Murals were unveiled in Iloilo City in Iloilo, and Isabela City in Basilan to mark the launch of 'Poets for Climate,' a collaborative project among the branches of Climate Reality in the Philippines, Canada, and Africa in support of the 'When Is Now' campaign.
As Iloilo is trying to bolster its role in Philippine culinary arts, the Iloilo Museum of Contemporary Art (ILOMOCA) has recently launched “Timplada: The Art of Ilonggo Cuisine.”
LASWA. A painting depicting "laswa" or mixed vegetable soup by Marge Chavez is among the art masterpieces on display at the Timplada: The Art of Ilonggo Cuisine exhibit that opened at the Iloilo Museum of Contemporary Art (ILOMOCA) located at the Casa de Emperador in this city's Iloilo Business Park (IBP) in Mandurriao district on Friday (Oct. 1, 2021). Timplada is expected to boost Iloilo City's bid to become the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) Creative City for Gastronomy. (PNA photo courtesy of ILOMOCA) ILOILO CITY - This city's bid to become one of the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) Creative City for Gastronomy got a boost with the launch of the Timplada: The Art of Ilonggo Cuisine on Friday. The Timplada, which was introduced by the Iloilo Museum of Contemporary Art (ILOMOCA), is a three-part event composed of an on-site and virtual art exhibition, a series of educational l
Published February 24, 2021, 10:26 AM
For this year’s National Arts Month celebration, Ilonggo artists have collaborated in creating a mural that speaks of realizations since the COVID-19 pandemic broke out early in 2020.
In the “We Hide No More” exhibition at SM City Iloilo, Himbon Contemporary Ilonggo Artists group unveiled the mural that depicts a rustic and old school Filipino practice or Asian practice, for that matter of hanging clothes to dry.
Harry Mark Gonzales, Sonny Tolentino, Vic Nabor, Anthony Castillo, Noel Epalan, Marrz Capanang, Aljerico Saraum, Daryl Dalipe, Gilbert Labordo, Nick Lanes, Eros Endencia, Ariel Pineda, Norman Acedera, and Juben Iwag had their own iterations of clothes.