FEATURES

Remembering Jaime de Guzman
By: Jojo G. Silvestre | March 27, 2023

Jaime De Guzman, farewell
By: Gemma Cruz Araneta | March 2, 2023
Jaime and I met shortly after I had seen him on television in 1968; it was a mid-morning show where guests answered imponderable questions. Jaime, introduced as a promising painter, was asked who among the Filipinas he would like to date. He pronounced my full name without hesitation. I did not take umbrage, but was relieved that Tonypet (my husband) was not watching TV with me that morning. Shortly after, I was appointed director of the National Museum by then President Ferdinand Marcos, Sr.

The ‘Limasawa 6’ case: criminalizing research
By: Jenny Ortueste | June 14, 2021
I write this on our country’s 123rd Independence Day, which got me thinking about this year, 2021, its significant historical milestones, and other history-related matters.

The ‘Limasawa 6’ case: case dismissed!
By: Jojo Silvestre | June 24, 2021
In what is surely a triumph for the justice system and for the rule of law, reason, and logic, a criminal complaint filed against six historians for their research findings has been thrown out by the Office of the City Prosecutor of Butuan City.

SC Declares with Finality against PhilHealth with Eye Doctor
By: Jenny Ortueste | December 20, 2019
The Supreme Court recently declared final and executory their July 2019 decision in favor of an ophthalmologist whose accreditation as a healthcare professional was illegally suspended by the Philippine Health Insurance Corp. (Philhealth).

SC declares PhilHealth Ruling as Illegal
By: Jenny Ortuoste | September 9, 2019
The Supreme Court declared as illegal in its Resolution of July 30, the suspension of Dr. Mario Reyes, a practicing ophthalmologist and former head of the Ophthalmology Department of the Ospital ng Maynila. According to Atty. Saul Hofileña Jr., lawyer for Dr. Reyes.

More Historic Hocus Paintings at the National Museum
By: Jojo G. Silvestre | February 23, 2023
The National Museum of the Philippines has put on permanent display five more Hocus paintings at the National Museum of Anthropology located just across the National Museum of Fine Arts. The first batch was hung at the National Museum of Fine Arts in 2017.

The South China Sea Turmoil, explained
By: Jenny Ortuoste | October 8, 2022
With increasing globalization and the economic interdependence of nations necessarily comes a greater focus on geopolitics and a watchfulness on the conduct of states that can, or do, pose threats to the safety and sovereignty of others.

Saul Hofileña Jr. on his Hocus opus (Part 2)
By: Jojo Silvestre | September 23, 2022
Saul Hofilena Jr (SHJ): Maybe because of its novelty and the way the National Museum presented the exhibition. Also, each time there was a HOCUS exhibition, I would write a book detailing the history behind each artwork, and lectures were conducted in the National Museum of the Philippines. There was even a monograph written by the late Sylvia Mayuga and the historian Xiao Chua about HOCUS.

A lawful glossary of geological terms
By: Gemma Cruz Araneta | September 22, 2022
Two eminent lawyers, Saul and Daniel Hofileña, father and son, authored an elucidating monograph, “Turmoil at the South China Sea” which to me is a veritable dictionary of basic yet misapplied terms.

Saul Hofileña Jr. on his Hocus opus (Part 1)
By: Jojo G. Silvestre | September 16, 2022
My dear friend, Saul Hofileña Jr., is a lawyer, a historian, a law professor, and a former law school dean. He has authored 15 books on law, history, and art.
Andres Luna: Outstanding architect in prewar Manila
By: Jojo G. Silvestre | July 23, 2022
In 1918, Andres Luna de San Pedro graduated from the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris. Immediately, he was hired by the French government, obviously on sheer talent, having been vouched for by his professors.
Luna, Arquitecto author Saul Hofilena pointed out that he was not well connected in Paris. His talent thus spoke for himself.

Andres Luna de San Pedro – The Making of a Great Architect
By: Jojo G. Silvestre | July 15, 2022
I have often wondered about the artistic life and career of the architect Andres Luna de San Pedro, son of the painter and hero Juan Luna, because I would read now and then about his famous works, including the Crystal Arcade in Escolta, and my search for a good reference finally came to an end with a gift of a book, Luna, Arquitecto, from the author himself, lawyer and history expert Saul Hofileña Jr.

Hocus astounds with artbook “Jucio Final”
By: Jenny Ortuoste | July 9, 2022
In a first for the Philippine art world, a lawyer-historian and a painter-conservator teamed up to produce a series of paintings on historical themes that bring to life our colonial past and the ways we come to terms with it.

Quadricula (Hocus II)
The Hofileña-Custodio Paintings
By Sylvia L. Mayuga and Xiao Chua | March 2020


A Hocus II: The return of the two-headed beast
By: Eric S. Caruncho | September 22, 2019
“Quadricula” marks the return of Hocus, the singular two-headed creature who took the local art world by storm in April of 2017 with an eponymous six-month exhibit at the National Museum of Fine Arts (NMFA).