Vigan was a primary source of antiques, what became the major antique trade center in the north was Baguio City. After all, Baguio had a ready market for these fine collectibles, home to many affluent families with large homes, and hordes of out-of-towners and international tourists looking for one-of-a-kind souvenirs.


The modern Maharlika Shopping Center and Marbay Building that rose  in the city’s famous market district became the home of popular antique dealers, known even to Manila buyers. Dealers like Felipe Estacio, Eddie Marcelo, and  Alicia Serrano set up shops there. Estacio also had a big branch along the highway leading to Benguet.


Pinky Garcia, a researcher who discovered early the marketability of ethnic antiques from the northern highlands like Kalinga furniture, weapons and bulols, set up her PNKY shop there. Daisy Gomes Locsin specialized in the black baskets of the Mountain Province that were a hit with American collectors. Soon, even Kapampangans like Francisco Lacap, trooped to Baguio to open their business in the summer capital.


When I was a student in Baguio in the mid to late 70s, the Marbay shops were all crammed with antiques and artifacts of the most bewildering and amazing variety.  Wooden and ivory antos were sold alongside bululs and anito figures. Spanish colonial trinkets and tribal heirloom beads could be easily had for the right price. There were old Ibaloi costumes, headgear, tribal wear, silver and gold jewelry pieces, primitive clay ware.


One would tire himself out just looking at thousands of Oriental plates, bowls, and jars, blue and white, Martabans, Sawankhaloks and Celadons. My interest in antiques was fired by my periodic visits to these stores, but alas, I could only afford the old gin bottles that were sold at 50 pesos each, discounted to 20 if you got more. Larger pieces like cabinets, almarios, tocadors and dining sets  could even be delivered for a small fee to Manila and any point in Luzon.


Even when I was already working in Manila, I would find time to drop by at these shops in the 1980s, during business trips. My last visit was in 2004, when I had to mount an event for a client at La Trinidad. With the antique trade dying in Manila, I knew it would not be long that Baguio’s supply would dry out too. 


Fifteen long years after, I returned to Baguio for another short visit—and of course, I was surprised at the changes the city had undergone. The mountain tops were crammed with houses, the city overpopulated. Burnham Park was one big parking lot and Session Road  teemed with pedestrians. There were overhead walkway that covered the city's landmarks, and tall structures that hid the cityscape, and for a few minutes, I could not locate Marbay, 


When I found it, I gave in to my urge to check my former haunts—and these pictures tell the sad story of Baguio’s antique trade. Less than a dozen hole-in-the-wall shops now populate the shopping center. I went there a little after 9 a.m., so many of the unites were still closed. I just peered through the glass walls and found a few genuine antiques sold side-by-side with many reproductions like furniture, Chinese ceramics and newly-woven baskets, cleverly aged with soot and wax polish.


The most popular shops—Tucucan—where I got my first antique santo for 90 pesos sometime in 1978—was still there, with a large stockroom on the upper floor, mostly reproduction antique furniture. Then, there was Globel’s Antiques, still hanging on, with an assortment of odds and ends. I looked around, but I could not feel the same skipping of my heart beat in my visits some 40 plus years ago, when the world and I were younger.


“All things must pass”,  Beatle George Harrison once sang, and I guess this is true for Baguio’s once bustling antique trade. It had its heyday, and I was glad and grateful for that vanished time, for “mine eyes have seen the glory”.
(ALL PHOTOS BY ALEX R. CASTRO)

Tuesday, March 21, 2017

288. SANTO SIGHTINGS IN TIENDESITAS ON A RANDOM DAY, 2011


VINTAGE STA., VERONICA Processional Santa.
When Tiendesitas, a shopping complex located within Frontera Verde in Pasig on 26 Sep. 20015, it was met with much hoopla. After all, it was envisioned to be a budget-friendly shopping destination (“tiendesitas” means a cluster of little shops), with specialty “villages” that sold fashion, native food, pets, plants and other novelties.

VINTAGE STO. SEPULCRO
Of course, for santo collectors, the opening of the “Antique Village” was a welcome section of Tiendesitas, another happy-hunting ground for antique santos, all in one location.

VINTAGE CRISTO DE LA PACIENCIA
Indeed, the early list of shops that could be found there included well-known names like Sarimanok (Henry Wee), Laong-Laan Antiques (Yanga), Unang Panahon (Esposos), 888 Noble Antiques and Henry Babiera—who was instrumental in getting the shops together at the new shopping hub.

VINTAGE RESURRECION
The shops did not disappoint, as the prices were relatively reasonable (the shops were not air-conditioned and the location—along C5—was then considered very far). But when access and generation of traffic became major issues, the shops started to close—and the “antique village” shrank in size to give way to more lucrative businesses.

NEW IVORY-FACED MANIKIN SANTOS
Tiendesitas deteriorated to the point that the antique shops were reduced to a handful. Eventually, as the area became more developed commercially, Tiendesitas was upgraded by the developers in 2014, adding buildings, second-level shopping places, escalators and airconditioning. The business climate improved with its relaunch and today, Tiendesitas has 450 traders from all over the Philippines.

ANTIQUE SAN VICENTE FERRER IN URNA
However, the same cannot be said of the antique shops. The dwindling supply of quality items forced more closures and for the remaining shops to carry lower-quality antiques and reproductions—a sad statement that the glory days of the Philippine antique trade is really gone.

ANTIQUE SAGRADA FAMILIA IN URNA
In March 2011, a few years before its renovation, a walk around the antique village of Tiendesitas yielded these santo offerings from select shops still operating in the complex.

ANTIQUE SAN YSIDRO & SAN ROQUE

VINTAGE STO. ROSARIO IVORY

ANTIQUE IVORY PURISIMA

ANTIQUE STO. ROSARIO, now in R. Lopez Collection

ANTIQUE BONE SAGRADA FAMILIA IN VIRINA

OLD INMACULADA CONCEPCION