A Muralscape of Light: Remembering Romy S.A. Carlos ’63

By Louis ‘Barok‘ C. Biraogo — August 10, 2025


TO speak of Romy S.A. Carlos is to trace the outlines of a mural whose pigments have not yet faded, though the hand that shaped them has set down its brush. He lived in that rarefied space where artistry becomes not just expression but stewardship—where each stroke, each hue, guarded the memory of a people even as it dared to innovate. He was, as his mentor José Joya once cautioned him to be, an artist who knew when to stop. The wisdom of restraint—how to leave space for silence in color, how to allow a work to breathe—would come to define not just his canvases, but his way of moving through the world.

“Light in every stroke.”

Romy’s art carried the chromatic pulse of Filipino history, yet it was never mere nostalgia. In his hands, the past was not embalmed but quickened, refracted through modern sensibilities, a dialogue between heritage and horizon. Exhibited in galleries here and abroad, his work became a kind of diaspora of images—Filipino culture scattered across continents, gathered again in the gaze of those who understood what was being preserved. His elevation to the UNO Award in 2025—golden-lit under the vaulted ceilings of the Aguado Residence—felt less a coronation than an affirmation. It recognized the sum of decades spent elevating Filipino artistry, not in a solitary ascent, but in communion with others.

For Romy was never only an artist. He was a convenor of people, a quiet architect of bridges. In the UP Alumni Association and the College of Fine Arts Alumni Association, he channeled the same compositional sense into projects that restored not only spaces, but the sinews of community. He understood that alumni networks, like murals, are living things—layers of experience bound by shared vision. These undertakings were, in their own way, acts of portraiture: framing a fraternity and a university in their best light.

To his fraternity brothers in Upsilon Sigma Phi, he was a constant flame, though never the loudest in the room. In the century-spanning arc of the fraternity—its triumphs and its darker chapters—Romy’s presence was a reminder that Brotherhood and Integrity are not mottos to be engraved on brass plaques but lived, daily, in the small and unpublicized acts. He gathered light, as the motto commands, not to store it for himself but to scatter it—across canvases, across generations.

It is impossible to speak of his life without noting the constellation of influences and peers: the tutelage under Joya, the collaborative ease with Bencab, the fraternity bonds that outlasted formal rites. In these relationships, Carlos was both student and mentor, recipient and giver of light. One imagines him offering quiet encouragement to a young painter wrestling with a stubborn canvas, or discreetly underwriting a community exhibit, never with fanfare, always with purpose.

The UNO evening itself remains vivid in memory: the cardinal red of Upsilon banners glowing against the Manila dusk, the mingling of art and fraternity as if two parallel currents had converged for a moment’s confluence. There was applause, yes, but more telling was the hush—an almost painterly pause—when his name was called, as though everyone present recognized that here was a man whose life was less a speech than a composition.

What endures now is not the ceremony nor the citations, but the permanence of his work, the way a viewer in some distant future might still feel the brush’s decisive lift, the careful refusal to overwork a scene. In a fraternity reckoning with its complex legacy—its luminous contributions and its undeniable shadows—Romy stands as proof that individual integrity can refract collective identity into something finer.

His story leaves us with lessons: that tradition and innovation need not be antagonists; that art is most vital when it serves; that recognition, while fleeting, can point us toward what should endure. And perhaps most of all, that knowing when to stop is not an abdication but a mastery—whether on the canvas, in leadership, or in life itself.

Some lives are like murals: meant to be approached slowly, studied in sections, understood over time. Romy S.A. Carlos’s was such a work—layered, complex, luminous at its core. The paint may be dry now, but the light he gathered continues to scatter, still finding its way to those who need it.

“Brod Romy, when I meet you under the sun, I shall tell you much.”

Louis ‘Barok‘ C. Biraogo ’79

Louis ‘Barok‘ C. Biraogo

2 responses to “A Muralscape of Light: Remembering Romy S.A. Carlos ’63”

  1. Celina Rallon Avatar
    Celina Rallon

    Hi Louis! My name is Celina, the youngest daughter of Romy Carlos. I just wanted to tell you, on behalf of my mom and siblings, that we greatly appreciate the article you have written about our dad, whom we lovingly call Pang. You have captured his very essence accurately! I found myself reading this over and over as I reminisce about the wonderful memories I have of my dad. We are also truly grateful for the amazing brotherhood he found with the great Upsilon Sigma Phi. It is something truly remarkable and something that my dad always cherished!
    With all our hearts, THANK YOU!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Louis 'Barok' Biraogo Avatar
      Louis ‘Barok’ Biraogo

      Hi Celina,

      Your message truly touched me. Writing that tribute was both an honor and a deeply personal journey, and knowing it resonated with you and your family means more than I can express. Your dad, Pang, lived a life of purpose, warmth, and generosity that left a mark not just on those who knew him personally, but on everyone who heard his story.

      I’m grateful you shared a glimpse of how he was as a father and family man—it adds an even richer dimension to the person we all admired. The bond he had with the Upsilon Sigma Phi was indeed remarkable, but it was his character, kindness, and quiet strength that made that brotherhood, and the world around him, better.

      Please extend my heartfelt condolences to your mom and siblings. May his memory continue to inspire us all, as it surely will for me.

      With deepest respect,
      Louis

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