Expat: Travel & Lifestyle Philippines

PJ Pascual: Stylin' in New York

He was the only Filipino editor at Oprah’s magazine. “It was an honor to work for O,” Peterson Jason “PJ” Pascual recalls. As an associate accessories editor, he was given the task to do market research in accessories from high to low-end labels, focusing on the latest trends. “I was the only editor allowed to go to all of Ms. Winfrey’s cover shoots in New York.”

A Thousand Steps to Renewal

“I discovered parts of my feet I never knew existed,” chuckled Father Bienvenido “Ben” Nebres. “I did not expect I would experience pain in my feet from the third to the tenth day. I was preparing for blisters, which I did not get. It took me a week to discover that the problem was that my feet had expanded and my toes were cramped inside my shoe.”

Catching the Wave with Style

Hoping to fulfill a personal need, Kage Gozun and Noelle Hilario started Brown Belly clothing back in 2004. Gozun shares, “Noelle and I met through capoeira classes and surfing and started hanging out. There and surfing and started hanging out. There talking about how hard it was for both of us to find affordable beach clothing in Manila. That kind of became the springboard for Brown Belly.”

Of Moons and Circles and Transformations

“I once stood on a beach at Real in Quezon province, watching a man build a house. There was a structure and he was slowly sifting through a pile of wood, finding bits that he could add to the house that he was building,” Australian artist Tony Twigg shares. “My pictures are made in the same way. They are an accommodation of the ideal within the possible, which I think is essentially Filipino.”

Maria Taniguchi’s Echoes

You spend a good number of minutes watching a video documentary on a large flat LCD screen showing workers chiseling pieces of marble with electric powered tools. You are seated on a long wooden bench—there are two of them, more like rectangular boxes— facing the two LCD screens positioned side by side. Behind the monitors, you can see some greenery in the pocket garden outside the floor to ceiling glass windows of the gallery in that part of the UP Vargas Museum where Maria Taniguchi’s works are on exhibit.

Russian Ballet Master in the Philippines

A group of young girls are sitting on the floor, some stretching, some putting on their toe shoes. One girl says, “Papa, just give us a step, then we’ll do it.” They call him papa as they discuss ideas on how to pose for the photo shoot. “You know, all my dancers, they call me papa,” says Russian ballet master Anatoly Panaskuyov. “It’s nice because they are my children. I love them. I love everybody. If you are working with me, if you dance with me, if you come for my training… For me, everybody is important.”

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