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- Kilos SAMBAYANAN (Kilos para sa Sampung Batayang Pangangailangan)
- Ang Huling Nazareno (Eli Eli Lama Sabachthani), short film
- Only Women Bleed 2, Eksibit at Pagtatanghal Laban sa Karahasan
- Bai, Bayan, Kalikasan: A Group Exhibit by Women Artists
- Only Women Bleed 2, Exhibit Opening
- FILM REVIEW Alamat ng Hustisya sa Tu Pug Imatuy (The Right to Kill)
- Only Women Bleed 2, an All-Women Painting Exhibit
- Karnabal Festival 2016 – IDEA Exchange Platform
- Senate Bill 2208: An Act Creating the Department of Culture
- Artists’ Welfare Project: On Taxation, Legal Obligation and Financial Literacy
- Artists Welfare Project: Art & Fashion Fair + Membership + Social Welfare
- Art + Environment: Artists Converge in Project Bakawan Arts Festival 2015
- Ateneo School of Humanities presents Alipin, a thesis play by Ariane Lim
- 2015 Euro-Pinoy Jazz Concert at Tiendesitas and Intramuros on Feb. 20 – 21
- Dulaang UP Stages Bilanggo ng Pag-ibig, based on Jean Genet’s Prisoner of Love
- KADAMAY with Urban Poor Resource Center of the Philippines restages Nanay Mameng
- Ten Things about Dulaang UP’s Production of The Country Wife / Ang Misis kong Promdi
- FILM REVIEW Mula sa Kung Ano ang Noon (From What is Before): Ganun pa rin Ngayon
- Ipagdiwang! UP Diliman Tribute to National Artists for Music Ramon Santos and Francisco Feliciano
- DROP THE CHARGES NOW AGAINST GENASQUE ENRIQUEZ, Indigenous People’s Rights Defender
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Tag Archives: national democracy
Boni150 Committee: Call for Artworks
In commemoration of the 150th Birth Anniversary of national hero Andres Bonifacio, the Bonifacio 150 Committee calls for art submissions in any media (minimum size 4″ X 6″). Poems, photos and original music are also accepted. There is a monthly … Continue reading
Posted in Advocacy, Biswal
Tagged American colonization, Andres Bonifacio, anti-feudalism art, anti-imperialist art, Bahay Nakpil Foundation, Bahay Nakpil-Bautista, Bansa, bayaning Pilipino, Birthday, Boni150, Bonifacio 150 Committee, contemporary arts, counter culture, cultural work, Filipino hero, Filipino national hero, gawaing pangkultura, ILPS Philippines, imperialism, Kasaysayan ng Pilipinas, KKK, Manila Contemporary, martir ng bayan, national democracy, Philippine, Philippine history, Philippine revolution, Philippine sculpture, Philippine struggle, Philippine visual arts, political art, proletariat, protest art, Quezon City, Quiapo Manila, radical culture, sense of history, sining biswal, Spanish Occupation, Tomas Morato, workers of the world
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Paghupa ng Mayo Trese
Pilipinas, anuman ang ating mapitas ngayong eleksyon, nanatiling ganito ang gobyernong nais ng lungsod at nayon: maka-bayan hindi maka-sarili lamang makakalikasan hindi maka-mapanirang minahan pinapaubaya ang lupa sa mag-uumang tagabungkal imbes na sa dayuhang walang moral o sa mga hasyenderong … Continue reading
Posted in Tula
Tagged Bagong Hukbong Bayan, burukrata kapitalismo, corruption, election fraud, elite government, freedom, genuine change, indigenous people, Indo-European, Indo-Iranian, Languages, Linguistics, Lumad, national democracy, Natural, NDF, New People's Army, no to mining Philippines, NPA, Philippine Election 2013, politics of change, radical change, reactionary government, revolutionary government, Social Sciences, southern mindanao, Standard Hindi, Typhoon Pablo, Yes (band)
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Aklan Hala Bira: Viva Teddy Casiño
So, I went to Aklan to take a short break from Manila’s election carnival. Of course, there’s also election play here though on a smaller scale and not as sense-splitting as in the capital. I’m just glad to find Teddy Casiño everywhere … Continue reading
Posted in Advocacy
Tagged Aklan, Bagong Alyansang Makabayan, Bayan Muna, Kalibo, Kalibo Aklan, Manila, national democracy, national democratic movement Philippines, pambansa demokratikong kilusan, PCOS, Philippine, Philippine Election 2013, politics of change, progressive change, radical change, Senate, social change, Teddy Casiño, Teodoro Casiño, voter’s education, wise voting
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Diklap, cultural solidarity by Bonifacio 150 Committee
Bonifacio 150 Committee with Linangan ng Kulturang Pilipino invites everyone to a cultural gathering at Binondo and Quiapo, Manila. Here’s the program: 7:00 AM – 10:00 AM Sketching, on the spot painting, photo shoot and performances at Binondo Church and Plaza … Continue reading
Posted in Advocacy, Teatro
Tagged Andres Bonifacio, Asia, Bahay Nakpil, Benigno Aquino III, Binondo Church, Binondo Manila, Binondo Plaza, Bonifacio 150 Committee, community sketching, cultural work, freedom, gawaing pangkultura, kalayaan, Linangan ng Kulturang Pilipino, makabayang sining, Manila, National Capital Region, national democracy, nationalist art, on-the-spot painting, Philippines, photo shoot, protest art, Quiapo, Quiapo Manila
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Rebyu ng Ang Baldado ng Isla Palasan: Kanser sa Kukote ng Kolonya
Adaptasyon ni Joshua So ng dulang The Cripple of Inishmaan ni Martin McDonagh Direksyon ni Tess Jamias Recital ng Philippine High School for the Arts (PHSA) / Produksyong Sipatlawin sa Tanghalang Batute, Sentrong Pangkultura ng Pilipinas (CCP): Marso 10, 12 … Continue reading
Posted in Rebyu, Teatro
Tagged 20th century Philippine theater, alternative journalism, Alyssa Herrera, American Salvation: The Fighting Epic of America’s First Guerilla Fighters, Americanism, Amerikanisasyon, Ang Kalayaan Hindi Natupad, Ang Katipunan, anti-colonial theater, Aurelio Tolentino, Ave de Rapiña, Baldado ng Isla Palasan, Balikatan Military Exercises, Bianca Mauricio, Blanche Buhia, Bryan Dilla, Carlo Gutierrez, CCP, Christine Bas, colonial mentality, consumerist culture, contemporary theater, Cultural Center of the Philippines, Cultural Imperialism, Dahas na Pilak, disentris, dulang Pilipino, dulang sedisyoso, dulang simboliko, dulang subersibo, emotional appeal, Estados Unidos, freedom, Gabriel Beato Francisco, Gracielle So, Hindi Aco Patay, Hollywood, Ian Santos, Ibong Manlulupig, imperyalismo, investigative journalism, Joshua Serafin, Joshua So, Juan Abad, Juan Matapang Cruz, Kahapon Ngayon at Bukas, Kitty Valdez, Krystle Valentino, Luhang Tagalog, Magdapio, Malaya, Mariano Martinez, marketing strategy, Martin McDonagh, Modern Theater, national democracy, Pantaleon Lopez, Pedro Paterno, Philippine High School for the Arts, Philippine theater, Philippines, PHSA, polio, pop art, popular art, post-colonial play, post-colonial theater, post-colonial theory, Pulong Pinag Lahuan, radical theater, Rafael Tibayan, seditious theater, sensationalized reporting, Sentrong Pangkultura ng Pilipinas, Sipatlawin Ensemble, Social cancer, subversive theater, Tanghalang Batute, Tanikalang Ginto, TB, Tess Jamias, The Cripple of Inishmaan, Tomas Remigio, Tubbataha Reefs, tumor sa utak, United States of America, US, US imperialism, USA, VFA, Visiting Forces Agreement
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Passion of Youth in Social Development
What can you do at age 16? The death of Filipino youth Kristel Tejada has created a phenomenon urging education policy makers to listen to a poverty stricken populace albeit at the expense of one’s own dear life. … Continue reading
Posted in Advocacy
Tagged ADB, Asian Development Bank, Belgium, Capaz Tarlac, Channel Good, CHED, Civicus, conscience-based entrepreneurship, construction workers, debt sentence, Earth, economic stability, Education, engineer for development, epic fail, factory workers, farmers, free education, Freedom Climb 2011, Global Shapers, government employees, Jamboree Mountaineers, Japan, Jose Rizal, kabataan pag-asa ng bayan, kabataan partylist, Kabataang Makabayan, kilusan ng kabataan, Kristel Tejada, Leave of Absence, literacy, Manila Hub, migrant workers, Mt. Pinatubo, Mt. Telakawe, national democracy, Pampanga, patriotic youth, Philippine, Philippines, Plan India, Russia, scholarship, school policy, social development, South Korea, STFAP, suicide rate, sunrise, sustainable growth, Switzerland, taxi drivers, United Kingdom, united youth fund initiative, UP Board of Regents, vendors, voice of youth, why youth blogging competition, World Economic Forum, Youth Action, youth for development
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Marat/Sade, a Classic Sample of Theater of Cruelty and angst not merely gone mad
Freedom, freedom, freedom! Long live the revolution! My heart and the chairs are on fire. Despite its anarchaic ending, my democratic feelings just got high after watching Marat/Sade in its DVD form. I share this rather innate sentiment with awareness … Continue reading
Posted in Rebyu, Teatro
Tagged Abbé de Coulmier, Adrian Mitchell, Aldwych Theatre, anti-monarchy, anti-poor education policies, Antonin Artaud, Apocalypto, Benedict Fitzgerald film, Berlin, Bertolt Brecht, Black Protest Week, British theater, CAL College of Arts and Letters, Catholic church’s brutality, cchaotic order, Charenton, Charlotte Corday, Corday, Death of Marat, defamiliarization effect, Die Verfolgung und Ermordung Jean Paul Marats dargestellt durch die Schauspielgruppe des Hospizes zu Charenton unter Anleitung des Herrn de Sade, Donatien Alphonse François, Doug Wright, DSCTA, Dulaang UP, education budget, European Theater, Farhad Safinia, freedom, freedom of expression, French Revolution, Geoffrey Rush, Geoffrey Skelton, Germany, Girondists, Glenda Jackson, human rights, human violence, Ian Richardson, investigative art, Jacobin Club, Jacques-Louis David, Joaquin Phoenix, karapatang pantao, La Mort de Marat, Marat, Marat/Sade, Marie-Anne Charlotte de Corday d'Armont, Marquis, Marquis de Sade, martial law, master’s class, Mel Gibson, Modern Theater, national democracy, neo-classical painting, nihilistic art, organized chaos, Parisian, Patrick Magee, Peter Brook, Philip Kaufman, Philippine Polytechnic University, Philippine youth movement, play within a play, poetic dialogue, political repression, Pres. Benigno Aquino III, Prof. Jose Estrella, psychological play, PUP, Quills, Royal Shakespeare Company, Sciller Theater, SCUs, Simonet de Coulmier, Sta. Mesa, State Colleges and Universities, surreal play, surrealism, The Death of Marat, The Passion of the Christ, The Persecution and Assassination of Jean-Paul Marat as Performed by the Inmates of the Asylum of Charenton under the Direction of the Marquis de Sade, theater between two world wars, Theater History, Theater of Cruelty, tuition hikes, University of the Philippines, UP Diliman Department of Speech Communication and Theater Arts, utopia, Verfremdungseffekt, western Theater
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Art, songs, poetry and flowers for Kristel Tejada
While in Koronadal City waiting for my bus to Gensan, there was a hullabaloo in the Yellow Bus Line station. I thought if it was news about some ambush or kidnapping, I had prepared myself for it but no, people were … Continue reading
Posted in Tula
Tagged Abante, ACT Teachers Partylist, anti-poor system, Arithmetic Skill, black week protest, CHED Chairperson Patricia Licuanan, Children’s Rehabilitation Center, civil liberty, condolensce, CRC, Cuba literacy, Davao City, DEPED Secretary Armin Luistro, Dong Abay, education to the poor, Fidel Castro, human rights, indigenous peoples, Iska, Isko, iskolar ng bayan, Juliet, Justice for Kristel Alliance, kabataan partylist, karapatang pantao, katribu partylist, katutubong Pilipino, Kilometer 64, KM64, Kristel, Kristel Tejada, Lake Sebu, Literacy program, literacy rate, Manila, Marianet Amper, mataas na matrikula, national democracy, pambansang minorya, Pasan ko ang Daigdig, people’s scholar, Philippine, Philippine Daily Inquirer, Philippine youth movement, poverty Philippines, Pres. Benigno Aquino III, Pres. Pascual, President Chavez Hugo, Prof. Andrea Martinez, protest art, protest music, protest poetry, protest song, Reading Skill, Salinlahi Alliance for Children's Concerns, Serve the People, socialist education program, socialist perspective, socialized tuition fee, Spanish Occupation, STAND-UP, state university, STFAP, student scholarship, suicide Philippines, tuition fee increase, Tuition payments, UN, United Nation, University of the Philippines, University of the Philippines Manila, UP Board of Regents, UP Manila, UP policy, UP system, Venezuela, Writing Skill
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Cotabato Chronicle: Cultural Exchange with T’boli Indigenous People at Lake Sebu
As I was planning my trip to Cotabato, I learned from wanderingcha of the homestay T’boli School of Living Traditions (SLT) in Purok Lambanig, Lake Sebu, South Cotabato. The only way to get there from Brgy. Awang in North Cotabato City is … Continue reading
Posted in Paglalakbay
Tagged 15th T’boli Seslong Festival, 1998 National Living Treasure Awardee, 39th Foundation Day, AFP, agricultural land, Allah River, American occupation in the Philippines, Ampatuan Massacre, ancestral domain, Baay Family, Bangsamoro, Bayan Muna Partylist, boating at Sebu Lake, brass casting, brass making, Brgy. Awang, Brgy. T’boli, Brittish occupation in the Philippines, Bundos, bureaucrat capitalism, CAR, car stuffing, Cebuano, COMELEC checkpoint, Cooperative of Women in Health and Development, Cordillera Region, Cotabato, Cotabato City, COWHEAD, Cultural Exchange, curroption, dark comedy, Dongon clan, Dongon Falls, Dutch occupation in the Philippines, Falls 1, Falls 2, Falls 3 Hikong B'lebel (Coil or Zigzag Falls), Falls 4 Hikong Lowig (Booth Falls), Falls 5 Hikong K'fo-i (Little Falls), Falls 6 & 7 Hikong Tonok (Soil), Filipino Sabah claim, General Santos, General Santos City, Gono Kem Bo-I (Princess House), goons gun and gold, hegalong T’boli guitar, Hikong Alu, Hikong Bente, Hikong Nature Park, homestay, House of Gongs, Husky Bus, Ilonggo, Immeasurable Falls, Indian Theater, indigenous instrument, indigenous music, indigenous people, indigenous song, indigenous T’boli dance, indigenous T’boli song, Insulan van terminal, IP, Japan, Japanese occupation in the Philippines, KAMP, katribu partylist, katutubo, Lake Sebu, Lake Sebu South Cotabato, Lam ‘Unay Song (sa sulod / inside), Lang Dulay, large-scale mining, Madal Ahalos, Madal Iwas (Monkey Dance), Madal Tahao (Dance of Bird), Madal Taho (Dance of a Good Person), Maguindanao, Maguindanaons, makabayan, Manila, Maria Todi, Merl Garden Spring Resort, military checkpoint, national democracy, NCCA Gawad Manlilikha ng Bayan, North Cotabato City, pambansang minorya, Passage Falls, Philippine May 2013 election, Philippine tourism, Philippine travel, Philippines, Political dynasty, politics of change, private army Philippine army, Punta Isla, Purok Lambanig, resorts in Lake Sebu, senatoriable Teddy Casiño, sky cable boat ride, South Cotabato, Spanish occupation in the Philippines, Sultan Kudarat, Surallah Integrated Public Terminal, T’boli, T’boli dress, T’boli School of Living Traditions, T’Boli Trade and Crafts, T’nalak, Tisay Todi, town ambush, Vedic, voter’s education
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