Friday, February 26, 2016

FVR on our future

FVR on the future

By Nickky Faustine P. de Guzman
“I’ll be around in 2030, I don’t know about you,” former President Fidel V. Ramos told reporters on Feb. 19, six days before the 30th anniversary celebration of the 1986 People Power Revolution, during the launch of a new book. Stood on a stool to elevate himself over the heads of the attendees at Kamuning Bakery’s Pandesal Forum, he held up the book called 2030: One World, One Community, One Family, which is a collection of his essays and speeches.
FVR on the future
His book, he said, “is the ultimate aspiration [of the world], but especially for the Filipino generation.”
At “87 years young,” the former President, one of the People Power heroes, is still witty and vibrant. The press conference might have been the unveiling of his newest endeavor, but it was also a venue to give his views on national topics.
WHY DO WE CELEBRATE PEOPLE POWER?
“Beyond the annual celebration, do we really try to remember why that transcendent, God-inspired event happened?” he said in his speech. “And do the younger ones, particularly those born after 1986, who make up a large percentage of our population today, even understand why the non-violent EDSA People Power Revolution took place? Why did more than a million Filipinos armed only with their convictions, democratic faith, and God’s protection, come out in defiance of overwhelming odds most likely to suffer sudden death or grievous injury?”
It’s because we wanted to make a stand, he said. People Power isn’t a one-time thing either, he added.
While the People Power Revolution was the country’s exclamation point ending well over a decade of repression and hostility, “it must be seen as just the beginning,” he said.
His book is a beginning, created to promote and achieve the United Nation’s 2030 Global Goals for Sustainable Development, including the end to poverty, hunger, water unavailability, and gender inequality, and promoting sustainable living through inclusive economic growth, peace, justice, and sustainable living.  
“We must be like the stock exchange,” said Mr. Ramos — who before his fateful role in overthrowing the dictatorship of Ferdinand E. Marcos, served in the top ranks of the Armed Forces of the Philippines — while motioning a zigzag pattern with his hands, “it is upward, but hindi daang matuwid (straight path).”
“’Yung daang matuwid, kung sino man ang nag-imbento nyan, hindi nag-aral ng physics. (Whoever invented ‘the straight path’ didn’t study physics.) Because of the force of gravity, ang daan na pinakamatuwid(the straightest path) is going to hell. There’s no straight line unless downward, which is going to hell,” he stressed.
HOW IS PEOPLE POWER RELATED TO ECONOMICS?
“The concept of People Power is also useful in the economy. When I became the president, I said, we must grow the economy like cooking abibingka (rice cake). May apoy sa ilalim at ibabaw. (There’s fire above and below). Below, is the people power: agriculture, fishing, and mom and pop businesses. Sa dami niyan ang lakas niyan (With so many people, this is strong). Ang apoy sa ibabaw (The fire above is) leadership, networking, marketing, education, science, and technology.Kung nagsama yan, aangat ang economy at magiging competitive (If those two are together, the economy is rise and become competitive).Pero di pa nangyayari dahil marami palpak na leader. (But it’s not yet happening because of many leaders who are failures.)”
DO YOU THING THE YOUTH DO NOT CARE ABOUT THE EDSA REVOLUTION?
“It’s not the youth’s fault if they are disconnected with the EDSA Revolution, but of their elders and ancestors. Me, I always give lectures to the youth. We have a road show, which started in June 2015, in 25 colleges and universities. We’re going to Mindanao. So far, we’ve been to Luzon and Visayas. The values of EDSA are development, cooperation, education, and international friendship.”
HOW SHOULD THE NEXT PRESIDENT DEAL WITH CHINA?
“China must be made to understand that we’re not acting alone. We are part of the democratic world. And this was brought about by our model during EDSA 1986 that ejected a dictatorship without violence. That model still holds. If you look at countries in the Middle East, there’s too much violence, suffering, and bloodshed. These must be avoided. This is our path toward avoiding bloodshed with any country in the world, with and between, the two super powers. Your foe in the world map is not another country my friend, it is Zika virus, Ebola, HIV, AIDS, dengue…”
SO 30 YEARS AFTER THE BLOODLESS REVOLUTION, WHERE ARE WE HEADING?
While Mr. Ramos is optimistic, he said we need revolutionary changes.
“The trouble with the Philippines is that we adopted the US style of presidential system,” said the former President, who started his career in 1946 as a cadet under former President Manuel L. Quezon.
“The American presidential system has not worked in the Philippines. We should try something else. We must be parliamentary, because, first, we are not a compact land mass, hiwa-hiwalay tayo (we are scattered). What we need is more local authority but greater connectivity. Not just in communication and transportation, but in culture and patriotism,maniwala kayo sa mga sundalo (believe in the soldiers).”
He said the people tend to falter repeatedly each new era. “After brilliant triumphs, we appear to fall short again and again in the aftermath.”
The former President, who was wearing an orange long-sleeved shirt and his military cap with badges pinned on it, predicted we might fail again as a nation: “If we content ourselves with flawed policies, greedy bureaucrats, and self-serving political dynasties at this time of new opportunity in the competitive world of the 21st century.”
With the coming national elections, he stressed that we need to look for competent leaders “who must work 25/8. [They should] figure how to work that out, because new problems come in every day.”
There are five  2016 “presidentiables” gunning for the highest position in power, including Sen. Miriam Santiago whom he beat with a small margin in the 1992 presidential national election.
The former President advises voters: “After 30 years from EDSA we should [have] umangat nang malayo (risen far). Ang hanapin natin sa bawat political unit, mayroong competence, marunong sa governance, management, bukod d’yan may integrity, transparent, and [is] honest (What we should look for in each political unit is competence, one who knows governance, management, and aside from that has integrity, transparent, and is honest).”
Mr. Ramos has been a vocal supporter of Congresswoman Maria Leonor G. Robredo, who’s running as vice-president. He said her late husband, Jessie Robredo, was his “model of Filipino mayor, who must be looked [up to] by other mayors.”
As for his choice for president? Laughing boisterously, he told reporters to ask him again some other time.
In summary, according to the president, if the country is to traverse the upward and right albeit crooked path, we need three things: unity, solidarity, and teamwork.
“We must be able to translate our unity and solidarity into action; that means the ability of people, of community, of government, of the nation… to work as one team to achieve a brighter future.”
2030: One World, One Community, One Family is published by Ramos Peace and Development Foundation Inc. Visit www.rpdev.org for book inquiries.

Encouraging young readers

Encouraging young readers

By Nickky Faustine P. de Guzman
READING is supposedly a physical affair. People are meant to touch, feel, smell, and highlight a book or a magazine. But thanks to smartphones and social media, humans, according to a Microsoft study, now have an attention span of eight seconds, which is one second shorter than that of a goldfish. Reading, whether online or in print, seemingly becomes very taxing.
“This is why every page should be a cliffhanger,” renowned children’s book author and Don Carlos Palanca awardee Augie Rivera, Jr. said at the launch of Children First Storybooks on Feb. 19.
Encouraging young readersWith the aim of promoting reading, the importance of physical books, and encouraging imagination among kids, United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) has launched Children First Storybooks, a collection of six books written in English and Filipino which deal with children’s rights and dreams. Each book has colorful illustrations to go with it.
Mr. Rivera is the author of the bestseller classic Ang Alamat ng Ampalaya (The Legend of Bitter Gourd), which was adapted into a play last year. For the Children First Storybooks, UNICEF republished his 1997 book Ang Bata sa Basket, which tells the story of three frogs that find a baby in a basket along a river. Determined to find the child a parent, the frogs learn that good parenting requires more than just good intentions.
Reading a physical book promotes comprehension and empathy among bookworms, said experts. Among children, reading encourages them to be creative in language and expression by putting themselves in a character’s shoe.
“The first five to six years of children are important because these will shape the rest of their lives. Kids learn language quickly through hearing and singing songs and having stories told or read to them. Having a supportive environment in the formative years will help them get ready for school and toward life-long learning,” said UNICEF Philippines representative Lotta Sylwander.
Besides Mr. Rivera’s classic tale, UNICEF republished four other children’s books: Ang Sabi ni Nanay, Ang Sabi ni Tatay (by Sacha Calagopi, with new illustrations by Jaime Bauza); Ang Dalawang Haring Siga (by Rene Villanueva, with new illustrations by Iori Espiritu); andYaya Niya, Nanay Ko (by Ma. Corazon Remigio, with new illustrations by Nicole Lim).
Anchoring the collection is the new book, Anita, The Duckling Diva, which actress and UNICEF Celebrity Advocate for Children Anne Curtis wrote. UNICEF said they didn’t have to think twice when Ms. Curtis expressed her interest in writing a children’s book as her social media influence, according to Ms. Sylwander, can encourage young readers. Ms. Curtis has 4.5 million followers on Instagram and 8.31 million on Twitter.
“It’s a lot of me inside the book,” said Ms. Curtis, who made five drafts and five revisions before finishing her first book. Her writing mentor was Mr. Rivera.
Anita, the Duckling Diva highlights the struggles of a young duckling whose introversion conceals her hidden singing talent, and how she tries to gain confidence on stage and in life.
“I’m very happy to write my first every children’s book, which I hope can help children particularly with their self-confidence and self-esteem,” said the actress, who said she grew up insecure about her lips. But she eventually learned to accept, love, and highlight them. She hopes her readers learn to love themselves.
The entire collection of Children First Storybooks is available for a minimum donation of P500 at the locations listed below. Proceeds go to UNICEF kids.
Feb. 22-27
South Supermarket
– Filinvest
Feb. 22-28
Centrio Mall
Marquee Mall
Fairview Terraces
SM Bicutan
SM Marikina
Solenad 2
Shell — SLEx
Northbound Binan
Save the Date:
Bridal and Debut Fair,
SM Aura
Feb. 26-28
SM Jazz Mall

15 key personalities discuss history in new EDSA Revolution documentary

Arts & Leisure


Posted on February 24, 2016 06:03:00 PM

15 key personalities discuss history in new EDSA Revolution documentary


  

FILMED 10 YEARS ago for a thesis requirement, former first lady Imelda Marcos, in full makeup and a glamorous dress, talked to the camera: “Everything is a priority... including enemies and garbage... He was a priority.” She was referring to the late Benigno “Ninoy” Aquino, Jr., detained during Martial Law, who wished to go abroad for an operation instead of going to the Philippine Heart Center (one of the First Lady’s projects). Within the next 24 hours, Ms. Marcos said on the video documentary, they were already processing his papers.

A PROMO PHOTO for Discovery Channel’s documentary People Power: 30 Years On which airs tonight. -- WWW.FACEBOOK.COM/DISCOVERYSEASIA
But she said she had to ask permission from her husband, dictator Ferdinand Marcos, first.

This snippet, showed on Feb. 23 at a press preview, is just one of the many never-before-seen on national TV accounts by key players in the historic event that is the 1986 People Power Revolution. 

To be shown today, 9 p.m., on the Discovery Channel, People Power: 30 Years On is arguably the most extensive documentary about the bloodless revolution told from the point of views of its key personalities. It includes flashback videos and newspaper clips.

What makes it meatier than other documentaries is its interviews with numerous important players during those four days on EDSA: 

• Ms. Marcos; 

• former President Corazon Cojuangco Aquino, Ninoy Aquino’s widow; 

• former President Fidel V. Ramos, who was the Vice-Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces at the time, and whose impending arrest along with Defense Secretary Juan Ponce Enrile triggered the People Power Revolution; 

• Senator Gregorio Honasan, then with the Reform the Armed Forces Movement (RAM) and one of the coup plotters against the Marcos regime; 

• Senator Aquilino Pimentel, Jr., an oppositionist in 1986; 

• Francisco “Kit” Tatad, who had been Marcos’ Minister of Public Information through much of the Martial Law period; 

• Bishop Soc Villegas; 

• former Congressman Butz Aquino, Ninoy Aquino’s brother and one of those who, along with Jaime Cardinal Sin, called the people to come to EDSA

• the late Fr. James Reuter, Sr., who was involved in the underground radio station, Radio Bandido, which reported on the events of that historic week;

• Manuel Quezon III, now with the Presidential Communications Development and Strategic Planning Office;

• journalist Cheche Lazaro

• Gen. Vic Batac and Col. Red Kapunan, who were members of RAM; 

• Prof. Luis Teodoro; 

• the late June Keithley, a Radio Veritas broadcaster who became the voice of Radio Bandido; and,

• Sr. Sarah Manapol, dubbed as “the lady in white” who provided information to the US Embassy during the EDSA Revolution while working with Fr. Reuter.

Originally called Laban: The Meaning of EDSA People Power Revolution, the documentary was the idea of producer Sally Jo Bellosillo for her masteral degree in Trans Atlantic Studies at the University of Birmingham in England. The documentary was first shown in schools.

“Then we changed the score of the music, simplified some of the script, and condensed it down to make it more accessible... we’re going to show it locally, but at the same time, it has to be relevant in South East Asia[n audience because] not everybody understands much details about the Philippines,” said executive producer Emile Guertin.

People Power: 30 Years On is narrated by Trey Farley, who also visited key locations around Metro Manila significant to EDSA in order to introduce an up-to-date perspective on each chapter of the EDSA story, peppered with his own personal recollections of witnessing the revolution as a young boy.

The original documentary included sections on EDSA II and III, which they had to edit out “because it could get complicated because you move away from the main topic,” said Mr. Guertin. Besides, he added, South East Asian audiences might get confused by these subsequent political events.

To fill in those sections that had been edited out, the team interviewed Ballsy Aquino-Cruz and Pinky Aquino-Abellada -- daughters of Ninoy and Cory Aquino and sisters of current president Benigno “Noynoy” Simeon C. Aquino III -- three weeks ago. The two said that Filipinos, especially the youth, are lucky because they can now “vent online.” “We hope you don’t get to experience it (Martial Law),” they said. -- Nickky Faustine P. de Guzman

Friday, February 19, 2016

How much is forever?

How much is forever?

By Nickky Faustine P. de Guzman
Jennifer Lopez was lying when she sang, “love don’t cost a thing” — because it does.
While love makes the world go round, it also burns a hole in one’s pocket, because, from courtship to formal relationship, until marriage and family planning, love entails cash. Lots of it.
In a pre-Valentine forum held on Feb. 10 at Quezon City’s Kamuning Bakery, financial experts talked about the stages of love and their costs.ECompareMo.com, a financial comparison web site, spearheaded the forum.
So, how much is your forever?
How much is forever?
THE COSTS OF DATING
Hotels, flower shops, and restaurants emerged victorious in the game of love that was the Valentine’s Day. And the men, oh the men, they ended up with empty pockets; the price they have to pay for a girl’s time or her “yes!”
According to one of the speakers, Burn Gutierrez, a stock market coach and Angat Pilipinas Coalition for Financial Literacy chairman, below is an estimate of a guy’s dating expenses.
• A movie ticket can cost around P300 to P1,500.
• Chocolates, the imported ones, are at least P700.
• To go with the sweets, a nice bouquet of roses costs at least P2,000. (If you’re a persistent suitor, sending flowers every week may cost you P48,000 in six months.)
• A fancy dinner costs at least P1,000.
• And oh, public transportation costs at least P7. (That is, if your lady love lives nearby).
While not every woman is fond of getting flowers and chocolates and balloons (others may prefer books or pens or whatever) still, the main point is, love has a price.
But women aren’t only receivers, they are generous gift-givers, too. A decent polo shirt costs at least P1,000 and a pair of today’s fancy rubber shoes is around P3,000 and above.
“The important thing is to know much money do you make a month. It is important to estimate your expenses… Check your proportion income, costs shouldn’t go beyond your earnings,” said Mr. Gutierrez who used take the lady who would become his wife on dates at the Marikina River Bank. “We’d only buy canned tuna and rice and happily eat together,” he said of those dates.
Alas, the game of love isn’t always about rainbows and butterflies.
“Even heartbreaks are costly, too,” he said.
Based from a Wall Street Journal report, Mr. Gutierrez said that mending a broken heart not only affects a person, but also a company. He said the workplace cost of heartbreak in the US is $75 billion per year because of absenteeism, increased errors, and productivity loss.
“Time is a slow healer. You should do something to surpass the ache. Pursue happiness,” he said.
But then again, it’s almost impossible to pass the time and pursue leisure without breaking the bank. Travels here or abroad for soul-searching are costly. And so is buying a pint of ice cream every day to cheer yourself up.
“I know of a friend’s friend who died from heartbreak. The hidden cost of heartache also includes stress and a weaker immune system,” he added.
In the end, he could only advise lover boys to “Just pray and prepare.”
THE COST OF MARRIAGE AND FAMILY
But are we ever ready for what tomorrow entails, especially when a couple decides to tie the knot?
“We’re never prepared,” said Aya Laraya, a former banker and teacher at the Ateneo de Manila University, and the founder of Pesos and Sense, a company that promotes financial literacy, “It’s because we’re never taught in school. That’s why when you grow older, you don’t know how to plan a family. Do you need insurance? Do you need to invest in a condo?”
The internet, while a pool for knowledge, is also a tool for “social costs of investing,” he said. Meaning, when you see everyone at the beach or your friends’ new gadgets, the tendency is to spend on these too. The result: Majority of the Filipinos scramble to make ends meet.
“You choose not to prosper when you have a choice because you’re earning. Lahat naman maraming gastos ehKung hindi mo alam hawakan ang maliit mong sweldo, hindi mo alam pag lumaki na ito. (Everything has a cost. If you don’t know how to handle your small salary, you’ll never know how to handle it when it grows),” he said.
Mr. Laraya said there are four common misconceptions about nest eggs: Savings are enough; I will start investing when I get rich; “Facebook University”; and the “I’ll do it later because I still have time” mentality.
By Facebook University, he meant people feel like they know everything just because of what they share and see on Facebook.
“Just like when it comes to love, aral muna (study first),” he said.
Invest your time in studying and preparing, be it considering life insurance or a business plan, before deciding to act on it.
“We always want a shortcut, that’s why we make wrong choices. Acquire knowledge first, then decide. It’s part of our culture to blame. We entrust someone our money and say, ‘Oh ikaw na bahala sa pera ko ah’ (‘you take care of my money’). And end up blaming others for wrong decisions,” he explained, when asked if there’s a formula to money-making and investing.
He said there’s no formula and it depends on what one’s goals are.
“It’s not a characteristic of Filipinos to do canvassing. We don’t do this,” added George Siy, president and CEO of the Marie-France Group of Companies.
He said that before couples invest on something, it pays to do some research first, and a lot of thinking after.
“Millionaires spend their time getting educated more by reading books or from other people. One hundred percent of the people who failed spent their time for entertainment and leisure, not for education,” said Mr. Siy, the man behind the beauty companies Marie-France and Facial Care Center.
Keep abreast of your surroundings, and start now, he said. Thanks to the growing economy and the low interest rates, the businessman said today is the best time to invest in a house and lot or take a loan to start a business.
“If you have an idea for a business, then prioritize it because it’s a productive asset. Always productive asset over unproductive asset, but unproductive asset before depreciating asset. Always in that order. You can always commute. When you have a car, you have to pay for its insurance, gas, and maintenance. Plus, the model gets old over time. The moment you want to sell a car, it’s always 20% less than you bought it. But if you’re going to sell a house, the mortgage is bigger,” he said.
But perhaps, the biggest investment one could ever make is on one’s health, agreed the three financial experts. After all, if couples and their children are healthy, they are happier and more productive.
“If we’re looking at a time of life, the middle age should look at possible disasters like health, accident, and death insurances. It’s more expensive to be sick,” said Mr. Siy.
Down the road, the three men agreed that this is the main question one should be prepared to answer before tying the knot and starting a family: Can you support yourself?
Mr. Laraya said: “You have to be complete — including financially — before you get married. Make sure you can start on your own, financially. Can you handle it?”
Because, at the end of the day, after friends turn to lovers and, later, life partners, couples would soon realize that love alone cannot pay the bills.

Tandem: Noir with a heart

Arts & Leisure


Posted on February 15, 2016 04:55:00 PM

Tandem: Noir with a heart


 By: Nickky Faustine P. de Guzman

UNDERNEATH the cuss words, rough sex scenes, and noir setting, the new indie film Tandem -- opening in cinemas on Feb. 17 -- is a poignant story of brothers, played by actors Nico Antonio and JM de Guzman (who bagged the New Wave Best Actor award in last year’s Metro Manila Film Festival).

THE INDIE FILM Tandem follows two brothers -- played by Nico Antonio and JM de Guzman -- who make a living by robbing people while riding in tandem on a motorcycle.
Tandem, directed by King Palisoc of Bang Bang Alley fame, follows brothers Roman (Antonio) and Rex (De Guzman), who work as “riding-in-tandem,” a colloquial term for a team of robbers on a motorcycle, in the sleazy streets of the city. Petty thieves who only want to make ends meet, they are trapped in the shady underworld of a police syndicate. The brothers are soon tested.

The brothers are opposites: the elder Roman is more cautious because he has a family to protect (his wife Cha, played by Rochelle Pangilinan is pregnant with their first child); Rex, on the other hand, is more reckless, a daredevil.

Holding a mirror to today’s society, the movie tries to humanize the criminals, while never venerating them.

“It’s up to the audience to interpret. We’re not glorifying criminals, we’re not judging them… but it’s good to see different points of view,” said the film’s director Mr. Palisoc at a press preview on Feb. 11.

Tandem is produced by three production houses: Quantum Films, which produced the hits English Only PleaseWalang Forever, and Buy Now Die Later; Tuko Film Productions; and Buchi Boy Films, a subsidiary of Artikulo Uno Productions, the makers of Heneral Luna.

Heneral Luna’s E. A. Rocha and Fernando Ortigas are the film’s executive producers.

On a Facebook note, the executive producers pleaded for support and asked the audience to watch the movie on its opening day -- Feb. 17 -- to guarantee its theatrical run.

“We’re not expecting a Heneral Luna level [of attendance], but having to fill a 300-seater cinema is more than enough,” said Mr. Palisoc in a mix of English and Filipino.

Heneral Luna is different. For one, they had a bigger budget and longer time to prepare and market it. We’re shorter. The goal is to have as much people as possible, because we are drawn with setbacks. One, we’re R-16 and we have Hollywood film competitors,” he said of the film’s obstacles.

He added: “Perhaps, it might have a chance to become mainstream because its story is simple. Hindi pa lang ganon kadami ang wide release (We don’t have a wide theater release). I think the audience will always be smarter than the makers, it’s up to them whether they like it or not.”

INTERNATIONAL SCREENINGS
After the film’s local showing, Tandem will join the Fantasporto International Film Festival in Porto, Portugal, screening on March 3.

“It’s our first genre festival… I’m excited. I want to show that we can do something in genre films. We can represent the genre filmmaking,” said Mr. Palisoc.

The film written by Zig Marasigan has already been seen in film festivals abroad: it was shown at the Montreal International Film Festival, Vancouver International Film Festival, and Cairo International Film Festival last year.

“The reaction was the same as the collective gasp from tonight’s audience. They were very surprise with this kind of milieu in the Philippines,” said the director.

Sunday, February 14, 2016

Fil-Am painter Alfonso Ossorio comes home

Arts & Leisure


Posted on February 09, 2016 08:32:00 PM


By Nickky Faustine P. de GuzmanReporter

Fil-Am painter Alfonso Ossorio comes home


  

HE’S FINALLY HOME. After decades of making a name in the Western world of art -- he pioneered the wax resist on watercolor technique, has done an exhibit with Andy Warhol in the ’60s, and was influenced by and contemporaries with Jackson Pollock, a major figure in the birth of American abstract expressionism -- Filipino-American painter Alfonso Ossorio returns to the Philippines for his first ever, albeit posthumous, local exhibit.

  
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THE ANGRY CHRIST
Called the Afflictions of Glory, Mr. Ossorio’s works that span from the ’40s until the ’80s are on highlight at the Leon Gallery until Feb. 21. This is to commemorate his 100th birth anniversary.

“His exhibit is a reminder to the millennials and other Filipinos, who will be traveling the road that Ossorio has already traveled. There will be more Filipinos and Southeast Asians who’ll be finding themselves in the US and Europe having to compete against the best of the best,” co-curator Lisa Guerrero Nakpil told BusinessWorldwhen asked of the resonance of the exhibit in today’s times.

Apart from being an original artist, she said the exhibit is “a signpost on how to be able to stand tall with the current equivalent of Pollock and [Jean] Dubuffet and still be original and true to oneself.”

Dubuffet was a French sculptor and painter who founded the Art Brut or rough art movement in Europe. Mr. Ossorio met Dubuffet during his travel in Paris in 1949. Later, Mr. Ossorio would be inspired by the Art Brut style and would make artworks from random objects like eyeballs and bones, and mirror shards and shells. He called his collage “congregations.”

He might have called his newfound technique as “congregations” because “he’s deeply rooted with Catholicism,” said co-curator Tats Rejante-Manahan, who also wrote an extensive feature of Mr. Ossorio’s life and lifestyle, which appeared on Rogue magazine last year.

Born in 1916 as an heir to a vast shipping and sugar fortune in Negros Occidental, Mr. Ossorio was able to live and study abroad at Harvard and the Rhode Island School of Design. He was eventually naturalized as an American citizen in 1933.

In 1950, Mr. Ossorio revisited the Philippines, albeit a short time, after his family commissioned him to create a mural for the Chapel of Saint Joseph the Worker. It was dubbed The Angry Christ.

Mr. Ossorio started as an abstract expressionist but was better known for his congregations. “He’s a well-rounded artist. He had many influences and has done many experiments,” said Ms. Nakpil.

But Ms. Ossorio’s journey toward becoming an accepted artist in the US was paved with challenges. While at the right place and at the right time when the American modern art was booming in the ’50s, Ms. Nakpil said “there were some biases against him.” He wasn’t a starving artist. He was rich. His passion and talent were underappreciated because they were eclipsed by his affluence. In fact, he was a generous Pollock art buyer. The two became friends and as assistance, he would give the dirt-poor American artist from a cowboy family his monthly allowance. He bought one of Pollock’s most celebrated works, Number 1 1950 (Lavender Mist), which was on display at his sprawling mansion at the Hamptons, Long Island.

But Mr. Ossorio was a force to reckon with. Today’s critics arguably consider him as one of the most colorful, prolific, imaginative artists to emerge from the Abstract Expressionist movement. In 1977 and 1987, his works were included in exhibits at Whitney Museum of American Art in New York called 30 Years of American Art: 1945-1975 and 20th Century Drawings respectively. Last year, the same museum included him along with 400 more American artists who changed the art landscape in an exhibit called America is Hard to See.

“Before, Europe was the center of art. Then it was pulled by Pollock and Ossorio and other abstract expressionists in the US. They made their own little Silicon Valley, but art,” said Ms. Nakpil.

“If you like Steve Jobs, you’ll like Ossorio because of his boldness, experimentation, and originality. He’s a true global person.”

Afflictions of Glory will be exhibited from Feb. 6-21, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., at Leon Gallery, Corinthian Plaza, 121 Paseo de Roxas, Legazpi Village, Makati City. For more info on the exhibit, please contact Leon Gallery at (632) 856-2781 or info@leon-gallery.com.