Group's posts with tag: varona
I am trying to desseminate the deadline info for ART40 to 125 artists and I do not have everyones phone numbers. Submission is BEFORE JULY 10.
To those who know the following :
Ajero, Joel Alcazaren, Juan Anading, Poklong Bacolor, Felix Baen Santos, Felix Bandoy, Argie Barredo, Gabby Barrioquinto, Andres Cacnio, Michael Cordero, Louie Datuin, Joe De la Cruz, Bembol De la Cruz, Rolly Dreo, Norman Drilon, Rock Enriquez, Francesca Garcia, Mark Andy Garcia, Pedro Gepte, Noy LINDSLEE Ma, Wilson Manalo, Neil Montinola, Jason Obemio, Roel Oliviera, Jason Padilla, Vincent Pama, Noel Paras, Lynyrd Parial, Mario Parial, Mikel Roslin, Elmer Roxas, Roxas Sena, Fernando SOLER Valles, Roma Velasco, Lydia Veneracion, Roy Vicaldo, Jun Villaruel, Alvin WELBART Young, Janice Yu, MM Zamora, Cristopher
Please inform them
Drop off points are at Art Informal in Greenhills, Boston Gallery in Cubao and Pinto Gallery at Antipolo.
| Start: | Jul 1, '08 10:00p | | End: | Jul 10, '08 | | Location: | Greenhills, Makati, Cubao, Antipolo |
To all those included in the Art40 lineup, please submit your work in the following galleries BEFORE July 10 (maawa tayo sa ating curator na si kagalang galang na Ruel Caasi) : Art Informal, Greenhills Blanc Space, Makati TinAw Art Gallery, Makati Boston Gallery, Cubao Pinto Gallery, Antipolo
| Start: | Jul 20, '08 3:00p | | End: | Aug 20, '08 | | Location: | Pinto Art Gallery, No. 1 Sierra Madre , Grandheights, Antipolo city |
This July, Babao is mixing all these elements of passion, art, friendship and investments into a palette of noble enterprise. He has parlayed his connections into donating paintings for a fundraising auction where all proceeds will go into building an entire village for Gawad Kalinga in Bagong Silang, Caloocan. Gawad Kalinga is a movement for nation-building that aims to transform poverty stricken areas with the goal of building 700,000 homes in seven years (2003-2010). He has upped the ante and decided to sponsor an entire village. “We’ll be building 25-30 houses and we’ll be calling it Art 40 Village,” he says. The number 40 holds sentimental value. “I’m turning 40 this year and this is actually my birthday project.” After the houses are built, Babao plans to invite all the involved artists to paint murals on the façades of the house to inject public art into the community. By Walter Ang Philippine Daily Inquirer First Posted 00:23:00 06/23/2008
| Start: | Jun 14, '08 6:00p | | End: | Jun 30, '08 |
Art Informal celebrates its anniversary with a group exhibition of works by 50 Filipino artists. Participating artists are Leo Abaya, Gus Albor, Lina Alcid, Salvador Joel Alonday, Benjie Cabangis, Zean Cabangis, Buen Calubayan, Pablo Capati III, Ronald Caringal, Joey de Castro, Joey Cobcobo, Marika Constantino, Marina Cruz-Garcia, Noel Soler Cuison, Rene Cuvos, Igan D’Bayan, Noell El Farol, Alfred Esquillo, Sandra Fabie-Gfeller, Tina Fernandez, Karen Ocampo Flores, Mark Andy Garcia, Erwin Leano, Romeo Lee, Michelle Lim, Stephanie Lopez, Nikki Luna, Neil Manalo, Ferdinand Montemayor, Jason Moss, Sam Penaso, Von Ng, Aleth Ocampo, Jim Orencio, Anthony Palomo, Jaco Payawal, Mervy Pueblo, Tatong Recheta Torres, Carlo Angelo Saavedra, Jerson Samson, Jose John Santos III, Pamela Yan-Santos, Rodel Tapaya, Alex Tee, Jose Tence Ruiz, Gino Tioseco, Juanito Torres, Anna Varona, MM Yu, and Costantino Zicarelli. The exhibit opens on Saturday, June 14 and runs until June 30. Art Informal is located at 277 Connecticut St., Greenhills East, Mandaluyong City. For inquiries, sms 0918-899-2698 or call 725-8518.
Luwalhati: Anniversary Group Show (June 14 - 30, 2008) Art Informal celebrates its anniversary with a group exhibition of works by 50 Filipino artists. Participating artists are Leo Abaya, Gus Albor, Lina Alcid, Salvador Joel Alonday, Benjie Cabangis, Zean Cabangis, Buen Calubayan, Pablo Capati III, Ronald Caringal, Joey de Castro, Joey Cobcobo, Marika Constantino, Marina Cruz-Garcia, Noel Soler Cuison, Rene Cuvos, Igan D’Bayan, Noell El Farol, Alfred Esquillo, Sandra Fabie-Gfeller, Tina Fernandez, Karen Ocampo Flores, Mark Andy Garcia, Erwin Leano, Romeo Lee, Michelle Lim, Stephanie Lopez, Nikki Luna, Neil Manalo, Ferdinand Montemayor, Jason Moss, Sam Penaso, Von Ng, Aleth Ocampo, Jim Orencio, Anthony Palomo, Jaco Payawal, Mervy Pueblo, Tatong Recheta Torres, Carlo Angelo Saavedra, Jerson Samson, Jose John Santos III, Pamela Yan-Santos, Rodel Tapaya, Alex Tee, Jose Tence Ruiz, Gino Tioseco, Juanito Torres, Anna Varona, MM Yu, and Costantino Zicarelli. The exhibit opens on Saturday, June 14 and runs until June 30. Art Informal is located at 277 Connecticut St., Greenhills East, Mandaluyong City. For inquiries, sms 0918-899-2698 or call 725-8518.
| Start: | Jun 14, '08 6:00p | | End: | Jun 30, '08 | | Location: | The Space at Artinformal, 277 Connecticut Street, Greenhills |
Art Informal celebrates its anniversary with a group exhibition of works by 50 Filipino artists. Participating artists are Leo Abaya, Gus Albor, Lina Alcid, Salvador Joel Alonday, Benjie Cabangis, Zean Cabangis, Buen Calubayan, Pablo Capati III, Ronald Caringal, Joey de Castro, Joey Cobcobo, Marika Constantino, Marina Cruz-Garcia, Noel Soler Cuison, Rene Cuvos, Igan D’Bayan, Noell El Farol, Alfred Esquillo, Sandra Fabie-Gfeller, Tina Fernandez, Karen Ocampo Flores, Mark Andy Garcia, Erwin Leano, Romeo Lee, Michelle Lim, Stephanie Lopez, Nikki Luna, Neil Manalo, Ferdinand Montemayor, Jason Moss, Sam Penaso, Von Ng, Aleth Ocampo, Jim Orencio, Anthony Palomo, Jaco Payawal, Mervy Pueblo, Tatong Recheta Torres, Carlo Angelo Saavedra, Jerson Samson, Jose John Santos III, Pamela Yan-Santos, Rodel Tapaya, Alex Tee, Jose Tence Ruiz, Gino Tioseco, Juanito Torres, Anna Varona, MM Yu, and Costantino Zicarelli. The exhibit opens on Saturday, June 14 and runs until June 30. Art Informal is located at 277 Connecticut St., Greenhills East, Mandaluyong City. For inquiries, sms 0918-899-2698 or call 725-8518.
|  | Assembled Stoneware on junked wood 20" (w) x 14 1/2" (h) x 6 1/2 (d) My piece for Art Informals anniversary show Luwalhati |
| Start: | Feb 23, '08 5:00p | | End: | Mar 8, '08 | | Location: | Art Center, SM Megamall, Building A, Mandaluyong City |
ALAY 10, The much-awaited art event of Silangan Foundation for the Arts, Culture and Ecology and Boston Gallery, opens at 5pm, February 23, 2008 at the Art Center in SM Megamall. ALAY is an annual show by artists who have exhibited at the Boston Gallery and Pinto Gallery. This year marks its 10th year anniversary. Alay 10 promotes the establishment of the Silangan Contemporary Art Museum. The museum aims maintain and preserve a collection of significant Philippine artworks from a period covering 1986 to 2010.
This Christmas season marks the debut of Anna Varona, who has come up with a show of new sculptures at Boston Gallery. Her work is a welcome addition to the growing line of Philippine sculptors, particularly women whose numbers remain small in the country. Varona joins the company of Julie Lluch, who has given her great encouragement as well as Agnes Arellano, Impy Pilapil, Charito Bitanga, Tala Contreras, Aba Dalena, Jenny Cortes and Ivi-Avellana Cosio, who does both painting and sculpture. A possible reason why not many women artists have gone into sculpture is the medium – whether wood, metal, or stone, it usually requires physical strength, as well as great dexterity from the artist. In the case of the new sculptor, Varona, the medium of clay does not significantly constitute problems of weight, especially in the relatively small forms she turns out, although they can also be surprisingly heavy. As to the process involved, she says that clay is one of the most challenging of art media, although it is, after crayons, the first that is introduced to children in art making. For Varona, it involves both time and infinite care in the various processes that clay sculpture involves, since clay is, at the same time, hard and fragile. According to her “I enjoy working with the material because it brings me back to earth. The material has limitations therefore reminding me of my own. It makes me truthful to myself and with this, there is no judgment, only acceptance – and with acceptance comes dignity, freedom and beauty”. In the process of formation, clay evolves like a human being continually in change. Varona believes in communicating with the piece she is working on, just as a gardener talks to his plants to make them respond to his loving care. She communicates to them mainly in her hands as she wedges and kneads them until the wet mass becomes pliable, almost like wax. Soon, the medium will dry into a leather-hard state, turning to black, a crucial stage because cracks may form. The artist has to wait for it to become bone-dry, when it is ready for bisque firing in the kiln at 1000 degrees centigrade that will make it hard, brittle and porous. This is also where surprises may come in, never quite the same as the piece was envisioned. Glazing and cooling make up the last stage, where the figure acquires color and sheen that give it a precious quality. Varona concludes that like life, “you need to be forgiving and accepting, and most of all unwilling to give up.” With the process summarized, Varona does not regard it as a purely technical activity requiring mental dexterity to realize a form. For, more than anything else, she has a personal intimate approach to each piece. Each one is drawn out of the depths, so that creating one becomes the material expression of a deeply felt struggle, aspiration, or search that she has tenderly coaxed of out the material that she now holds to herself like a mirror. Salaming Bulag is an example, consisting of two figures facing each other. They are both one and the same: the first lovingly scrutinizes the face of the other, reaching out with groping sensitive fingers, feeling the mold of eyes, temple and cheekbones, and how they have been shaped by life and its experiences, the fingers solicitously asking with endearment: “How has life treated you?” At the same time, it is also an image of the quest for the identity, what woman has gone through, what she has stood for, or what she has emerged from as a survivor. This piece conveys deeply felt quality; it is as though the artist kneaded material for it to acquire the stuff of life. Si Felicia ang Martir is unusually poignant, possibly stirring feminist sentiments. The figure consists of two parts: one, a torso bending back and touching the ground with superhuman effort; and two, the head of the martyr herself resting in death on the ground. There is a strong contrast between the dynamic tension of the overstretched torso and the still head with its half-smiling and peaceful expression. Possibly derived from her life as wife and mother, but whether personal or general, it strikes a nerve in women, and men likewise, in their interrelational exchanges. The closeness of the sculptures to her personal self is likewise conveyed in the expressive works Sa Aking Isip, Alipin sa Puso, Ipaglalaban Ko and other pieces. Sa Aking Isip exposes the full potential of the medium and what depth it may convey, as the clay becomes transformed into a thinking face, the force of its spiritual energy breaking out in two antennae-like forms on its head. The expression is so inwardly absorbed, without the least distraction, but so pure in its concentration. As in her other works, there is no effort to idealize but always to seek the lineaments of truth, as the features become signifiers of feeling and value.
Alipin sa Puso is more outward in spirit, as it faces the world with a fierce cry issuing from its circular mouth, the figure geared for battle like a warrior with chest, shoulder and waist emblazoned with a regalia of silver, gold, and red. As in her other figures, the artist clearly does not observe classical symmetry in the limbs, but uses disequilibrium to add sharpness to the quality of figure. Ipaglalaban Ko achieves the point where realism slips into expressionism. Uncannily enough, the face does not shout but is instead quietly, but strongly, resolute in its half-closed but focused eyes, its high eyebrows and prominent cheekbones, all in all a strongly modeled face with not a hint of distraction or loose transitions. Nevertheless, Varona owes some debt to classical mythology when she alludes to Persephone or Demeter, as in Ang Pagdadalaga ni Perseponya (Persephone) or Demetria ang Ina. But the debt is possibly not only that of the nomenclature of personages, but a base which she begins with but in the process explores and distorts in order to bring out other directions and meanings, arriving at startling effects. Ang Pagdadalaga ni Perseponya (Persephone) shows the girl emerging fully and sinuously from a dark enclosing medium, as though to affirm her coming of age. Demetriya ang Ina recalls the truncated Venuses, but without their undisturbed physical serenity, as it bears instead the marks of punishment on body or in mind creating strange configurations that one cannot readily name. The figures of Varona certainly bear the marks of the best sculpture: That is, when the medium or material becomes transformed by the spirit of the artist, her intentions, aspirations, messages and values. In it, she will find the joy of expressing the truth and beauty, as well as achieving full humanity and freedom.
|  | Sculptural show by Anna Varona at Boston Gallery, Cubao on December 8, 2007. Curatorial design by Leo Abaya. PR by Ronnel Britania. |
|  | A show hosted by Utterly Art, Singapore features Filipino artists working around the concept of 'Postcards'. |
|  | A thematic show titled 'Ave Eva', Stephanie Lopez and Anna Varona showed pieces inspired by famous heroines/non-heroines. Curated by Joel Alonday and shown at The Space of Art Informal, Greenhills |
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