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Kulay-Diwa Gallery of Philippine Contemporary Art is a privately owned venue for artistic expression. It is strategically located within a cluster of progressive communities South of Manila. It has an independent exhibition area able to accommodate large-scale works, and a spacious garden ideal for outdoor programs, performances and sculpture installations.

 

Goals of Kulay-Diwa:

To discover and promote the works of talented, young and deserving Filipino Artist;

To serve as a cultural outpost and make the arts more accessible to the fast-growing communities South of Manila; and

To foster cultural interaction and exchanges with the local regions,Southeast Asia and other countries.

 

Kulay (Color)

Diwa (Spirit, Thought)

 



 

 




Kulay-Diwa Gallery of Philippine Contemporary Art
25 Lopez Avenue, Lopez Village,Sucat
Paranaque City, Metro Manila 1700
Philippines

ph: Landline: (632)8260574

bobbit@kulay-diwa.com

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Anita Magsaysay-Ho

 

Kulay-Diwa-Anita-Magsaysay-Ho.jpg

 

Anita Corpus Magsaysay-Ho
One of the Thirteen Moderns

 

MAGSAYSAY-Ho, ANITA CORPUS b. Manila 25 May 1914. Painter. She is the daughter of Ambrosio
Magsaysay and Armilla Corpus. She is married to Robert Ho. She studied at the University of the Philippines
(UP) School of Fine Arts under Fabian de la Rosa, Vicente Rivera y Mir, and Fernando and Pablo Amorsolo.
She also studied at the School of Design under Victorio Edades and Enrique Ruiz. From there she proceeded
to the Cranbrook Academy of Art in Michigan, USA, While in the United States, she affiliated with the Art
Students League in New York where she took courses in oil painting, graphics, and figure sketching.
 
During the early 194os Magsaysay Ho's works showed the influence of Amorsolo in choice of subjects and in
treatment of light and color, However, these works had very modernist tendencies, such as the use of
expressive distortion and concern for design and rhythm. The Philippine Art Gallery (PAG) did much to
situate Magsaysay Ho's works showed the influence of Amorsolo in choice of subjects and in treatment of
light and color, However, these works had very modernist tendencies, such as the use of expressive distortion
and concern for design and rhythm. The Philippine Art Gallery (PAG) did much to situate Magsaysay Ho's art
in the modernist movement of the 1950s. The original neorealists expanded to the PAG group which included
Lydia Arguilla, Nena Saguil, and Magsaysay Ho's art in the modernist movement of the 1950s. The original
neorealists expanded to the PAG group which included Lydia Arguilla, Nena Saguil, and Magsaysay Ho as its
women artists. In her paintings of the PAG period, which had as subjects women harvesting fruits, gathering
sheaves of grain, or selling fish in the market in their baro Ho as its women artists. In her paintings of the
PAG period, which had as subjects women harvesting fruits, gathering sheaves of grain, or selling fish in the
market in their baro't saya and bandana, Magsaysay Ho emphasized movement and bustling interaction by
means of bold, vigorous brushstrokes and strong tonal contrasts of light and dark, In the 1960s she opened up
space and allowed a more leisurely disposition of her women figures which became clearly articulated and
separate, the better to bring out the relationship of their movements and their serial rhythms. The lines tended
to soften with a more consistent modelling, the light and dark tones, creating a more harmonious and
mellifluous effect that hinted of choreographic grace. The style developed into paintings with movement and
greater interaction among the figures.
 
Her work of the 1970s showed the artist exploring a new style influenced by Chinese calligraphy, and a
secondary quasiwriter atmosphere. While her subjects were still the native women, she randomly spattered her
canvases with delicately controlled ink blots which suggested rock formations, vegetation or waves in the sea.
Her concern had evidently become purely formal: balance the interest and variety of the human gestures and
movements with the dynamic and assertive power of the ink blots.
 
A distinct period in the mid late 1980s may be called the Green Period after its predominant coloration. The
predominant green is the hue of leaves, fruit, and vegetables; the women figures themselves share this quality
symbolically as they themselves become like plants and fruit in nature. The physical type of her sisterhood is
now clearly defined: the oval face with high cheekbones and narrow eyes, brows softly curving up to the
temples.
 
In the late 1980s Magsaysay Ho began to paint large half figures. She filled the pictorial field entirely with
female figures surrounded by baskets, fruits, or tame birds hopping around them. In place of spontaneity and
lightness which characterized her earlier period, her figures and forms acquired solidarity of mass rendered in
a highly refined manner. Her colors became very Asian, using stark contrasts such as burnt sienna and yellow
greens.
 
Magsaysay Ho won second prize for Five Senses in the 1950 Manila Grand Opera House Exhibition. She
won second prize for Fish Vendors in the second watercolor exhibition of Graphic Arts in 1952. Her awards
from the Art Association of the Philippines include: first prize, The Cooks, 1952: second Prize, Fruit Vendors,
1953, third prize, Mending the Nets, 1959; first prize, Two Women, 1960; and second prize, Trio, 1962.
 
 


 




 

Kulay-Diwa Gallery of Philippine Contemporary Art is a privately owned venue for artistic expression. It is strategically located within a cluster of progressive communities South of Manila. It has an independent exhibition area able to accommodate large-scale works, and a spacious garden ideal for outdoor programs, performances and sculpture installations.
 
Goals of Kulay-Diwa

To discover and promote the works of talented, young and deserving Filipino Artist;

To serve as a cultural outpost and make the arts more accessible to the fast-growing communities South of Manila; and
To foster cultural interaction and exchanges with the local regions and other countries.

 

Kulay(Color)


Diwa(Spirit, Thought)



 

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Copyright 2012 Kulay-Diwa Gallery of Philippine Contemporary Art. All rights reserved.

Intellectual Property Philippines Reg. no. 4-2010-990154

DTI Reg. no. 01166724

TIN: 200672743000


Managing Director: Roberto San Agustin Nolasco

Contact person: Bobbit


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Kulay-Diwa Gallery of Philippine Contemporary Art
25 Lopez Avenue, Lopez Village,Sucat
Paranaque City, Metro Manila 1700
Philippines

ph: Landline: (632)8260574

bobbit@kulay-diwa.com

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