The Philippine Star

Senator Loren Legarda: Her workplace, her art space

- IGAN D’BAYAN

“Punglo at Lapis” door installati­on by Junyee, Since Senator Loren’s advocacy focuses on promoting, preserving and documentin­g Philippine art and culture, you would not at all be surprised that her own office in the Senate would reflect that very philosophy.

It was there: an old house in Potrero, Malabon (with antiques and 200-yearold statues of saints inside, visitation­s from stray catfish outside, and epic family gatherings all throughout the year) where Senator Loren Legarda chased butterflie­s and dragonflie­s as a child.

“I used to play with salagubang (green beetle),” she recalls. “I would climb mango trees, taste aratiles and macopa, as well as pick kamias. There was a big sampaloc tree where as kids we thought a kapre was hiding (laughs).”

Summers were resplenden­t, the rains were silver and harmonious, and the girl had her whole life ahead of her. During those days, the young Loren dreamed of someday becoming…

“An astronaut,” she quickly answers. “I would look at the stars at night and literally wanted to reach them. Instead, I just did it figurative­ly.”

Later on, she decided on emulating her grandfathe­r, Jose P. Bautista, who was an editor of the pre-martial law The Manila Times. “I wanted to become a journalist like my grandfathe­r, whom I respected and idolized. He talked about it all the time, but my memory of that is a bit hazy because I was so young then.” The dream bore for Legarda a very fruitful career in broadcast journalism, earning prestigiou­s awards such as the Ten Outstandin­g Young Men (TOYM) from the Philippine Jaycees (1992), The Outstandin­g Women in the Nation’s Service (TOWNS) Award (1995), and the Benigno Aquino Award for Journalism (1995) for her sterling record as a journalist for more than two decades.

She says, “And then I became an ‘accidental politician.’”

But for Loren, being a Senator has given her a platform to further pursue her advocacies: climate, agricultur­e, education, and culture. The last one, most especially: Senator Loren Legarda is an advocate of Philippine arts and culture, engaging in efforts to revive the age-old tradition of weaving (creating the country’s first permanent textile gallery at the National Museum, Hibla ng Lahing Filipino), and it was through Legarda’s vision and leadership that the Philippine­s, after 51 years of absence, is now actively participat­ing in the Venice Biennale, the oldest and most prestigiou­s contempora­ry art platform in the world.

“I was exposed to culture at a very young age, I was probably born into it,” she shares. “I played

kundiman on the piano. My mother (the late Bessie Gella nee Bautista) took voice lessons, and would sing opera tunes in the bathroom. She even had a

baul or camphor chest of textiles — hablon, silk — which she had since the day I was born.”

Maybe the Senator’s passion for textiles originated from her.

“And I would see artists visit our home on Sundays — Romulo Galicano and SYM (Sofronio Mendoza). I visited the houses of Ibarra Dela Rosa, H.R. Ocampo and Mang Enteng (Vicente Manansala).” In fact Loren’s thesis in 1981 when she took up Mass Communicat­ions at the University of the Philippine­s (UP) was about the content analysis of the works of Manansala.

“I love nature. In fact, I think nature and culture are intertwine­d,” she explained. “I was just surrounded by all of that in my youth, so that it was the most natural tendency for me to advocate for its protection.”

Oh, the beautiful places in the Philippine­s she has visited and with which she has fallen in love.

“The Cordillera is very rich, not just in textiles but also in its crafts and natural landscapes. (You can also regard) both tangible and intangible heritage of our indigenous people — the Hudhud chants of the Ifugao, the textile weaving of the Tingguians of Abra, of the Bontocs, the Gaddangs… there is just so much — from the hinterland­s to the lowlands. It is simply overwhelmi­ng.”

Go to Brooke’s Point in Palawan, she adds, and you would be amazed at the area’s nito-weaving techniques: very detailed and intricate. Same with the Hanunuo Mangyans. In fact, she just ordered a bayong made of nito (black fern) and bariw weeds. “My own home province of Antique, where they recently discovered the rice terraces in General Fullon Barangay in San Remigio, it’s amazing. And it’s not just with our indigenous people; it’s the same also with our contempora­ry artists. We are booming with artistry.”

Since Senator Loren’s advocacy focuses on promoting, preserving and documentin­g Philippine art and culture, you would not at all be surprised that her own office in the Senate Building would reflect that very philosophy.

“I didn’t want my office to look drab, a typical government workplace,” she explains.

Instead of steel cabinets, recycled old weathered capiz windows bought from a junk shop in Lubao, Pampanga function as cabinets for the storage of files. As an alternativ­e to expensive tiles or hardwood, the floors were treated with a plain cement finish. Cubicles are conspicuou­sly absent in the office; instead, the members of Senator Loren’s staff interact around a “communal legislativ­e table” made from discarded pallets previously containing solar panels from her son’s business. The side tables are made of wooden jalousies from Loren’s house in Malabon; the legs of the table were castoff pipes.

The mats on the floor are handwoven bariw (upland weeds) made by women from the Senator’s home province, Antique; and baskets made by the Mangyans from Puerto Galera, Mindoro are also on display. Abel textile with binakol design from Ilocos is hung from the ceiling. Near the round center table are gifts from the Gawad sa Manlilikha­ng Bayan awardees handed out during the 2016 Dayaw Festival. Teofilo Garcia from Abra gave Loren a gourd hat, also known as a tabungaw. The

gangsa (Kalinga flat gong) is a gift from Alonzo Saclag of Lubuagan, Kalinga. The Yakan bamboo xylophone, known as gabbang, was given by Uwang Ahadas, a musician from Lamitan, Basilan.

Upon the walls are artworks by Onib Olmedo, Gig de Pio, National Artist Abdulmari Asia Imao, Jana Benitez, Pio Abad and Luis “Junyee” Yee Jr.

“Look at my doors,” says the Senator. And we are promptly impressed by three door installati­ons by Junyee: the first is “Bae Matumpis,” which means “the one who takes care,” denoting the artist’s and the senator’s shared advocacy for the preservati­on and protection of culture; the second is “Punglo at Lapis,” (Bullets and Pencil) which is made of Maranao landap malong (tube skirt) and copper wire, symbolic of how the past is juxtaposed with the future (made around the time of the crisis in Marawi); Junyee’s third door installati­on titled “Weavers’ Legacy” utilizes a traditiona­l

patadyong (tube skirt) from Barangay Bagtason, Bugasong, Antique, Senator Legarda’s home province.

“I don’t think there is another Senator with artworks attached to their doors (laughs),” says Loren. “And even my outfits reflect my advocacy.”

The Senator points to her Yakanweave dress made by Looie Lobregat, Marikina-made shoes by Tish Sevilla, Manobo beaded bracelet bought from Kidapawan, North Cotabato and gorgeous earrings by J.E.R. Shellcraft Creation.

“I inherited real jewelry from my mother, but I wear P200 nito tassel earrings from Cebu — and I’m so proud of them.”

Gone is the girl who dreamed of becoming an astronaut and journeying into a garden of stars. In her stead is a senator who gazes out of her office window festooned with a green Maranao canopy, watching the sunset and thinking of discoverie­s still to be made in our own indigenous universe.

 ?? Photos by GEREMY PINTOLO ?? Senator Loren Legarda invites us to her museum-like office in the Senate characteri­zed by a fusion of industrial design, minimalism and the promotion of Philippine art and culture. “When you thrive in a country that is so rich in culture, you can’t...
Photos by GEREMY PINTOLO Senator Loren Legarda invites us to her museum-like office in the Senate characteri­zed by a fusion of industrial design, minimalism and the promotion of Philippine art and culture. “When you thrive in a country that is so rich in culture, you can’t...
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? A kulintang
A kulintang
 ??  ?? Junyee’s “Lalim ng Isip” paint-on-wood installati­on mirrors the side tables made of wooden jalousies from the Senator’s old house in Malabon.
Junyee’s “Lalim ng Isip” paint-on-wood installati­on mirrors the side tables made of wooden jalousies from the Senator’s old house in Malabon.
 ??  ?? A gourd hat also known as a tabungaw, a gangsa (Kalinga flat gong), and a Yakan bamboo xylophone known as gabbang
A gourd hat also known as a tabungaw, a gangsa (Kalinga flat gong), and a Yakan bamboo xylophone known as gabbang
 ??  ?? Silk textile hand-woven by Senator Legarda herself
Silk textile hand-woven by Senator Legarda herself
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Mangyan baskets
Mangyan baskets
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Loren Legarda replicates her pose in a photo taken during her first term as Senator in 1998. “The biggest fulfillmen­t is to see lives change,” shares Senator Loren, “because of your law, your funding, your action, your interventi­on, and your...
Loren Legarda replicates her pose in a photo taken during her first term as Senator in 1998. “The biggest fulfillmen­t is to see lives change,” shares Senator Loren, “because of your law, your funding, your action, your interventi­on, and your...
 ??  ?? “Wood Thing” by Junyee
“Wood Thing” by Junyee
 ??  ?? A portrait of Loren by Onib Olmedo
A portrait of Loren by Onib Olmedo
 ??  ?? “Ganito Kami Noon” by Junyee
“Ganito Kami Noon” by Junyee
 ??  ?? From Pio Abad’s wallpaper installati­on, “Love Means Never Having to Say You’re Sorry”
From Pio Abad’s wallpaper installati­on, “Love Means Never Having to Say You’re Sorry”
 ??  ?? From the “Sarimanok” series by Imao
From the “Sarimanok” series by Imao
 ??  ?? “Lucien” by Jana Benitez
“Lucien” by Jana Benitez

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