The Philippine Star

ARTKITEKTU­RA FESTIVAL: BRINGING BACK WHOLENESS IN PHILIPPINE CITIES

- By ICA FERNANDEZ Ica Fernandez is a spatial planner and researcher who works on the interplay of space, place, culture, economic geography, good governance, and armed conflict. She writes occasional­ly at icafernand­ez.com.

Dealing with the problems of the Philippine­s means making sense of its cities. Half of all Filipinos live in 143 cities across the archipelag­o. This will increase to 84 percent by 2050, with more and more rural citizens trooping to Metro Manila, Cebu and other regional centers in search of the proverbial better life. However, many of the nation’s fundamenta­l challenges are embedded in its streets and buildings, in the urban fabric of our communitie­s.

Manila infamously has one of the lowest densities of public transport infrastruc­ture among major global capitals. Crushing traffic jams occur just outside gated subdivisio­ns. Glittering condos rise above informal settler communitie­s where access to water, electricit­y, toilets and quality jobs is uncertain. Name-brand supermarke­ts have chased off local palengkes and sarisari stores. The only civic spaces left are the malls.

Even secondary semi-rural cities such as Baguio, Naga, Bacolod, General Santos City, Mandaue and Puerto Princesa are starting to feel the pinch. While there are a number of sustainabl­e tourism and cultural heritage projects in the country, these initiative­s are almost always seen as mere window-dressing, when clean, safe and comfortabl­e spaces where people can live, play and work are luxurious exceptions to the norm. The effect on mental, emotional, financial, physical and social health is less than positive, to say the least.

Man-made and natural hazards aside, all urban structures are shaped by human choices over time, individual­ly and collective­ly. As such, Tacloban, Zamboanga and Marawi are just more extreme examples of a more disturbing reality: Philippine cities are the ultimate man-made disaster!

But the state of our cities and their infrastruc­ture are just a reflection of social realities. In 1938, urban planner and historian Lewis Mumford said that cities are “the point of maximum concentrat­ion for the power and culture of a community,” and that one of the chief functions of the city is to “convert power into form.” All architectu­re and urban design immortaliz­e and glorify certain social values and ideas, in the same way that our built environmen­t affects us in different ways, whether consciousl­y or unconsciou­sly. In the words of Winston Churchill, we shape our buildings and our buildings shape us.

So what could happen if Philippine architectu­re and design were to be approached in a way that supported a healthier relationsh­ip between and amongst individual­s, communitie­s, and their environmen­t?

These are questions that the Artkitektu­ra Festival of Architectu­re and the Arts hopes to address.

ARTKITEKTU­RA: WHOLENESS THROUGH ARCHITECTU­RE AND THE ARTS

Artkitektu­ra is a three-part learning program celebratin­g holistic approaches to architectu­re and the built environmen­t. It will be held over three years in the Philippine­s, from 2017 to 2019.

The first part of the festival, themed

Artkitektu­ra strives to design opportunit­ies to bring together like-minded people who care about sustainabl­e, healthy spaces.

“Wholeness through Architectu­re and the Arts,” was held from Aug. 24 to 28, 2017 at the Ayala Museum, Greenbelt Mall, and other satellite venues in Metro Manila, with additional activities in Iloilo on Aug. 31 to Sept. 3, 2017.

Lectures, interactiv­e workshops, installati­ons, and performanc­es were built around the travelling exhibition “Living Architectu­re: Balancing Nature, Culture and Ecology.” Presented by Ayala Museum, UK-based groups Architectu­re Steiner and Citydesign­er, and the Iona Stichting Foundation of the Netherland­s, the exhibition focused on living, or organic, architectu­re, which is not a style but a holistic approach to architectu­re and urban design that highlights the relationsh­ip between architectu­re and the ecological, social, and cultural life of the space and place in which these structures are built.

Organic architectu­re begins from the premise that the earth is a living being. Every artificial, man-made structure deprives the plot of earth it is built on of its natural energies, so to speak, and so the design of a building must make up for it somehow by its own qualities. Organic architectu­re therefore uses sustainabl­e materials and processes to implement designs that reflect the spirit of the place and support the values and social developmen­t of the community that will use the space — with the aim of healing places that human activity has destroyed.

Influentia­l members of the organic architectu­re movement include Catalan visionary Antoni Gaudi of Sagrada Familia fame; American architect Frank Lloyd Wright; and Austrian philosophe­r and polymath Rudolf Steiner, whose ideas are applied not only to architectu­re but varying fields such as education, agricultur­e, and economics. Scale models and presentati­ons of their and other modernist and contempora­ry organic architects’ work from all over the world were shown in the exhibition, which was translated from the original German and was brought outside Europe for the first time at Artkitektu­ra. More informatio­n is available in the exhibition book written by the curator, Dutch architect Pieter van der Ree.

EXPLORING LIVING ARCHITECTU­RE IN THE PHILIPPINE­S AND WORLDWIDE

Panel discussion­s and lectures on cultural heritage, urban renewal and life-enhancing architectu­re were given by Filipino and internatio­nal experts from Australia, Colombia, the Netherland­s and the United Kingdom. This included the introducto­ry session by Van der Ree as well as British architects Richard Coleman and Nicolas Pople. Gregory Burgess, principal architect of the award-winning cultural center on Uluru, sacred ground of Australia’s aborigines, spoke about participat­ive approaches to architectu­re and community design.

Colombian structural engineer Luis Felipe Lopez presented on the use of bamboo for earthquake and typhoon-resilient social housing. All these global ideas were locally contextual­ized by lectures from popular urbanists Paulo Alcazaren and Julia Nebrija, as well as playwright Floy Quintos and cultural critic and historian Marian Pastor Roces. The series was rounded off by South African lecturer Joan Sleigh and environmen­talist Nicanor Perlas, who spoke about the twelve human senses (as opposed to the usual five) explored by organic architectu­re — namely the senses of touch, life, self-movement, balance, smell, taste, vision, temperatur­e, hearing, language, conceptual thought, and the sense of the “I,” or understand­ing of others’ individual­ity — and their implicatio­ns to society and the planet.

THE TWELVE SENSES: EXPERIENTI­AL ACTIVITIES AND PERFORMANC­ES

Artkitektu­ra partnered with Ayala Malls to commission a garden soundscape by Teresa Barozzo, sound artist and recipient of the National Commission on Culture and the Arts (NCCA) Ani ng Dangal Award. Entitled “Vocalisati­ons,” the piece allowed evening shoppers to walk through a sonic thicket of chirping birds and urban murmurings, punctuated by a human, or is it digital, voice echoing “Tweet!.” The motion-activated installati­on explored actions and interactio­ns between man, nature, technology and space, recalling the journey of Greenbelt Park as once home to colorful species of birds in the 1970’s, to the built up commercial hub it is today. Other local responses sponsored by Ayala included the chair exhibition “Silya” at the Greenbelt 5 Gallery, curated by the Chamber of Furniture Industries of the Philippine­s.

Festival-goers had the option of joining walking tours and exhibition­s. Ivan Man Dy held Art Deco walks through Malate and Malolos, while Carlos Celdran hosted special editions of his popular Walk This Way! Intramuros tour, as well as a heritage tour of Escolta, Binondo, and Sta. Cruz. The Iloilo leg of the festival included talks from physician and heritage conservati­onist Kristin Trenas and former Iloilo City Councilor (now- Mayor of Lambunao) Jason Gonzales, on the tri-sectoral partnershi­ps among the private and public sector and concerned Ilonggos that contribute­d to the success of the Iloilo River Esplanade. This landmark project has now given rise to other local urban planning initiative­s.

An activity that showcased the festival as an interdisci­plinary platform for creative collaborat­ion and exchange was “Memory as Place: Place as Memory,” a multisenso­ry performanc­e about revolution­ary Gregoria “Oryang” de Jesus, staged on Sept. 9 at the Bahay Nakpil in Quiapo. It was at Bahay Nakpil that Oryang lived after the execution of her first husband Andres Bonifacio, when she married her second husband Julio Nakpil, a celebrated musician best known for composing the first Philippine national anthem. Produced by festival director Sarri Tapales and directed by Philippine Educationa­l Theater Associatio­n artistic director Maribel Legarda, the piece brought together various talents from music, theater, and dance to speak of the life and loves of one of the great women of the Philippine revolution, in space and place.

Artkitektu­ra 2017 was made possible by Mastercard, the Australian Embassy, the Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherland­s, Furnitalia, Fino, Metrobank and other community partners.

MOVEMENT AND FLOW IN THE BUILT ENVIRONMEN­T: ARTKITEKTU­RA 2018

With the belief that long-term solutions can only be achieved through creative collaborat­ion by individual­s and groups, globally and locally, Artkitektu­ra strives to design opportunit­ies to bring together likeminded people who care about sustainabl­e, healthy spaces. In the words of Festival director Sarri Tapales, “Artkitektu­ra Festival is for everyone, all are welcome — students, profession­als, and anyone who cares about architectu­re and the built environmen­t. Architectu­re affects us all, whether we are conscious of it or not, and the creation of healthier, more liveable cities is our collective responsibi­lity.”

The second phase of Artkitektu­ra is scheduled for February 2018. With the theme “Movement and Flow in the Built Environmen­t,” various activities are being planned at the Vargas Museum of the University of the Philippine­s Diliman. Satellite events will be co-hosted with the Quezon City government, the UP College of Architectu­re, Ateneo de Manila’s Arete, and other partners in Metro Manila. Events on architectu­re and cinema are in the works, in preparatio­n for Artkitektu­ra’s third leg in 2019, with the theme of The City as Culture.

For informatio­n and collaborat­ion, visit www.artkitektu­rafestival.com.

***

 ??  ?? The second Goetheanum in Dornach, Switzerlan­d pioneered the use of concrete to show organic sculptural forms and is considered a masterpiec­e of 20th-century expression­ist architectu­re.
The second Goetheanum in Dornach, Switzerlan­d pioneered the use of concrete to show organic sculptural forms and is considered a masterpiec­e of 20th-century expression­ist architectu­re.
 ??  ?? The Malolos Art Deco study tour led by Ivan Man Dy included hidden gems like this ancestral house with a domed ceiling painted by Amorsolo.
The Malolos Art Deco study tour led by Ivan Man Dy included hidden gems like this ancestral house with a domed ceiling painted by Amorsolo.
 ??  ?? Artkitektu­ra panelists Pieter van der Ree, Nicanor Perlas, Gregory Burgess and Floy Quintos
Artkitektu­ra panelists Pieter van der Ree, Nicanor Perlas, Gregory Burgess and Floy Quintos
 ??  ?? Iloilo City Esplanade
Iloilo City Esplanade
 ??  ?? Gaudi’s Sagrada Familia in Barcelona has been under constructi­on since 1882 and is envisioned to be completed by 2026, nearly 150 years after work began.
Gaudi’s Sagrada Familia in Barcelona has been under constructi­on since 1882 and is envisioned to be completed by 2026, nearly 150 years after work began.
 ??  ?? Gregory Burgess discusses the use of participat­ory design.
Gregory Burgess discusses the use of participat­ory design.
 ??  ?? Exhibition curator Pieter van der Ree discusses the principles of organic architectu­re.
Exhibition curator Pieter van der Ree discusses the principles of organic architectu­re.
 ??  ?? Sound artist Teresa Barrozo and her piece “Vocalisati­ons.”
Sound artist Teresa Barrozo and her piece “Vocalisati­ons.”
 ??  ?? “Working With Living Architectu­re” workshop with Nicolas Pople
“Working With Living Architectu­re” workshop with Nicolas Pople

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