Category Archives: Arts and Culture

Touring Beijing, China

By | Arts and Culture, Travel | 2 Comments

We did not go to Beijing this year, but five years ago, we did with our good friends, Suharto and Rina.  I did not take as many photos but am glad I still have them.  

We got a package tour for only US$ 800.00 which included airfare, hotel and food to Shanghai and Beijing for a week.  WHAT A GREAT DEAL!  I do not know if you can still get something like that now.  It was a smart way to go because we had a tour guide and we did not have to worry about how to communicate- where to go- what to eat etc etc.  

Beijing is definitely a place to go to- very rich in history and culture! 

Tiananmen Square

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Forbidden City- I wish I had taken more photos.  This was beautiful!   

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Summer Palace

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The only photo I have of the Beijing Zoo, I love Panda bears!!  

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The Great Wall

We could not imagine ourselves climbing that but if many others were doing it, why can’t we? And we were already there so might as well make the most out of it 🙂  

 

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Suharto climbing up – tired but smiling 🙂

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WE MADE IT!

“The GREAT Wall with GREAT friends!” as captioned by my best friend, Rina 🙂

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They even sell certificates at the top of the mountain as proof that you actually climbed the wall 🙂

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Previous Entries:

 Touring Xian, China

Sofitel, Xian

Breakfast Buffet at Sofitel

Terra-Cotta Warriors

Terra-Cotta Factory

Eating in Xian

Le Chinois

Touring Beijing, China

88 Xintiandi

Din Tai Fung

Shanghai Antique Market

Whampoa Club at 3 On the Bund

8 On The Bund

Yuyuan Market, Shanghai

Era,Intersection of Time

Breakfast at 88 Xintiandi

Chinese Silk

The Kitchen Salvatore Cuomo

Touring Shanghai 

The YongFoo Elite

Yi Long Court

The Peninsula Shanghai 

Good Hot Pot

Taikang Lu Street

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Terra-cotta Warriors

By | Arts and Culture, Travel | 3 Comments

Our main purpose for our visit to Xian was to see the Terracotta soldiers.  And WOW!  We read and see a lot of photos about them but to be actually there and absorb the history surrounding them and how they preserved it. And for my two sons, they are awed as they are studying it and when they see it in person, they are more amazed!dsc_1095.JPGdsc_1098.jpgdsc_1101.JPGdsc_1106.jpgdsc_1107.JPGdsc_1110.JPGdsc_1111.JPGdsc_1112.JPGdsc_1118.JPGdsc_1120.JPGdsc_1123.JPGdsc_1124.JPGdsc_1125.JPGdsc_1126.JPGdsc_1137.JPGdsc_1138.JPGdsc_1142.JPGdsc_1143.JPGdsc_1144.JPG

Continuing their excavations 

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There was only one soldier that was intact when they excavated and it was the kneeling archer.  All the others were already in pieces and they had to put them together one by one to rebuild the soldiers and put them into one piece 

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Javier was so excited to see one of the farmers there

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and he made sure he bought a book so he could get an autograph

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They normally do not allow photos but the farmer was probably happy that the kids wanted to meet him so he allowed it

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 Previous Entries:  ( Click on them to go to them )

Touring Xian, China

Sofitel, Xian

Breakfast Buffet at Sofitel

Terra-cotta Factory 

Eating in Xian  

Le Chinois 

[email_link]

Touring Xian, China

By | Arts and Culture, Travel | 3 Comments

We were fortunate to go to China over the holy week and mostly for the kids who are taking up China and the Chinese language now in their school. We stopped by Xian to visit the Terracota soldiers and were surprised to see many other beautiful structures and historical places.  It’s a good thing one of my sons had been there in one of their school trips and he helped as a tour guide 🙂 Though we had our own tour guide and better make sure you have one with you when in China because hardly anyone speaks English or better yet…we need to learn to speak Chinese!

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The Old City Wall which is around 13 kilometers circling around the city.  It is amazing!

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It’s beautiful on top as well!  It was foggy while we were there which gave it an even more mystical effect

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You can bike around the wall – you can bring your bike or you can rent one there

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Even the trash can looks ancient and blends well with the place

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We circled the wall with the bus and we saw the different entrances/gates

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Around the wall is of course moat and they have a few bridges to enter the wall

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Night shots of the wall

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Bell Tower

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Drum Tower

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 Our tour guide took us to a market, Since it was late afternoon already and a bit drizzling, many stalls were closed and not many people were there

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They had a lot of stores selling paintbrushes and paper

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and other Chinese handicrafts

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Small booths closed due to weather

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Beautiful buildings

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 Previous Entries:  ( Click on them to go to them )

Sofitel, Xian

Breakfast Buffet at Sofitel

Terra-cotta Warriors

Terra-cotta Factory 

Eating in Xian

Le Chinois 

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Barbie Goes To The Ballet

By | Arts and Culture, Fashion, Giving Back | 6 Comments

Ballet Philippines and the country’s top designers collaborate to benefit the company’s dance scholars

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Premier Philippine dance company Ballet Philippines launches a project that merges dance and fashion with the help of their latest muse, who’s also known as the most iconic doll in the world.

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Ballet Barbie is the collaboration inspired by two different but essentially connected worlds, to benefit the heart and soul of Ballet Philippines, its scholars and dancers. The project aims to raise funds for the dance scholars by auctioning one-of-a-kind Barbie dolls dressed and stylized by some of the country’s most notable designers.   

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The combination encapsulates an irresistible magic that every girl, no matter what age, desires. “Barbie and ballet represent every girl’s idyllic dream,” says Ballet Philippines President Margie Moran-Floirendo. “Through Ballet Barbie, we hope to create the perfect blend of these two and come up with something that every girl will want to keep and cherish for the rest of her life.”

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Many real life Barbies who graced the evening 

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 and some dashing Kens

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As cornerstone of Filipino identity and culture, the company has been at the forefront of promulgating the importance of and appreciation for the esteemed dance form. Now, Ballet Philippines is visually translating the beauty and grace of ballet through stylish ensembles crafted by 42 partner designers       

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The project brings together a number of the most talented arbiters of fashion including Pepito Albert, Aureo Alonzo, Jerome Ang, Ivarluski Aseron, Avel Bacudio, Vittorio Barba, Alex Bitong, JC Buendia, Mitzi Quilendrino-Bustos, Louis Claparols, Auggie Cordero, Dong Omaga Diaz, Patrice Ramos Diaz, Rhett Eala, Joel Escober, Ramon Esteban, Veejay Floresca, Tan Gan by Solenn Heussaff, Cesar Gaupo, Katrina Goulbourn, Len Nepomuceno-Guiao, Sassa Jimenez, Gerry Katigbak, Rajo Laurel, Brian Leyva, Jojie Lloren, Jerome Lorico, Dennis Lustico, Pitoy Moreno, New Yorker by Tina Lirag, Tippi Ocampo, Randy Ortiz, Frederick Peralta, Eric Pineda, Puey Quinones, Barge Ramos, James Reyes, Mike de la Rosa, Joey Samson, Cary Santiago, Eric de los Santos, and Hans Brumann.

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The creativity, time and talent that the designers have displayed is limitless, utilizing multi-media to simulate actual sculptures, dolls sent to the hairdressers to be bobbed, curled, streaked, shagged, teased, or turbaned,

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and adorned with jewelry by no less than Hans Brumann.

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Thank you to the generous bidders 

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Ballet Philippines is grateful to American Express, Lifestyle Network, Manny O. Wines, Metro Society, The Peninsula Manila, Philips and Richwell. For inquiries, please call Caroll Odvina at 0922.8135148. For information on the auction, please contact Menchu Mantecon at 0918.9425118 or email menchugonzalezmantecon@yahoo.com.

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Meaning To Be Modern

By | Arts and Culture, Great Achievements, Proud to be Pinoy! | 5 Comments

 Thanks to our friend, Hetty, for inviting us to come over and see the exhibit of her husband, Paulino!  We remember very well many years ago when we visited his home to see his beautiful collection or art and antiques!  And now this beautiful exhibit!  You cannot imagine the value of the paintings – both its financial worth and the worth of its history and beauty!!!! This in itself is an accomplishment and a legacy of Paulino to Philippine Art and for our country.  

You will have to be there to believe it and see the actual paintings.  I am featuring all 80 works ( which is probably not even half his collection ) of art but it is still different to actually view them yourself.  I would say this is a once in a lifetime opportunity to view this collection and as Vita, the owner of Finale Gallery, told me, she said that she is happy that it is Paulino who owns these works of art because he is very generous in lending his paintings for others to see and appreciate in a public setting.  So do come over as it is still showing til the end of the month.

And this Saturday, March 20,  Learn more about the early Filipino Moderns with Juvenal Sanso, Mark Justiniani and Patrick Flores at 4:00 pm at the gallery.   

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 Finale Art File is proud to show this March “Meaning To Be Modern”, a selection of Philippine paintings from 1907 to 1959.

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The exhibition presents a vital part of Paulino Que’s vast collection of Philippine art and antiquities.p1170225.JPGp1170288.JPGp1170293.JPG

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It focuses on the early periods of Philippine modern art, spanning the initial phases of the movement with Victorio Edades,

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his precursors Juan Arellano

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and Diosdado Lorenzo,

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and peers Galo Ocampo

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and Carlos Francisco,

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as well as the developments hereafter: the Thirteen Moderns, incipient and late neorealism, and abstraction on the cusp of the sixties. This collection is exceptional and exemplary, surveying the watersheds of Philippine modern art, from the early part of the twentieth century to the sixties. The fifties may be considered the high point of the process of modernity in Philippine art, preceded by years of debates with the Amorsolo conservative school of romantic realism, experimentation with a range of styles from the school of Paris, and the formation of a distinct visual idiom of modern art that was cosmopolitan and uniquely Filipino.

These are the broad strokes of the sequence of modernism that the Que corpus embodies that complement those earlier mentioned: second-wave stalwarts Anita Magsaysay-Ho,

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Nena Saguil,

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Manuel Rodriguez,

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Ricarte Puruganan,

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and Ang Kiukok;

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the neorealist originals H. R. Ocampo,

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Vicente Manansala,

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Cesar Legaspi,

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Romeo Tabuena,

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Ramon Estella,

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and Victor Oteyza;

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the Filipino émigré artists Venancio Igarta

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and Macario Vitalis;

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and the harbingers of abstraction Fernando Zóbel,

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Arturo Luz,

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Constancio Bernardo,

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Jose Joya,

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Lee Aguinaldo,

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Federico Aguilar Alcuaz,

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and J. Elizalde Navarro. 

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When probed more keenly, it would reveal idiosyncrasies, too: the surrealism of the early Juvenal Sanso,

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the unique imagery of Alfonso Ossorio,

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and the lesser- known attempts of sensitive, sensible practitioners like Lyd Arguilla,

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Cenon Rivera,

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Jesus Ayco,

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Jose Pardo,

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Hugo Yonzon, Jr.,

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Rod. Paras-Perez,

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Rodolfo Ragodon,

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and Helen Guerrero Roces.

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The afterglow of the neorealist flare may also be discerned in the folksy aspirations of Mauro Malang Santos.

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Finally, we may want to ask about the delineation of time: Why posit the fifties as the height and limit of modernism? It may be argued that this decade signifies the defining moment of the tendency: the First Neo-Realist Art Exhibition in 1950, the First Exhibition of Non-Objective Art in 1953, the walk-out of the conservatives at Art Association of the Philippines (AAP) salon in 1955, the replacement of the conservative/modern categories at the APP with “contemporary Philippine painting” a year later, and the First Southeast Asian exhibition held in Manila in 1957. It may also be proposed that the fifties was witness to the incipient expression and later the fullness of the modern tradition, before it was to wither in the face of its own institutionalization and, in some instances, its descent into kitsch.

Aside from the art works, this collection also brings to light the significance of the Paulino Que collection, which is one of the most indispensable in private auspices and could rival the combined treasures of public institutions of modern art collection such as the National Museum, the Cultural Center of the Philippines, the Ateneo Art Gallery, and the Vargas Museum. Featuring 36 artists and 80 works, it promises to be an event in itself, a rare occasion in which a private collection becomes public discourse as students, scholars, and supporters of Philippine art gain access to it and hopefully engage it with the same discernment that went into its shaping.

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The exhibition will run from March 6 to 31, 2010 at Finale Art File, Warehouse 17, La Fuerza Compound, (enter Gate 1), 2241 Pasong Tamo, Makati City. We welcome student tours. Should you request a guided tour, please call us at 813 2310 or email us finale@pldtdsl.net. Admission is free. We are open Monday to Saturday, 10am to 7pm.

 

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Art in the Park 2010 An Affordable Art Fair

By | Arts and Culture | 12 Comments

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It was a very hot day at the park at 2 pm, but even when booths were not even set up – there were many art lovers going around already eagerly awaiting and many already purchasing even before 2pm.   

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Lisa told me to take note of the out of town artists that came for the event

From BAGUIO 

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From Bohol 

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From Malabon 

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And the art lovers going around 

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And Melissa happily purchasing her work of Art 

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All the proceeds help and benefit our very own Philippine artists and at the same time funds the National Museum 

 

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Thanks to the Board of Trustees who volunteer their time and efforts to uplift and preserve Philippine Art 

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Previous Entries:

 Art in the Park 2010 Feb 16, 2010

Art in the Park: Art After Dark 2009  March 9, 2009

Art in the Park  2008 June 29, 2008 

Art in the Park November 13, 2007

 

Arturo Luz

By | Arts and Culture, Homes and Interiors | 6 Comments

Heart2Heart had the chance to visit the beautiful home of National Artist, Arturo Luz.  I am an admirer of his works so I was happy to visit him again after a long time when he was still in his other home.  

He has a beautiful home designed by Ed Calma. 

Previous entries:  By Ed Calma July 6, 2008  

Manoling and Sandie August 25, 2007 

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And here he is…still very active and still smiling 🙂 

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He took us to one of the rooms in his house which had his paintings which were for sale…. all beautiful of course! 

 

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Then he took us upstairs to his studio where he creates his masterpieces….. 

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Arturo Luz, Self portrait, already reserved by a client 

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Philippine Art Collection

By | Arts and Culture, Proud to be Pinoy! | 2 Comments

We recently came from our friend’s house to once again drool over the beautiful art collection they have.  Around 13 years ago, we met them and they introduced us to Philippine Art and we immediately had an instant appreciation for it.  

My personal favorite is Anita Magsaysay-Ho, aside from the many stories from Mom about how wonderful a person she is, she is a great artist!  I have not seen as many works of hers in one place, As we all know, it is very difficult to acquire her works

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She even made portraits of their two sons!  Wow!

 

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A diptyque – and again one of the sons is in the painting- the little boy on the ground

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This is my most favorite of them all which is specially displayed in the master bedroom 🙂  dsc_8976.JPG

A 1978 Manansala which is absolutely beautiful! 

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Mauro Malang- Santos, another of our favorites

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Soler San Pedro Santos, son of Malang 

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Arturo Luz

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Lopez Museum’s Golden Jubilee kicks off this Feb 18

By | Arts and Culture, What's New at Power Plant Mall | One Comment

The Lopez Memorial Museum turns 50 this month

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and anniversary activities kick off with the launching of the coffee table book

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alongside the opening of a cutting-edge exhibit, Threads: The Museum as Site for the Weaving of Tales.

Threads features contemporary artists Leo Abaya, Myra Beltran, Jef Carnay, Kiri Dalena, Ann Tiukinhoy Pamintuan, Claro Ramirez, Jean Marie Syjuco and Ann Wizer. Each artist has been invited to either craft a work taking off from their personal notion of the museum or to “cosplay” characters found in iconic works from the museum collection. Taken together, their works will speak on what museums do, as sites of remembrance and narrative-making.

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Threads: The Museum as Site for the Weaving of Tales

Threads at Rockwell underlines the museum’s commitment to move the institution forward by broadening its engagements outside its premises in Pasig and pursuing an openly interdisciplinary approach to exhibitions and programs. 

Threads  at Rockwell Tent takes off from the title of Lopez Memorial Museum’s commemorative book and overall anniversary theme, Unfolding  Half a Century:  The Lopez Memorial Museum.  It launches the series of events marking the institution’s 50th anniversary celebration.  Loosely taking after a UP College of Fine Arts exercise called “Paintings Come Alive”, Lopez Museum will engage a mix of individuals to ‘cosplay’ characters found in iconic works from its collection as well as animate or embody their notion of what museums, as sites of remembrance and narrative-making, do.

The works and artists pairs are the following:

1.    Leo Abaya’s Generator  is a video installation playing on spinning/unraveling thread/fabrication using archival footage of the museum’s opening in Pasay as well as objects in its trove; it is interactive in the sense that a museum official will be asked to set off a kinetic sculpture that in turn activates video.

2.    Myra Beltran will perform Mi ultimo adios, a 6-7 minute excerpt from Itim Asu: 1719-2009, a modern ballet that references Felix Resurrecion Hidalgo’s El Asasinato del Gobernador Bustamante y su hijo, the anti-clerical flavor of El Filibusterismo, and the agential power of artists.

3.    Jef Carnay’s Tipped and Empty Pockets make up a tandem of installation  and performance depicting the character in Danilo Dalena’s Jai Alai series, Talo.

4.    Kiri Dalena’s  Watch History Repeat Itself is a video installation using images taken from the Lopez Library archive as projected upon marble and soil.

5.    Ann Tiukinhoy Pamintuan’s The Family Affair and Pie Chair are functional handwelded galvanized wire sculpture lounge pieces that evoke the need for bonding and converging physically.

6.    Claro Ramirez’s Industrial Totems are three totemic sculptural pieces invoking history, lineage and memory in light of the museum’s turning 50 years old. Consciously evocative of the underside or unfinished nature of creative practice, Industrial Totems underscores how birthing the new begins with what is old and perceived as used up.

7.    Jean Marie Syjuco’s work called Where are we now?… Where do we go from here…? metamorphoses the two female figures in Juan Luna’s Espana y Filipinas into Barbies ascending toward a video projection of images suggestive of cultural imperialism.

8.    Ann Wizer’s Extra ORDINARY combines found objects made out of trash woven into tapestry and garments coupled with sound elements.  Her work takes off from Jose Tence Ruiz’s Topless Victorian. She also collaborates with Jean Marie Syjuco’s piece for Threads.

At the Rockwell Tent, visitors will enter a pared down environment reminiscent of New York-underground/warehouse happenings.  The Tent, while fitted with staging accoutrements will evoke a rough unfinished space that strongly suggests a physical encounter with the material and process of art/culture-making.  The Tent itself should be looked upon as one large installation that simulates how Lopez Museum has morphed from a site of static display and hanging to one that reckons with how the contemporary viewer consumes information and multisensory stimuli—that is in the non-linear, self-propelled, endlessly nested cross-referencing that is best visualized by imagining computer users dealing with simultaneously open windows/tabs and hyperlinks pointing to other hyperlinks.   

 Highlights of these performances and installation pieces will be exhibited at the Rockwell Power Plant Mall North Court from February 19 to 25, 2010.

  Parallel to this is the exhibition, After the Fact at the museum’s premises in Ortigas Center, Pasig. The exhibit evokes recollections of past exhibitions as well as a purview of future directions of the Lopez Museum. It features key works from the museum collection and works by Gaston Damag, Antipas Delotavo, Imelda Cajipe-Endaya, and Keith Sicat.

 Fifty years have passed since Lopez Museum’s doors first opened and sought a public for its trove of what was then loosely imagined as Filipiniana, presumably material proof of what was held in common or at least tenuously marked off what was and was not Filipino.  This half-a-century post-ness brings with it notions of evidence for re-consideration, looking back and ultimately, moving forward.  After the Fact is given to questions such as:  What and how did we do?  Then what?

As ‘after’ summons appropriative gestures and attempts to establish lineage and a re-collected past, this exhibition assembles remnants of what has transpired, what is present in the collection, and what is perceived as needing attention if the museum continues to aspire to a wider breadth and substantive depth in the working narratives that its exhibitions and attendant public programs present. 

This particular project also brings two artists loosely associated with Philippine social realism into the physical site of this museum which has much more popularly imagined as a home for art produced by Luna,

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Hidalgo

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and several generations of modernists. 

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In After the Fact,  Antipas Delotavo (Nature of the Beast) and feminist Imelda Cajipe-Endaya (Musmos  and Tarana)  underscore what may have been eclipsed in the unfolding of various stories that have been articulated within Lopez Museum over the years. 

Alongside their work are multimedia interventions from the one-time and still ambivalently diasporic practice of Keith Sicat (Cinemosaic)  and Gaston Damag (Rin-Nawan), the latter specifically highlighting, to this mind, still another gnawing gap in narratives woven within the museum as generator of knowledge, that is, particularly about notions of indigeneity and origin lacing the complex relationships between lowland and highland cultures in the Philippines.  These still relatively muted voices emanate from continuing re-explorations of the Philippines as thrice occupied territory unto our present days of unbridled deployment of Pinoy human bodies across over 200 countries around the globe as of recent count.

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In as much as there is truly no escaping what has passed in attempting to move through the present and future, After the Fact hopes to approximate a subtle homage of cultural production that is not so facetious that it only gets helplessly entangled in paeans to itself.

What started as the personal collection of the late Lopez Group founder Eugenio H. Lopez Sr. has evolved into a trusted and well-loved Philippine institution. In fact, the Lopez Memorial Museum and Library collection now ranks as one of the finest in Asia. 

Since its founding in 1960, the fine art section has grown from an initial collection of 19th century masterpieces consisting of 36 Juan Lunas and 182 Felix Resurreccion Hidalgos to include modern and contemporary pieces. The library currently counts over 19,000 Filipiniana titles by 12,000 authors, rare books, maps, manuscripts and literary works. With the institution’s digitization project and conservation laboratory, it provides quick and convenient access to materials while ensuring that these are preserved for future use.

Over the years, the Lopez Museum has always been committed to move the institution forward by broadening its engagements outside its physical structure, as well as pursuing an interdisciplinary approach to its exhibitions and programs. For more info, contact Fanny at 631-2417.

For more information, visit their website, click on the photo below:

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