Renato Rocha in his 30s
Renato Rocha: Building Modern Sculptures
by: Christiane L. de la Paz
Invitation for a Group Exhibition with Renato Rocha at the Quad Gallery
Newpaper Feature on Renato Rocha, Times Journal, January 24, 1984
Newspaper Feature on Renato Rocha, Philippine Daily Inquirer, December 4, 1998
December 2013–From 1960-1965, Renato Rocha had a winning streak in various art competitions including the University of the Philippines Student Catholic Action Art Competition (UP SCA) and the National Student Art Competition. His big break came in 1965 when his piece, Expulsion from Paradise, an abstract figure of Adam and Eve won him the grand prize at the 18th Art Association of the Philippines Art Competition. He also participated in two international group exhibitions: the Seattle World’s Fair in 1962 and the New York World’s Fair in 1964.
Study for a Woman
In the beginning of his career, Rocha used acacia, molave and narra in sculpting abstracted figures of animals, family, women and other free forms as they were stylishly economical, glowing with mellow warm patinas and strong and lasting in character. In 1978, he opened his first solo exhibition, Renato A. Rocha: Recent Wood Sculptures at the Manila Peninsula Hotel and three years later, held his second solo exhibition, Rocha’s Wood Sculpture at the Rear Room Gallery at the Manila Garden Hotel. “I arrived at my style through exposure, assimilation and distillation. I see no threat that my style would ever get exhausted because flexibility resides in me” Rocha once said. “My works are documentation of my maturation and an index of our people’s maturation.” The Cry of Pugad Lawin (1971), Struggle of Man for Higher Knowledge (1974), Evolution (1976), Guitarist (1977), Reclining Figures (1977), Mariang Makiling (1989), Seal of Abra (1992) were among his key works.
Rocha with his wife, Erlinda
Rocha during his 40s
Renato Rocha with his wife and seven children
Renato and his wife and their grandson

Renato Rocha’s children during his wake–August 24, 2001
Junior (Renato’s eldest son) with his mother, Erlinda
Born Renato Rocha on March 8, 1937 in Uson, Masbate, Rene is the second of four children of Ramon Rocha, an owner of boats for rent and Consuelo Autor, a housewife. Growing up in Tabaco, Albay, he used to dig out the clavey soil making up the termite hills in the rice fields, dwelling on nuno sa punso for use in modeling heads of animals, people and tiny figures. He spent his elementary and high school education in Uson High School and then attended the UP, graduating with a degree in Sculpture in 1963. From 1959-1960, he apprenticed under Anastacio Caedo and then under Napoleon Abueva from 1961-1965. He also studied commercial design under the Scranton International Correspondence School. In 1980, Rocha received the Araw ng Maynila Award in Sculpture. He was working on the art pieces he was planning to exhibit when he was stricken with a chronic liver disease. He died on August 24, 2001 and was survived by his wife, Erlinda Fallorina and their seven children.
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