The National Living Treasures Award, alternatively known as the Gawad sa Manlilikha ng Bayan (GAMABA), is conferred to a person or group of artists recognized by the Government of the Philippines for their contributions to the country's intangible cultural heritage. A recipient of the award, a National Living Treasure or Manlilikha ng Bayan is "a Filipino citizen or group of Filipino citizens engaged in any traditional art uniquely Filipino, whose distinctive skills have reached such a high level of technical and artistic excellence and have been passed on to and widely practiced by the present generations in their community with the same degree of technical and artistic competence."
In 1988, the National Folk Artists Award was organized by the Rotary Club of Makati-Ayala. The distinctions were given by the organization until it was replaced by the GAMABA Law in 1992. The recipients of the National Folk Artists from 1988 to 1992 were not declared as GAMABA even after the GAMABA Law was enacted, creating a gap in the legal recognition of traditional artists previously recognized as National Folk Artists. Of those recognized as National Folk Artists from 1988 to 1992, only Fidel Antiporda Go from Vigan City was given a marker, where it read that the award was given to him by the National Commission of the Philippines (NCCA) in 1990. The other pre-GAMABA Law National Folk Artists are publicly unknown, since a list of the recipients is virtually missing in online public records.
The National Living Treasures Award (Gawad sa Manlilikha ng Bayan) was institutionalized in 1992 through Republic Act No. 7355. The National Commission for Culture and the Arts, which is the highest policy-making and coordinating body of the Philippines for culture and the arts, was tasked with the implementation and awarding. This is in line with UNESCO's criteria of Living National Treasures.
To become a National Living Treasure, the candidate must possess the following qualifications:
A traditional artist who possesses all the qualities of a Manlilikha ng Bayan candidate, but due to age or infirmity has left them incapable of teaching further their craft, may still be recognized if:
The Gawad sa Manlilikha ng Bayan recipients, as exemplified in Republic Act No. 7355 shall receive a plaque or medal bearing the logo of the award. A duplicate of this is to be donated to and permanently displayed in the pertinent provincial museum or largest cultural center.
An initial grant of One hundred thousand pesos (P100,000.00) and Ten thousand pesos (P10,000.00) a month thereafter for life.
The categories are, but not limited to, the following categories of traditional folk arts:
Other artistic expressions of traditional culture may be added, such as the case of the ethnomedicine category, which was added only in 2020.
As defined by UNESCO, the bearers of intangible cultural heritage are to be known internationally as Living Human Treasures. The Filipino counterparts of this title are the Gawad sa Manlilikha ng Bayan (GAMABA) awardees.
There are currently twenty-five declared GAMABA awardees, all of which have exemplified the highest standard in their respective field of expertise.
There have been multiple constructive criticisms of the system by which the award was crafted. Critics have argued against the discriminatory reason that created a separation between those implied as "traditional", "indigenous", and "craft" arts (where recipients are given the Gawad Manlilikha Award or National Living Treasures Award) with those implied as "fine arts" (where recipients are given the National Artists Award). The separation of the fields have caused discrimination, rather than inclusion, since "traditional" arts should be on the same merit and system as those identified as "fine arts", which is a term mostly applied by older Filipino crafters of the law, who crafted the GAMABA law, as "Western art". Critics argue that it is insignificant to still discriminate between the two and call one as the "fine arts" and the other as "craft".
The terminology used in the award is also a source of discourse and problematique. "Manlilika" directly means "artist", making the GAMABA Award and the National Artist Award the same thing by translation, but the two are still separated by a system that views "traditional" arts as not "fine arts", which the system only applied to "Western arts", diminishing and discriminating actual traditional Filipino arts in the process. While in doing so, the same system itself notes that the two awards have allegedly the "same" ranking.
Critics have argued also why is it impossible for the system to institute the two set of arts into one national art award system, since the distinction has only increased the gap between what the system views as "fine arts" and "indigenous" arts. Critics also argue why there is a system in place which makes traditional artists (manlilika ng bayan) unqualified to be declared as a "National Artist", a title that the system only bestows to those who lean towards the "fine arts" or "Western arts". As per the National Artist Award criteria, those who can be declared as National Artist are those who "build a Filipino sense of nationhood; distinguish themselves; create a significant body of excellent work; and be nationally recognized", while those that can be declared as GAMABA are those attributed as "indigenous, "folk", or "heritage". These two sets of distinction, critics argue, has created confusion since National Artists cannot qualify for GAMABA, yet GAMABA awardees are technically qualified for the other although still barred from it. Scholar Magpantay notes on the two art form groups and the problematique on what the system has imposed:
Unlike the Philippines, in other countries, such as Thailand, the "traditional" arts and the "Western arts" are both considered as "fine arts". Thailand has instituted all its traditional arts and "Western" arts into a single Thai National Artist Award system, improving the outlook and expansion of the traditional arts in the process.
Another criticism towards the GAMABA system is its awarding system that has effectively blocked deceased traditional artists from receiving posthumous conferment on par with the National Artist Award. Non-traditional artists who have passed away can still be posthumously conferred the National Artist Award and be honored for time immemorial in the national artistic roster, but "traditional" or "indigenous" artists cannot be posthumously conferred the Gawad Manlilikha (GAMABA) Award, denying them of their place in the national artistic roster. Counter-critics argue that the reason is because the GAMABA Award can only be given to "living" traditional artists as the award is only for "Living National Treasures". The "living" counter-argument has been criticized as it showed a double standard, where the term and the system itself have only created a limited box for traditional artists, blocking them from posthumous conferment and their rightful place in the national roster, while still allowing posthumous conferment of the "same-level" National Artist Award to non-traditional artists.