Art in the time of COVID-19 pandemic

The J. Amado Araneta Foundation (JAAF), the social development arm of the Araneta Group, is conducting a series of online art therapy sessions to select youth participants and medical frontliners in response to the ill effects of the pandemic.

Titled “I am Visible”: Mental Wellness Through Art Therapy, the project – which was organized via a grant from the National Commission for Culture and the Arts – started with its online sessions via Zoom last August 7 and 21, 2021. Two more online art therapy sessions will be held on September 11, and September 18.

“I am Visible” aims to acknowledge the mental health crisis happening in the country today which is being exacerbated by the ongoing pandemic. Among those affected are students who deal with stress and depression given the current online learning set-up, and doctors and community health workers who deal with burnout and anxiety from longer working hours and various work hazards.

“This is one of the bold and major undertakings of JAAF for 2021. We have taken steps to help address a growing issue of society – mental health. We have targeted vulnerable groups, which happen to be within our circle of influence, and even beyond,” JAAF’s Executive Director Diane Romero remarked.

JAAF partners with the Makati Medical Center Foundation for “I am Visible”, with the latter providing facilitators and identified doctor-participants. Joining the Program as art coaches are veteran artists Rene Canlas and Julius Legaspi, who will introduce the medium of drawing and painting: pencil, pastel, watercolor, and acrylic paints.

Online art exhibit

The program will end with an online exhibit to be launched on October 10, which is designated as World Mental Health Day. It will be curated by art teacher Jonah Mari Valenzuela, who has 15 years of art teaching experience with Xavier School Manila.

The virtual exhibit will be hosted on the website of Araneta City’s art museum, the Gateway Gallery, which spearheads the “I am Visible” project. It will open with a Curator’s Talk to be live streamed on the JAAF and Gateway Gallery Facebook pages. The exhibit will be up until January 10, 2022.

“Even if Gateway Gallery is closed to the public, as a community art space, we find it our responsibility to reach out, in our capacity, to address this concern. JAAF, through Gateway Gallery, is proud of “I am Visible”, Romero stated.

Most of the time, mental health problems are dismissed and swept under the rug. With “I am Visible”, participants will have voices, be listened to, acknowledged, and made visible. With ”I am Visible”, mental health will be legitimized, discussed, and supported because healthy communities start with holistically healthy individuals.

JAAF and Gateway Gallery thank the National Commission for Culture and the Arts, Makati Medical Center Foundation, and CANVAS for supporting “I am Visible” and the mental health cause.

#gatewaygallery #iamvisible #onlinetheraphy #artsessions #mentalhealthcause #exhibit #pandemic  #JAAF #rubyspreciousmoments #rubyasoyph

 

Ani ng Dangal Awardees for 2021 bared

The National Commission for Culture and the Arts (NCCA) has conferred the Ani ng Dangal Award for the year 2021 to 62 artists, art groups, and creative works in online awarding ceremonies held yesterday, August 15, 2021, on NCCA’s Facebook page and on their broadcast partner pages.

Launched in 2009, the Ani ng Dangal (Harvest of Honors) Award recognizes artists who have earned international awards and accolades during the past year. Filipino creativity continued to shine despite the gloom of the global pandemic that hit in 2020, according to NCCA.

Sixty-two (62) artists, art groups, and creative works belonging to the following categories — architecture and allied arts (1), literary arts (2), cinema (30), music (4), and visual arts (25) — were awarded internationally and were recognized in this year’s Ani ng Dangal.

For the complete list of awardees: https://www.facebook.com/NCCAOfficial/posts/10158681168065283

The awardees were chosen by the various expert committees on the following:

National Committee on Architecture and the Allied Arts
National Committee on Cinema
Dance Xchange: The Philippine International Dance Workshop and Festival
NCCA National Committee on Dramatic Arts
National Committee on Literary Arts
NCCA National Committee on Visual Arts

Congratulations to the Ani ng Dangal Awardees for the year 2021!

Source: National Commission for Culture and the Arts

Photos courtesy of NCCA

#AningDangal2021 #NCCA #accolades #rubyspreciousmoments #rubyasoyph

British Council’s 2021 Connections through Culture artist grants now open for applications

Applications for the latest round of the British Council’s Connections Through Culture (CTC) grants in Southeast Asia (SEA) are now open until 05 September 2021.

Initiated in 2019, CTC grants promote arts and cultural exchange between the UK and Southeast Asia to spark innovative ways for participants to collaborate through the arts.

The bilateral grants program supports cultural exchanges and collaborations between artists and arts organizations to nurture cooperation and long-lasting relationships between the UK and for 2021, six SEA countries: Indonesia, Myanmar, Malaysia, the Philippines, Thailand, and Vietnam.

CTC_Kamustahan Art Project:
Artwork by Joan Monis Pabona, ‘Ayuda Ko, Ayuda Nila’, 2021; An art piece from the Kamustahan Art Projects led by 2020-21 CTC grantees Nathalie Dagmang and Deirdre McKay

Prior to Covid-19, this would have most likely involved international travel. However, with travel restricted and uncertain, the CTC grants will be used to develop and strengthen new and existing relationships and provide funding to promote dialogue and explore the possibilities of online collaboration.

Last year, the grant allowed artist-educator Nathalie Dagmang and Keel University cultural geographer and educator Deirdre McKay to bring Filipino labor migrants into conversation with artists, family members, and policymakers across the diaspora through an online space called ‘Kamustahan Art Projects’. Participants presented their artwork through a virtual exhibition to honor the contributions of Filipino migrant workers in the time of Covid.

CTC_Irine (in photo) is a Filipino migrant worker based in Taiwan. She created flowers from recyclable materials as part of the Mayflowers project under the Kamustahan Art Projects led by Dagmang and McKay in May 2021.

Artists, arts professionals, and art group/collective representatives from the six SEA countries and the UK are eligible to apply for the online grants valued up to 8,000 GBP. A new alumni scheme is also open for previous CTC UK-SEA grantees, with a value of up to 2,000 GBP.

Grantees may use the fund for projects, platforms, and conversations between October 2021 to February 2022. Successful applicants will be announced at the end of September 2021.

Applicants can find full information on the Southeast Asia pages of the CTC grant:

British Council Indonesia | British Council Myanmar | British Council Malaysia

British Council Thailand | British Council Philippines | British Council Vietnam

To apply and for general inquiries, please email ctc@britishcouncil.org.

Connections Through Culture news, application calls, and results will regularly be posted on British Council channels in Southeast Asia.

#BritishCouncil #ConnectionsThroughCulture #GrantsinSoutheastAsia #rubyspreciousmoments #rubyasoyph

65 Erasmus+ Filipino Scholars to pursue higher education in the EU

There is a gold mine among the Filipino youth!

In the coming weeks, 65 Filipino students will pursue their academic dreams in several countries of the European Union after they won scholarships under the EU’s Erasmus + Programme.

Erasmus+, the European Union’s mobility and scholarship programme, allow students to pursue their studies – MA and PhD programmes- in more than one EU member state giving them the opportunity to benefit from the academic expertise and culture of more than one university.

EU Ambassador Luc Véron said that the Philippines has consistently ranked as among the top 10 countries which has the highest number of Erasmus+ scholars in the world from 2004 to 2020.  The Philippines has also ranked as the second country with the highest number of Erasmus+ scholars in the region from 2004 to 2021.

These 65 Erasmus+ students will be sent off in a virtual ceremony on 5 August in collaboration with Campus Erasmus comprised of Erasmus+ scholars in the country.

“I congratulate the new Erasmus scholars as they depart for the EU campuses starting this August. Make the most out of your Erasmus journey and take pride in your Filipino heritage,” EU Ambassador Véron said. “I encourage you to become agents of social change and transformation for the Philippines and to become goodwill ambassadors for the partnership and friendship between the EU and the Philippines.”

This programme gives life-changing opportunities for Filipino students to experience living the European culture, learning European languages and being integrated into the European society for one to two years.

The Erasmus + programme is among the leading international academic mobility programmes in the world, and students from the Philippines have benefited considerably from the programme.  Erasmus + (formerly called the Erasmus Mundus Programme) promotes the EU as a centre of excellence in learning and making student mobility a reality for EU and non-EU citizens alike.

Featured photo courtesy of European Commission

#Erasmus+programme #internationalacademic #europeanunion #erasmusscholars #rubyspreciousmoments #rubyasoyph

Nemiranda: Capturing imaginations for Lapulapu’s quincentenary

Over pandemic, we have collectively been prompted to look inward, towards our respective histories — something Nemesio “Nemi” Miranda Jr. is intimately familiar with. Nemiranda, as he is also called, is a visual historian and lauded as the “Father of Imaginative Figurism,” conjuring human forms and historical scenarios from his imagination. This year, he has been nominated for National Artist for Visual Arts.

Nemiranda is among Angono’s greats. The Rizal town itself is the Art Capital of the Philippines, as well as the birthplace of one of his two major influences, National Artist Carlos “Botong” Francisco – his other influence being Francisco Coching, the “King of Philippine Comics.”

This year, Nemiranda zooms in on the 1521 Victory of Mactan, where Datu Lapulapu and his warriors defeated the Spanish empire, commanded by Ferdinand Magellan at the behest of Rajah Humabon.

A decade in the making

Nemiranda’s project took root in his mind a decade prior, in a meeting with the director of tourism in Southern Leyte. He explains, “They wanted me to design a concept for Magellan’s discovery of the Philippines: the landing of Magellan in Limasawa Island, the site of the first mass, the first cross monument of the Philippines. From that time on, I had this interest to make a series of paintings on the life of Lapulapu.” Between that time and now, he did his research visiting sites of interest from Mactan to Limasawa Island.

Ten years on, Nemiranda has finished his multimedia showcase, musing that this is the perfect time to celebrate our people’s spirit. “This year, quincentenary natin as a nation, from the arrival of the Bornean datus in the Philippines, doon nagsimula ang kasaysayan natin.

At the same time, he outlines the project’s personal history: “Everything started in drawings, and eventually I made paintings and sculptures.” Nemiranda’s two-part showcase includes 35 drawings, upwards of 20 paintings, and 25 sculptures on the life and historical events of the esteemed Datu. The first show is currently showcased at the House of Representatives and the second part at Gallery Nine in September.

Filling in history’s gaps

Surely, Lapulapu is an enduring presence from history books to works of art. He is a symbol of resistance and courage even today. However, this belies how little we actually know about him.

Nemiranda is aware of this, and true to form, he fills in the gaps with his imagination: “Lapulapu is only in a very small portion of the writings of [Antonio] Pigafetta. The exhibit at Gallery Nine is my own concept of who he was, and who he could be. He was an ordinary family man, at the same time he learned a lot of things, and had many talents, many passions for creativity.”

Thus, his Gallery Nine exhibit features 35 pen and ink vignettes into the life Lapulapu might have led. These include his famed victory against Magellan; his civic contributions as a teacher, blacksmith, fisherman, and builder; as well as more tender moments cradling his child, serenading and caressing his beau.

Capturing imaginations

Over at his main exhibit in Congress, he expands his focus: his paintings and sculptures depict the spread of Catholicism in Cebu, interspersed with imaginings of what could have been. Even here, Nemiranda underscores the quieter events in Lapulapu’s life- he kneels in prayer before marching onto the battle, he pays his last respects to fallen rivals. At an unknown point in time, he dreams of hunting a mythical creature in a dreamscape with the fallen Magellan in the foreground.

Nemiranda’s life-work is about arousing inspiration through his imaginative chronicles. His most noted works include a 175-meter-long mural on the history of the Philippine Army at Fort Bonifacio, EDSA I and II murals, paintings and sculptures, and religious works depicting the Mysteries of the Holy Rosary — all in public spaces, for everyone to see. In terms of sculpture, he pioneered the craft of relief sculptures in concrete cement, a technique he had been perfecting for 50 years.

When asked about his vision, he responds, “I want to capture what is happening during my lifetime. I want to tickle the imagination of the audience, I want them to ask, did this really happen? The answer is not a straightforward yes or no.”

 Keeping up with the times

Our relationship with memory is dynamic; our perspectives and understandings continually evolve after every recollection. This makes the arts fertile ground for chronicling reimaginations, the industry itself has withstood last year’s challenges through constant reinvention.

As we move ceaselessly towards the future, so too does Nemiranda’s work: “I am not one to stick to a comfort zone. There is always a new subject to capture, life goes on, history happens.” Despite the pandemic’s limitations, he has had a successful stint in the United States just this June. There, he auctioned 35 pieces of his Imaging Lapulapu drawings at the Philippine Consulate at Los Angeles with the Eagle Eye Charities Foundation. He also completed a mural honoring healthcare workers at the Philippine Consulate in New York.

He will also be showcasing a mural study of the history of the Philippine legislative bodies, a project first offered to him in 1990 during Fidel V. Ramos’ term. Despite it not pushing through at the time, he has endeavored to keep updating his study up to the present day.

Looking back, moving forward

Nemiranda’s works have never been about a singular event in isolation: “It’s not just about the Victory of Mactan. I want to bring attention to the start of the Filipino fight for freedom, justice, and democracy- up until the present. It is my mission to showcase both past and present-day heroes.”

This quincentenary year, we celebrate in the midst of this pandemic’s major sociocultural changes. Nemiranda’s topics of focus compel us to look back at our history while commanding us to fill in the gaps — not just in history’s blank pages, but for what is in store for us as a nation in the years to come.

“Imaging Lapulapu” will be held from August 2 -19 at the North Lobby, Main Building, Batasang Pambansa Complex, Batasan Hills, Quezon City. Viewing is by invitation only. The exhibit at Gallery Nine will be held in September subject to the lifting of current quarantine restrictions. More details as well as a full 360 walk-through of the exhibit is available online at www.galleryninemanila.com.

#Nemiranda #ImagingLapulapu #GalleryNineManila #onemanexhibit #rubyspreciousmoments #rubyasoyph

Multi-media Artist Rocky Cajigan is the Third Winner of the 2020 Portfolio Art Award

Multi-media artist Rocky Cajigan is the third recipient of the 2020 Agents of Change portfolio launched by Giorgio Guglielmino and Hugo Bunzl with the artistic collaboration of Angel Velasco Shaw.

The portfolio features 10 local prominent artists who have used their art to highlight the pandemic and the country’s response to it. Each sale of the portfolio adds to the pool of funds that would allow a special jury to award a financial prize to a limited number of artists.

The purpose of the project is to provide financial aid to Filipino artists whose lives have been affected by the health crisis and pursue their creative works in their studios.

With the sale of additional copies, it became possible to award a third artist with a P300,000 prize. Cajigan is the third recipient after Issay Rodriguez and Czar Kristoff.

Cajigan has built a name for himself in both the local and global art scene with his distinctive multi-media installations and assemblages. In every artwork he does, he explores material culture with indigeneity to craft one-on-a-kind pieces reflective of the Philippine indigenous culture.

The artist says that his work largely focuses on identity questions and the transitioning of, and decolonization in, indigenous cultures. Cajigan uses his own personal experience for his art, himself born in the Mountain Province in 1988.

He has made it both his mission and passion to constantly question who the Filipino is.

“We have to take apart what our culture is, and which part is truly ours and which have been imposed on us by others,” he says. “There are experiential difficulties in continuing colonial habits with indigenous communities.”

Since 2011, Cajigan has been part of AX(iS) Art Project, a non-profit artist collective focused on programming events that study access to contemporary art in communities in the Cordillera Region. In his capacity, he has managed several projects with the non-profit, including an art festival in 2011 in Bagiuo City, a collaborative project in 2014 for Markets of Resistance, a cultural research program in the Cordillera Region, and an art book about the region.

Currently, Cajigan is focused on experimenting with material cultures and their processes of creation and what new meanings can become of them when presented in galleries and museums or are in the process of “museumification.”

The 2020 Agents of Change art portfolio awards young local artists who have been selected by a special jury. The idea is to be able to give artists a financial basis to continue their work in this period of generalized difficulties.

It is hoped that with further sales, more prizes can be awarded to deserving artists.

For more information or inquiries on how to support the 2020 portfolio project, email ailene@a-listconsulting.co or call 09175366856 and look for Ailene Co at The Drawing Room.

#RockyCajigan #Third Winner  #2020PortfolioArtAward #rubyspreciousmoments #rubyasoyph

 

 

Teatro Europa Second Edition: To showcase 16 European theatre plays from 16 PH Universities

Teatro Europa comes back this year with table reads until 30 July, with full video performances from 1 to 31 August and re-runs from 1 to 30 September on its official Facebook Page Teatro Europa  @TeatroEuropaPH.

The European Union Delegation to the Philippines, together with the EU Member States, their EU cultural institutes, and importantly our 16 University partners, proudly opens its theater festival “Teatro Europa, The Second Edition.”

Sixteen European theatre plays from famous playwrights will be showcased to share with you European culture.

These masterpieces carefully curated from Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Netherlands, Poland, Romania, Spain, and Sweden focus on genres such as comedy, tragedy, drama, and romance.

“Theatre is a mirror of all human emotions and helps to better understand Europe and its culture, from the plays, played in ancient Greece to the current online performances,” says EU Ambassador Luc Véron.  “Teatro Europa provides a platform for artistic Filipino youth to share their talents in acting, directing, and production design.”

Following its success with 300,000 viewers in 2020, the EU welcomes this year 16 participating universities from all over the country with new universities from Metro Manila, Baguio, Bulacan, Nueva Ecija, Iloilo City, Bacolod City, and Ozamiz City from the original seven theatre groups that participated in 2020.

Here are the 16 partner universities performing theater pieces include:

  1. Colegio de San Juan de Letran – Taruffe by Moliere of France
  2. Saint Louis University – Rur by Karel Čapek of the Czech Republic
  3. Wesleyan University – Pariah by August Strindberg of Sweden
  4. University of the East – Life’s a Dream by Pedro Calderon de la Barca of Spain
  5. University of Makati – The Horrid Little Princess by Geneviève Damas of Belgium
  6. Meridian International College – The Salt Princess (Hungarian Folktale) of Hungary
  7. University of San Agustin – Snow by Stanislaw Przybyszewski of Poland
  8. La Salle University – Erasmus Montanus by Ludvig Holberg of Denmark
  9. Mapua University – Riders to the Sea by John Millington Synge of Ireland
  10. Jose Rizal University – The Birds by Aristophanes of Greece
  11. Arellano University – II Vero Amico by Carlo Goldoni of Italy
  12. Pamantasan ng Lungsod ng Marikina – Lucifer by Josst van den Vondel of the Netherlands
  13.  First City Providential College – La Ronde by Arthur Schnitzler of Austria
  14. Pamantasan ng Lungsod ng Valenzuela – My Three Angels by Sam and Bella Spewack of Romania
  15. University of St. La Salle – Broken Heart Story by Saara Turunen of Finland
  16. Rizal Technological University – Leonce and Lena by Georg Büchner of Germany

While “Teatro Europa, The Second Edition” is still primarily a virtual theater festival there are new and exciting things to expect. As the government opens up the economy more, the festival will hold a limited physical performance in late August in the walled city of Intramuros.

A series of webinars with known theatre directors will also be held during the Teatro Europa season. These webinars aim to engage discussions on the similarities, intersections, and differences between Philippine Theater and European Theater.

#TeatroEuropa #secondedition #rubyspreciousmoments #rubyasoyph

Art News This Week

Featuring the exhibitions “Ovacion,” a homage to the Master Sanso, only losers left alive (love songs for the end of the world), and In Celebration of Creativity: A Homage to Junyee.

  • “Ovación,” a Homage to the Master Sansó

Online exclusive: July 3-18, 2021

“Ovación” is an exhibition that primarily centers around the idea of life and time of an older and more renowned artist as imagined by another. The participating artists aim to depict Sansó’s legacy and importance in the current context; simultaneously, the exhibition is meant to reflect on how an artist is influenced or shaped in his own time, and how ideas, thoughts, and inspiration flow continually from predecessors to the younger generation.

The exhibition pays tribute to the artist whom all have admired throughout the years. With great respect and reverence, Barbara Angeles, Joy Calanasan, Katrina Cuenca, Patrick Esmao, Ciara Fabie, and Perfecto Palero will showcase selected works that are in keeping with drawing inspiration from the original vision of the master, Juvenal Sansó.

Nightshade I by Patrick Esmao, 12×12 inches mixed media on canvas.

For “Ovación”, the participating artists hope to portray the master Sansó as each individual knew him: monumental in his importance in the art world, philosophical, and bearing witness to the unwinding of time by his careful and detailed observation of seascapes, landscapes, and flowers. The works focus on techniques and palettes that Sansó used in his oeuvre, with each artist’s unique take of the master’s approach.

For more information, visit: www.galeriejoaquin.shop.

 

  • only losers left alive (love songs for the end of the world)

Exhibition dates: July 10-31, 2021 (part 1)

This group exhibition is a two-part project with a central proposition: if our world were to come to a screeching halt tomorrow, what would we be left with?

only losers left alive (love songs for the end of the world) features a roster of local and locally-based artists. It takes its visual and conceptual cues from cinema, featuring tableaux populated by objects, images, and sounds that evoke the moods of science fiction. It draws inspiration from films, such as La Jetée (1962), Brazil (1985), and 12 Monkeys (1995), that envision disaster and/or dystopia, but filters that vision through the nostalgic aesthetics of the past.

Providing the real-world context for the mood of despondency is, of course, the current pandemic, and the climate of fear, uncertainty, and paranoia in which the global population has been mired. With that backdrop in mind, only losers left alive (love songs for the end of the world) offer an oneiric vision of a calamity to come, understood through the memory of a yesterday that is mourned, lamented, grieved for.

Part one of the show takes place from July 10 to July 31 and features the work of Chok Si Xuan, Mark Chua & Lam Li Shuen, Hamkah Latib, Victoria Hertel, the collective Paradise Now, Sarah Isabelle Tan, Brandon Tay, and XUE. Works range from site-specific installations to video, to sound pieces that function as a soundtrack for space.

While only losers left alive (love songs for the end of the world) transitions from the first part to the second, two iterations of a performance by XUE, in collaboration with musician Rudi Osman, will happen on 3 August and 4 August, 7.30 pm at Yeo Workshop. The second half of the exhibition, which opens in August, will feature the work of Mark Chua & Lam Li Shuen, Victoria Hertel, Georgette Goh, Geraldine Lim, Masuri Mazlan, Sarah Isabelle Tan, Juria Toramae, and Samuel Xun.

For more information, visit https://www.facebook.com/YeoWorkshop

 

  • In Celebration of Creativity: A Homage to Junyee

Exhibition dates: June 26 to July 25

Altro Mondo is pleased to present In Celebration of Creativity: A Homage to Junyee. The exhibition will run from June 26 to July 25.  It’s an exhibition that pays homage to the Father of Philippine Installation Art, Luis Yee, Jr. (JunYee).

Throughout his long-standing career, Junyee has pioneered the craft of installation art and left a lasting impact on the development of art in the country. Now, both the artist himself and his striking breadth of work are honored in our exhibition, which will comprise more than 80 renowned artists and the entire gallery.

The gallery is open from Mondays to Saturdays 10-5 PM. For more information, visit https://www.facebook.com/altromondoart.

Featured photo: Bright Collar I by Perfecto Palero, 12×12 inches, acrylic on canvas

#GalerieJoaquinOnlineShop #YeoWorkshopSingapore #Altromondo #exhibitions #rubyspreciousmoments #rubyasoyph

 

“7,000 Islands” limited edition launched

An Italian modern art portfolio pays homage to the Philippines.

The “7,000 Islands” art portfolio, printed by the famed Rome-based Bulla printing studio in limited 25 numbered copies, with the participation of Italian modern artists, is initiated by Italian Ambassador Giorgio Guglielmino to cap his four-year stint in the country and pay homage to its remarkable culture and resilience.

The portfolio features artworks of Italian contemporary artists: Micol Assael, Ra Di Martino, and Nunzio who freely interpreted the theme of “island” as a physical and metaphorical place and a cultural tribute to the country of more than 7,000 islands. Ambassador Guglielmino together with Department of Tourism Secretary Bernadette Romulo-Puyat wrote the texts accompanying the artworks of the three Italian artists.

7000 Islands Portfolio

“The prints were made with the highest professionalism and sincere participation on the part of the Italian artists from the point of view of what ‘7,000 islands’ represents. From my perspective, it is a concrete sign of how culture brings two countries like Italy and the Philippines closer,” Ambassador Guglielmino stated.

“In the printing process, I involved the Bulla printing studio, one of the most prestigious artistic printing companies in the world, based in Rome. The Bulla printing studio was born 210 years ago and has always remained in the ownership of the same family. It is currently managed by the seventh generation of printers, “he added.

The recipients of the 25 works were given to key government officials and individuals who were instrumental in strengthening relations between Italy and the country.

The portfolio was delivered to the Foreign Minister of Italy Luigi Di Maio and Philippine Department of Foreign Affairs Secretary Teodoro Locsin, and Secretary Romulo-Puyat who also contributed to the portfolio initiative.

Most of the copies were delivered individually to 15 Filipino personalities who over the last few years have helped to strengthen the cultural, commercial, and convivial ties between Italy and the Philippines. Among them was President of the Metropolitan Museum of Manila Tina Colayco who was instrumental in the presentation of the great exhibition “Arte Povera, Italian landscape” inaugurated in February 2020.

Margarita Fores receiving the 7,000 Islands Portfolio.

Recipients of the portfolio include Margarita Fores who has constantly enhanced and promoted Italian cuisine in her restaurants and through television broadcasts;  Ben Chan and Florence Ko for the importation of the best brands of Italian furniture design by their firms; Nedy Tantoco for the Italian fashion brands at Rustan’s; and Boots Herrera of the Ateneo Art Gallery for the creation of the “Embassy of Italy Award” which recognized Silvana Diaz for her contribution to visual arts through “Galleria 2000 “.

The “7,000 Islands” limited-edition portfolio is Ambassador Guglielmino’s parting gift to the country for the warmth and hospitality of its people and shows his love and passion for the country and his appreciation of modern art.

#7000Islands #limitededition #portfolio #AmbassadorGuglielmino #modernartappreciation #rubyspreciousmoments #rubyasoyph

 

 

His legacy will live on

National Artist for Visual Arts Arturo Luz passed away peacefully on May 26. He was 94.

Arturo Luz, painter, sculptor, designer, and esteemed Philippine National Artist in the visual arts passed away Wednesday night, leaving behind a legacy in the arts that “exemplify an ideal of sublime austerity in expression and form.”

His daughter, former TV personality, Angela Luz, announced that the 94-year-old artist passed away peacefully while she was at his side at 8:45 pm on May 26.

“God blessed my father with 94 of the most wonderful years on earth. He enriched our lives with his art, his incredible talent, and his genius. As a father and a grandfather, he was simply the best. He was the most kind and generous human being. And as a husband to my mother, he was perfect. He will be terribly missed, but will never be forgotten. His legacy will live on, and will last forever,” wrote Angela on her Facebook post.

“He enriched our lives with his art, with his incredible talent and his genius,” wrote Angela Luz on her Facebook account. Courtesy Angela Luz FB account

Luz was born on November 20, 1926, and was a founding member of the modern Neo-Realist school in Philippine art. He was educated at the University of Santo Tomas School of Fine Arts in Manila, and then went on to the Art School of the Brooklyn Museum in New York, and to the Académie Grade Chaumière in Paris. He became the director of the Metropolitan Museum of Manila in 1976, holding the position until 1986. He was named National Artist in 1997.

Luz’s notable works include the Carnival series of the late 1950s to the recent Cyclist paintings.

Among his other significant paintings are Bagong Taon, Vendador de Flores, Skipping Rope, Candle Vendors, Procession, Self-Portrait, Night Glows, Grand Finale, Cities of the Past, Imaginary Landscapes.

His mural painting Black and White is displayed in the lobby of the CCP’s Bulwagang Carlos V. Francisco (Little Theater). His sculpture of a stainless steel cube is located in front of the Benguet Mining Corporation Building in Pasig.

He produced works that elevated the Filipino aesthetic vision to new heights of sophisticated simplicity.

He established the Luz Gallery that professionalized the art gallery as an institution and set a prestigious influence over generations of Filipino artists. He inspired and developed a Filipino artistic community that nurtures impeccable designs.

Sources: Yahoo News, NCCA, Angela Luz FB account

Featured photo courtesy of NCCA

#ArturoLuz #NationalArtist #visualarts #legacy #DeathofArturoLuz #rubyspreciousmoments #rubyasoyph