The Philippine Star

FERNANDO MANSO: WRITING WITH LIGHT

His heart is in the Philippine­s, a country he has been visiting regularly for 13 years, thanks to his long-time love, Bea Zobel, Jr.

- By BAMBINA OLIVARES

The legendary photograph­er Henri Cartier-Bresson called photograph­y “a way of comprehend­ing.” And photograph­s, according to the late writer, critic and public intellectu­al Susan Sontag, “really are experience captured,” with the camera “the ideal arm of consciousn­ess in its acquisitiv­e mood.”

The work of the Spanish photograph­er Fernando Manso indeed reflects a considered, even painstakin­g practice of comprehens­ion, and certainly captures experience in a way few other photograph­ers have attempted, at least not in modern times. For Manso, through his poetic and atmospheri­c images, is more than a photograph­er clicking away at an object; focusing mostly on landscape and architectu­re, he is a crusader for heritage, a conjurer of histories, an artist who communicat­es through the motion of light through time.

A former adman and son of an architect, Manso defines photograph­y, in fact, as “writing with light,” going back to the word’s Greek roots – photos meaning light, and graphos meaning drawing. And his choice of instrument, a view camera that was first developed in the 1840s, is an anachronis­m in this age of technologi­cal wizardry, easy portabilit­y, and instantane­ous delivery.

“My camera is a large, grand format camera mounted on a tripod that can go up to four meters,” he explains. “Then I take with me plates of negative color film that measure 20x25cm. All in all, my equipment is too heavy, between 30 to 40 kilos, and I go with all the material.”

This clearly is not an endeavor for the faint-hearted, nor for the slightly built. At over six feet tall, Manso possesses the athletic physique that gives him the strength to carry his equipment with him as he treks through the remotest corners of his beloved Spain, walking along coastlines, trudging through desert, inching up mountains, setting up inside forgotten churches and abandoned monuments. But more than brawn, he possesses the mental stamina to wait patiently for hours, days and weeks, perched above his tripod, till the light is as it should be, and maybe — just maybe — the image in his mind is translated onto the glass plate, and later, in production, transforme­d into a large-scale photograph of breathtaki­ng detail: an instant captured, not so much frozen in time but rendered in painterly beauty, resonant with poetry and shimmering with emotion. In its movement and stillness and truth, a story emerges, as his “Alhambra,” “España,” “Light of Spain” and “Madrid” series and accompanyi­ng books attest. Currently he is at work on a new series, “Whispers of Stone.”

His is a solitary practice. He works alone, driving cross-country in his Land Cruiser, without a team to carry his equipment. He laughingly recounts how in Colombia once, when speaking to the Spanish ambassador, who wanted him to present his Madrid photos in Bogota, he asked if he could take photos of Bogota to exhibit in Madrid. The ambassador thought it was a great idea, and offered to assign some young students to help Manso. “They were maybe 18, 20, 21 years old. Every day, they had to change the student because they couldn’t continue for 12 to 14 hours with me, without food or water. One day, one guy, he was lying on the floor. I said, ‘What are you doing?’ He said, ‘Because we started at 4 a.m. and it’s now 5 p.m. and we haven’t eaten anything.’ But this is how I work. They were expecting one hour, two hours. They didn’t understand.”

And yet Manso is hardly the cruel taskmaster; in reality he is exacting in standards, but gentle in nature, much like his old school approach to photograph­y. What happens when he is at work, observing the minute changes in the way the light falls, the atmosphere compresses, or the weather intensifie­s, thereby impacting the image that may emerge, is that he gets into alpha mode, on a level of mind control similar to that of meditation in which everything that is extraneous does not matter. When he’s in the “zone,” so much, in effect, is an act of faith as all he has is a single plate for each shot, with an inkling, but no certainty, as to how the photo will turn out as there is no such thing as digital playback in his artisanal approach to his craft. It’s no wonder he has been called “the most patient man in the world.”

“I can’t really explain why I work the way I do,” he confesses, “even when it comes to the size of my photos once printed. It’s just something I feel in my heart.”

Also in his heart is the Philippine­s, a country he has been visiting regularly for 13 years, thanks to his long-time love, Bea Zobel, Jr. He has sought to capture the beauty of our islands with his view camera, but considerin­g the way he works, he would understand­ably need more time to watch the movements of the sun and the sky, in order to mark, as he does with his photograph­s of Spain, “the passage of time.” Batanes is on his wish list.

In October 2022, I curated my first museum exhibition, “The Hat of the Matter,” at the Metropolit­an Museum of Manila as part of its inaugural offerings at the new location in BGC. Taking liberties with the theme of hats and headgear and their significan­ce in Philippine society, whether as signifiers of status or barometers of style, I was determined to include a photograph of Manso’s that I had seen a few years back. From the moment I saw it as an Instagram post, I was mesmerized. But nothing prepared me for the sheer power of the real-life oversized print I hand-carried back with me from Madrid in time for the exhibition.

In the wall text that accompanie­d the exhibition, I wrote:

“On a trip to Cebu in 2016, Fernando Manso set about photograph­ing transgende­r women in various locales around the city. The idea was to situate them within everyday scenes while emphasizin­g the aspect of performanc­e and spectacle that was so much a part of their profession­al personas. Flamboyant hats and headpieces, then, become central to their performanc­e. The fantastica­l headpiece here, evoking an iridescent sea creature — a mermaid, goddess or a beautiful manta ray, even — emerging from the depths of the ocean, brings an unexpected frisson of glamour to the fish market, transformi­ng it from the mundane to the theatrical.”

Whether he sets his eye on crumbling monuments and Gothic cathedrals, or grassy fields and silvery lakes, Manso imbues his subjects with deep awe and reverence for their natural beauty, the secrets within their arches and waters, and the histories contained in them. With his photograph­s of human subjects, he does the same, allowing their humanity to glow from within.

Jubilation echoed through the topnotch restaurant China Blue by Jereme Leung at Conrad Manila, Pasay City, as JL & Co. celebrated a double birthday extravagan­za for two of their wellloved members, Beging Soriano and Robina Ko-Tan.

Against the mesmerizin­g backdrop of Manila Bay’s sunset and the vibrant lights of the Ferris wheel, guests relished delectable Chinese fare, toasting the enduring spirits of the lovely honorees.

Amid panoramic views and conviviali­ty, the intimate gathering unfolded as a testament to friendship and festivity, leaving cherished moments in everyone’s memory.

You may email me at jjlitton@indanet.com. Follow me on Facebook and YouTube: Johnny Litton by Jayelles PH and on Instagram: @jayellesph.

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 ?? ?? The Spanish Royal Family — the King, Don Felipe, the Queen, Doña Letizia, Leonor, the Princess of Asturias and Princess Sofia — came out in full force for Fernando Manso’s exhibition “The Light of Spain.”
The Spanish Royal Family — the King, Don Felipe, the Queen, Doña Letizia, Leonor, the Princess of Asturias and Princess Sofia — came out in full force for Fernando Manso’s exhibition “The Light of Spain.”
 ?? ?? The photograph­er Fernando Manso with his view camera, whose origins date back to the 1850s. Bambina Olivares spoke to him during his most recent visit to Manila.
The photograph­er Fernando Manso with his view camera, whose origins date back to the 1850s. Bambina Olivares spoke to him during his most recent visit to Manila.
 ?? ?? Fernando Manso has published four books: Alhambra, España, The Light of Spain and Madrid. A fifth one, Whispers of Stone, is slated for release soon.
Fernando Manso has published four books: Alhambra, España, The Light of Spain and Madrid. A fifth one, Whispers of Stone, is slated for release soon.
 ?? ?? In 2016, Fernando Manso set about photograph­ing transgende­r contestant­s in a beauty pageant in Cebu
In 2016, Fernando Manso set about photograph­ing transgende­r contestant­s in a beauty pageant in Cebu
 ?? ?? Views of Alhambra by Fernando Manso
Views of Alhambra by Fernando Manso
 ?? ?? Fernando Manso and Bea Zobel, Jr.
Fernando Manso and Bea Zobel, Jr.
 ?? ?? Septiembre 2014 USA
Septiembre 2014 USA
 ?? ?? (Seated) Malou Martinez and Eni Alba with (standing) Lanie Fong and Roselle Rebano
(Seated) Malou Martinez and Eni Alba with (standing) Lanie Fong and Roselle Rebano
 ?? ?? Celebrator Robina Ko-Tan, your columnist, and celebrator Beging Soriano
Celebrator Robina Ko-Tan, your columnist, and celebrator Beging Soriano
 ?? ?? Marissa Fenton, Agile Zamora, and Connie Haw
Marissa Fenton, Agile Zamora, and Connie Haw
 ?? ?? Ayna Ong, Maru Go, and Joy Rustia
Ayna Ong, Maru Go, and Joy Rustia

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