Text and photos by Erka Capili Inciong, BW Graphic Artist

MUSEO KORDILYERA, which opened on Jan. 31, is an addition to the must-visit sites in Baguio City.

An ethnographic museum is Baguio鈥檚 latest attraction
At the entrance of the museum, wooden statues of the Ifugao rice deity bul-ul welcome visitors. Rice is one of the most important commodities in Ifugao society, thus the bul-ul plays a major role in various rituals before, during and after the harvest season, as well as in other feasts and ceremonies.

Located within the University of the Philippines-Baguio (UPB), the minimalist design of the building is in itself quite an attraction.

Inside, the Museo Kordilyera鈥揢PB Ethnographic Museum is a place where the visitor gets an understanding of a facet of Filipino culture which is still evolving, and comes to a deeper realization that there鈥檚 more to learn about our past in order to move forward. The museum鈥檚 goal is to help make people understand and respect the diverse culture and identity of the indigenous peoples of the Cordillera and Northern Luzon.

An ethnographic museum is Baguio鈥檚 latest attraction

Of the museum鈥檚 three floors, only the reception level is above the ground. According to the UP Baguio Web site, the museum houses exhibition spaces for both its permanent collection and temporary exhibits, a visitor鈥檚 room, an audio-visual room, and a museum shop and caf茅.

An ethnographic museum is Baguio鈥檚 latest attraction
The museum鈥檚 reception area. All day access to the museum costs P60.
An ethnographic museum is Baguio鈥檚 latest attraction
The Museo Kordilyera currently has three exhibits as an inaugural offering. One is on tattoos, known in the local language as batok. The exhibit is based on the extensive research of Prof. Analyn Salvador-Amores on the tattooing traditions of the Cordillera region, which is both an art and the use of body as an archive.
An ethnographic museum is Baguio鈥檚 latest attraction
One of the museum鈥檚 three current exhibits is Jules de Raedt: Life Works, Lived Worlds which displays the process and requirements of ethnographic research as pursued by the late Dr. Jules de Raedt, who conducted fieldwork among the Buaya people of Kalinga from 1964-1966. Dr. De Raedt taught anthropology at UP Baguio for many years.
An ethnographic museum is Baguio鈥檚 latest attraction
One of the museum鈥檚 three current exhibits is titled The Indigenous, In Flux: Reconfiguring the Ethnographic Photograph, featuring the documentation done by Prof. Roland Rabang of how 鈥渋ndigenous societies, as dynamic entities, are bound to their past but also firmly connected to the present,鈥 according to the museum鈥檚 printed guide.
An ethnographic museum is Baguio鈥檚 latest attraction
Museo Kordilyera鈥揢PB Ethnographic Museum