Showing posts with label Mind Museum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mind Museum. Show all posts
Monday, February 1, 2016
Adobo Design Awards Asia now accepting entries
MANILA – Adobo Design Awards Asia (ADDA) is calling on professionals, freelancers and students to submit their entries in this year’s design competition.
Now on its seventh year, ADAA is considered one of the country’s most prestigious juried competitions for design.
The focus for the 2016 edition will be the Open Category, which calls for entries in various formats. In line with the theme “Designing for a Bold New World,” judges will be looking at designs that push the boundaries of creativity to achieve positive results.
Selected submission formats will be presented by sponsors as special awards – Mobile App for Good by Globe Telecom; T-Shirt by Bench; and Digital Short Film by Power Mac Center, among others.
The deadline for submission of entries is on February 27. More details may be found on the event’s website.
ADAA will be working with Design and Art Direction, a British educational charity. D&AD president Andy Sandoz will head the jury in this year’s competition.
Other members of the jury include Melvin Mangada, AJ Dimarucot, Dan Matutina, Jowee Alviar, Marcus and Bernie Nada, Benjamin Marasigan, Leigh Reyes, Patrick Cabral, Ric Gindap and Arnold Arre.
Together with Sandoz, the jury members will give short talks on design-related topics during the Adobo Design Series to be held on March 22 at the Mind Museum.
There will also be a Design Masterclass by New York-based Lucille Tenazas, graphic designer and associate dean of the School of Art at Parsons The New School of Design on March 31 at Axon, Green Sun.
“We are extremely proud to be chosen by D&AD to represent their activities in the region and to partner with them in presenting this year’s competition. By raising the standards of excellence, we hope to see a new dose of creativity and innovations in the work we receive from both local and international talents,” said Angel Guerrero, founder and editor-in-chief of Adobo magazine.
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Friday, February 28, 2014
How full-time YouTube users are making profit
MANILA – There are a lot of things YouTube users can do to maximize their own channels.
This is what the speakers from the popular video-hosting website YouTube said during a workshop held at the Mind Museum in Bonifacio Global City on Thursday.
The first ever Philippine YouTube Pop-Up Workshop aims to explain to YouTube users how they can effectively attract more subscribers and make a living just by uploading videos on their channels.
YouTube Philippines Content Partnerships Manger Trixie Canivel said that YouTube is a great platform for Filipinos because it is accessible to everyone.
“Anyone can be on YouTube. A lot of people get on Youtube because they want to create videos about doing stuff that they love,” she said.
Canivel cited the story of now-popular YouTuber Lloyd Cadena, whose series of video blogs online has attracted more than 175,000 subscribers. Cadena’s videos prominently tackle topics related to romance, schooling and the local lesbian, gay bisexual and transgender community, among others.
She also said that what YouTube users do not know is that they can actually make profit just by posting videos on their channels.
“What a lot of people don’t know is that actually, you can turn that [your videos] into a business by turning ads on and monetizing your videos and working with sponsors to be able to really turn it to a viable opportunity for you,” Canivel said.
An example of YouTube users who have enjoyed the monetizing feature of the website is real-life couple Jamvhille Sebastian and Paolinne Michelle Liggayu or more popularly known as “Jamich”. During the workshop, the couple admitted that during a one-month period, they are able to make a six-digit revenue out of the videos they upload.
Canivel, meanwhile, stressed that in order for YouTubers to attract more subscribers, they must work on developing their channels. For starters, YouTubers must establish authentic and unique channels which should be maintained on a regular basis. This, according to Canivel, is a sure way to build a strong fan base.
Following the workshop, a panel which consists of popular YouTube users and channel heads spoke before the members of the press. They include ABS-CBN YouTube Channel Strategies Head Dennis Lim, Jamich, PaperbugTV Channel representatives Jako de Leon and Marco Ho (more popularly known as comedian Bogart the Explorer), and Filipino-Canadian YouTube sensation Mikey Bustos.
YouTube – still a growing platform
Google Philippines Country Marketing Manager Ryan Morales claimed that with over one billion subscribers every month, YouTube is now one of the most influential online platforms in the world.
“If you fit the Internet and the denominator, [that is] almost one out of every two people. So 50% of the entire internet population watches YouTube on a monthly basis. And if you are to make YouTube a country, it will be the third largest country next to China and India,” he said.
Morales revealed that in the Philippines, YouTube is gradually gaining followers among mobile users who opt to watch videos on their mobile devices.
“But the one thing you might not know is in the Philippines is actually hype. That almost a third of YouTube’s traffic in the Philippines is through mobile devices,” he said.
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Wednesday, August 28, 2013
Mind Museum decodes Da Vinci's genius in exhibit
MANILA -- Painter, sculptor, architect, engineer, inventor, anatomist, geologist, cartographer and writer. What went on inside the mind of Leonardo da Vinci?
Plenty, it seems, if you check out “Da Vinci – The Genius,” the most comprehensive exploration of Leonardo da Vinci’s work at the Mind Museum at the Bonifacio Global City.
Created by the world renowned Grande Exhibitions Australia, the exhibition will run from September 1 to November 30.
Jason Brown, Grande Exhibitions exhibition production manager, said Da Vinci lacked neither imagination nor ingenuity as evidenced by the 200 pieces of the Italian polymath’s extraordinary works from paintings to war machines and even codices in the exhibit.
The exhibit shows full-scale interpretations of Da Vinci’s inventions including a mechanical drum, a multi-directional gun machine and an aerial screw, as well as high-quality reproductions of his Renaissance art.
“Most of Da Vinci’s artwork is too fragile to travel. These are the best examples outside of the Louvre or the museums in Krakow, Poland. You won’t find plastics in this exhibition. All the replicas are made of wood and metal that would have been available to da Vinci during his time,” he told reporters.
The exhibit features 13 themed areas of Da Vinci’s work, giving visitors an immersive experience into the mind of a genius.
In the Military Engineering section, visitors are given a glimpse into the mind of Da Vinci as a weapons maker. Some of the replicas in the exhibit include an assault ladder (the better to scale enemy walls), a multi-barrelled gun machine (the great granddaddy of the modern machine gun) and a Scitian Wagon, a nasty looking war chariot with four large scythes that would not look out of place in the Colosseum.
One highlight is a wooden replica of Da Vinci’s concept of a tank: an armored vehicle capable of moving in any direction and bristling with cannons on all sides. To move the tank, eight men inside the vehicle turned cranks attached to trundle wheels which were in turn attached to four large wheels. The Da Vinci tank is actually a dream come true for Assassin’s Creed gamers.
Other sections of the exhibit on hydraulic and aquatic and civil engineering also reveal the brilliance of Da Vinci’s intellect. In one corner of the exhibit -- like a reverse Abe Sapien suit – stands a rudimentary diving suit that would help people breath underwater. The suit is made of a watertight leather tunic reinforced by armor that would protect the air bag from being compressed in deep water. Flexible hoses with leather joints reinforced by spirals of metal drew in air from above the surface while valves regulated the air intake.
Another invention that would have made Tony Stark proud is a humanoid automaton, which would have been the world’s first robot if it was actually built. Da Vinci drew sketches of the automaton before he painted the Last Supper in 1495. It is not clear, however, whether there was an attempt to actually build the device. The robot was clad in medieval armor similar to that of a knight and was designed to make several human-like motions.
Other inventions that leave people in awe are replicas of a self-propelled car, a hammer driven by an eccentric cam and rolling ball bearings.
Da Vinci, however, wasn’t just interested in conceptualizing suits or automatons. He was also interested in flight and hydraulic engineering. The physics/flight section of the exhibit shows how Da Vinci was one of the first scientists fascinated with flight as shown in his concept of the Aerial Screw, considered as the ancestor of today’s helicopter. Meanwhile, the hydraulic and aquatic section also showed his designs for a double-hulled ship and a submarine.
In the Art section, one cannot help but be drawn to a replica of Da Vinci’s most famous work of art: The Mona Lisa. One secret revealed in the exhibition is that a blotch mark on the corner of the model’s eye is actually water damage to the varnish “most likely caused when she was on display in Napoleon’s bathroom.”
Another piece of artwork, which is presented only in animation, is The Last Supper, which is the most famous religious painting of all time.
Other works of art presented in the exhibit include The Annunciation, Virgin of the Rocks, St. Jerome and Portrait of a Musician. There is also a self-portrait of the Italian Renaissance polymath.
A separate section is also given to Leonardo’s Vitruvian Man, which illustrates the theories on proportion postulated by the Roman architect Vitruvius.
Maria Isabel Garcia, curator of the Mind Museum, said the exhibit seeks to ignite the spirit of curiosity, exploration and expression found in the life of Da Vinci.
“Throughout the three months, we want everyone to enter the exhibition hall and not just look at his works but to find him – to find Leonardo. Leonardo’s genius also now lies in sparking the creative in each of us,” she said.
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
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