Across
- 5. Filipino artist celebrated for portraying rural life with golden light.
- 6. A burial jar from Palawan with boatmen depicted on its lid.
- 12. Art style that uses bold colors and loose brushwork, pioneered by Jose Joya.
- 14. Spanish colonial house combining nipa hut and European influences.
- 16. The oldest known artwork in the Philippines, found in Angono.
- 17. Filipino painter famous for romantic landscapes and depictions of sunlight.
- 19. Filipino term for the ancient script used in pre-colonial Philippines.
- 20. Dance introduced by Americans, blending local and Western styles.
- 23. Legendary bird symbolizing good fortune in Maranao culture.
- 24. Musical instrument made of bamboo used in ethnic dances.
- 25. National artist Guillermo Tolentino created this iconic sculpture at UP.
- 26. A vibrant traditional dance involving clashing bamboo poles.
- 28. Festival dance celebrating a bountiful harvest in Ifugao culture.
- 30. Maranao dance with props imitating bird wings.
Down
- 1. Early sculptor in the Spanish era, sacristan of San Pablo, Laguna.
- 2. Symbolic markers for graves made of etched coral in Mindanao.
- 3. Pre-colonial dance performed as a courtship ritual.
- 4. Spanish friars used art to propagate this religious faith.
- 7. Ancient Ifugao jewelry made of boar tusks and bone.
- 8. Term for taking elements from another culture without permission.
- 9. Filipino term meaning “to spell,” referring to an ancient writing system.
- 10. Pioneering Filipino painter known for secular (non-religious) art.
- 11. 19th-century Filipino class of educated natives who patronized art.
- 13. Negative impact of cultural appropriation, leading to loss of authenticity.
- 15. Sculptor who discovered the Angono Petroglyphs.
- 18. Wooden chair symbolizing royalty in Ifugao culture.
- 21. National artist known for the “Bonifacio Monument.”
- 22. Form of literature sung by warriors during battle.
- 27. Traditional drum used in the kulintang ensemble.
- 29. Dance of the Maranao people that depicts the epic poem “Darangen.”
