Community Art Archive (CAA) is a nomadic collection of documentations and publications on regional and/or community art practices. It is the concrete materialization of one of RAF’s objectives, which is to encourage scholarship or research on regional and/or community art in hope of producing publications and the building of archive for these publications and related scholarships.

The archive is a collection of print and electronic documentations. This collection may take the form of books, articles, pamphlets, brochures, curatorial essays, print and electronic publications, zines, moving images, audio recordings, and other relevant materials that are important to the preservation of knowledge and the promotion of regional and/or community art practices.

Community Art Archive Entries

Street Art Tradition

by Nomar Bayog Miano Art criticism has a tendency to couch valuations of art in a historical mold. This tendency pushes certain elements or features of artistic traditions to the margins of discourse.

On Tactics: Women, Art, and Pedagogy

by Ivy Marie Apa On Pedagogy as Art Eighteenth-century Enlightenment has enacted changes in the way, Western societies value artistic productions.

On Squatting: DIY in Third World Space

by Nomar Bayog Miano The totalizing eye imagined by the painters of earlier times lives on in our achievements. The same scopic drive haunts users of architectural productions by materializing today the utopia that yesterday was only painted. Michel de Certeau – The Practice of Everyday Life

Looking for Action: Performance, Video and Direct Art in Cebu

by Paul Grant In 1991, Alice Guillermo, the respected Manila-based art critic published a much-needed history of Cebuano art entitled Cebu: A Heritage of Art [1]. Guillermo eloquently expounded on works created in Cebu, from church ceilings to what she referred to as the then contemporary "crop" of artists. While the work is a laudatory, necessary and insightful effort, one might be struck by certain gaps, not in the history she recounts, nor in the group of artists whom she celebrates, but rather more generally in the very concept of art described: in large part what we encounter in this avowed heritage is painting. The resultant picture is of an artistic tradition touched by certain realist schools, folk art, tendencies in art brut, and a fair amount of portraiture and landscape.

Funny and Feminist: Performing the Comic Anti-Hero

Tania Smith 30 September 2016 @ Ateneo Art Gallery, Ateneo de Manila University, Quezon City 5 October 2016 @ SAFAD Lecture Theater, University of San Carlos, Cebu City 10 October 2016 @ Orange Gallery, Bacolod City