Priceless and historically important artifacts from the country’s two preeminent precolonial gold collections come together at the Ayala Museum beginning May 17, 2024. Titled Reuniting the Surigao Treasure, this new exhibition adds a select 38 goldworks loaned from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) to around 1,000 gold items on permanent display at the Ayala Museum. This joint exhibit demonstrates the rich artistic traditions, complex social hierarchies, and sophisticated economic practices of precolonial Philippines.
Curated by former Ayala Museum director Dr. Florina Capistrano-Baker, this showcase brings to the Philippines a larger precolonial gold exhibit than another display, the successful joint exhibit in 2015 at the Asia Society Museum in New York City co-curated by Dr. Capistrano-Baker and Dr. Adriana Proser.
"For the first time ever in the Philippines, these once-dispersed gold objects have finally come together in the exhibition Reuniting the Surigao Treasure here at Ayala Museum. Because of the collective effort between us and the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, Filipinos young and old alike can visit, revisit, and marvel at these breathtaking objects, inspiring and reminding us of our country’s glorious precolonial past and what it says about us as a people," said Mariles Gustilo, Senior Director of Ayala Museum, in her remarks during the launch of the exhibition.
Origins of the Surigao Treasure
A number of precolonial gold objects in both Ayala Museum’s and BSP’s collections can be traced back to what is popularly called the Surigao Treasure. On April 27, 1981, Edilberto “Berto” Morales, a heavy machinery operator working on an irrigation project in Sitio Magroyong, barrio San Miguel, Surigao del Sur, unexpectedly unearthed golden objects scattered along a 100-meter stretch of landfill quarried from a nearby mountaintop. Morales found objects as varied as a golden bowl and golden accessories such as bangles, necklaces, and waistbands. His find inspired a gold rush in May to July of the same year, when treasure hunters, dealers, and collectors came to Magroyong in search of more gold.
Reunion: Telling a fuller story
Among the objects included in the exhibition are those that come individually from either the Ayala Museum or the BSP collection but would tell a “fuller” story together. This includes the reunion of a massive, four-kilogram gold chain believed to be a Hindu upavita, or sacred thread (Ayala Museum) with its pronged finial (BSP). Also reunited are intricately woven gold waistbands with seven complete belts from the BSP collection and several partial and complete sashes and buckles from Ayala’s collection. Together, they tell the story of power and opulence in the ancient polity of Butuan in northeastern Mindanao, where the elite could afford stunning accessories of gold.
For more information please visit the Ayala Museum website.
Tagged 02/06.