Archive for May 23rd, 2006

Eyeglasses Help Needy Balinese See Clearly

Hundreds of Balinese will have free access to clearer vision, thanks to the generous donors who recently contributed unwanted, used eyeglasses to the “I Can See Clearly” community drive.

Launched in October to collect used eyeglasses, the effort has since netted nearly 1,000 donated units to The John Fawcett Foundation/ Yayasan Kemanusiaan Indonesia (YKI). Donations were shipped, posted and hand carried by year-end visitors to Bali arriving from around the world, while local residents scoured drawers for out-of-date spectacles.

Once received, all donated eyeglasses are sorted according to usability. Of the recent donations, about 60 percent were deemed usable, a high ratio according to the foundation’s optometry workers. An optometry technician grades the lenses and standard lenses are retained. Non-standard lenses are removed and replaced with standard ones.

For poor Balinese farmers or school children in remote villages, good vision care is not an assumption - it is a luxury. YKI routinely conducts free vision checks among local schools and in mass village screenings. A surprisingly large percentage of people screened are identified as candidates for cataract surgery. An equally significant number of those screened have vision impairment, which can be aided with eyeglasses.

These patients may choose frames from the donated stock. Thus, these recently donated and processed glasses are immediately available to benefit patients - and at no cost to the recipient.

Used or unwanted eyeglasses or frames are continually accepted at designated points around the island. These points include: YKI, Lakimen Advertising, Bali Discovery Tours, BIMC, Tropical Homes, Jenggala Keramik, Bali Hotels Association, Sourcing Bali, The Works and Ary’s Warung.

Bulk shipments remain a logistical problem, but small quantity donations brought in with visitors luggage or posted have not been a problem.

For further information contact:
Yayasan Kemanusiaan Indonesia
The John Fawcett Foundation
JI. Pengembak 16
Blanjong, Sanur, Bali
Tel: +62-361-270812 Fax: +62-361-287707
Email: yki@indo.net.id
Web: www.balieye.org

Source: Tropical Living

Add comment May 23rd, 2006

Contemporary Art

Bali’s reputation as an international centre for the arts is further enhanced with the recent opening of Casa Iseabo, a gallery specializing in contemporary art, centrally located in Seminyak. The gallery focuses on artists who dare to be true to their vision in a chosen field - whether stone or wood hand-carving, glass, painting, metals or any other medium.

Casa Iseabo supports and promotes exceptionally talented local artists who wouldn’t normally have the opportunity to exhibit their work in Bali and overseas.

The gallery’s first exhibition spotlights the “primitive-modernist” art of famous Balinese stone sculptor, I Wayan Cemul. At 78 years of age, this is only his second exhibition in 50 years (in 1983 he exhibited in Australia) and the first time he has produced sculptures in white stone. His unconventional sculptures are delightfully Balinese in character and full of comical playfulness. Many of them are displayed in museums and hotels throughout Bali, as well as collected by private individuals worldwide.

CASA ISEABO
JI Laksmana 22A
Seminyak, Bali
www.casaiseabo.com

Source: Tropical Living

Add comment May 23rd, 2006


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