International and Filipino Artists Create Exhibition to Support Typhoon Haiyan (Yolanda) Relief Efforts
On 6 April 2014, a consortium of international and Filipino
artists will open the Haiyan International Fundraising Art Exhibition 2014.
This exhibition, which features art works from over 40 international artists
and 17 Filipino artists, showcases the support from the art community from
around the world for the victims of Typhoon Haiyan.
Haiyan International Fundraising Art Exhibition 2014 was
conceptualized by Singapore National Artist Goh Beng Kwan and Filipino artist
Florence Cinco when they and other artists from the ASEAN region convened to
celebrate the 86th Birthday Anniversary of His Majesty King Bhumibol Adulyadej
in Thailand .
Alongside Mr. Goh Beng Kwan and Mr. Cinco, the consortium of artists
participating in the exhibition includes Mr. Ilseon Ryu (Korea), President and
Art Director of Ecorea Biennale Committee and President of the Asia-Pacific
Institute of Art & Research; Ms. Grete Marstein (Norway), President of the
Norwegian Artists Copyright Association and International Vice President of the
International Association of Art (UNESCO); Mr. Trinh Tuan (Vietnam); Mr. Daniel
Houle Jayd (Canada), and Mr. Wattanachot Tungateja (Thailand). The exhibition
is organized and curated by Mr. Florence Cinco, Mr. Red Mansueto, and Ms. Aimee
Villas Adalla.
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| Catalogs of some of the artworks to be featured in the exhibition |
Each of the artists participating in the Haiyan International Fundraising Art Exhibition 2014 has contributed an artwork in
support of the ongoing relief and reconstruction efforts in the Visayas region.
All proceeds from the art works sold during the exhibition will go to MyShelter
Foundation, whose Liter of Light program provides low-cost, simple solar
lighting to disaster-stricken areas, creating local jobs, teaching green
skills, and empowering local communities.
Since Haiyan struck, thousands of people have lived without
electricity. As a result, women feel unsafe, children cannot study at night,
and households remain dependent on expensive or unreliable forms of lighting
(i.e., kerosene, candles) to survive. In the most devastated communities, these
alternative energy sources have already run out. MyShelter Foundation was the
first organization to respond to the immediate need for lighting in Palo, Leyte , providing the cheapest form of lighting through
its Liter of (Night) Lights and street lamps, which were assembled and
installed in the community within 40 days of the disaster.
Liter of Light’s efforts to aid the Typhoon Haiyan victims
focus on assembling and installing night lights and street lamps for 228
bunkhouses in Leyte and Samar, the areas most affected by Typhoon Haiyan. At a
cost of just US $9 per beneficiary, MyShelter Foundation’s Liters of Light will
bring light and hope to over 27,000 people displaced and affected by the storm.
Haiyan International Fundraising Art Exhibition 2014 runs
from 6-26 April 2014 at Galleria Duemila. For more information, please call telephone number +63 2 831.9990; telefax number +63 2 833.9815 and look for Thess
Ponce or Mark Arvin Patiag. For more information on Galleria Duemila,
visit www.galleriaduemila.com for
details and event happenings or e-mail gduemila@gmail.com.
For more information on Haiyan International Fundraising Art Exhibition 2014, click here.
You may visit www.aliteroflight.org or e-mail info@aliteroflight.org for more information on the Liter of Light and MyShelter Foundation.


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