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THREETIME ROTARY CLUB OF MANILA JOURNALISM AWARDEE 2006, 2010, 2012
U.N. MEDIA AWARD 2008
A broader look at today’s business Saturday 18, 2014 10 No. 40Vol. 10 No. 272 Wednesday, JulyVol. 8, 2015
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BSP REMAINS CAUTIOUS BECAUSE OF GREEK CRISIS, EL NIÑO
INSIDE
Rate tweaks unlikely despite low inflation
G IS FOR GREATNESS The Lord has done great things
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H, Lord, in our daily life, have we realized that You have done great things for us? When God set the captives of Zion free, we were more like children in a dream. Then we could hear our laughter and cheers. Then we could hear our shouts of joy. They said in amazement to the world, indeed, God has done great things for them. Truly we must treasure all His goodness and mercy. Amen. BREAKING BREAD 2015, AND LOUIE M. LACSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com
Editor: Gerard S. Ramos • lifestylebusinessmirror@gmail.com
Life
PEN’S PEN AND INK »D4
BusinessMirror
Wednesday, July 8, 2015
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Apple loses appeal on e-book antitrust suit B D B S Los Angeles Times A FEDERAL appeals court on Tuesday let stand a 2013 lower court ruling that concluded Apple conspired with several top book publishers to raise e-book prices. The Justice Department had accused Apple of unfairly taking control of a nascent market that had been dominated by Amazon.com. Judges from the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals in New York split on the decision 2-1. In a 117-page decision, Judge Debra Ann Livingston wrote that Apple pressured publishers to band together to prevent price drops for books, both electronic and print. Apple had leveraged publisher frustration with Amazon’s $9.99-per-book pricing on its Kindle reader as a bargaining chip, she said. The publishers then “combined forces to grab control over price,” she wrote, referring to five of the “Big Six” publishers— Simon & Schuster, HarperCollins, Macmillan, Penguin and Hachette. “A coordinated effort to raise prices across the relevant market was present in every chapter of this story,” she added. The story began with Apple’s 2010 launch of the iPad, a tablet that marketed its selection of e-books as a prominent feature. Until then, Amazon’s Kindle, released in 2007, had dominated the e-book market, accounting for 90 percent of all e-book sales within two years. Amazon sold many new releases and bestsellers at close to or lower than wholesale prices. Publishers considered this practice a threat to their business model, Livingston said, and became determined to overcome it with the help of Apple, the newcomer eager for a foothold in the market. After negotiating attractive contracts with Apple, the publishers went to Amazon with demands for sweeter deals. Prices for iPad books could be set as high as $19.99. Apple now may be ordered to pay $400 million to consumers, complying with a 2014 settlement of a class-action lawsuit brought by 33 states and territories. Judge Raymond J. Lohier, in concurring with Livingston, said Apple and the publishers committed “corporate bullying” by teaming up against Amazon. But Judge Dennis Jacobs disagreed, writing in a 38-page dissent that Apple joined with publishers as the only way to force a lower barrier to the e-book industry. “No one publisher alone could counter Amazon,” he wrote. “Apple’s conduct...was unambiguously and overwhelmingly procompetitive.” Apple disagreed with the ruling and denied that it fixed e-book prices. “While we want to put this behind us, the case is about principles and values,” the company said in a statement on Tuesday. “We know we did nothing wrong back in 2010 and are assessing next steps.”
G IS FOR GREATNESS
LOVE THAT LEATHER The genuine leather-clad LG G4, which gives new meaning to luxury and personalization in the smartphone landscape. B G R Lifestyle & Entertainment Editor
with its latest flagship, as the G4 is available not only with the de rigueur hard plastic back cover (textured of course), but also with a vegetable-tanned leather backside. The back cover, by the way, is removable. Yes, leather—actual, real leather, not the faux variety, this one crafted from animal rawhide using the same cutting and tanning process employed on luxury bags. And, yes, that’s also real stitching flanking the faux seam that runs vertically through the mid-section of the leather-clad LG G4, which the company’s local office sent over for us to play with for a spell. The process that the leather undergoes before it is fused to the hard plastic shell reportedly takes 12 weeks at the minimum— and the moment your hand cradles the LG’s leather-clad flagship, you will readily say that it is time well spent. The material gives the LG G4 a warm, organic, luxurious feel that neither metal nor glass—the materials of choice for flagship smartphones these days, from Apple’s iPhone 6 Plus to the twin Samsung Galaxy S6s—can provide. It would come as no surprise if the brown variant becomes the most popular among the G4’s leather back covers, as brown leather ages handsomely, but fashionistas will no doubt be pleased that there are five other color leather variants they can choose from to match or contrast their OOTD: red, beige, sky blue, yellow and, of course, black. The back cover being removable not only allows the LG G4 user a level of handsome personalization that goes beyond what the similarly leather-clad 2014 Moto X allowed, but it also means that—unlike a number of current flagship smartphones which have nonremovable batteries—you can easily swap out power packs just in case you overdid all the social media and other Internet stuff on the 4G-powered G4 (the Li-Ion 3000 mAh battery can last you a full day with typical use; our experience thus far usually has the G4 with 16 percent of battery life left by the time we hit the sack after a day of intermittent data usage). No need to have that humungous power bank or charger weighing down and crowding your bag or purse. Compared to its predecessor, the LG G4 is just a hair taller, wider and thicker at 148.9x76.1x6.3-9.8 mm. But unlike the G3, the company’s newest flagship is a dual-SIM
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ACK in January LG Electronics Inc. reported that it scored a “net profit of 501.40 billion won ($474.81 million) for full-year 2014, an increase of 125 percent over its 2013 net profit. Operating profit increased significantly in 2014 to 1.83 trillion won ($1.73 billion) from 1.25 trillion won ($1.14 billion) in 2013, an increase of 46 percent. Full-year consolidated revenue of 59.04 trillion won ($55.91 billion) was mainly boosted by a 24-percent increase in smartphone shipments.” Also back in January the tech media reported that the other consumer-electronics giant headquartered in South Korea, Samsung, saw “its first annual earnings decline in three years, in part due to a sharp drop in sales of mobile phones. Net profit fell to 23.4 trillion won ($21.3 billion; £14 billion) last year, a 27-percent fall from 30.5 trillon won in 2013. Mobile-phone sales for the year fell 21 percent to 107.41 trillon won.” (tinyurl. com/mkfburp) Of course it can be said that given the rapid shifts in the tech landscape, things may have turned around for Samsung since the release of its twin flagship smartphones, the Galaxy S6 and the attention-grabbing Galaxy S6 Edge. That was back in April, and although the new releases—particularly the S6 Edge—have wowed media and consumers alike, it remains to be seen whether Samsung has arrived at a turnaround. (tinyurl.com/pghb22o) Meanwhile, the latest flagship smartphone from LG, the G4, has arrived at gadget shops globally, with the handset launched with befitting grandness in late May at The Theater at Solaire in Pasay City, and becoming available around these parts shortly thereafter. Nope, the successor to the LG G3— reportedly the best-selling top-tier Androidpowered smartphone of 2014—doesn’t have the gimmicky curved-edge display of the Samsung Galaxy S6 Edge, although it must be said that LG obviously took design cues from its South Korean rival, which began putting out phablets and smartphones with a fauxleather back with faux-stitching in 2013. LG, however, pushed the idea even further
beast (the secondary SIM is limited to purely 2G performance); boasts of a 5.5-inch IPS Quantum Display that “offers 20 percent greater color reproduction, 25-percent improvement in brightness and 50 percent greater contrast,” and is also ever-so-slightly curved, which LG claims makes it more resistant to damage from face-down drops; and packs a 16-megapixel camera with a fast f/1.8 aperture lens, improved optical stabilization (OIS 2) and a color spectrum sensor that “improves color accuracy by precisely reading the RGB values of the ambient light in a scene.” In plainspeak, that means vibrant pictures that don’t look overprocessed or overworked. And, yes, the camera can save still images in RAW format—the format preferred by professional photographers—and capture video in ultraHD, but be warned: choosing either of these capture modes will gobble up a huge chunk of memory from the 128 gigabytes microSD card you will slap into the LG G4. Out of the box, the smartphone offers 32GB for your media, apps, games and then some. Under the hood, the LG G4 purrs along nicely and smoothly courtesy of Qualcomm’s 64-bit hexa-core Snapdragon 808 processor, with a clock speed of 1.8GHz, plus 3GB of RAM and the latest and greatest version of Android (that would be Lollipop, or V5.1). Your nerdy friend might be quick to point out that, unlike a number of flagships, the G4 doesn’t run on the latest premium chip from Qualcomm, and he would be right. The latest top-of-the-line processor from Qualcomm would be the Snapdragon 810—which, alas, is dogged by heat issues that have yet to be addressed. No such thermal issues arose in the weeks that we have been putting the G4 through its paces, which include trying our hand at “FarmVille 2” and watching a couple of episodes of Season 3 of the excellent The Fosters. All things considered, including its UX 4.0 user interaface that still needs a bit of reiningin, the LG G4 may not be as flashy as some of the flagship smartphones out there, but—with that handsome leather back, its buttery responsiveness, its stunning display and that envelope-pushing camera—it is sublime and gorgeous where it matters.
LIFE
n To know more about LG’s latest and greatest smartphone, visit www.lg.com/ph/.
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CHOOSE BETTER D2
Personal Tech BusinessMirror
Wednesday, July 8, 2015
It’s best to ‘Choose Better’ SUN Postpaid Vice President Joel Lumanlan (from left), AVP for Sun Prepaid Regina Pineda, new Sun endorser Drew Arellano and AVP for Sun Broadband Pam Santiago at the launch of Sun’s new “Choose Better” campaign.
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MID the plethora of promos and offerings from wireless communications providers, Sun recently launched its newest campaign that urges consumers to wisely sift through their options and ultimately “Choose Better.” “You really have to choose the option that gives you the best value for your money, and that is what Sun is all about,” said Joel Lumanlan, vice president of Sun Postpaid, during the campaign’s launch. “What’s important to us is that we are able to provide our consumers the best value services in the market. We believe when you choose better, you spend wiser.” Lumanlan added that Sun, which has dropped the word “Cellular” in its new “sunny, bright, bold, warm and practical” logo to appeal to a broader spectrum of the market, has a set of “hero products” to carry out its new slogan and present consumers with the best options in the market. At the forefront of these offers is the Sun Postpaid Best Value Plan 450. Described by Lumanlan as a “good entry-level plan for new postpaid subscribers,” the Plan 450 offers unlimited calls and texts within the network, 250 texts to all networks, plus 20 hours of data consumption. As opposed to the existing Plan 450, this deal is made sweeter with the inclusion of a free Android smartphone. There are also better options in the broadband department with Non-Stop Surf Plan 450 for Sun Broadband, which comes with nonstop surfing (30day access of light surfing), 1 gigabyte for streaming and downloading, 1GB for the music streaming service Spinnr, and a free pocket Wi-Fi. Another Sun Broadband promo goodie is the Non-Stop Surf 25 that is
valid for a day and offers 25 megabyte Open Access plus 300MB Spinnr. Sun Prepaid subscribers can also choose better with Super Loaded CTU 100 (Call & Text Unlimited) with unlimited trinet calls, unlimited texts to all networks and 100MB of free data all valid for seven days. Lamanlan clarified that aside from these promos, they have gone all-in with the Choose Better campaign with their other offerings. “When you visit a Sun shop now, all you will see are the revamped plans. We’re doing this across the board.” “It’s not all about image. It’s not all about fluff. You really have to go through your options to be able to
determine what gives the better value for your money,” he added. Along with the launch of the new campaign, Sun has also introduced its newest endorser, the multihyphenate Drew Arellano. He said that his personality jives perfectly with Sun’s core values as a company. “Being an adventurous type of person, I have this thinking that I want to maximize everything while using the most practical ways.” According to Lamanlan, they have the best ambassador to personify Sun’s new campaign. “Drew embodies what we want the brand to personify in the market,” he said. “Like Sun, he’s very credible and, yet, very practical. He also has a very sunny personality.” n
Lazada helps bloggers earn through its affiliate program session on blog-content improvement by top lifestyle blogger and Lazada affiliate, Kryz Uy. The Lazada Affiliate Program (www.lazada.com.ph/affiliate) www.lazada.com.ph/affiliate) is an www.lazada.com.ph/affiliate automated marketing program that allows bloggers and web site owners to use various advertising tools such as banners, links, or a product feed in order to earn as much as 10 percent commission on sales generated. Lazada also uses cookies that expire after 30 days, so purchases made 30
LAZADA ADA Philippines (www.lazada. com.ph), the country’s one-stop com.ph shopping and selling destination, recently held its first Shop ‘til You Blog workshop, where it introduced the Lazada Affiliate Program to lifestyle bloggers and online influencers. Lazada recognizes bloggers and publishers as important participants in the e-commerce industry as the overall usage of social-media platforms continue to rise. The highlight of the event was a
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Today’s Horoscope
By Eugenia Last
CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS IS DA DAY: Toby Keith,
54; Kevin Bacon, 57; Anjelica Huston, 64; Jeffrey Tambor, 71.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: DA Helping others will help you DAY:
advance. Don’t fight the inevitable. Going with the flow will help you avoid being left out. Use your ingenuity and be a participant. If you don’t make suggestions or offer assistance, you will have no right to complain. Discipline and hard work will be required, but will also pay off. Your numbers are 9, 13, 17, 20, 23, 35, 41.
days following a click from an ad still counts as a sale from the blogger or web site partner. Payouts are made via PayPal or bank deposit. The program is similar to Amazon’s associate program which is more widely known in the US for its success stories on bloggers earning thousands of dollars each month through affiliate links. Many local bloggers are not yet monetizing their web sites and a good place to start is Lazada’s Affiliate Program,
touted as the largest direct affiliate marketing program in the Philippines. The company’s huge inventory of over 200,000 reputable products gives publishers options to select and feature items relevant to their audience. Additionally, Lazada affiliates are informed in advance of Lazada’s big sale events and exclusive flash sales so they can share these promos with their readers. Full technical support is also provided by the Lazada Affiliate Team.
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Leading buy-and-sell web site introduces changes OLX.PH, the leading buy-and-sell web site in the country, has introduced new changes that will benefit its growing number of users. These improvements include promoting better-quality ads, minimizing duplicate listings and providing a fairer selling environment to everyone. All OLX sellers can still post ads at no charge. Each member is entitled to a set of free ads or “rent” space, which can accommodate 36 listings of buy-and-sell items (phones, furniture, etc.), two real estate, two cars and nine car parts and accessories, two services, two jobs, and one business opportunity. The number of free ad slots per category is subject to change. Sellers can use their free ad space anytime and they can post various items, as long as they don’t exceed the category limit. They will also never run out of free ad space even after they have sold their items. Once an item has been sold, they just have to mark it as “sold” to make space for more items to sell. Meanwhile, average C2C sellers, or those who sell personal secondhand items occasionally, will not need to pay for more space. They won’t even notice any difference in their selling experience. The B2C sellers, or those who do buy-and-sell as their business or as a side job will be charged with a minimal fee, depending on the category that their items will fall under. The optional fee is a security feature that drives away sellers with malicious intent. Scammers and spammers will have to think twice about posting duplicate and false ads that only distract or mislead buyers. It’s also a way of encouraging sellers to make the most of the free ad space and ensure the quality of their ads. With the changes, OLX expects to provide more win-win arrangements to all users. Buyers will be more protected from scams. They can also find what they’re looking for on the site faster and easier. And without the pesky duplicate ads, there’s more assurance that the items they’re buying are of good quality. Meanwhile, sellers can be easily searched; interested buyers will be able to find them quicker, which can translate into more chances of selling their items.
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ARIES (March 21-April 19): Use your intelligence to make your way to the top. Beef up and send out your resumé if you are bored or feel you are going nowhere fast. A physical change will boost your confidence and lift your spirits. Romance is encouraged.
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CANCER (June 21-July 22): Don’t take on too much, or emotions will escalate, causing disputes or minor mishaps. Take time out for yourself. Do something you enjoy or that stimulates you mentally and physically. Personal changes will make you feel good.
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TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Take a tour around your neighborhood and you’ll notice things you haven’t seen before. There is plenty to discover and with a little coaxing, you may want to participate in something that will improve your community.
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GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Your involvement in a worthy cause will lead to new friendships. Take a position of leadership and make suggestions, and you will become a valued contributor. Do your own research. Positive personal changes will improve a relationship.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Get motivated and make things happen. Act on your instincts and don’t look back. You’ll attract attention and plenty of interest in what you have to offer personally and professionally. Promote your interests and you will get an offer you cannot refuse.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Stand firm if someone makes demands, but don’t get into a dispute. Be prepared to walk away. You will lose if you don’t negotiate with finesse. Believe in your ability to move forward on your own if necessary. Protect your interests.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): You’ll have trouble getting along with business partners. Compromise and keep the peace. Focus more on being helpful and taking care of personal needs that ease your stress and make you feel good about the way you look. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Take a close look at any contracts, investments or paperwork you are given. Someone will try to take advantage of you if you aren’t careful. Make changes to whatever proposition you are given.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Expand your interests and your friendships. Exploring new people and places will change your attitude and improve your goals. Set your standards high and you will rise to the occasion. Walk away from negativity or people looking for an argument.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Someone will play on your emotions by making a last-minute change. Before you jump to conclusions or believe what you hear, dig deep and look for alternatives that will help you continue along your set path. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Reconsider your direction and the partnerships you have formed. Limitations and frustrations will occur if you let someone make decisions for you. A professional change based on something you enjoy doing will bring you higher returns and greater satisfaction.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Getting along with your peers will make the difference in how successful you can be. Don’t rule out the possibility that you are being judged not only on your skills and ability, but also on your presentation and appearance. Leave nothing to chance.
BIRTHDAY DAY BABY: You are unpredictable, willful and courageous. You are progressive and responsive. DA
‘gourmet sampler’ BY MASON LORRY The Universal Crossword/Edited by Timothy E. Parker
ACROSS 1 Gallery contents 4 Common construction girder 9 Some cobras 13 Any one will do in a storm 15 Exotic jelly flavor 16 Cashless deal 17 Grouches 19 Repeated word in a Doris Day song 20 Intensify 21 Essayers, essentially 23 Former Justice John Paul 24 Far from the most 25 Old cager’s org. with a colorful ball 26 Like some blinds 29 Beast of Borden 32 Harp and elephant 33 Tail-end of a countdown 34 100 dinars 35 Plant with yellow flower clusters 36 Fish hawk’s cousin 37 Clear toothpaste 38 “The evidence of things not seen” 39 Ancient Germanic letters
40 42 43 44 48 50 51 52 54 55 56 57 58 59
Survives Backstabber Adolescent Not a main route Foiled Create a division Didn’t swing at Difficult thing to swallow, figuratively Pond organism Confederacy’s counterpart And others, for short Party thrower Mends When this sound stops, you’ll be left flat
8 9 10 11 12 14 18 22 24 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 35 36 38 39 41 42 44 45
46 Book with legends 47 Is sure to be heard 48 2002 Winter Olympics state 49 Court plea, for short 50 Cookbook direction 53 “...baked ___ pie”
With great skill Birthplace of Saint Francis Succotash ingredient Henry VIII’s last wife Fitness centers Toil and trouble Newbie, of sorts Plural of 42-Across Chow line? Air outlets Green Gables girl Wine sediments Descartes’ “therefore” In ___ of (replacing) Experienced sailors, slangily Speaks like the Lord? Flavor sensor Colleague of Calliope Satyrlike creature Airspace monitoring device Consider Matures on the vine Cause to attack Long-line annoyances
PERSONAL TECH DOWN 1 Church recesses 2 Fowl place 3 A handshake begins it 4 Large lizard 5 Some museum pieces 6 Convenience 7 It might briefly cross a street?
Solution to yesterday’s puzzle:
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PEN’S PEN AND INK
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KOMUNIKASYON
ONGOING EXHIBIT AT CASA SAN MIGUEL CELEBRATES THE PAROCHIAL AND SIMPLE CHARMS OF RURAL LIFE “Growing up in the countryside, life is much simpler. Back then, human activities were very limited: limited access in entertainment and latest technology, such as television, radio and comics. Due to such limitations, people were more focused on their farming activities as their primary resources for survival. These life experiences in the community are the beacon of these paintings: [a] homage to the past and present.”ÑZ ÑZANIEL MARIANO, 2014 ZANIEL MARIANO’S body of work is a glimpse of a place and time we once knew. We are now living at a time where everything is moving so fast; where things rapidly take its form from one shift to the other—almost unnoticed because of globalization and the rapid growth of technology. Mariano’s body of work focuses on the act of remembering life experiences with the intent to portray his idea of “slowing things down”...of selfevaluation, of unlearning and relearning the meaning of “progress” through pictures of what seemed to be a simpler life—a life in the countryside, in Zambales. His paintings aim to guide us to form the right questions that we eventually ask ourselves, about how we live our lives and make us reflect our own values and the things that truly make us feel alive. Mariano’s Rural is an exhibit of his works on view until July 30 at The Anita Magsaysay-Ho Gallery and Museum in Casa San Miguel. Mariano, who hails from San Antonio, Zambales, is a self -taught artist and began his career in painting at the age of 16. He was one of the top 10 finalists in the ArtPetron competition and a semifinalist in the Metrobank Art & Design Excellence painting competition. Mariano has since served as an art mentor to local children in San Miguel and San Antonio, teaching drawing every weekend, preparing young artists for entry into the Philippine High School for the Arts.
Pen’s pen and ink
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TEPHEN PRESTADO is “Pen,” and he is slowly gaining a following with his works in pen and ink. He is an illustrator in a time when technology can be summoned to quickly produce works that are composite of many elements available in the Internet. Pen’s art harks back to a period when artists were needed to visualize on paper maps and monsters lurking at the edge of the world, writers and intellectuals in their most ponderous of poses, and animals and plants coming to life as anthropomorphic beings. I first noticed the skills and ferocious imagination of Prestado when he was commissioned to make the poster for the indie film Angustia, made under a grant from Cinema One Originals. Directed by Kristian Sendon Cordero, the film is a meditation on the conflicted colonialists who came to conquer not only our souls, but also our vegetation and our bodies. The studies for the film poster are a joy to behold, as Prestado jumps from one obsessive point to another— for the film is not only about the anguish of the priest,
who feasts not only on local flora and fauna, but also on the lush loveliness of an indigene. One poster study shows a beaming indigene, half of her face covered by plants. Framing her are more plants, stems and leaves. In the film, the priest collects plants and draws them, a tender metaphor for the facet of colonization that took place where forests were summarily collected by the colonizers. Evangelization E also meant taking over the body of the “natives.” In the other studies, Prestado recovered the image of “ ngustia,” the old image that was hidden by early “A converts and later recovered to induce more mysteries in the Christianization of the land. Interestingly, the illustration of Mary bearing the Dead Christ on her lap recalls the crude and flat figures of drawings common during the 1st and 2nd centuries of Christianity. The drawings of Prestado appear to reproduce the antiquarian feel of the so-called illuminated manuscripts, which were prevalent in the Middle Ages. Marginalia in Prestado’s young universe do not remain as borders or frames done in solid colors. As with those manuscripts done by monks, the wide lines that frame text or images are also copiously filled with text in rambunctious designs. Only the feel of the ancient
spirituality are remembered by this illustrator who can be irreverent with forms, as well. One gets this feeling that Prestado is indeed enamoured with the art of illuminated manuscripts where figures do not have supremacy over alphabets. Prestado, however, can be whimsical, as well. In fact, it is his whimsy running as counterpoint to his antediluvian temper that brings about a luscious irony. In a book titled Obras Maestras, written by Dr. Paz Verdades Santos and Marifa Borja Fajardo, both of the Ateneo de Naga University, a woman—a maestra—has green stems and leaves coming out of her orifices. The book is an exhaustive study of Bikol literary works with guides to discussion and lesson plans built around them. Thus, the leaves and stems—growths that are expected to happen when the book is used. The literal interpretation catches the eye and induces the readers to be engaged in the pedagogy of the book. Daumier and George Cruikshank are two of the ancestors of Prestado insofar as the path of form and texture he has chosen to tread is concerned. But otherwise, in terms of content, Pen is as postmodern as any good illustrators among the millenials in our midst. n
Hanna Pettyjohn exhibit opens on July 16 WITH By Land or By Air, Silverlens presents Thirteen Artists Award winner Hanna Pettyjohn’s first show for 2015. The 36 paintings comprise a work about the passage of time, as well as all other passages; a migratory mentality known to all who live away from home. As the perpetual traveler learns, lightness is not only more efficient, but also often essential. At 12”x16”, these paintings are distinctly smaller than any Pettyjohn has created since the concise and arid landscapes of 2011’s Few and Far Between. Here, any natural setting has melted away in the form of dripping earthen tones framed by thick, stippled white. Her subjects for this series of paintings, the self-same swaths of cloth seen in works from previous shows, such as 2013’s Bundle, The Glass Between Us and Witherland, have now been abstracted from any context of environment or collage, achieving an effect somewhere between singular focus and compartmentalization. Like flotsam adrift, each painting refers to an absent whole. Visual components of larger paintings similar to those in the upcoming show A Web of When and Where in Taipei have been plucked and arranged into isolated formations. The act of packing and unpacking is familiar to Pettyjohn, who produces her paintings primarily in America and has become adept at anticipating the logistical considerations that accompany shipping her paintings overseas for exhibition. Continuing the process of deconstruction and reconstruction that has informed so much of her past work,
Pettyjohn has fashioned a diaspora in oil on canvas—reflections dislocated by their own momentum remain connected, by land or by air. Pettyjohn’s By Land or By Air at Silverlens will be on view from July 16 to August 15.
Bernardo Pacquing at Silverlens SILVERLENS presents Half Full, Bernardo Pacquing’s latest one-man exhibition of mixed-media paintings and sculptures that delves into the materiality of everyday media. The artist distills into aesthetic encounters the sensate experience of quiet observation and work: making and growing things from the simplest of elements. Pacquing started working on this series after learning hydroponics— cultivating plants sans the presence of soil. The resulting works are abstractions of these found forms, fact products of quiet deliberation, waiting and exploration with various media.
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RAISING TOBACCO TAXES World Health Organization (WHO) Regional Director for the Western Pacific Dr. Shin Young-soo (from left), Health Secretary Dr. Janette L. Garin, Finance Undersecretary Jeremias N. Paul Jr. and WHO Prevention of Noncommunicable Diseases Director Douglas W. Bettcher show the signed report of the WHO on the Global Tobacco Epidemic 2015 during its launch in Manila on Monday. The report urged governments to raise tobacco taxes to discourage people from smoking. ALYSA SALEN
Greek PM Tsipras races to restart bailout talks
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His use of abstraction, however, eschews any semblance of fidelity to botanical forms; instead, one can perceive indirect references to flora through the wielding of form and composition. The exhibition is Pacquing’s first time to use raw, unprimed canvas as an essential component of his works: salvaging discarded and stained canvas and using them as both surface and sculptural space. His visual fascination with the rawness of surfaces, and his experimentation with mixed media are especially evident in this series, which uses materials, such as elastomeric,
resins, house paints, rugby and wood glue to create new translucent or textured layers in the process. The exhibition’s title—in a literary sense—also pertains to metaphorical ways of seeing the world: To seek dignity and merit in things, images or experiences easily dismissed and discarded, and to find contentment in these little, passing moments of being. As an ongoing series, Pacquing’s explorations of botanical abstraction beguile and speak to both mind and spirit. Half Full is on view at Silverlens (silverlensgalleries.com) until July 11.
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REEK Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras heads on Tuesday to Brussels, where he will try to use a bailout referendum victory to obtain a rescue deal with European leaders. Tsipras faces intense pressure from creditors abroad and banks at home who all demand what Greece lacks: money. As the Greek leader readied proposals to restart bailout talks, the situation was complicated by the European Central Bank’s (ECB) refusal late Monday to increase assistance for Greek banks desperately needing cash and facing imminent collapse, unless a rescue deal is reached.
A hastily called meeting of eurozone finance ministers is slated for Tuesday afternoon, and a full summit of the leaders of the 19 euro countries was to be held that evening. With Greece’s future in the European Union and its euro currency at stake, a Monday meeting between German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President François Hollande in Paris set the tone for the Brussels talks. “Time is of the essence,” Merkel said afterward. “[Greek] proposals have to be on the table this week.” Tsipras scored a bigger-thanexpected win in Sunday’s bailout
referendum, with 61 percent of voters rejecting the economic measures creditors had proposed in exchange for loans Greece needs to remain afloat, including further cuts to pensions. In a sign of compromise, Tsipras appointed a new finance minister to lead talks with creditors and replace Yanis Varoufakis, who clashed with his European counterparts. Euclid Tsakalotos, a 55-yearold economist, has appeared more willing to engage with creditors. He will be tested as soon as Tuesday, in Brussels. “I won’t hide from you that I am
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very nervous and very anxious. I am not taking over at the easiest moment in Greek history,” Tsakalotos said after being sworn in. Greek banks are running out of cash, even after the government placed limits on how much depositors can withdraw. The ECB has been providing emergency credit to the banks, but on Monday said it could not increase the amount offered because the banks’ collateral was weaker now, after the “No” vote. Nor ma l commerce is now impossible in Greece. Small businesses, lacking use of credit cards or
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HE Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) would not likely be stampeded into relaxing its grip over the policy rates just yet, no matter the confirmation of still lower inflation in June, when the rate of change in prices hit a 20-year low of 1.2 percent.
Tech firms bewail lack of enabling environment
HE government must increase investments in research and development (R&D) and put in place a tax regime that would be supportive of technology start-ups in the Philippines, local and foreign tech firms said on Tuesday. During the SlingshotMNL 2015, the official tech start-up event of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec), tech firms said an “enabling environment” for early-stage tech firms is lacking in the Philippines. “Tech start-ups are not on the list of the investment-priorities plans of the Philippines. But now we’re in talks to change the language [of government plans] to make it easier for young entrepreneurs to, for example, to manage tax issues,” said Earl Valencia, President and CEO of business accelerator IdeaSpace Foundation. Valencia said the government can also consider making investments in shared services facilities and to boost the R&D capacity of the Department of Science and Technology. Nicholas Shea, founder of StartUp Chile—a Chilean governmentbacked seed accelerator—said government cooperation is “crucial” in helping the local tech sector reach its full potential. “The government is the partner of every Filipino company; it gets 32 percent of the taxes. If the government thinks of itself as the main partner of every company, it would want firms to prosper because a third of [company revenues] will go to government,” Shea said. In a panel discussion, Shea said the Chilean government eased its visa restrictions for technology entrepreneurs from other countries to attract the best talent in the tech community. Minette Navarrete, from Kickstart Ventures, added that, in terms of flexibilities, the tax environment should also be “conducive” not just to start-ups, but to investors or venture capitals that will infuse the muchneeded funding to these firms. Navarrete also called on the government to make it easier for foreign
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D4 Wednesday, July 8, 2015
P. | | 7 DAYS A WEEK
n n
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PESO EXCHANGE RA TES n US 45.1240
n JAPAN 0.3683 n UK 70.4205 n HK 5.8200 n CHINA 7.2673 n SINGAPORE 33.4649 n AUSTRALIA 33.9202 n EU 49.8981 n SAUDI ARABIA 12.0331 Source: BSP (7 July 2015)