Melecio Figueroa
Melecio Figueroa was a Filipino sculptor and engraver whose design of the Great Seal of the Philippines was featured in a previous coin series of the Philippine peso.
Early life and education
Melecio Figueroa Magbanua was born on May 24, 1842, in Arevalo, Iloilo, to Gabriela Magbanua and Rufo Figueroa. At an early age, his mother Gabriela died, and both he and his sister were sent to relatives in Sorsogon, who were cake vendors. As a child, he carved wooden boats and dolls which he gave away to his friends.At the age of 16, he was selected by the Ayuntamiento de Manila as one of two Filipino artists to be sent to Spain on a scholarship sponsored by Francisco Ahujas, a consul based in the Philippines.
He arrived to Madrid in 1866, where he enrolled at the Escuela de Artes y Officios, later transferring to the Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando. When his benefactor Ahujas died, Figueroa repaired watches as his source of income. While studying in Spain, he won various prizes and recognitions for his engravings.
Career
In 1892, he returned to the Philippines with his family to teach engraving as a professor at the Escuela de Dibujo, Pintura y Grabado in Manila. He was appointed in 1893 as engraver to the Casa Moneda or colonial mint. Figueroa also continued to repair watches as a side business and opened a silversmith shop in Manila. He also attended the Malolos Congress as a delegate, and taught at the Liceo de Manila until his death in 1903.Works
At the 1875 Exposición de Bellas Artes, Figueroa sculpted a bust of King Alfonso XII. His work was recognized and he was given a pension. While in Rome, he created a bust of the then-Prince Odescalchi. At the Exposición de Filipinas in 1887 held in Madrid, he served as a judge and also designed the medals awarded at the event. In 1903, he joined a competition for the Philippine peso coinage system, and his design was selected as the winner. The coinage system was known as the Conant Series, after financial expert Charles Arthur Conant. Figueroa's designs featured in Philippine peso coins until the 1960s.Figueroa's design was later adopted as the Great Seal of the United States-administered Insular Government of the Philippine Islands, and saw use after his death from 1903 to 1935.
Personal life and death
While in Madrid, Figueroa married Enriqueta Romero in 1888. They had four children, three of whom were born in Spain but died early. His surviving child, Blanca, was born in 1892 while they were en route by ship to the Philippines. She served as a model for some of her father's coinage designs, and the personification of “Filipinas” on the Great Seal.Figueroa died of tuberculosis on July 30, 1903, and was buried in Paco, Manila.