Lapu-Lapu’s cage


LANDSCAPE

Have you heard of the plans to put Lapu-Lapu in a cage? I may be imagining things  after being under “house arrest” for more than a hundred days,  but that is how it looks to me. The proposed Lapu-Lapu memorial which will be inaugurated next year, during the quincentennial  is a  pretentious edifice that looks like a cage, an elegant one, but  still a cage.

          According to a recent news report,  the National Historical Commission of the Philippines (NHCP) and a local government in Cebu are planning to honor Lapu-Lapu with a monument-museum complex  in Barangay Mactan on the eponymous island.  Quite shamelessly, the report described it as a  “version” of the Thomas Jefferson Memorial in Washington, DC.  Oh, no!   I cannot imagine how that 19th century  style, called “classical  revival” and  in vogue during the Age of Enlightenment” could ever be transplanted to tropical Mactan.

           From the picture that came with the report, it will have  a cathedral-like dome supported by a wrap -around colonnade, perhaps Ionic or Doric.  Apparently, Lapu-Lapu Mayor Junard Chan and NHCP Chairman Rene Escalante have had group  meetings  about this proposed memorial,  the last one was held in Malacanang, no less. Could this be a sign that Mayor Chan has the right connections to make his dream project come true? That is a frightful thought.

          At this point, no one knows what the budget is like and if it includes a 19-foot statue of Lapu-Lapu cast in bronze like Jefferson’s effigy. If that were made locally, the cost could be prohibitive; real bronze is not easy to find, much less a foundry with that capacity.  Perhaps  President Duterte and  Mayor Chan know someone in China who can do the job  for much less, with the price of transport thrown in. If they don’t, I suggest  they look up  that sculptor from China who made the statue of Cardinal Sin, the one sandwiched between the twin shrines of the Ninoy and Cory and the Legazpi-Urdaneta monument.

          Whatever the dimensions,  Lapu-Lapu’s statue will be placed on a pedestal of marble, of course, easily available in Romblon. It will be situated  directly under the dome. Lapu-Lapu  will probably be  gazing at the sea from behind that prison of columns.

          My objection to this plan is that it is an imitation of something else. Why must we Filipinos be the eternal copycats? Why do we feel insecure when we are not copying iconic works  from the West, quite alien from our native pre-colonial culture?  There are Filipino architects who are creative and original and who are inspired by  what is local, by what our cultural communities offer. Why do we have to copy and imitate all the time?  The news report did not mention the name of the architect or engineer; if it is someone working for the NHCP, I am all the more shocked that he/she should conjure the Jefferson Memorial for our own Lapu-Lapi.  Mayor Chan is certain that it will be a must-see tourist destination. I beg to disagree. Not only foreign visitors but  local tourists will find the planned memorial out of character.

          Since we have no documentary evidence of what Lapu-Lapu looked like, shouldn’t sculptors think of another way of portraying him? The late Solomon Saprid, a multi-awarded sculptor ( I think he is a National Artist) once  made a fascinating  study of a Lapu-Lapu monument which captures the potent energy of  two inveterate enemies   locked in ferocious combat for survival. It was executed in true Brutalist style. Neither the face of Magellan nor of Lapulapu are seen but those who know our history will feel the energy and know, at first glance, what the sculpture is all about.  

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