INQUIRER Lifestyle’s To Be You regularly features up-and-coming talents in fashion. Meet three from De La Salle College of Saint...
WASHINGTON—A pocket watch that stopped at 8:15 a.m. when the first atomic bomb dropped. A sprawling picture of twisted bodies...
Japanese aesthetic is known for its minimalism and fineness of detail. Its concept of beauty some may find very strange indeed, if not at all distorted. Others may find an artwork facile, yet on closer inspection, one realizes how really hard it is to create.
Artworks curated by Japanese art critic Midori Matsui will be featured in “Winter Garden: The Exploration of Micropop Imagination in Contemporary Japanese Art.” The collection consists of 35 works of art by 14 young professional Japanese artists, who were active from the late 1990s to the late 2000s. The exhibit will be held until April 15 at Manila Metropolitan Museum.
Ikebana is the Japanese art of flower arranging, but there’s more to it than disposing blooms, leaves, branches and twigs on a vase. The origins of Ikebana are deeply rooted on Ikenobo.