Archive | Shows and Events RSS feed for this section

Art at the Shang: Saturday group exhibit

17 Jul

Was surprised to see a Hermes painting while going up the escalator in Shangri-la Mall yesterday…
art at the shang

Turns out there’s an art exhibit of the Saturday Group of Artists until July 26 (two Mondays from now). What a lovely pick-me-upper in the middle of a mall!

art at the shang

Was also so happy to see this piece by Migs Villanueva, who was such a patient writing mentor for our group of fiction-writing babies in 2005…(indulge me– I wrote a piece that got published then!).  Migs invited us to her first (?) painting exhibit a few years after that, but it was a nice surprise yesterday to see that she’s still at it, and exploring new themes:
art at the shang

There was also a Blanco! I didn’t recognize the first name from the Blanco kids I saw in the Angono museum, maybe it’s by one of the grandkids?
art at the shang

Lovely fantastical images…
art at the shang

art at the shang

Am glad that Filipino art is made more accessible to Pinoys today, most of whom find more reason to frequent malls than museums…

Coming in a few weeks is the 2nd Annual Manila Art Fair, which is a bigger (and hopefully just as successful) sequel to last year’s Manila Art09 “Asia’s Latest Contemporary Art Fair”!  Yahooo, excited for that!!

* * *
Art at the Shang is an exhibition of the Saturday Group of Artists at the Grand Atrium, Shangri-la Plaza. It runs from July 14 to 26, 2010.

<a href=”http://www.flickr.com/photos/manilarat/4799362630/” title=”art at the shang by manila rat, on Flickr”><img src=”http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4141/4799362630_b27101aa33.jpg” width=”375″ height=”500″ alt=”art at the shang” /></a>
Share

a market-to-plate cooking day using organic food!

18 May

My friend Jhoey Hernandez of PinoyOrganics.com is holding a unique culinary tour in Alabang on Saturday, May 22, for sustainable cooking! Hope you and your green-minded friends can support her project:

Are you a cooking mama, a foodie, an urban gardener wannabe or simply love learning new things? Dust off your basket and join us as Pinoy Organics launch its Market-to-Plate Tours in the South!

Pinoy Organics in partnership with Feed 5000

present

Market-to-Plate Tour Launch

MAY 22, 2010, SATURDAY

8AM – 2PM


  • Know your local producers in nearby weekend markets
    • Help us purchase our ingredients for our cooking demo
    • Meet the only certified organic local produce seller in the South
    • Meet a 70 year old woman who sells local produce from Batangas on weekends only
    • Know where to buy organic brown rice at market price in the South
    • Enjoy a local drink with more electrolytes than commercial sports drink
    • Visit Mom-Turn-Farmer who sells her sustainable foods from Cavite
    • and more!

    (more…)

Share

Manila Art fair bests: Yusof, Villaseran & Antonio

20 Jul

First heard about an art fair in Manila–the first of its kind– from Mr. Rio Ambrosio and his wife Annie, amiable owners of Artes Orientes gallery where I bought a painting last week.

Always always I get giddy when I visit galleries–just the proximity to creative babies is enough to inspire and refill the well..so imagine my glee being in a roomful (tentful!) of paintings and art from a good number of Philippine artists! Wowoweeee (such joy calls for a leap, a dance!)!!

Sharing below the pieces that most tugged at the heart:
Movement of Nature by Abd Racid Yusof – they make you sway, right? they take you to the river, you can hear it gushing!

Had to stop and ask for the artist’s name when I saw these… so evocative, of childhood (lost?) or a pause, to think, to ponder, to pout and stare… by Marcel Antonio. Left work was sold for 230k if I remember right.


These pieces by Rom Villaseran won me over at first glance… wow. Talked to the gallery rep, his process requires him to sand the canvas, paint (he uses acryclics), then sand, then paint. Does this almost 30 times, to come up with such a smooth finish. Beautiful, fantastical images.. a book/portfolio of his works describes them as “replete with shadowy, mythological figures, celestial beings and denizens of the netherworld.” One favorite had a giant blue squid in outer space (reminded me of SilverHawks the cartoons) with a cheeky menacing look (was not on exhibit, saw it in the book/folio). Will certainly watch out for Foreplay, his upcoming exhibit at the WhiteWall Gallery on August 28-September 9.

Hayyy….

I love paintings! I want to to paint!!!

Manila Art09 “Asia’s Latest Contemporary Art Fair”
NBC Tent, July 17-19, 2009
P200 entrance fee

More pics of paintings from the fair at Inspiration everywhere at the Manila Art Fair.

Share

Let us REMEMBER: The fall of Manila (lecture this Thursday)

28 Jan

In August 2005, wrote about my thoughts on the fall of Manila in WWII, which I first heard about on the Intramuros Walking tour of Carlos Celdran. This tidbit of history took me by surprise, and made that sad event a little more palpable to me… more real or immediate, with its physical remnants very much alive today, what with destruction still a mainstay in Manila…

Been taking a history course on the Philippines since September, with mostly expat ladies as my classmates. Originally, I signed up for the course because I was drawn to its multi-cultural approach in making sense of something that I should know by heart by now. But over the past four months, realized that despite excellent teachers in high school and college, and despite a seeming above-average interest in Philippine culture, I still don’t remember much about my collective history with Pinoys. And I still can’t make sense of our present state as a people in relation to our past.

Shame indeed, and so rigorous effort must me made to REMEMBER.

Admittedly, I know the least about “modern Philippine history”, which, for me, is anything after the Spanish era: the American period, Japanese Period, plus the post-war presidencies all the way to Marcos– these are muddled times for me… complicated and messy, or perhaps the exact opposite–uneventful, untrue, un-Filipino in a sense…in short, uninteresting (to me, at least).

Even my own insights two years ago have been forgotten: the need to find the personal connection to make history come alive, to resuscitate that sense of belonging with the people who suffered through those years…

I don’t take it lightly, then, that I ended up with the topic, “Sufferings and Reparations post-WWII” for my class report. There’s much to re-examine, reread, relive… this talk on Manila in 1945 this Thursday may be a good place to start:


The Battle of Manila, Myth and Fact
By Peter Parsons

February 7, Thursday
6:00 pm
Ortigas Foundation Library,
2/F Ortigas Building, Ortigas Avenue corner Meralco Avenue, Ortigas Center, Pasig City

ADMISSION IS FREE.

The Ortigas Foundation Library cordially invites you to the OFL February lecture:

The talk will be based on Mr. Parson’s video documentary Manila 1945: The Forgotten Atrocities. It will focus on the atrocities committed by the Japanese in Manila during the battle which took place in February of 1945. Between one hundred and two hundred thousand Filipino civilians were killed at that time. The researcher on this topic has to walk through the landmines and booby traps of both fact and fiction.

A few excerpts from the video which has recently won an award for documentaries at the Myrtle Beach International Film Festival will be shown during the talk.

The Ortigas Foundation Library is using this opportunity to recognize the 63rd anniversary of the Battle of Manila. Copies of the video Manila 1945: The Forgotten Atrocities will be available for purchase.

ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Peter Parsons is one of the sons of Cmdr. Chick Parsons, who worked for General Douglas Mac Arthur during World War II as his liaison with the Philippine resistance.

For more information, please call 631.1231 local 222 or email maticat@ortigas.com.ph

Share

passion play

5 Apr

“We Were There”
Christ the King Main Church, Greenmeadows Ave., QC
7:30pm, Holy Wednesday
Free admission

For the first time, our parish is staging a full-blown musical on the Passion of Christ, with volunteer actors and staff from the community. Directed by Gene Lopez of Miss Siagon fame, I’m sure it will be quite a show. On a personal note, I’m excited to see friends and neighbors sing their hearts out about Christ in full costume!

Everyone is invited.

Christ the King is mostly made up of residents from Greenmeadows, Acropolis, White Plains, St. Ignatius, Libis, Corinthian Gardens, and Valle Verde 1-6.

Share

Holy Week

20 Mar

As a kid I grew up thinking of Holy Week as one big fiesta, when the extended family would gather, spend days at the beach, and eat fresh seafood like there was no tomorrow. Even processions in my dad’s native Bicol were seen as a source of enchantment and unconventional play, as my brothers and I would take turns scaring each other with the masked flagellants going about their panata (vow of suffering / sacrifice).

Holy Week is now less than a month away, and this year, the family’s decided to stay put in Manila, where surprisingly, the week is observed with more solemnity. Below are some activities lined up by the Jesuits:

Life’s Directions Weekend 65
Friday-Sunday, March 24-26
A 3-day live-in interactive retreat for single young professionals (21-39 years old)
The Karis Retreat House, Iruhin, Tagaytay City
Organized by the Center for Family Ministries (CEFAM)

Four Holy Week retreats from the Christian Life Community Formation Institute
Three days, four days and eight days beginning April 8, 12 and 13
Mirador Jesuit Villa, Baguio City and Horacio de la Costa Formation Center, Trece Martires City, Cavite

Alumni Holy Week Triduum Retreat
Thursday-Saturday, April 13-15
Escaler Hall, Science Education Complex (SEC), Loyola Heights Campus
Reservation required.

Holy Week Triduum Recollection & Services at the Ateneo Professional Schools
Thursday-Saturday, April 13-15
Chapel of St. Thomas More, Ateneo de Manila Professional Schools, Rockwell Campus

Holy Week Triduum Recollection at the Loyola School of Theology
Thursday-Saturday, April 13-15, 8:30am-12:00noon

Share

big time opens on wed!

23 Jan

SYNOPSIS

Danny (Winston Elizalde) and Jonas (Nor Domingo) are two petty crooks who dream of moving into the big scene. When their carefully-planned kidnapping goes askew, Danny and Jonas find themselves in a tangle neither of them can handle.

Big Time is the non-linear story of two small-time criminals, a wannabe actress, the son of a crime lord, and the kidnapping that brings all of them together for what should be the ticket to their dreams.

In this crazy world, everybody wants to go big time.

Winner of Best Screenplay and Best Sound for Full Length Feature at the 2005 Cinemalaya Film Festival, Big Time goes mainstream on Wednesday, Jan. 25.

Showing exclusively at SM theaters.

Share

Lecture: Regenerating a Coral Reef

15 Nov

November 18, Friday
9:00a.m. sign in, 9:30a.m. lecture starts
Filipinas Heritage Library

P100 MVP members, P200 non-members.


“95% of RP Reefs Ruined, Says Group” -Front page headline in yesterday’s Inquirer
“Program to Save RP Reefs Launched” -Front page headline in yesterday’s Star.

The plight of Philippine reefs is front page news.
Learn about an award-winning project that regenerates the coral reef from the man who started it, Ernie Pelaez.

Two years ago, Ernesto Pelaez, together with a marine biologist and a dive instructor, set out to restore the badly damaged coral reef in his family’s beach resort. Their project was not only successful in regenerating coral and bringing back an abundance of fish, it also recently won a silver medal in the Holcim awards for innovation in achieving a sustainable environment.

It will be refreshing to listen to a success story about our environment, especially about our coral reefs. Here is a story of three invidiuals “with no high academic background”, in Pelaez’s words, who made a huge difference in only 2 years — Don’t miss it!

Share