When In Manila And The Long Game Of Building A Lasting Brand

A platform built on consistency now faces reinvention, as When In Manila shifts from founder-led identity to a shared space shaped by its growing community.

Unilever Champions Women Within The Workplace And Beyond Through Purposeful Programs And Partnerships

Unilever Philippines highlights how intentional policies and programs can empower women to lead, grow, and thrive across workplaces and communities.

Vivant Posts Double Digit Growth In 2025, Core Net Income Surges 21% To Php 2.7 Billion On Solid Power Generation Results

Vivant Corporation posts strong earnings growth, reflecting steady performance across its energy and water businesses amid shifting industry dynamics.

Reaching The Philippines’ Last Mile: Private Sector Innovation To Bridge The Financial Inclusion Gap

Private sector innovation is stepping in to bridge the gap between access and actual financial inclusion in underserved communities.

Ayala Museum Virtual Exhibition Features Early Works Of Arturo Luz

Have your first online museum experience at Ayala Museum’s first virtual gallery!

Ayala Museum Virtual Exhibition Features Early Works Of Arturo Luz

42
42

How do you feel about this story?

Like
Love
Haha
Wow
Sad
Angry

Ayala Museum, as part of its continuing efforts to bring the museum experience online through Ayala Museum Virtual, presents the virtual re-mounting of their 2017 exhibition Arturo Luz: First Light.

Curated by historian, scholar, and educator Dr. Ambeth R. Ocampo, this 2017 exhibition was organized to celebrate the 90th birthday of Arturo Luz and his 60th year as a professional artist. Arturo Luz: First Light marks Ayala Museum’s first virtual gallery experience and it goes live in time for Luz’s 94th birthday.

First Light traces an arc from the genre, color, and pictorial representation of Luz’s early works in the 1950s to the muted colors and simplified lines and shapes of the 1960s.

In 1952, Arturo Luz created a series of paintings that marked the beginning of his life as a professional artist. The paintings from this time typically depict scenes from Philippine life.

From this first figurative phase, Luz in the 1960s progressed from exuberance of color and subject to a simplification into line and form. The transition of his work into having a more minimal and architectural dimension would later become the hallmark of his work.

This exhibition is part of Ayala Museum’s Images of Nation program which showcases works by Filipino artists who have been named National Artists in the Visual Arts. Its primary aim is to share the extraordinary vision and formal excellence embodied in this award.

Arturo Luz: First Light will be virtually on show until January 31, 2021. The exhibition can be viewed at ayalamuseum.org/first-light.