Sunday, April 8, 2012

TICKETS ON SALE NOW! http://tagabanua.eventbrite.com/

Photo Credit: Ernesto Andrade

TAGABANUA: A PHILIPPINE DANCE PROJECT BY JAY LOYOLA
MAY 5, 2012 7:30PM DOORS OPEN 8:00PM SHOW

$25 GENERAL SEATING. RESERVED SEATING ALSO AVAILABLE. PLEASE CONTACT HERNA CRUZ-LOUIE AT (510) 637-0461 FOR INFORMATION. SEATING IS LIMITED.

OAKLAND ASIAN CULTURAL CENTER
388 NINTH STREET, SUITE 290
2ND FL OF THE PACIFIC RENAISSANCE PLAZA
OAKLAND, CA


The Oakland Asian Cultural Center (OACC), in conjunction with the American Center of Philippine Arts (ACPA), is proud to announce the U.S. premiere of Tagabanua (tah-gah-BAhN-wah) by renowned folkloric choreographer Jay Loyola on Saturday, May 5, 2012 at 8pm at OACC. This is the inaugural piece of ACPA’s new Emerging Works program.

Meaning “from the village,” Tagabanua narrates the life journey of a man struggling with the responsibilities he carries in his community and the personal betrayal it brings. Set against the backdrop of a village on the Philippine island of Palawan, the work integrates indigenous rhythms, beats, and chants with performances by homegrown Bay Area dance artists.

The U.S. premiere of Tagabanua features local music and dance artists – Jonathan Mercado, Brian Batugo, Maritoni Medrano, Mariflor Medrano, Gemma Calderon, Henry Lao, Rey Arcilla, Ladislao Arellano, Kimberly Requesto, Herna Cruz-Louie, Eric Solano and Nick Obando. Each of these artists performs with various Philippine folk dance companies across the Bay Area. Tagabanua is made possible through the support of the East Bay Community Foundation – Fund for the Arts, the Zellerbach Family Foundation, the Philippine Consulate General of San Francisco, Gabay ng Sayaw, and the Oakland Asian Cultural Center.

For more information on Tagabanua, please visit the American Center of Philippine Arts website: http://philippinearts.org/tagabanua.htm

Saturday, October 8, 2011

New TAGABANUA Project audition date has been confirmed.

Please submit dance portfolios and head shots to herna@oacc.cc by Friday, October 28, 2011. Dancers ages 17+, of multi-ethnic origin with advanced experience in Philippine dance and/or other dance technique are welcome!

TAGABANUA: A PHILIPPINE DANCE PROJECT BY JAY LOYOLA
AUDITION DAY

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2011
5:00PM-9:30PM

5:00PM - Audition Prep: led by Master Artist Jay Loyola and by Tiffany Yee (formally trained by the San Francisco Ballet and current performing artist with Requisitedance.)

7:30PM - Auditions: Audition panelists will be comprised of selected dance practitioners of various disciplines.

OAKLAND ASIAN CULTURAL CENTER
388 9TH STREET, SUITE 290 (2ND FL OF RENAISSANCE PLAZA)
OAKLAND, CA 94607

PARKING: Street parking is metered on Saturdays until 6:00pm, and free after 6:00pm. Paid parking is also available in the Renaissance Plaza parking garage. Entrance to the Garage is located on Franklin between 9th and 11th Streets, or on Webster between 9th and 11th Streets. The parking fee is $2 per hour with a maximum daily rate of $24. There are no special weekend rates or validation available. In the Plaza, take the elevator to the 2nd floor. OACC is the first suite on the left.There are also various parking lots and garages in the area.

PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION: Oakland Asian Cultural Center (OACC) is accessible via BART. The closest BART station is 12th Street Station at Broadway in Oakland. Walk south on Broadway to 11th Street and turn left. Continue on 11th Street and turn right on Franklin to enter the Pacific Renaissance Plaza.

For updates on this dance project, please visit OACC online at http://www.oacc.cc/supportus/donations/tagabanua.html or contact Herna Cruz-Louie, Programs Manager at herna@oacc.cc or (510) 637-0461 for more information.

TAGABANUA is co-sponsored by Oakland Asian Cultural Center and American Center of Philippine Arts, and is supported by individual donors and the East Bay Community Foundation.

Sunday, September 18, 2011

Jay Loyola about Project: TAGABANUA

American Center for Philippine Arts


Artistic Director & Co-Founder - Jay Loyola

For almost two decades, Jay Loyola has created dance pieces performed by cultural groups in the Philippines, Asia and Europe. His dance method have garnered respect form his peers as he emerged as the Bay Area's ingenious dance practitioner with choreographies motivated through immersions in Philippine indigenous tribes. He has significantly contributed to Bay Area's multicultural landscape by performances at major venues such as Palace of Fine Arts, and Cowell Theater as well as festival events like San Francisco Ethnic Festival, Pistahan Festival, and Filipino-American Arts Exposition that have been attended in by more than 150,000 audiences who yearn to experience a genuine Philippine dance experience.
“Wawa Jay” as his students call him, spent the peak of his youth exploring the creative and colorful world of dance through a series of immersions to tribal communities, dance competitions and international dance festivals providing him with the opportunity and experience to become a seasoned dancer, choreographer, and mentor of Philippine dances.
His exposure to various dance conferences, competitions, and festivals in Russia, France, Poland, Spain, Netherlands, Italy, Switzerland, England, Japan, Austria, Korea, Singapore, Monaco, and China groomed his versatility that is reflected in the unique and creative dance interpretations he produced. Loyola trained under Hazel Sabas, Kristin Jackson, Miki Sato, Hans Christian Wagner, Tim Feldman, Agnes Locsin, Dr. Stephanie Burridge, and the Philippine National Artist for Dance: Lucrecia Reyes- Urtula. Loyola served as Junior Assistant Dance Director of the Bayanihan Philippine National Folk Dance Company. He was awarded “Young Alumni Achiever in Arts and Humanities” by Holy Trinity College. He also worked with New York's Elisa Monte and David Brown Dance in 1998 Philippine International Dance Festival and World Folklore Festival under the auspices of Conseil International des Organisations de Festivals de Folklore et d'Arts Traditionnels in Manila.
Loyola has been invited to conduct dance workshops to various Filipino dance companies in the Philippines as well as resource person for Philippine dances for international festival and conferences like Singapore Arts Festival; Kaliningrad International Dance Festival in Russia, Konnichiwa Festival in Tokyo and Macau Arts Festival in China. Loyola choreographed a total of more than thirty original dance pieces. Some of them are based on his research on Palawan indigenous communities like Diwata kat Dibuwat (a Tagbanua healing ritual), Sinaraksakan (a Palao'an wedding ceremony), Saàd (Batak's migration triumphal), and Tagabanua (a full length dance narrative set in the rich backdrop of a Tagbanua community in Palawan) which premiered at the Cultural Center of the Philippines, the United States and Europe. Loyola together with Rudi Soriano had the honor to present two World Premiere pieces particularly for San Francisco Ethnic Dance Festival. His collaborative piece Kadayawan was nominated in the Isadora Duncan Awards for Dance in 2008.
Loyola is the Founder Emeritus of Palawan Dance Theater (PDT) - the premier dance company of Palawan in the Philippines; one of the recognized dance companies in the Southern Tagalog Region, known for their world class dance dexterity and discipline. PDT has performed before audiences in North America, Singapore, Thailand, Italy, Germany, and Spain.
Loyola has also done extensive research and documentation on the rituals and traditions of the tribal people of Palawan and has become an adopted Tagbanua in the highlands of Palawan in the Philippines. These documentations have challenged his creative acumen in transforming “what used to be unknown” through dance. Loyola's passion for dance kept him vigorous and enthusiastic in sharing these art forms to young Filipinos in all the countries he has visited. He continues to work untiringly towards the refinement of dance into its highest disciplined form as well as preservation of Philippine traditional dance forms by conducting classes to Filipino-American youth.
Serving American Center of Philippine Arts is a great opportunity for Jay Loyola to develop performing artists and continue its mission to increase positive reception of Philippine cultural traditions using neo-ethnic dance form. Loyola's participation in Oakland Asian Cultural Center residency program will take his works to the next level of development reaching a more diverse audience. In furtherance, while the immediate impact will be felt by the artists themselves, the cultural significance of this is the trans-generational transfer of Philippine traditions and tremendously has a widening effect on the Asian community as his admiration to take pride with Asian's common heritage to reassert universal ties as a people. Jay Loyola recognizes the importance of actively engaging youth thus creating new generations of culturally invested community members and for young people of Philippine heritage within a multicultural population who desire a deeper connection to their roots. Loyola has a purpose to meet this cultural longing. Today's youth move through educational system, with high school, college and beyond, they will inherently bring along a strong sense of heritage that can be shared with others.
Wawa Jay - Philippine dance practitioner, cultural worker and Artistic Director of American Center of Philippine Arts.