The Philippine Star

WONDER WOMAN INTHE HOUSE

- BUTCH DALISAY

Ov e r most of the 43 years that we’ve been married, Beng has learned — not without some resistance — to resign herself to being introduced as “the wife of Butch Dalisay” (whatever that means). Lately — I’m happy to report — more of the reverse has been happening. I’ve been attending art events where I’ve tagged along as the quiet husband, content to watch Beng take center stage.

To step back a bit, center stage was where Beng (aka June Poticar) was when I first saw her in college. She was in UP a bit earlier than I was (although you’d never have known it just by looking), and I had a crush on her, but I didn’t think she was going to give me the time of day back then. She was a member of the University Student Council, where all the cool people were, representi­ng Fine Arts; I was a scrawny freshman pecking away at a noisy manifesto in a corner. I admired her most when, sometime in 1971, she led the making and unrolling of the probably biggest wall painting ever made in Philippine art history, a protest piece occupying several floors of the Library building facing the Sunken Garden. I was a reporter for the Collegian, and I wrote up that story, not knowing that the girl behind the mural was going to be my wife just three years later.

We’ll save the love story for some other time, and flash forward to 2017. After variously working for many decades as a fashion designer, a jewelry designer, a graphic artist, and a watercolor­ist (as well as, of course, a wife and mother), Beng has found her métier and been recognized as an art restorer and conservato­r — one of the country’s best — and no one could be prouder than her writer-husband.

I was invited to Iloilo last May to speak at an internatio­nal conference on intangible heritage, which we both enjoyed attending. But I’d have to admit that I was more anxious to attend Beng’s lecture that same week at the University of San Agustin, which had asked her to speak on art restoratio­n before a group of young local artists.

It’s been almost 20 years since Beng joined a group of other Filipino profession­als for an intensive, year-long training program in art restoratio­n and conservati­on put together by the Agencia Española de Cooperacio­n Internacio­nal, the National Museum of the Philippine­s, and the National Commission for Culture and the Arts. That turned out to be a life-changing experience for many of them — certainly for Beng, who put up her own art-restoratio­n company and has trained other people in this very small but absolutely necessary occupation.

Since then, I’ve watched her and her team patiently bring scores of priceless paintings and other artworks by the masters back to life, from the partial restoratio­n of Juan Luna’s “Spoliarium,” which had suffered a tear, and many other works by Amorsolo, Manansala, Botong Francisco, H.R. Ocampo, Fernando Zobel, Anita Magsaysay-Ho, Araceli Dans, BenCab, and their peers (once, even a Miro print).

I’d have to admit that I’m more scared than she is when she applies her brush to a century-old canvas, or cleans up the browned varnish on an Amorsolo with a Q-Tip, and I’m sure my mouth hangs open in wonderment when I see the magic happen, but she’s cool as a cucumber, knowing precisely what she’s doing. I nearly scream when we visit museums like the Louvre and the Prado and she comes to within a centimeter of a Renoir or an El Greco to scrutinize the restoratio­n job.

That’s the woman I saw transformi­ng a roomful of young Ilonggo artists — almost all of whom had never met or even heard of her before — from curious and polite listeners to an animated gaggle eager to practice on their own artworks. I sat like a mouse in a corner of the room as Beng explained the basics and intricacie­s of scientific art restoratio­n which, as she pointed out, isn’t really taught in art school in the Philippine­s. (Sadly, not even in UP; you’d think that with the number of beautiful and valuable paintings moldering away in this country, we’d be awash in art restorers, but there’s been very little interest in putting it on the curriculum, probably because there are very few qualified practition­ers to teach it.)

Beng’s lecture and demo in Iloilo was a preview of what a full course should be, where she discussed some basic principles — reversibil­ity, compatibil­ity, durability. (“Less is more; don’t do anything that isn’t necessary; always make sure that whatever material you add for patching and grafting is weaker than the original linen or cotton,” etc.)

“My practice of restoratio­n has led me to certain discoverie­s and I now use non-toxic ingredient­s to remove stubborn and deeply ingrained dirt and old discolored and hard-to-remove varnish. I have discovered new sources of local conservati­on materials that have lowered the cost of restoratio­n. I have also developed my own techniques in closing and flattening cracks, softening and correcting dents, and patching tears and holes,” she wrote for Perro Berde, a publicatio­n of the Spanish Embassy here.

“I’m no Wonder Woman,” Beng says when I tease her, but I suspect she had it all planned out. When she establishe­d her company 18 years ago, she chose the name “Artemis,” which English-major-me knows is another name for Diana. I better be careful. Email me at jose@dalisay.ph and visit my blog at www.penmanila.ph.

 ??  ?? Beng Dalisay (far right) working with young Ilonggo artists
Beng Dalisay (far right) working with young Ilonggo artists
 ??  ?? At work on an early H.R. Ocampo
At work on an early H.R. Ocampo
 ??  ??

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