“For a long time I really didn’t know who I was,” Lek admits. “When I was younger, the school I went to was predominantly white. What I thought about how I should present myself came from that image. I dyed my hair blond and put on blue colored contacts to fit in. It was a lot of assimilation and cultural erasure. I started talking less Tagalog and less Ilocano. But art has really helped me find myself. It made me think more deeply about who I really was and what was important to me on an authentic level.”
New Outlooks Interview: Meet APAC’s Co-Executive Director, Catrece Ann Tipon
Precious Ringor’s first of two artist profiles in this collection is an interview with APAC’s Co-Executive Director, Catrece Ann Tipon. Catrece is a nurse by trade, but a dancer and photographer as an artist. Through her conversation with Precious, I hope you can get a sense of the creative stewardship that drives APAC, one that is committed to always crossing borders, in Catrece’s case finding ways to present facets of herself that are not expected in the spaces she finds herself in — as a Filipina, as an arts activist, and as a woman passionate about her art.