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Pacita Abad (1946-2004) was born in Bastern, Bataan, the Philippines. Her 30-year painting career began when she went to America to study at the graduate school. Abad learned painting at Corcoran School of Art in Washington, DC and Art Students League in New York. She lives in five continents and is active in more than 80 countries, including Guatemala, Mexico, India, Afghanistan, Yemen, Sudan, Mali, Papua New Guinea, Cambodia and Indonesia. Her early paintings were primarily figurative social and political pieces of personality and primitive masks. The other series are large pictures of underwater scenes, tropical flowers and wildlife of animals. However, Pacita's largest piece, from her canvas and paper to bark, metal, pottery, glass, her vibrant colorful abstract works - many very big canvases, and many small collages - is. . Abad has produced more than 4000 works
Pacita Abad (Filipino, 1946 - 2004) is a contemporary painter born in Bassani in the Philippines. I studied painting at Corcoran School of Art in Washington DC and Art Students League in New York. After graduating from art school, she traveled the world to paint and visited over 80 countries. Abad's journey has had a big impact on her life and art. Her paintings are very creative and experimental, and her style began in the 1970s and developed through her career. Most of her earliest picture is a social or political metaphor covering topics like starvation. Her work was later expanded to include a naturalistic theme inspired by what she saw on exotic journeys. This colorful piece of vibrant pattern is described by her as an abstract painter as her most famous habit.
The Philippines is part of the 7th century Srivijaya and the early Indian kingdom. Indian culture, language, biblical, food, faith, art, fighting spirit, and epic have had a great influence on the old Spanish Filipino still seen. They have contributed to the unique cultural integration of the Philippines. According to a source, the number of Indian communities in the Philippines in 2008 was 150,000. Most Indians in the Philippines are mainly businessmen and businessmen, belong to Cindy or Punjabi nationality. Indian people who belong to Marathi have a low population and are part of the priesthood of the Roman Catholic Diocese of the country.