BIR-CAR Eyes Boost In Tax Collection Via ‘CHAT’, Remittances

Kumpiyansa ang BIR-CAR na tataas ang koleksyon ng buwis dahil sa inaasahang remittances mula sa 2025 projects.

Initial 59K Trike Drivers Receive PHP5 Thousand Cash Aid

Mahigit 59,000 drivers ang nakinabang sa cash aid ng DSWD upang makatulong sa kanilang gastusin.

DOT Reminds Tourists To Use Accredited Services, Operators In Bicol

Nagpaalala ang DOT-5 na mahalagang gumamit ng accredited tourism services lalo na ngayong Holy Week at summer season.

Faith, Flavor Shape Albayano’s Lenten Table

Nagiging sentro ng tradisyon at pananampalataya ang Lenten table ng mga Albayanos sa bawat pagdiriwang ng Holy Week.

Climate Change Reading Group Opens Doors To The Public

A local climate change reading group was launched, providing knowledge about the climate crisis relating to current catastrophes.


Climate Change Reading Group Opens Doors To The Public

21
21

How do you feel about this story?

Like
Love
Haha
Wow
Sad
Angry

Strange Weather Reading Group, a hybrid event that discusses a curated list of source materials on climate change, is now open for registration.

The series of communal readings focuses on the idea of the vernacular of the climate crisis as a strange phenomenon that forces abnormal changes, ecological imbalance, and mutations.

Topics will be extracted from biomes focusing on interconnected readings, which span from scientific journals and anthropological studies to professional opinions and artistic literature.

It will be facilitated by Filipino trans-disciplinary artist Derek Tumala, whose expertise delves in the intersections of art, science, and technology.

Strange Weather Reading Group is part of Tumala’s research-based project Tropical Climate Forensics, which centers on the Philippine climate and ecological thought. It is the ongoing online exhibition of the Museum of Contemporary Art and Design (MCAD) of the De La Salle-College of Saint Benilde.

It is a virtual world that provides an in-depth look at the anchors of the crisis in the tropics across the past, present and speculative future. It features a single crosshatch plane that holds biomes that float as seemingly independent entities.

A planet in its own right, each diorama encapsulates a timeline of climate decisions that led to the current catastrophe.

The collection includes Komunidad (Community), Tubig (Water), Gubat (Forest), Init (Heat), Bulkan (Volcanoes), Bagyo (Typhoon) and Obserbatoryo (Observatory).

Tumala’s work is supported by the British Council’s Creative Commissions for Climate Action, a global programme exploring climate change through art, science and digital technology.

Strange Weather Reading Group has sessions at 3 p.m. on Saturdays, April 29, May 27, June 10 and July 15.

For more information, visit www.mcadmanila.org.ph or follow @MCADManila on leading social media platforms.