Stable income for
artists still a challenge
Press Release
By Ramon Aboitiz Foundation Inc.
February 16, 2012
CEBU CITY – Growing
up in a family of painters, Dorby Alcoseba saw firsthand the
struggling life of an artist.
Though his heart is on
art, Alcoseba pursued a college degree in computer engineering hoping
to have a more stable life. After two years of working in an office
job, his love for the art haunted him back.
“The life of an artist
is a struggling one. But it’s what I really want. What’s important is
to go where your heart is,” Alcoseba, a fulltime painter, said in
Cebuano.
The artist is one of
the guests in the February 11 episode of Pagtuki, the official radio
program of the Ramon Aboitiz Foundation Inc. (RAFI), which is aired at
DYLA, every Saturday from 10-11 a.m.
The February 11
episode talks about the "life of an artist", as a celebration for the
National Arts month in February.
Having a father and an
uncle who are painters, Alcoseba is no stranger to canvass and
watercolors. He knew then that painting was his calling, just like his
father.
For July Carmel, a
degree holder in mass communication, she chose to work as a fulltime
dancer in a dance group rather than pursue a career in communication.
Though the pay is not
as high as a regular job, she said that what is important is she is
happy with what she is doing.
Carmel was a scholar for being a member of the university's dance
and theater group.
“Performing,
dancing...these are my passions,” she said.
Dennis “Sio” Montera,
vice-president for visual arts of the National Commission for Culture
and the Arts, said that a stable income is one of the greatest
challenges of an artist.
"Being an artist is a
lifetime commitment. It has no boundaries, no limits, and no bosses.
But it is not a regular job. Financially, it’s a challenge. Artists
need to learn how to be flexible because we all have bills to pay.
Despite that challenge, you might wonder why artists are happy...
because we are happy with our time and in what we do,” Montera said in
Cebuano.
He advised starting
artists across different fields to not give up and to pursue their
passion for the arts, despite the struggles.
Montera expressed his
hopes that the government will initiate programs to further develop
and preserve Philippine arts.
“Art should be
given importance because this reflects us as a race,” he pointed out.