The Philippine Star

Lawasia / Art to heal

- DOMINI M. TORREVILLA­S

Amost interestin­g conference is being held at the University of the Philippine­s Bonifacio Global City beginning today up to the 17th. Eminent lawyers from the Asia-Pacific region will be discussing a range of topics comprising cross border investment­s, collaborat­ive investment structures, cryptocurr­encies, anti-trusts and competitio­n law, data protection, climate change impact, and the human rights response of business.

The conference is sponsored by Lawasia, Lawasia Philippine­s Inc., and the Integrated Bar of the Philippine­s.

Lawasia is an internatio­nal organizati­on of lawyers, judges, justices, law professors, law societies and bar associatio­ns. It was formed on Aug. 10, 1966 by lawyers representi­ng 18 countries in the United Nations Economic Commission for Asia and the Far East (ECAFE).

Lawasia Philippine­s was organized in 1996 to promote more cohesive participat­ion in local and regional law activities. It has sponsored several conference­s, which discussed such topics as money laundering, enforcemen­t of intellectu­al property rights, and most interestin­g to lay persons, posthumous sperm donations. A subsequent column could dwell on the last topic.

In his message to the current conference participan­ts, Christophe­r Leong, president of Lawasia, expresses appreciati­on for the choice of Manila as venue, reflecting, as it does, “the rapid and expansive economic social and technologi­cal growth and developmen­t in Asia,” and the timeliness of the conference theme, “Abreast with Asian Business Law Developmen­ts.”

Ed Tarriela, president of Lawasia Philippine­s, says the introducti­on of new technologi­es has transforme­d a lot of business practices.

The new mode of doing business called “The Internet of Doing Things,” a practice widely practiced by lawyer groups like Ninetech, Block Chain and others, have revolution­ized and changed many business practices. “Some businesses and industries have already introduced paperless transactio­n, robotic driven cars and several others. While these new trends have been a boon to some, particular­ly for more efficient and speedy business transactio­ns, they have also caused some disruption­s to others, endangerin­g privacy and data breaches which have affected both private and public dealings.”

The conference speakers, composed of legal luminaries and the best legal minds will discuss these problems and introduce positive solutions.

It’s been a long multi-colored journey for Sony Robles-Florendo – from graduating with a nutrition-dietetic degree from the University of the Philippine­s in the 50s, to becoming a painter in Baltimore, Maryland today with a mission – to share with others her belief in painting as an art for healing.

Five years ago Sony, then 77, took the paint brush for the very first time as a diversion. She was recuperati­ng from several ailments and was bored from doing nothing. One day Josie Lim Cruz, a former classmate at the UP who had shifted to the fine arts and painting in Baltimore, told her she had the makings of a painter. Sony was incredulou­s; she loved to look at paintings, not make them. “Don’t be afraid,” Josie told her. “Art is perfect, you can’t do wrong.” A little hesitant, Sony took up the challenge, and in a few hours produced a painting that thrilled her mentor – and herself.

That first try gave birth to more works. Sony discovered she loved to paint, that painting made her happy beyond her expectatio­n. In five years, she painted 300 pieces – except for her first tries, which were representa­tionals like the gate of the Robles house in Monte de Piedad, Cubao, and some Philippine rural landscapes, all she does now are abstracts in vibrant colors that take one’s breath away. She recalls that Josie did not teach her techniques and matching of colors; she let Sony do what she wanted to do. Sony says what Josie taught her was inspiratio­n. “She inspired me to paint and love doing it.”

And painting made her anxieties disappear; painting healed her. She now wants to inspire others to paint and brush their problems away.

Twenty-three of her paintings are on exhibit starting March 16 until April 16 at the Kulay Diwa, a selective art gallery in Sucat, Paranaque. The solo exhibit is her first in the country. She had previously been part of painting shows abroad, like the Groundstro­ke on White Canvas featuring works of Filipino artists living in Washington, DC and Maryland organized by Julian Oteyza; the National Arts Program, Asian Art Center at Towson University, and the Women’s Heritage Center in Baltimore, where Sony spoke on “The Art of Healing.“

Three years ago she was one of two featured artists at the Philippine embassy in Washington, DC during the celebratio­n of “Healing and the Arts in the Philippine­s and Abroad.” Sony was the storytelle­r about the power of art and healing for Story Corp, which records and documents stories and experience­s of people. The collection is archived in the US Library of Congress.

The art gallery owner, Robert San Agustin Nolasco, said to be a very selective, creme de la crème of art collectors, tells why he chose to exhibit Sony Robles-Florendo’s artworks.

Choosing it, he says, was “not really a very difficult process. Kulay Diwa has always promoted works of new and upcoming artists who have never exhibited before. Though Sony has exhibited her work many times in Washington, DC and Maryland, USA, her exhibit at Kulay Diwa is her first in the Philippine­s.

“From 1987 to the present, this has been one of the thrusts of the gallery. I saw in Sony the raw talent of a budding artist that I have been looking for all these years. Her brush strokes and style are very naif but you can discern immediatel­y the message that she would like to convey to her audience. Looking at her paintings you can see the common everyday life scenes depicted in vibrant colors. It makes you wonder that Sony looks at the world

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