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ARTS

PRE-TEST: QUIZZ 1 (ARTS)


Matching Type: Folk Arts of Luzon & Visayas

Pampanga

Marinduque

Angono, Rizal
Laguna

Quezon

Baguio
Cebu

Bacolod

Tacloban

Aklan
Philippine Folk Arts
 Sarimanok - is a legendary bird of the
Maranao people who originate from
Mindanao, a major island in the
Philippines. It comes from the words
"sari" and "manok." "Sari" means cloth
or garment, which is generally
of assorted colors.[1] Manòk,
which makes up part of its name,
is a Philippine word for chicken.
 Bulul - is a carved wooden figure used
to guard the rice crop by the Igorot
peoples of northern Luzon. The
sculptures are highly stylized
representations of ancestors, and are
thought to gain power from the presence
of the ancestral spirit.[1] The Ifugao are
particularly noted for their skill in carving
bululs.
 Okkir or okkil - is the term for geometric and
flowing designs (often based on an elaborate leaf
and vine pattern) and folk motifs that can be
usually found in Maranao and Muslim-influenced
artwork, especially in the southern Philippines,
and in some parts of Southeast Asia. Okir a dato
refers to the
ornamental
design for men
and okir a bay to
that for women
 T'nalak – is a traditional cloth found in
Mindanao island made by a group of people in
Lake Sebu, South Cotabato called T'bolis, Tboli
people. This traditional cloth is hand-woven
made of Abaca fibers which traditionally has
three primary colors, red, black and the original
color of the Abaca leaves.
Weaving - is a method of fabric production in which
two distinct sets of yarns or threads are interlaced at
right angles to form a fabric or cloth. The other methods
are knitting, lace making, felting, and braiding or plaiting.
The longitudinal threads are called the warp and the
lateral threads are the weft or filling. (Weft or woof is an
old English word meaning "that which is woven".[1]) The
method in which these threads are inter woven affects
the characteristics of the cloth .
[
Bawal Buksan
QUIZZ 2 (ARTS)
I. It refers to the ornamental design for men .

Okir a datu

T’nalak

Okir a bay
II. This is a carved wooden figure used to guard the rice crop by
the Igorot peoples of northern Luzon.

Weaving

Bul-ul

T’nalak
III. It comes from the words "sari" and "manok." "Sari" means
cloth or garment, which is generally of assorted colors.[1]
Manòk, which makes up part of its name, is a Philippine
word for chicken.

Okkir

Okkil

Sarimanok
IV. This traditional cloth is hand-woven made of Abaca fibers which traditionally has
three primary colors, red, black and the original color of the Abaca leaves.

T’nalak

Weaving

Sculpture
V. It is a method of fabric production in which two
distinct sets of yarns or threads are interlaced at
right angles to form a fabric or cloth.

Sculpture

Painting

Weaving

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