Included are disciplines which some snobs I know don’t consider serious art—fashion, cooking and comics. Japanese comics, at that. Why Japanese?
The art festival is known as “Zero-In—Open Call.” The organizations involved are Lopez Memorial Museum, Ateneo Art Gallery, Ayala Museum, Bahay Tsinoy and the Museo Pambata.
“Each year the collaborating museums would just mount an exhibit with a theme but this year we are more ambitious,” said Mercedes Lopez-Vargas, executive director of Lopez Memorial Museum.
The five museums each had an open call for concepts from artists last year. Each museum drew lots, and this genre went to the following museums: cuisine (Ateneo Art Gallery); cosplay (dressing up a cartoon character) and manga (Japanese comics)—Ayala Museum; visual arts (Bahay Tsinoy); sound (Lopez Museum); and dance (Museo Pambata).
All of these will be featured in the Mall of Asia (inside the main atrium, free of charge) in Pasay City from Sept. 15 (6 p.m.) to 24. There will be live dance and sound presentations, a cosplay parade, gaming demonstrations, on-the-spot painting, culinary treats, and unveiling of the Freedom Wall.
Complementing the mall-based activities are long-running exhibits in the various museums, which will last to late this year and even next year.
To demonstrate this contemporary art form are homegrown artists Tad Ermitañao, Lirio Salvador, Jon Romero and Stanley Castelo. This exhibit runs until April 3, 2012.
Culinary
The Ateneo Art Gallery at the Ateneo de Manila, Quezon City, will focus on culinary arts, and will hold an interactive game with a food theme zestfully called “Crafty Critters Munch Up” until Dec. 22.
For its part, the Ayala Museum in Greenbelt 4, Makati City, will showcase the world of manga with an exhibit called “World of Manga Realities: Exploring the Art of Japanese Manga Today.” The show runs until Oct. 2.
Bahay Tsinoy in Intramuros, Manila, mounts an installation by visual artist Con Cabrera called “Kasama,” which will be on display until Oct. 6.
And Museo Pambata in Ermita, Manila, will share with the public the memorabilia of National Artist for Dance Ramon Obusan, who was known for his researches on the dances of indigenous peoples and other ethno-linguistic groups.
“The Open Call Festival aims to expand and deepen the people’s appreciation of art and the country’s rich cultural heritage,” said Lopez-Vargas. “We want to make art more popular, more relevant.”
Visit https://www.zeroinmuseums.org, or call 6312417.