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Gawad sa Manlilikha ng Bayan or the National Living Treasures Award

Gawad sa Manlilikha ng Bayan or the National Living Treasures Award. Institutionalized through Republic Act No. 7355. Gamaba Award. search for the finest traditional artists of the land adopts a program that will ensure the transfer of their skills to others

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Gawad sa Manlilikha ng Bayan or the National Living Treasures Award

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  1. GawadsaManlilikhangBayan or the National Living Treasures Award Institutionalized through Republic Act No. 7355.

  2. GamabaAward • search for the finest traditional artists of the land • adopts a program that will ensure the transfer of their skills to others • undertakes measures to promote a genuine appreciation of traditional craft and art • instill pride among our people about the skill of the ManlilikhangBayan.

  3. Qualifications • He/she/group is an inhabitant of an indigenous/traditional cultural community anywhere in the Philippines that has preserved indigenous customs, beliefs, rituals and traditions and/or has syncretized whatever external elements that have influenced it. • He/she/group must have engaged in a folk art tradition that has been in existence and documented for at least fifty (50) years.

  4. Qualifications • He/she/group must have consistently performed or produced over a significant period, works of superior and distinctive quality. • He/she/group must possess a mastery of tools and materials needed by the art, and must have an established reputation in the art as master and maker of works of extraordinary technical quality.

  5. Qualifications • He/she/group must have passed on and/or will pass on to other members of the community their skills in the folk art for which the community is traditionally known.

  6. 1993

  7. A Hanunuo Mangyan of Mansalay, Oriental Mindoro • Awarded for faithfully preserving the Hanunuo Mangyan script and ambahan poetry. • He has promoted the local script and poetry so that the art will not be lost but preserved for posterity. Ginaw Bilog

  8. A Pala'wan of Brookes Point, Palawan • He was awarded for his exemplary skills in basal or gong music ensemble • He was also recognized for his versatility as musician, poet, epic chanter and storyteller of the kulilal and bagit traditions of the Pala'wan. Masino Intaray

  9. AMagindanao of Mama sa pano, Maguindanao. • He was awarded for his outstanding artistry and dedication to his chosen instrument, the Magindanao kutyapi. • Kutyapi is a two-stringed plucked lute, regarded as one of the most technically demanding and difficult to master among Filipino traditional instruments. Samaon Sulaiman

  10. 1998 Awardees

  11. a T'boli of Lake Sebu, South Cotabato, was awarded for weaving the abaca ikat cloth called t'nalak • She has produced creations which remain faithful to the T’boli tradition as manifested in the complexity of her design, fineness of workmanship and quality of finish. Lang Dulay

  12. SalintaMonon • A TagabawaBagobo of Bansalan, Davao del Sur • She was awarded for fully demonstrating the creative and expressive aspects of the Bagobo abaca ikat weaving called inabal at a time when such art is threatened with extinction.

  13. 2000 Awardees

  14. Alonzo Saclag • A Kalinga of Lubuagan, Kalinga was awarded for his mastery of the Kalinga dance and the performing arts • He was also recognized for his persistence to create and nurture a greater consciousness and appreciation of Kalinga culture among the Kalinga themselves and beyond their borders.

  15. A Panay-Bukidnon of Calinog, lloilo was awarded for his mastery of chanting the sugidanon, the epic tradition of Central Panay. • He ceaselessly worked for the documentation of the epics of his people painstakingly piecing together the elements of this oral tradition nearly lost. Frederico Caballero

  16. UwangAhadas • A Yakan of Lamitan, Basilan was awarded for his dexterity in playing Yakan musical instruments such as the kwintangan, gabbang, agung, kwintangankayu, tuntungan among others • He has a deep knowledge of the aesthetic possibilities and social contexts of those instruments. • In spite of the dimming of his eyesight, he has devoted his life to the teaching of Yakan musical traditions.

  17. 2005 Awardees

  18. DarhataSawabi • Of barangayParang, Jolo Island, Sulu province • Has preserved the art of pissyabitweaving. • It is difficult art of tapestry weaving that creates the traditional squares used by the Tausug for ornamentation. • Despite the conflict in Jolo, Sawabi’s dedication to her art enhanced the preservation of traditional Tausug designs.

  19. HadjaAminaApi • of UngosMatata, Tandubas, Tawi-Tawi, • is recognized as the master mat weaver among the Sama indigenous community of UngosMatata. • Her colorful mats with their complex geometric patterns exhibit her precise sense of design, proportion and symmetry and sensitivity to color.

  20. Eduardo Mutuc • A Kapampangan from Central Luzon is recognized for reviving the Spanish colonial-era craft of Plateria. • This self-taught master craftsman found his calling in producing religious and secular art in silver, bronze and wood. • In doing so, and in his pursuit of perfection for himself and his apprentices, he assures the continuity of this rich tradition.

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