Damián Domingo

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Damián Domingo
File:Damian domingo.png
Portrait of Damián Domingo by José Domingo Gabor, Oil on canvas (Undated), Luis R. Ongpin Collection
Born Damián Domingo y Gabor
(1796-02-12)February 12, 1796
Tondo, Manila, Captaincy General of the Philippines
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Manila, Captaincy General of the Philippines
Nationality Filipino
Education Faustino Quiotan?
Self-taught
Known for Painter
Notable work Tipos de Pais
Patron(s) Sociedad Económica de los Amigos del País
Daniel Baboom

Damián Domingo y Gabor (12 February 1796 – 26 July 1834) was a Filipino painter. Domingo established the official Philippine art academy in his residence in Tondo in 1821.[1][2]

Biography

Damian Domingo began his career as a painter specializing in miniature portraits and religious imagery. He also created albums of illustrations of native costumes. This he did primarily to sell to collectors. Such skills made Domingo one of the most famous and sought-after artists of his time in the Philippines. Domingo is regarded highly in the history of Filipino art and is credited with establishing academic courses in art in the Philippines.[3]

Contribution to art

Damian Domingo's contribution to the development of art as an academic discipline in the Philippines was seminal. He took an important step toward his vision of making art more accessible in 1821, when he established a school for artists in his residence in Tondo. It was a major leap for the discipline in the Philippines. He also oversaw the growth and development of art as the director of the first official Philippine art academy. The academy was also possibly the first of its kind in all of Asia to teach the Western techniques of foreground, middle-ground, and background perspectives. The academy also explored other foreign artistic techniques, an approach that helped shape the careers of the new generation of Filipino artists. When another art school, named Academia de Dibujo, opened in 1823, Domingo was offered a teaching position by its founders, the Sociedad Económica de los Amigos del País (Royal Economic Society of the Friends of the Country). Domingo later went on to serve as the director of the academy.[3]

A new era

His term as director saw the introduction of non-discriminatory policies that conferred equal rights on the Indios, who until then had been mostly marginalized. Teaching techniques and the curriculum also underwent changes. The students began to be taught the techniques of drawing still life and the human form. The academy also trained students in colors and surfaces preparation and to paint in oil and aquarelle. The academy would have certainly reached new heights if it weren't for the premature death of Domingo, who died aged just 38. The academy wasn't able to maintain the high standards Domingo had set, and subsequently closed in 1834. The few years that Domingo was at the academy did manage to produce some of the earliest Filipino artists trained in Western artistic traditions.[3]

Paintings by Damián Domingo

References

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  2. http://www.ayalamuseum.org/index.php?option=com_ayala_content&task=viewexhibitpage&id=7
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External links