All Photos by Josiah Antonio

By JOSIAH ANTONIO | Published by GMA News Online | April 10, 2025

An exhibit of letters penned by writer and historian Letizia Roxas-Constantino, wife of historian Renato Constantino, opened on Wednesday at the Linangan Gallery on Panay Avenue in Quezon City.

“Letizia: A Life in Letters” has on display Intimate letters spanning eight decades, anecdotes of her life, as well as notes of wisdom from the artist that doesn’t just introduce, but hopes to reflect her grace, intellect, heart and substance as a writer, Constantino Foundation managing director Red Constantino, says.

“It is an exhibit that honors the nationalist, the historian, the writer, the generational Filipina that she was. No burloloy, only consition, only substance and something that Letizia embodies, elegance,” he said.

“The exhibit represents a sliver of a fingernail of letters, manuscripts, and other artifacts that she worked on which represents an incredibly tiny fracture of what remains covered in boxes inside the Constantino Foundation compound,” he added.

According to Constantino, there is still so much material remaining to be uncovered. “But that is a tomorrow challenge. Tonight until May 30, we will honor Letizia,” he said.

Going Through her Letters

Karmina Constantino, curator and granddaughter of Letizia, recalled how receiving a letter from her grandmother meant so much for her.

“You receive a letter from her and you feel as if you’re the single most important person in the world,” the journalist said. “Opening the envelope it came in meant sharing space and time only with her and she with you.”

Karmina said her bond with her grandmother was like no other, ” as did my siblings and my cousins. Such was her gift.”

So when they lost her in 2016, Karmina admitted to being “unfixable.”

“So much so that when I was tasked to lead the family towards mounting this exhibit, there was a lot of hesitation on my part,” Karmina said.

“How can I celebrate her life when I was still mourning over her loss? Even years later. But then, the love. The love she left and the love we will always have for her — that consumed me,” she said.

Going through the letters allowed Karmina to feel her grandmother’s love again. It soon “served as the foundation for every reading adventure we took as we dove through stacks upon stacks of letters, notes, documents.”

According to Karmina, it was this love that guided the family, pointing them to photos, artifacts, piano recordings. “This love served as the beacon for finding how this exhibit should take its shape,” she said.

The exhibit doesn’t show introduce the writer, it also allows visitors to experience her life — or at least what a typical day was for her. An interactive wall has been set up where visitors can full up her day’s tasks, while voice recordings of family members will keep visitors company as they move through the displays.

Karmina went on to say: “I don’t know if you all had the great fortune of meeting Letizia Roxas-Constantino, but to all those who had the pleasure of spending even just a minute with her, I am sure you will agree with me when I say, the only way of knowing her is to experience her.”

Entering the exhibit is a portrait of Letizia Roxas-Constantino with a quote from Rosalinda Ofreneo’s “Letty at Eighty.”

Another photo of Letizia Roxas-Constantino in a baro’t saya with the actual baro (blouse) displayed in a glass container

A letter of Letizia Roxas-Constantino addressed to her grandchildren for Christmas Eve
advertisement

Photographs of Letizia Roxas-Constantino during her childhood

Photographs of Letizia Roxas-Constantino with her family and loved ones.

Some of letters are displayed with items, this stuffed toy she kept for her great-granddaughter.
advertisement

Other items of Letizia Roxas-Constantino were also displayed including her notepads

Also on display are Letizia Roxas-Constantino’s lists and daily routines.

Some of Letizia Roxas-Constantino’s music sheets showing her love for music as a pianist.
advertisement

Concluding the exhibit is a desk with some of the works of Letizia Roxas-Constantino