PH makes its debut at the Venice Architecture Biennale
The Philippines makes its debut at Venice Architecture Biennale
The Philippines makes its debut at Venice Architecture Biennale
Its sensuous, curvaceous form is easily recognizable—voluptuous top, tapering gently to a narrow waist, like an hourglass, perhaps inspired by a woman’s buxom physique, a popular silhouette in the 1950s.
To be clear and honest, I wasn’t there at last Sunday’s dinner hosted by Conrad Onglao for his love, Zsa Zsa Padilla. I was in another sweet couple’s milestone affair, the 30th wedding anniversary celebration of Chito and Anna Sobrepeña.
When we interviewed Magnum and Unilever RFM Ice Cream, Inc. brand manager Brian Chanyungco at the launch of Magnum Gold last February, we asked—no, begged—him to bring Magnum Honeycomb Crunch to the Philippines.
After having lived in or traveled to all the continents, “except Antarctica,” former banker Josephine del Gallego is guided by “form and function” whenever she builds a house or invests in European-made furniture and accent pieces.
Architect Ed Calma has become synonymous with minimalism. His design revolves around geometry, nature, void spaces and materials. One of his talked-about designs is in Lipa, Batangas. The house
In Philippine design and architecture, the name “Calma” is synonymous with a powerful aesthetic impact on the environment. Think Lorenzo “Lor” Calma’s sculptural planes, whose flatness is interrupted by cuts and folds, or Ed Calma’s stark-white College of Saint Benilde School of Design and Arts building with its irregular form and all-glass backside set against an old, grayish district in Manila.
Fashion retailer Mark “Jappy” Gonzalez likes to think out of the box. When this managing director of H&F Retail Concepts Inc. was conceiving the design for a second Homme et
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