Friday, January 10, 2014


This last MMFF, I watched the film "girl, boy, bakla, tomboy" by Wenn V. Deramas. I chose this movie because:

1) Vice Ganda is the protagonist of the film and as we all know he is very good at delivering punchlines that people will surely be laughing.

2) The Director is Wenn V. Deramas.. nuff said.

3) It is very hard to have this kind of movie because vice ganda have 4 characters and it will surely take time to finish this film because of editing.

All in all i really enjoyed the film. all my expectations are met and there's not much advertisement unlike the other movie entries. Their editing skills are excellent because they were able to put vice ganda's 4 characters in one scene and the story line is very good. Lastly, the values that the movie wanted to let us know can be easily understand.











GROUP WORK (self portrait)



These are the works of my groupmates. You can also see my artwork on the lower right.
we roamed around the campus and we asked people to criticized our works.

Continuing Revolution by Leonilo Doloricon


Last December 10, 2013. we toured inside the pamanang bedista. While we were walking, I instantly saw an artwork that struck me the most. it is called "CONTINUING REVOLUTION" it is made by 
Leonilo Doloricon. In this artwork, you can clearly see the message of the artist.

The role of fine art has been to simultaneously express values of the current culture while also offering criticism, balance, or alternatives to any such values that are proving no longer useful. So as times change, art changes. If changes were abrupt they were deemed revolutions. The best artists have predated society's changes due not to any prescIence, but because sensitive perceptivity is part of their 'talent' of seeing.
Artists have had to 'see' issues clearly in order to satisfy their current clients, yet not offend potential patrons. For example, paintings glorified aristocracy in the early 17th century when leadership was needed to nationalize small political groupings, but later as leadership became oppressive, satirization increased and subjects were less concerned with leaders and more with more common plights of mankind.















                     
Background:
                         
            Bruegel painted this picture when he was still living in Antwerp and supplying drawings to the 
engrave Hieronymus Cock. Turning his back on the then-dominant Italian models, he plunges into the then old-
fashioned tradition of Hieronymus Bosch’s world. An apparently inextricable mixture of persons and shapes offers itself to our bewildered gaze. Emerging from distant depths in a halo of light, monsters are thrown to earth as from a breaking wave. Angels combat them, led by St Michael, thin as a rake in his golden armour, striking with his sword at the dragon with the seven crowned heads on which he has his foothold. The combat of the archangel with the fallen angels is described in the Book of Revelation (12, 3-9) and was frequently illustrated from the Middle Ages onwards.

I chose this artwork because i had an overwhelming feeling when I first saw it on the internet. He has a very good style in painting and when you look at the painting from afar, it looks like an abstract but you will see the real image when you moved forward. I find this a very special painting because it came from the book of revelations.

source : http://www.google.com/culturalinstitute/asset-viewer/the-fall-of-the-rebel-angels/ewEs_8lOXkz7tQ?projectId=art-project