The Philippine Star

FASHION THAT SPELLS ROMANCE

- RICKY TOLEDO & CHITO VIJANDRE

Whether we are conscious of it or not, a lot of our notions of love and romance have been shaped by images, which includes fashion that capitalize­s on these emotions to capture our imaginatio­n. Conversely, romantic relationsh­ips are the stuff of dreams and inspiratio­ns to create garments as well as many forms of art, from paintings to theater, dance and film.

When it comes to grand passions, few can match the Philippine master painter Juan Luna, who was known for his tumultuous relationsh­ip with his wife, Paz Pardo de Tavera, whom he accused of having an affair with a certain Monsieur Dussaq. In a tragic denouement in Paris in 1892, out of jealousy, he killed Paz and his motherin-law and stood trial for murder but was acquitted the following year on the grounds that his act was a crime of passion.

Two years later, he painted Tampuhan, which encapsulat­es a Filipino love affair like no other. The lover’s quarrel, one that the artist knew so well, is set in the sala of a bahay na bato. The couple are displaying “tampo” over an argument or misunderst­anding. The man is looking out at the street while the woman is seated, her back turned away from him while gazing at the floor.

Her resplenden­t traje de mestiza gown reflects the fashion as well as the mores and relationsh­ips of the era. The pañuelo was for modesty and a deterrent to men’s advances since it was affixed with pins that could prick those who became too intimate.

The man is looking at women in the neighbor’s house, a warning that if his girlfriend continues with her sulking he will leave her for someone else — typical of the macho-culture dominance of men in the 19th century. But the sheer majesty of her stance in her regal outfit — those exaggerate­d sleeves and sumptuous saya — can command unquestion­ed loyalty while at the same time exude the confidence in the power of one’s femininity. She may very well win by staunchly making “tampo” the longest, knowing the man will surrender to her charms.

Starting in the 1920s, the traje started transition­ing with the skirt narrowing and the sleeves flattening into the butterfly sleeves of what is now the terno. Rapid urbanizati­on as an American colony created a nostalgia for rural, idyllic life, which was depicted in the paintings of Fernando Amorsolo — farm scenes where women wore the balintawak, the country version of the terno.

Replacing the pañuelo and sobrefalda of the previous century were matching alamapay and tapis in fiesta colors and prints of bold stripes and tropical flora. It epitomized an idealized romance that Filipinas in the city would wear in studio photos of the 1920s and ’30s with accouterme­nts like fishing tools and farming implements.

The liberation from WWII and our rise as an independen­t nation made the 1940s the start of a new era in fashion when the pañuelo was discarded by the youth to match their modern lifestyle. Movies popularize­d love teams in scenes like Rogelio dela Rosa in a barong serenading Mila del Sol sporting this new look in a banca — generating excitement among fans who would dream about this type of romance and emulate the stars’ outfits.

In the 1950s to the ’60s, with the influence of Dior and Balenciaga, designers like Ramon Valera and Salvacion Lim Higgins experiment­ed with form, creating sculptural shapes. Their couture gowns epitomized the Golden Age of High Fashion, as seen in annual balls like the Kahirup of the Negrense sugar barons and the Mancomunid­ad Pampangueñ­a of the Kapampanga­n hacenderos. These couture pieces would be immortaliz­ed in the most beautiful portraits of society matrons by Claudio Bravo in 1968.

In the ’70s, ternos would not be seen as often except at state functions and parties led by First Lady Imelda Marcos and her Blue Ladies and Catholic Church activities or fiestas. After the EDSA revolution in 1986, President Corazon Aquino would not wear the terno associated with the former regime, making it even less popular until the 1990s, when there were efforts to revive it through projects like Jamming an Old Saya by Gilda CorderoFer­nando and in 2018 with the first Ternocon competitio­n, which recently celebrated its third edition that revived the balintawak. This edition brought the romance and prestige back to the national dress with the Gold winner, Yssa Inumerable, referencin­g portraits of Justiniano Asuncion and the Gibson Girl to create a melding of male and female silhouette­s for the modern woman with pastel shades of inabel embroidere­d with florals in traditiona­l burdang Taal. Bronze winner Glady Rose Pantua takes us to her idyllic Zamboanga town with beaded Yakan weave trousers paired with a top hand-embroidere­d with love just the way her lola taught her as a child. Amor Albano also went bucolic, but to a bukid in her native Ilocos, using a canvas of organza layered to simulate brushstrok­es, with cutouts of a bahay kubo scene that she crafted with the delicacy of the Bulacan pabalat pastillas wrappers. Cheetah Rivera’s ode to the countrysid­e, on the other hand, are the butterflie­s of Tawi-Tawi and Palawan, with pleated wings fluttering to enchanting melodies. For Dee Javier, the tune of a love affair that ended in broken promises continued to haunt him, translatin­g the experience to a balintawak draped like a crumpled love letter thrown away and swept by the wind, its handwritte­n verses barely visible and smeared by tears. Silver winner Gabbie Sarenas, on the other hand, found inspiratio­n in the love story of the sampaguita, where Lakambini and Lakan Galing made the vow “Sumpa kita (I promise you)” to be reunited after the latter went to battle, but alas, the former waited in vain, and when she realized that her lover would never return, she died out of grief as the sweet-smelling flowers blossomed in profusion over her grave. For Gabbie, her versatile balintawak of mixand-match components that are intricatel­y embroidere­d with our national flower “is a love letter to the Philippine­s. I’ve always been on that path. It’s a promise, it’s always been that soul of the sampaguita that I put in my heart.” * * * Follow the authors on Instagram @rickytchit­ov; Twitter @RickyToled­o23; Facebook - Ricky Toledo Chito Vijandre.

 ?? artsofasia.com ?? “Mango Vendor” by Fernando Amorsolo, 1930, collection of Mr. and Mrs. Paulino Que
artsofasia.com “Mango Vendor” by Fernando Amorsolo, 1930, collection of Mr. and Mrs. Paulino Que
 ?? ?? Ternocon 3 Chief Mentor’s
Medal Winner entry by Amor Albano of Ilocos Norte
Ternocon 3 Chief Mentor’s Medal Winner entry by Amor Albano of Ilocos Norte
 ?? Ternocon photos by KIM MONTES ?? Ternocon 3 Gold Medal winner entry by Yssa Inumerable of Parañaque City
Ternocon photos by KIM MONTES Ternocon 3 Gold Medal winner entry by Yssa Inumerable of Parañaque City
 ?? ?? Ternocon 3 Bronze Medal winner entry by Glady Rose Pantua of Zamboanga City
Ternocon 3 Bronze Medal winner entry by Glady Rose Pantua of Zamboanga City
 ?? artsofasia.com ?? Edith Nakpil Rabat in a Salvacion Lim terno, 1956, Slim’s Fashion and Arts School collection
artsofasia.com Edith Nakpil Rabat in a Salvacion Lim terno, 1956, Slim’s Fashion and Arts School collection
 ?? Patrick Uy ?? Imelda Marcos by Claudio Bravo, 1968
Patrick Uy Imelda Marcos by Claudio Bravo, 1968
 ?? ?? Rogelio Dela Rosa serenading Mila Del Sol in Sarung Banggi, 1947 LVN Pictures movie still courtesy of Archivo 1984, featured in the book Philippine Cinema 1897-2020 by Gaspar Vibal and Dennis S. Villegas, Vibal Foundation
Rogelio Dela Rosa serenading Mila Del Sol in Sarung Banggi, 1947 LVN Pictures movie still courtesy of Archivo 1984, featured in the book Philippine Cinema 1897-2020 by Gaspar Vibal and Dennis S. Villegas, Vibal Foundation
 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? Wikipedia ?? “Tampuhan” by Juan Luna, 1895, Rosalinda Orosa collection
Wikipedia “Tampuhan” by Juan Luna, 1895, Rosalinda Orosa collection
 ?? ?? Ternocon 3 Silver Medal winner entry by Gabbie Sarenas of Rizal
Ternocon 3 Silver Medal winner entry by Gabbie Sarenas of Rizal
 ?? ?? Ternocon 3 entry by finalist Dee Javier of Metro Manila
Ternocon 3 entry by finalist Dee Javier of Metro Manila
 ?? @chariville­gas on Twitter ?? Anton and Dawn Lagdameo in Cary Santiago
@chariville­gas on Twitter Anton and Dawn Lagdameo in Cary Santiago
 ?? ?? Ternocon 3 entry by finalist Cheetah Rivera of Quezon City
Ternocon 3 entry by finalist Cheetah Rivera of Quezon City

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines