GAMABA is one of the Philippines' highest awards that recognizes exceptional traditional artists. Teofilo Garcia, a 2012 awardee, is a farmer known for cultivating enlarged gourds. The production and environment of traditional arts are impacted by various factors like tourism, mining, infrastructure projects, militarization, and Christianization. The document recommends viewing three films that showcase indigenous cultures and their connection to traditional arts.
GAMABA is one of the Philippines' highest awards that recognizes exceptional traditional artists. Teofilo Garcia, a 2012 awardee, is a farmer known for cultivating enlarged gourds. The production and environment of traditional arts are impacted by various factors like tourism, mining, infrastructure projects, militarization, and Christianization. The document recommends viewing three films that showcase indigenous cultures and their connection to traditional arts.
GAMABA is one of the Philippines' highest awards that recognizes exceptional traditional artists. Teofilo Garcia, a 2012 awardee, is a farmer known for cultivating enlarged gourds. The production and environment of traditional arts are impacted by various factors like tourism, mining, infrastructure projects, militarization, and Christianization. The document recommends viewing three films that showcase indigenous cultures and their connection to traditional arts.
is one of the highest national awards for culture and the
arts. The GAMABA recognizes exceptional artist who are engaged in the traditional arts. The art forms produced by GAMABA has high aesthetic value, functional and accessible in everyday settings. GAMABA Awardees Teofilo Garcia
Teofilo Garcia , a 2012 awardee is a farmer in the town of San
Quintin, a municipality in Abra Province, better known for tending a plot of land filled with enlarged upo or gourd. The Production Process and the Changing Environment Tourism
45mins. Katutubo: Memory of Dances (2001), directed by Antonio Jose Perez, 50 mins. Ifugao: Bulubunduking Buhay (1998), directed by Fruto Corre and Nancy Rodriguez, 45 mins.