The Philippine Star

Artisan Maximus

- PHILIP CU-UNJIENG

If there existed a repository of Cu Unjieng family folklore, the chapters pertaining to my direct family branch would have to mention how my late father, in his senior widower years, inexplicab­ly developed a bizarre bazaar fetish!

For some unfathomab­le reason, almost every weekend would find him attending bazaars in his own inimitable fashion. This would consist of showing up a good hour before the doors would officially open; and insisting, in the midst of the setting up, to purchase items. It was like he was taking the adage about the early bird far too much to heart. Friends who were budding entreprene­urs and had booths in these fairs would text me about how my dad was the very first to buy, and leaving before they would even open.

Triggering these memories of father was my visit to ArteFino at 8 Rockwell. A resounding success, the organizers of this three-day showcase of various things artisanal can pat themselves on their collective backs. Whether it was jewelry, crafts, apparel, home furnishing­s, fashion accessorie­s, fragrances and soaps, alcohol and craft beverages, food, or fans (as in pamaypay), ArteFino made me a fervent fan — and a proud one at that, witnessing how all these products are all homegrown.

With some 70 exhibitors, my minor complaint about the degree of duplicatio­n that exists has to be registered. But I do recognize how it is opportunit­y for so many of these businesses and won’t begrudge them the chance to show off to a captive audience. The Saturday evening I managed to attend had a wonderful cross section of attendees — including showbiz personalit­ies like Maja Salvador and Bibeth O. Siguion-Reyna. I also saw social media posts with the likes of Sen. Grace Poe and Makati City Mayor Abby Binay having dropped in on ArteFino.

One of the unique propositio­ns of ArteFino is how so many of the vendors are good friends or acquaintan­ces. My sister-in-law Maitoni with her sister Tina manned the Milvidas booth, Monchet Olives at Monchet y Cia, Karen Santos, Michelline Syjuco, Reese Fernandez-Ruiz, Ito Kish, Tim Tam Ong, the Vargas family members behind Bucky’s, Grace Barbers-Baja, An M. Alcantara, Carissa Cruz Evangelist­a, and the list goes on and on. And this makes the atmosphere at ArteFino very special — it’s not just a bazaar, it’s also a reunion, a congregati­on of friendship, and of a love and appreciati­on for what Filipino artisans can create.

Going back to my father, during his time, there was no ArteFino, no pop-up stores. But I’m certain he would have given ArteFino his two thumbs up. When he visited his bazaars, he would often recruit his grandchild­ren to accompany him, “bribing” them with promises of lunch or dinner after the sneak attack on the bazaar. And I know, he would have been especially happy to make buena mano at Maitoni’s Milvidas — as long as she would have been ready to accommodat­e him a good hour before the official 10 a.m. start of operations!

Time bandits

Today’s three novels are wonderful examples of stealing time for our enjoyment. Mastai’s is a time travel piece, while Lovett’s combines religion, treasures and love in equal measures. Gill’s is something of a love poem to 1970s New York architectu­re.

All Our Wrong Todays by Elan Mastai (available on Amazon.com) When first we meet Tom Barren, he is living in 2016 very much unlike the one we know. It is everything we dreamed the future would look like when people were imagining it in the 1960s. The son of the man who is developing time travel, Tom has to that point been a disappoint­ment to his father. Designated as the alternate “chrononaut” when circumstan­ces change and it is Tom who travels to the past, a wonderfull­y written tale about redemption, family, loss and love is set in motion. Causing changes in time’s fabric has its consequenc­es, as the world resets to the 2016 we know. What could have been a straightfo­rward time travel story becomes a humorous existentia­l treatise revolving around decisions, possibilit­ies and hubris. Both entertaini­ng and wildly speculativ­e.

The Lost Book of the Grail by Charlie Lovett (available on Amazon.com) For those who love books and libraries, modern day quests for medieval treasures and precious objects and mysteries with strong, rich characters and eccentrics, this latest

from Lovett is just the thing! Author of The Bookman’s Tale and The Further Adventures of Ebenezer Scrooge, Lovett has always had an uncanny sense of history, time and place, thanks to the wonderful research he puts into his books. This is no exception as at the core of the novel is Arthur Prescott, English professor, but most at home in the Barchester Cathedral Library, where he pores over ancient books and quenches his thirst for evidence that King Arthur and the Holy Grail truly existed. When Bethany Davis arrives to digitize the library’s contents, a wonderful “hunt” ensues. A truly great read!

The Gargoyle Hunters by John Freeman Gill (available at Fully Booked) An exceptiona­l love for New York architectu­re and a sense of time and place propel this novel about fathers and sons, about art and obsession. When we meet Griffin, he is a young boy, enmeshed in the middle of a struggle between estranged parents. His father, in the architectu­ral salvage business, is one obsessed individual while his mother, lives in the brownstone still technicall­y owned by his father. It is in trying to create a bond and relationsh­ip with his father that Griffin goes down a path that leads to petty crime, and taking scary risks that put his own life and limb at peril. Interspers­ed with vignettes that demonstrat­e a keen ear for showing us how growing up in New York in the late 1970s would be, the novel both charms and provides trenchant food for thought.

 ??  ?? The Fan Man Monchet Olives welcomes one and all to ArteFino.
The Fan Man Monchet Olives welcomes one and all to ArteFino.
 ??  ?? At the Milvidas booth, Maitoni del Rosario CuUnjieng with her sister Tina.
At the Milvidas booth, Maitoni del Rosario CuUnjieng with her sister Tina.
 ??  ?? The Ito Kish-curated vignette at the entrance to ArteFino.
The Ito Kish-curated vignette at the entrance to ArteFino.
 ??  ?? Novels that pull the great trick of taking us forward and backward in time.
Novels that pull the great trick of taking us forward and backward in time.
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