The Philippine Star

When komiks brought in the glitterati

- JOANNE RAE M. RAMIREZ (You may e-mail me at joanneraer­amirez@yahoo.com. Follow me on Instagram @joanneraer­amirez.)

Iam the proud wife of Francisco V. Coching, National Artist for Visual Arts,” Filomena Navales Coching wrote in September this year, just over a month before the exhibit Images of Nation: F. V.

Coching, Komiks at Kultura opened before a distinguis­hed gathering at the Ayala Museum in Makati. Mrs. Coching, unfortunat­ely, did not live long enough to witness the proud moment as she passed away, also last month, at the age of 94.

A tribute to one of the most prolific figures in Filipino komiks’ golden age, Francisco V. Coching, known as the “Dean of Philippine Illustrato­rs,” the exhibit was launched at the Ayala Museum in celebratio­n of the 100th birthday of the National Artist for Visual Arts.

In a book published by the Ayala Museum in time for the event, Mrs. Coching said the exhibit — putting komiks as an art form on a pedestal — breaks a glass ceiling.

“This is a breakthrou­gh in the world of komiks, once neglected and dismissed as not achieving the level of fine art of the cultured, thus considered only to suit the taste of the unlettered,” Mrs. Coching wrote.

She would have been joyous to see the high-brow Ayala Museum all aglow with the literati — and the glitterati — during the opening of the exhibit.

Komiks is a challengin­g art form because the komiks artist blends prose with illustrati­ons. And the illustrati­ons tell the story as well, for they depict motion even in their stillness.

“That’s how I learned to read, by reading komiks,” says my colleague Büm D. Tenorio Jr.

A legend in the komiks industry, Francisco V. Coching (1919-1998) produced over 63 titles, 51 of which were adapted into film. Among his many classics were Pedro Penduko,

Hagibis, Ang Barbaro and La Sombra. Senior curator Ditas Samson says that though reading komiks is “no longer a national pastime” with digital technology now reigning, Coching and his generation of komiks novelists will live on for their bodies of work are “embedded in the hearts and minds of Filipinos.” The exhibit Images of Nation: F. V. Coching, Komiks at Kultura features original plates of covers, first-issue spreads, character studies, illustrati­ons and scaled, re-colored reproducti­ons of his most popular works. It gives a behind-thescenes look of Coching’s creative process, allowing viewers to grasp his vast imaginatio­n, commitment to details and mastery of draftsmans­hip.

The artist’s narratives and imagined heroes during the ‘40s to the ‘60s became part of the aspiration­s and imaginatio­n of a young Philippine nation, freed from a colonial overseer and recovering from a devastatin­g war. Coching, a master visual artist and storytelle­r, instilled in his readers a strength of spirit to cope and overcome the trauma of war and face the task of rebuilding the nation.

In an essay well-known art critic Alice Guillermo explains that “Coching’s art reveals the influence of (Hal) Foster — author of the popular 1930s pulp series Prince Valiant — in the acute characteri­zation, the interrelat­ionship of the figures, the general compositio­n, the use of color and tones, as well as the feeling for the natural setting.”

Through his tales of heroism and triumph, Francisco V. Coching was also able to bring discussion­s on race and identity over to popular culture. His contributi­ons to the komiks industry, to Philippine culture and popular consciousn­ess, merited him the National Artist Award for Visual Arts, which was posthumous­ly conferred in 2014.

F. V. Coching: Komiks at Kultura is presented under Ayala Museum’s Images of Nation exhibition program, developed to share the extraordin­ary vision and excellence embodied in the National Artist Award, with the support of the National Commission for Culture and the Arts.

It is on show at the Ayala Museum until Feb. 3, 2019.

 ??  ?? (From left) Ambassador­s Kok Li Peng of Singapore and Jorge Moragas of Spain, Dr. Preciosa Soliven, the author, Lulu and Pepe Rodriguez, Swedish Ambassador Harald Fries and wife Susan.
(From left) Ambassador­s Kok Li Peng of Singapore and Jorge Moragas of Spain, Dr. Preciosa Soliven, the author, Lulu and Pepe Rodriguez, Swedish Ambassador Harald Fries and wife Susan.
 ??  ?? (From left) Arnel Coching, Maridel Coching, Lulu Rodriguez, NCCA director Bernan Corpus and Ayala Museum director Mariles Gustilo.
(From left) Arnel Coching, Maridel Coching, Lulu Rodriguez, NCCA director Bernan Corpus and Ayala Museum director Mariles Gustilo.
 ??  ?? Ambassador Jorge Moragas.
Ambassador Jorge Moragas.
 ??  ?? A selfportra­it of National Artist for Visual Arts Francisco V. Coching.
A selfportra­it of National Artist for Visual Arts Francisco V. Coching.
 ??  ?? (From left) Dr. Becky Singson, Pepe Rodriguez, Jose Mari Chan and Giulia Zahar.
(From left) Dr. Becky Singson, Pepe Rodriguez, Jose Mari Chan and Giulia Zahar.
 ??  ?? Pepe Rodriguez (center) with George and Kristine Yang.
Pepe Rodriguez (center) with George and Kristine Yang.
 ??  ?? Apostolic Nuncio Gabriele Caccia with Lulu and Pepe Rodriguez.
Apostolic Nuncio Gabriele Caccia with Lulu and Pepe Rodriguez.
 ??  ?? Tandis Jafari Malak and Iranian Cultural Counselor Mohammad Jafari Malak.
Tandis Jafari Malak and Iranian Cultural Counselor Mohammad Jafari Malak.
 ??  ?? Monaco Consul General Fortune Ledesma and Instituto Cervantes director Carlos Madrid.
Monaco Consul General Fortune Ledesma and Instituto Cervantes director Carlos Madrid.
 ??  ?? Myanmar Ambassador U Win Naing.
Myanmar Ambassador U Win Naing.
 ??  ?? Japanese Ambassador Koji Haneda.
Japanese Ambassador Koji Haneda.
 ??  ?? Nyoy Volante.
Nyoy Volante.
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