This is my first time to experience wood firing.
I wasn't expecting anything from it. I arrived at the studio past lunchtime and Kuya Carl was there putting wood on the kiln. I took a chair and watched as the fire burns the wood to ember. And the process repeats itself until I hardly noticed, an hour had already passed! The fire somewhat draws me to it, a sort of calming feeling watching it rise up and burn down in a cycle. The fire sends some warmth to my skin on this cold January.



A few hours more and I decided to join in the stoking. The pattern was two and four on alternate. Kuya Carl had the left side and I was in charge of putting wood on the other. We had to watch for the temperature changes. A drop meant we have to stoke again. We have to constantly watch for signs: the smoke on the chimney, the pyrometers, the temperature gauge, or the burning wood.



We used plywood at first and it took long before it reached the desired temperature. 
Later, we shifted to palochina.



The camera doesn't show but flames are rising up the chimney!


It's more evident at night. Red-orange flames up the roof.

I ended up staying til 8pm! Wow. I never thought I'll be this enamored by burning wood! 
I learned a lot of new things that day. Spontaneity pays off. I hope hardwork pays off too. Now I wonder how my pots turned out to be. :)

I realized I'm happiest with experiencing the process than expecting how the outcome will look like. 
I guess this also applies with my life.


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Pinto Art Gallery is a treasure cove of Philippine's contemporary art. Located in Antipolo, Rizal, this one-hectare of rolling hills is converted into a compound of galleries and a vacation house for Dr. Cuanang.

It houses works from prominent visual artists in the Philippines like Mark Justiniani, Elmer Borlongan, Rodel Tapaya and a whole lot more. It goes in every corner of this Mexican-inspired architecture. I also think that its structures are noteworthy and in itself holds a grand design. How they incorporated the rocks found in the area to be part of the building is something visually fresh and organic.

I visited Pinto with other members of Ang Ilustrador ng Kabataan (Ang InK) on a Saturday.


The entrance greets you with a number of terra cotta and bronze sculptures


Wide indoor spaces are everywhere! I love this kind of minimalist design.


Installations like this man with snails all over can be found in the gardens

Rocking horse


Karnabal by Saling pusa Group




Rodel Tapaya



Portrait of the owner, Dr. Cuanang.


More installations!




Sculpture by Riel Hilario if I'm correct. I'm not too sure.


Rooms and rooms of more art! It goes on.


Roberto Acosta terra cotta sculptures. I love the bright aura it omits.


Aparisyon by Salvador Alonday


Shoe box


Note: This place deserves a second post just for the gardens.
This is definitely one of the places I want to come back to.

END
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It's that time of the year again! Ang InK is now open for new members!

Requirements:

1. Accomplished application form. Click here
2. One (1) illustration based on the poem by Eugene Y. Evasco, “Sino Ako?” View here
3. Five (5) sample illustrations from your portfolio 
 72 dpi, JPEG or PNG | Dimensions should be at least 1000 x 1000 pixels

Deadline on February 20, 2013 || Email at hello@ang-ink.org
Please indicate subject as: 2013APP: FirstName LastName

Goodluck!



This is the original version of the poster :) Just sharing
9 x 12 | Gouache and white ink on Watercolor Paper
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 I have been sketching and painting personal works lately. 
Sharing some self-portraits and my vulnerabilities with you, strangers.

Butterfly Rash
Gouache on Watercolor Paper

The Pricking Step
Gouache, Ink and Inktense Pencil on Watercolor Paper


Lupus is hard to describe to common people. It is a silent illness and often misunderstood. It manifests in numerous forms like a simple rash, an aching joint, a fever or a fatigue that sometimes, it is called a disease with a thousand faces. Don't worry, mine isn't life threatening nor extremely painful but it is something I live with everyday. It comes and goes whenever it wants. It is like the rain - when it pours, it pours and the only thing you can do is wait for it to stop and surrender to it.

1) Butterfly Rash is a portrait of how SLE shows on the face. It is usually a reddening of the cheeks and nose bridge. It happens when I stay too long out in the sun (photosensitivity). And it feels like I have a fever on the cheeks. It also looks like a natural blush-on (ha ha). This has made me pretty self-conscious. Precautionary measures include a sunblock and something to cover me up from the heat.

2) The Pricking Step | The most common symptom I feel and I find very hard to explain! I would usually tell people it is arthritis but what I really feel is a cold on the middle part of my bones, sometimes like ants eating the marrows or something similar. I mostly feel it on my legs but it also occurs in my arms, wrists and fingers (joint areas). I use medicated patch to ease the pain and it does disappear after some time. 


"That is why (for Christ's sake), I delight in weaknesses, in insults, in hardships, in persecutions, in difficulties. For when I am weak, then I am strong." - 2 Corinthians 12:10



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Leaving traces, 
wasting.
Like I have
 nothing to lose

2012 was definitely a good year. There was less of traveling but there is more personal growth going around.
My creative juices have suddenly came to life. From a still-recovering-from-burnout phase to an 
I-don't-care-if-it-fucking-hurts-I'm-going-to-make-art. I am still going to choose art no matter


1.  Joined Ang Ilustrador ng Kabataan this year!  Met awesome people as well 2. Takatak Exhibit 3. Being a Studio Assistant at Clay Ave Pottery Studio for the Summer. Including a stint at the US Embassy! And definitely being more into ceramics 4. Ang InK's 21st Annual Exhibit 5. Experiment! It pays off in the end


My ceramic journey has also been awesome thanks to Pottery fieldtrips and studio time. To which you have heard numerous times in this blog!
Thank you for the following people: 

1. Ugu Bigyan || Tiaong, Quezon 2. Jon Pettyjohn || Calamba, Laguna 
3. Mia Casal || Quezon City 4. Anton || UP




 And all else that makes this year memorable.

1. Got Bailey (Pomeranian) this year! I now have three dogs in captivity as pets. 2. "Cultural tours" aka hanging out with my favorite people at National Museum or CCP. More Manila gala and less flying  3. Foodtrips with friends! 4. Usual trips to Polillo or Real, Quezon. Finished painting our resthouse, yeah. 5. And a recent trip to a waterfalls that I haven't shared yet :)

It's also this year that we moved house and I got special projects. This is a transition year for me. Grateful for all the changes that happened and I hope 2013 will be awesome as well. 

To all people who has been part of my 2012, Thank you very much!

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I.
I wake up early on a Saturday morning and commute to the University. There isn't much people around during the weekends, it was an easy ride. At the second street, the jeepney stops and I step down from the rusty old thing and breathed fresh air. The leaves from the years old tree rustle and I hear some birds in the background. It reminded me of the rural landscape of my childhood.

The building sits in the far corner of the compound. I walk towards it with an umbrella at hand, humming to a song stuck in my head since I waked up. Oddly, it was Cosmic Love by Florence + The Machine today. I see a figure that gestures a wave at me and a slight smile. And this is how fourteen weeks of my Saturday mornings begin.

II.
We get clay from a black bag and start kneading it. I still haven't gotten around to kneading properly even today. I try to avoid it as much as possible. It is a laborious task, repetitive, and well, I'm just not patient enough and want to start forming pots already!

There are usually five students in the morning session. It is an odd thing to be with the company I have. My usual shyness awkwardness is accentuated by the presence of professors who, for today, become the students. Our facilitator, Anton, is also a guy almost my age.

He does a demo on the pottery wheel and we, his students, eagerly watch as he makes a ginger jar. I am not entirely new to pottery, I must tell you. But it always amaze me to see another person working with clay. A simple fascination at how one's way of doing things can be different from mine or from other potters I have known, and yet, it is still the same process of centering, opening, lifting and forming. It is in him though that I became more aware of the details that make a pot different or better from another. From a slight angle of the wooden rib, the placement of the fingers, the importance of a leveled pot, to the dryness of clay, it all mattered. A far cry from my mindset of "whatever goes". Unaware, it makes a habit out of me as the days go by.

III.
I walk the usual road to the ceramic studio. Truth be told, the wind in the campus blows a certain sadness that reminds me about an incident some years past. The University plays with my emotions. A street, a sound, a scene. I wanted to forget, but I still remember.

I work on my lump of clay and it doesn't follow. It might be that the clay is too soft and hasn't aged yet. Or it might be me that refused to grow up.

IV.
The mastery of this art form isn't about how long have you been doing it. To some, it comes naturally like they came straight out of an Anagama. Several years into ceramics and I still consider myself a beginner. My control over clay is still questionable and often inconsistent. Still so much to learn and improve! Today though, I managed to make four bowls with one casualty, this is enough to put a smile in my eyes.

V.
It was a mess all over, like a scene in an apocalyptic movie where the people have evacuated the city. It was the Lantern Parade the day before, which left the campus into a wasteland of flying fish, horses, wrecked ships and gigantic paper cockroaches. Only two students came today this quiet Saturday morning. Anton reads a book while we go about our business with mud. The other student plays her songs on speaker. I made my pots. One. Two. Three... The time came by fast and we had to say goodbye. Only today, the chapter ends. Oh, if only this goes for one more hour or day or month.

I walked out the studio and hear the rustle of leaves from years-old trees. I looked back and smiled.

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Note: I don't know why I didn't take blog-worthy pictures for this but we do live first before writing, yes? I hope the narrative is adequate to let your visual imagination work. Sorry for the grammar inconsistencies, I am not a good writer :)
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