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Activity on Philippine Art (Individual work)

Reflection Paper
The Pre-Colonial Period is when our indigenous ancestors inhabited the Philippines and also the
time before the approaching of our first colonizers. Arts during this time were for ritual purposes or
everyday use only. As local communities were established, art starts to travel beyond mere craft, i.e.,
stone weapons or jewelry but starts to possess decorative elements, meaning, and context. LITERATURE
- It is in written and oral form. Cave drawings and writings are the earliest types of written literature,
and rituals, chants, and storytelling are the earliest styles of oral literature. VISUAL ARTS - Sculpture,
paintings, and pottery were the widely known kinds of visual arts within the Pre-Colonial Period, like the
tattoos from the pintados in Panay, the Bulul that's a wooden sculpture of the rice God of Ifugaos, and
therefore the Manunggul burial jar that was found in Palawan. ARCHITECTURE - Earliest Filipinos are
known to be dwelling in caves. MUSIC - They used wind instruments. DANCE - They imitate the
movements of animals and nature. During Post war, Philippine Architecture was dominated by the
American style. during this period the plan for the trendy city of Manila was designed with an outsized
number of artistic movement buildings, by famous American and Filipino architects. During the
liberation of Manila by the Americans in 1945 large portions of Intramuros and Manila were destroyed.
within the period after the Second war many of the destroyed buildings were rebuilt. At the top of the
20th century modern architecture with straight lines and functional aspects was introduced. During this
era many of the older structures fell into decay. Early within the 21st Century a revival of the respect for
the normal Filipino elements within the architecture returned. It describes material qualities and new
approaches to style. the foremost obvious associations with soft are material characteristics—yielding
readily to the touch or pressure; deficient in hardness; smooth; pliable, malleable, or plastic. And this
can be the definition of "soft" that came to define a number of the foremost exciting design motives of
the 1960s and '70s. These new design approaches were skeptical of modernism; soft was deemed to
enable uniqueness, openness, and lawlessness.

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