ART NOOK In a bid to rejuvenate Baguio City’s creative landscapes across its 128 barangays, young artists initiate Project 2600, which empowers local artisans and transforms barangays into vibrant creative hubs just like the pilot area in Barangay Camdas. —Photo from Carlito Dar
Enterprising residents of Barangay Camdas in the City of Baguio set up shop recently at one of their least busiest streets last week to pilot a program that would help boost the creative economies of Baguio’s neighborhoods.
A cooperative group, the Baguio Arts and Crafts Collective (Bacci), had been encouraging community weavers, tattoo artists and waste recycling afficionados to sell their products along one of the streets of Barangay Camdas as part of a “social experiment” that would determine the viability of converting interior Baguio villages into community art markets.
A movement called Project 2600 headed by Arvin Molintas and a member of the cooperative, partnered with livelihood consultant Mobile-Oriented Valuable Entrepreneurship to bring incentives and benefits to Baguio artisans, many of whom still operate in the underground economy.
Project 2600 intends to develop “Creative Nooks,” or display and marketing hubs for craftsmen in the city’s 128 barangays.
Molintas said Project 2600 also engaged various sales platforms, including online trading spaces, to draw the attention of national and foreign customers to authentic artisans in smaller communities and helped the city government and DTI identify and profile the city’s artisan population.
Creative City
Baguio was recognized in 2017 as the country’s first metropolis in the World Creative Cities Network of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO).
The UN organization recognized the “folk art expressions” in the city’s silver craft, woodcarving, tattooing, and weaving.
Creative cities are defined by how much their art, culture and traditions have contributed to their economic growth.
Project 2600 planned to engage not just the village of Camdas but also the neighboring barangays of Dizon Subdivision; the East, Lower, Middle and West Quirino Hills; Pinget; and Happy Homes, or the Old Lucban.
He said a weaving community thrives in Camdas and East and West Quirino Hills, while Lower Quirino Hills “creatives” have focused on “more innovative art forms.”
Micro-entrepreneurs in Happy Homes invest in food products and other crafts; Pinget artisans produce homemade products like soaps and perfumes; and Dizon Subdivision has tailors who currently produce household rags.
“We don’t want them to settle with rags, so learning from the innovations made by fashion designer Rajo Laurel, we have asked them to generate bags from rags, so it is important we provide them with sewing machines,” he said.
With Camdas as the first community to undertake Project 2600’s “social experiment,” Princess Urduja Street will become the trading space for formerly unlicensed and home-based enterprises, Molintas said.
The stretch of road leads to the project’s first Creative Nook at Camdas’ multipurpose hall, involving members of the art group Pasakalye and other independent artists.
The arts business is volatile, so marketing areas like the Creative Nooks would be helpful for the local art trade, said Adeilada Guia, who used to produce the 10-foot-tall mandalas in 2022 when Session Road closed to traffic. (Source of Original Story: Inquirer.Net)
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