#igorot
Bahag (Loincloth)
Bahag is a traditional garment worn by men in what is now the Philippines before the arrival of European colonizers in the 16th century. It’s still worn by some indigenous tribes today and I’m fascinated by them.
Two hundred nine.
In two years, 2019-2021, with the pandemic and the caregive, I finished all my book illustrations today, 12:06 PM, Sunday, 11 April 2021, all two hundred nine (209) of them
Maycapal: Philippine Mythopoeia. From the timelessness of the cloud archipelago to the Philippine Republic of 1946.
Here’s to the anitos, diwatas, Indarapatra, to the babaylans, to Philippine flora and fauna, to myths, folklife and folklore, to the proud pre-conquest natives of the archipelago, to our Austronesian heritage, to the imagined Filipino and the Philippines!
To Thomas Bulfinch, to Edith Hamilton, to Hieronymus Bosch, to the early printers and typographers, to Cesare Ripa, to the medieval traditions brought by the holy orders, to renaissance humanists, heretics and alchemists.
To Francisco Balagtas, to Damian Domingo, to Jose Honorato Lozano, to Jose Rizal, Juan Luna and Felix R. Hidalgo.
To Gaiman, to Pullman, to Le Guin.
To semiotics, to Umberto Eco.
To archetypes, to Carl Jung.
To folklore, to Maximo D. Ramos, to E. Arsenio Manuel, to Damiana L. Eugenio.
To history, heraldry, comparative literature, religion and mythology.
To museums, archives, and libraries.
I owe to them my love of reading, drawing, and imagining.
Now to continue my writing!
IMAGE NFT: GOD-ARMOR LUMAWIG collectible https://rarible.com/token/0x60f80121c31a0d46b5279700f9df786054aa5ee5:645314:0xe236d526e1d08dbd8b6fd063fc36271818e71257? #rarible #ethereum #nonfungible #digitalasset #nft via @rariblecom