Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Eduardo Masferré (April 18, 1909 – June 24, 1995) was a Filipino-Catalan photographer who made important documentary reports about the lifestyle of native people in the region of the Cordillera in the Philippines at the middle of 20th century. [1] He is regarded as the Father of Philippine photography. [2]
National Association of Pastoral Musicians (NPM) National Federation of Music Clubs (NFMC) National Music Publishers Association (NMPA) Philippine Association of the Record Industry (PARI) PRS for Music (PRSM) Recording Artists' Coalition (RAC) Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) Recording Industry Association of Japan (RIAJ)
The Cultural Center owns and operates several performance venues in the Cultural Center of the Philippines Complex located in the reclaimed area shared between Pasay and Manila known as Bay City. Its flagship venue is the Tanghalang Pambansa (National Theater) which also houses its principal offices. The building contains three performing arts ...
The National Commission for Culture and the Arts of the Philippines (NCCA; Filipino: Pambansang Komisyon para sa Kultura at mga Sining, Cebuano: Nasodnong Komisyon alang sa Budaya ug mga Arte) is the official government agency for culture in the Philippines. It is the overall policy making body, coordinating, and grants giving agency for the ...
Upon his return in Barcelona, Laureano had been cited at the Exposicion National de Industrias Artisticas and was recognized by papers like La Solidaridad and La Vanguardia. [4] He had two brothers and a sister. [4] Among Laureano's works include the Recuerdos de Filipinas (Memories of the Philippines), a photography book published in 1895 in ...
1 July 2012: The Philippine Madrigal Singers won the Brand Laureate Premier Award (as World's Best Choral Ensemble) from the Asia Pacific Brands Foundation. [12] 7 September 2013: The Madrigal Singers held a joint concert with the Swingle Singers, a 5-time Grammy Award winning vocal group, at the Cultural Center of the Philippines.
The pioneers of photography in the Philippines were Western photographers, mostly from Europe.The practice of taking photographs and the opening of the first photo studios in Spanish Philippines, from the 1840s to the 1890s, were driven by the following reasons: photographs were used as a medium of news and information about the colony, as a tool for tourism, as an fork anthropology, as a ...
In the early 1950s, music piracy started to grow in the Philippines. So, in 1952, major recording companies organized the first recording industry association in the country called the Record Industry Association of the Philippines (RIAP). [1] The association was mostly composed of foreign licensees. [2]