cpar

Cards (49)

  • Methods
    The framework of the production. It provides the skeletal plan that will serve as the guide for the whole production. It contains the objectives, goals, material, procedures, manpower assignments, target date or finish.
  • Objectives or goals
    The expected output or result of the production. Objectives must be SMART: SPECIFIC, MEASURABLE, ATTAINABLE, RELEVANT AND TIME BOUND.
  • Title or name of production
    The name of the production, which should catch the audience's attention.
  • Target Audience
    The group that is the primary target of the production.
  • Production
    The activities that need to be done.
  • Venue or Platform
    The space used to execute the production, which can be a physical space or an online platform.
  • Date of implementation or target date to finish

    The expected date of the production's launch.
  • Materials
    The artwork presented in the production, such as the script, music, lyrics, or choreography. It is the center of the production that expresses the concept through art.
  • Machine
    The mediums, machinery, tools, or equipment used in the production. In a theater production, these are the physical materials such as stage lighting, sound systems, or any technical medium.
  • Manpower
    The team of people assigned to specific roles, such as the director, producers, choreographers, dancers, artists, or crew. They make the whole process of creating the production fun and easier to accomplish.
  • Manpower roles
    • Concept writers
    • Researchers
    • Director
    • Producers
    • Choreographers
    • Performing arts
    • Crew
  • Concept writers
    Create and write the storyline and/or script.
  • Researchers
    Research to ensure a properly contextualized and well-informed production.
  • Director
    The head of the production, the one whose vision manifests the most in the production.
  • Producers
    Produce machineries and manage the manpower.
  • Choreographers
    Produce the act and the motions in the storyline to be executed by the artists.
  • Performing arts
    Lead the roles in the storyline.
  • Crew
    The associates in the production.
  • Minimalism
    • Use of geometric shapes, limited use of color, use of everyday materials, and a focus on the object and not emotion.
  • Found Objects
    • Art that utilizes objects not conventionally designated as art supplies, and manipulates them while keeping them still recognizable as their original form.
  • Large Scale Art
    • Art created on a massive scale, often using unconventional materials, and created for public view.
  • Abaca
    Also called manila hemp, extracted from the leaf sheath around the trunk of the abaca plant, which is related to the banana plant.
  • Bamboo
    Mistakenly identified as a tree, but is actually a kind of grass, classified scientifically as a plant of the subfamily Bambusoideae of the grass family Poaceae.
  • Capiz Shells
    Abundant in the Philippines, commonly found along the coastal waters, and used for various artistic applications like windows, lanterns, and walling.
  • Cowrie Shells or Sigay
    Small shells, about 2 centimeters each, found on sandy seafloors around the Philippine islands, and used in shell jewelry and shell craft work.
  • Junk
    Discarded materials stored or hidden away inside homes or thrown in garbage bins, usually made up of plastic, wood, and metal.
  • Rattan
    A naturally renewable palm belonging to the subfamily Calamoideae of climbing palms, widely used as furniture, handicrafts, and building material, grown in plantations in Western Visayas and Mindanao.
  • Dried Leaves
    Falling off from branches of trees and plants, ranging from pale yellow to dark brown, plentiful throughout the year, used to create artistic mats or banig.
  • Availability
    The attribute of an art material's existence or presence for the artist to obtain and use.
  • Accessibility
    The attribute of an art material to be easily acquired by the artist without much effort or difficulty.
  • Affordability
    The attribute of an art material to be within the financial capacity of the artist to purchase or buy.
  • Mastery
    The artist's skill and rich knowledge of the art technique.
  • Practicality
    The art technique's functional and sensible application for the creation of the conceived artwork.
  • Appropriateness
    The art technique's suitability for the kind of art materials and to the conceived artwork.
  • Singkaban
    A type of Filipino art of shaving a bamboo for home decors and bamboo arches for weddings, mass gatherings, fiesta, and as welcome signage of a town, city, or village.
  • Embroidery
    An art of decorative stitching, especially by hand, with a long tradition in the towns of Taal and Lumban, Laguna since the arrival of the Franciscan Missionaries.
  • Puni
    A traditional art of leaf folding, an ancient art of weaving that uses elongated leaves.
  • Pastillas
    A traditional art of decorating pastillas wrappers, made from carabao's milk and sprinkled with white sugar.
  • Pagpapalayok or Potterymaking
    One of the oldest and most important art forms of Pasig, the pottery-making.
  • Atching Lillian Borromeo
    A famous food historian and expert in Pampanga.