Fernando Amorsolo Fernando Amorsolo Was Born On May 30, 1892 in Calle Herran in Paco, Manila
Fernando Amorsolo Fernando Amorsolo Was Born On May 30, 1892 in Calle Herran in Paco, Manila
Fernando Amorsolo Fernando Amorsolo Was Born On May 30, 1892 in Calle Herran in Paco, Manila
Fernando Amorsolo was born on May 30, 1892 in Calle Herran in Paco, Manila
to Pedro Amorsolo and Bonifacia Cueto. Although born in the nation’s capital,
Amorsolo would spend most of his childhood in the small town setting
of Daet in Camarines Norte where his love for the simple rural life would become the
foundation for his artistic output for which he is most well-known.
Amorsolo’s earliest memories would bring him back to a quiet life in the
countryside. When he was only seven months old, his father moved the family to Daet
to work as a bookkeeper for two abaca firms. Pedro was able to earn a modest income,
enough to keep his family comfortable.
Fernando showed early signs of his artistic talent. He would go out to the coast
to draw pictures of the ships by the wharves. It was his mother who recognized the
young Amorsolo’s talent. She would send her son’s drawings to her cousin Fabian
dela Rosa, a prominent painter in Manila. At this early age, Amorsolo displayed an
affinity for the rural landscape --- a reflection of his own small world.
Tragedy struck early in Amorsolo’s life. One night, when Fernando was still very
young, his father was awakened by shouts coming from outside his window. It was the
head of the revolutionary movement fighting against the Spaniards demanding that
Amorsolo’s half brother, the eldest son Perico, join the group. Against his father’s
wishes, Perico relented and went down to join the rebels. The family never saw him
again. After the failure of the 1896 uprising, neighbors told the family that they saw
Perico, bound with a bamboo pole strapped to his back, being taken to jail. He was
later executed by the Spaniards. Shattered with grief by the death of his son,
Amorsolo’s father Pedro never recovered from the ordeal and died of a heart attack a
few years later.
His father died when Amorsolo was eleven years old. Before he passed away,
Pedro made his wife promise to give Fernando a proper art education. The widowed
Bonifacia gathered her family and returned to Manila in hopes of finding better
prospects to provide for her family. Her cousin Don Fabian dela Rosa opened his doors
to the family. It was here that Amorsolo had his first real exposure to the art world.
To make ends meet, Bonifacia did embroidery to feed her family. Fernando
made himself useful by assisting Don Fabian in his studio. It was during this time that
Amorsolo received his first art instruction from Don Fabian. The family’s limited
financial means made it difficult for the artist to receive consistent formal art instruction.
He earned money the only way he knew how. Amorsolo drew sketches and sold them
for 15 centavos a piece to help his family and to pay for his schooling. Despite the
family’s financial difficulties, in 1914, he finally earned his degree, with honors, as a
member of the first graduating class of the University of the Philippines School of
Fine Arts.
Amorsolo lived during a turbulent time in the Philippines. He came of age during
a transition period in Philippine history. The former Spanish colony became a territory
of the United States of America. As American influence slowly crept into Filipino culture
in the bigger cities, the artist yearned for the life he knew during his early childhood
days in Daet. This clearly manifested itself in his artistic output where he clearly
showed a partiality towards the rural setting where American culture was slow to trickle
down. His paintings would embody an affinity for the traditions and lifestyle he knew
during the
Spanish era. His canvases were filled with scenes of fiestas, old churches and rituals
that were the legacy of the Philippines’ former colonial masters
The end of the war saw the Philippines gain its independence from the United
States. As a young republic it was seeking its own national identity. Amorsolo’s work
was naturally seen as the embodiment of a Filipino culture unique from that of the new
country’s former colonial masters. His genre paintings were in such high demand that
he catalogued his works. Prospective clients would choose the painting they wanted.
The artist then painted a different version of the chosen subjects.
Amorsolo’s prodigious output was helped in no small way by the speed with
which the artist was able to finish his work. His strokes were so sure and true that he
was able to finish a painting in a significantly shorter period of time. It is believed that
the oil paintings that he produced number into the thousands. If his drawings, sketches,
and studies are added, his total output was in excess of ten thousand pieces. At one
point, he was able to finish no less than ten paintings in a typical month. Part of the
motivation for this incredible pace was the need to support his large family.
The artist was roundly criticized for his machine-like efficiency. Furthermore, a
blossoming modern art movement, who considered Amorsolo the de facto leader of the
classical realist school, saw him as a natural target. He never raised his voice nor took
up the cudgel in his own defense yet he had no shortage of defenders who took up the
fight. Among his staunchest supporters was Guillermo Tolentino, the finest sculptor
the country ever produced and Amorsolo’s best friend. When asked why he did not
speak up in his own defense, the artist responded with a shrug and said that he had
already matured as an artist. He had nothing left to prove and was comfortable painting
what he wished in the form of expression that he chose. His customers stood by his
side and demand for his paintings remained high.
What were probably the most painful tragedies struck him in his later years. In
1964, his eldest son Fernando, Jr. died from asthma and tuberculosis. The artist was
so grief-stricken that he could not bear to attend his own son’s funeral. Seven years
later in 1971, his youngest child Milo died in a car accident. The pain of having to bury
two of his children was too much for Amorsolo to bear. Five days short of a year after
Milo died, Amorsolo died of heart failure on April 24, 1972.
Amorsolo’s work continues to resonate among his countrymen decades after his
death. His portrayals of an ideal and beautiful world drew the most ardent praises and
the harshest criticisms. To understand the artist one has to appreciate the man behind
Amorsolo. He was shy, innocent, and most importantly pure. These traits spilled over
onto his canvas. It was not because Amorsolo was not capable of recognizing the dark
side of society. He had his share of heartbreak and disappointment in his life but he
deliberately isolated himself from these and chose to portray the bright side of the
world. Not a shred of wickedness permeated his character and as a result his art is the
purest manifestation of beauty. The basic desire to identify with what is good is what
people inherently have in common with the artist. It is for this legacy that Amorsolo will
be most fondly remembered.