Poker games, Miss Universe and the untold story of a P20 million painting – ABS-CBN News

Posted: June 8, 2020 at 10:44 pm

The year was 1974. The Sarimanok, that exuberant bird from Maranao mythology, icon of power, wealth and prestige, was strewn all over the city. It happened to beat least for that yearthe chosen symbol of the biggest beauty pageant in the world. Miss Universe, for the first time in its 22-year history, was being staged in Asia, and in Manila at that.

After all, the year before, in Greece, it was the Filipina Margarita Moran who won the crown, soits but natural that her country host the 1974ceremonies. The pageant was a big deal, like most international events that happened in those days of the Marcos years.The Price is Righthost Bob Barker was coming to host the event, and LA Lakers point guard Jerry West was going to sitas one of the judges.More important than any of these, however, 65 of the worlds most beautiful women in the worldgatheredin Manila that July, heating up what was already a pretty hot month (as Mr. West observed to Mr. Barker who asked about the basketball star's photo in the papers showing him playing a round of golf in the city's greens). And while there were many earlyfavorites, everyone was smitten with the starlet from Spain, Amparo Muoz, a sweet-faced beauty blessed with a bombshells body.

The Miss Universe fever was inescapable, and the invasion of these earthly goddesses was not lost to three men then in their 40s and 50s, who at that time has just been commissioned to work on a mural in the basement of a friends house. The friend is Pablo Bustamante Jr. who ran the respected Bustamante Press Inc. The three men were Ang Kiukok, Hugo Yonzon Jr., and Mauro Malang Santos, then already quite recognized as respected painters in the local art scene.

The trio also happened to bebrothers in cartooning for the nations dailies, with Malang having created the beloved comic strip Kosme The Cop, among others.

Bustamante invited the three that one day in July for their regular poker game in the basement of his residence, which also served as the family's den. According to Pablo Bustamante III, son of Pablo Jr., Malang was an old family friend while Yonzon has done illustrations for some books published by the familys printing press. Kiukok, for his part, was a former acquaintance.

The year prior, the troika staged a three-man show called Tatlo at a space called Gallery One. The purpose of Bustamante's invite for the three was two-fold, recalls Pablo III. First:to play poker. Second: for home improvement purposes. Pablo Jr.wanted a painting for a large blank wall in the basement.

The said wall was adjacent to the swimming pool. Prior to the renovation that wall had a large glass pane through which one could view the swimmers from the basement, explains Pablo III.But water from the swimming pool found its way around the viewing glass and began to leak, prompting the family to replace it with a wall. The blankness, we imagine, probably started digging into Pablo Jrs consciousness. He needed to do something about it.

Pablo III remembers that meeting with the three artistsDad brought three pieces of plywoodone for each artistto the basement and requested the artists to paint during their poker game breaks. Each of the three pieces wascut to a standard 6-feet height; the standard 8 feet would not have fitthe basement wall. Now thesize of the mural wasperfect. The only thing missing were the paintings.

Pablo III says he doesnt recall much of the collaboration among these three greats when it was happeningExcept for a few instances when I would hear boisterous laughter from these poker buddies by the stairwell, he says. They must have found humor in the subject and the various elements of the paintings. Elements such as the female body or their favorite nightclub along Roxas Boulevard might have tickled their funny bones.

Indeed the entire work is ruled by elements that tickle a man's interests, foremost of which is women. Beautiful, curvaceous figures. Naked goddesses descending from the clouds. Floating and lounging and carousing alongside the shapes we have come to associate with Ang Kiukokwho was clearly very much influenced by the Spanish painter Pablo Picasso (seeing the Guernica on a visit to New York proved to be life-changing for the artist). And that was just Panel 1.

In the panel of Hugo Yonzon, the woman is Eve, hourglass-shaped, completely unashamedly naked, still oblivious tothe fruit that will alterher destiny.

Finally, we come to Malangswho historically insists on earthly, more everyday vignettes, jeepneys andbarong-barongsand such. From the street, a svelte lady isacknowledging a compliment from the jeepney driver (Sweet lover?). From an open window in one of the shanties, a woman is making love to a man. And then at the bottom rightcorner, a cock is ready for sabong, a popular past time in those days,and somewhere in the center, a partly hidden Amihan, a favoritenightclub in 70s-era Roxas Boulevard.

I do not recall how long these poker-cum-painting sessions lasted, recalls the younger Pablo. But I distinctly remember going down to the basement one day to find the paintings joined together andfind a 6x12 foot mural. This was framed and hung on the wall. As a teenager then I had not much interest in art but I have to admit that I was in awe seeing that mural on that wall by the basement bar.

One would be hard pressed not to be enthralled, just imagining the size of it and looking at a photograph of the work. It's in the way each painter was able to fully express his individual stamp, and the way the three collectively came up with a whole that looks totally harmonious in both style and vision. Its a testament to the friendship of these men, how each considered the other, and how they all agreed on a path and kept to it. Its the kind of painting one wants to see over and over; the kind of work whose many little details reveal themselves little by little over the passing of time.

Pablo III says the poker games eventually came to an end, as his own generation of men took over the place as a hangout. The mural was a fixture that always elicited interest and humor between me and my friends, he says. That went on throughout my teenage years.

Later on, he would notice that the paintings were unsigned and asked the older Pablo why.

He said that during one of their poker sessions, an argument ensued between Ang Kiukok and Malang. This argument led to a quarrel between the two which eventually ended the poker-cum-painting sessions," says Pablo III.He says his father later told him the quarrel becamea popular story in the art circlealthough the Bustamantes don't offer details. Malangs son, the artistSoler Santos, says he only remembers a falling out between the two giants in the late 80sway past the making of the mural. Before Kiukoks death nagbati din sila, says Soler. A lifestyle editor echoes Solers response, but adds that underneath the friendship there was also a sort of friendlycompetition between the two who were incidentally both disciples of the great Vicente Mang Enteng Manansala.

By the end of the 70s, Malang, Kiukok and Yonzon would settle into their own individual successes. Hugo Yonzon, though, would not be as visible in the art firmament as his younger comrades, his works often snagged even before he could put a show together. His images revolved around what is distinctly Philippine life, whether in the urban or rural setting.

Fast forward to today and Goddesses, the title of that July 1974 collaborative work is up for bidding this month at Leon Gallerys Spectacular Mid Year Auction. The oil on panel work is the piece de resistance of this particular saleithas a starting bid of P20,000,000.

Of the three artists that worked on the triptych, only Malang was able to sign his contribution. Yonzon died in 1994while Ang Kiukok passed away in 2005. The Bustamantes brought Malangs panel to his residence at West Gallery for his signature before the artist passed on in 2016.

Many years after the making ofGoddesses, and years after the poker sessions came to an end, the mural was transferred from the basement of the Bustamante residence to its living room, and then eventually to another house. The house where the mural was transferred did not have the luxury of space nor the wide walls unlike our old home, says Pablo III. The only wall it could fit in was by the staircase.

Soon, the triptych, as with every important piece of art, will be welcomed into a new home, and space will be made for it, along with everything it carries: nostalgia for a distant past, the styles and obsessions of three great Filipino painters, their friendship and humor. Add to that, of course,the pairs of eyes that admired it over time, the faint smell of swimming pool water, and the memory of that sweet, innocent smile from Amparo Muoz, Miss Universe 1974.

The Len Gallery Spectacular Mid-Year Auction is happening on Saturday, June 20, 2020 at 2 p.m. Co-presented by ANCX.ph, the urban mans guide to culture and style, the online lifestyle website of the ABS-CBN News Channel.

View the Spectacular Mid-Year Auction 2020 catalogue as well as register to bid now at http://www.leon-gallery.com.

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Poker games, Miss Universe and the untold story of a P20 million painting - ABS-CBN News