Cuanang would open the Pinto Gallery around the year 2000 and in 2010, he would found the Pintô Art Museum.
[1] The museum is linked to Cuanang being a patron of local Antipolo artists – particularly the amateur art troupe, named Saling Pusa.
[1] The group was co-established by Cuanang as the Antipolo Foundation for Arts, Culture, and Ecology after the People Power Revolution of 1986.
[2] The Pintô Art Museum consists of six buildings and stands on 12,000 square meters (130,000 sq ft) of land at the Grand Heights subdivision in Antipolo, Rizal.
[1] Tony Leaño, a Saling Pusa member designed the buildings in an organic and eclectic style.