The Constantino legacy exhibit just got extended: here is why you need to go
by Astig.PH
MAKATI, Philippines (Jul 2026): You have a few more weeks to catch a rare look at the love letters and personal artifacts of the couple who changed how we look at our own history. The Constantino Foundation and Yuchengco Museum officially extended the run of “Pasts Revisited: An Exhibit on a Usable History and the Romance of Renato Constantino and Letizia Roxas Constantino” until July 31, 2026.
Located at the RCBC Plaza in Makati City, the showcase focuses on the celebrated husband and wife historian duo. Organizers decided to keep the doors open longer because of high demand and the sheer size of the collection. This is the first time the public can see personal items like Renato’s writing desk and his wood pipes. Legend has it that National Artist Vicente Manansala once traded a custom painting just to get his hands on one of those pipes.
A look at Pinoy [READ]
‘Pasts Revisited’ exhibit extended until July 31
Visitors have more time to experience a unique intersection of history, art, and intellectual resistance, as the Constantino Foundation and Yuchengco Museum have officially extended the run of Pasts Revisited: An Exhibit on a Usable History and the Romance of Renato Constantino and Letizia Roxas Constantino until July 31, 2026.
Currently housed at the RCBC Plaza in Makati City, the exhibition highlights the celebrated husband-and-wife historian duo whose writings profoundly reshaped Filipino identity.
Due to popular demand and the vast nature of the collection, organizers are giving the public a prolonged opportunity to engage with these pieces of national heritage.
The exhibit offers a look at the intellectual labor and lifelong romance of Renato and Letizia. For the first time, the public can view personal artifacts, rare art and photos, historical notes, and contemporary [READ]
Candido’s Wave!
Two sold + two reserved = only 16 prints are left. The limited serigraph prints by the artist Denise Nicole Tolentino are among the most moving pieces of art in recent memory depicting Philippine history with compelling power. It reflects so closely a chapter in our past that makes the narrative bloom, and it succeeds because it is both haunting and inspiring. Candido’s Wave is available at the YShop of Yuchengco Museum until the exhibit [READ]
The Philippines’ Past Revisited and Continuing Past: Usable History in Today’s Philippines
Renato Constantino’s A Past Revisited and The Continuing Past remain profoundly relevant in illuminating the Philippines’ present political turbulence marked by the impeachment of Vice President Sara Duterte, the collapse of the Marcos–Duterte alliance, and violent upheaval within the Senate. These developments have not only revived anxieties over institutional fragility that Constantino already analyzed during his time but also sharpened dynastic rivalries as the nation looks ahead to the 2028 presidential elections.
Written during the Martial Law era, these two books on Philippine History dismantled colonial-centered narratives and restored Filipinos as central actors in their own story. They exposed how Spanish and American colonialism entrenched [READ]
History, art, and intellectual resistance converge in ‘Pasts Revisited’ exhibit
July 1, 2026 · 12:24 AM

A combination of history, art, and intellectual resistance is on display at the Yuchengco Museum. Running until July 11, 2026, “Pasts Revisited: [READ]
Pasts Revisited Exhibit Extended Until July 31!
Thank you for the feedback. The Constantino Foundation and Y Space at the Yuchengco Museum have extended the #PastsRevisited exhibit to July 31. Come and find out more about the romance with history and the epic love story of Renato Constantino and Letizia Roxas Constantino. Open everyday except Sundays and holidays, from 10:00 AM to 5:00 PM, @ RCBC Plaza on Ayala [READ]
Diving into Renato and Letizia Constantino’s past lives and history
Rosalinda Ofreneo: The Constantinos’ romance went beyond the commonplace connection and encompassed the country in their advocacy of nationalism. They shared what Ofreneo called “usable love,” with Letizia serving Renato “hand and foot, as prescribed by patriarchal culture,” and later becoming his equal intellectual partner.
By Liana Garcellano | Jun 29, 2026
The Philippine history book “A Past Revisited,” published in 1975, has always been associated with the late historian and war veteran Renato Constantino. But he was only one of two authors, the other being his wife Letizia Roxas Constantino.
The exclusion of Letizia’s name was not a patriarchal erasure but a conscious decision for her safety, as stated on an introductory panel at Yuchengco [READ]


