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tv   Business  Deutsche Welle  July 24, 2019 6:45pm-7:01pm CEST

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concern for the environment. and in our series underground europe we visit an eerie stop to rainy a lake in southern switzerland. or the turning point that's the term that germans used to refer to the fall of the berlin wall in 1909 an event that mend the end of east germany and clear the way for the country's reunification artists who had found a way to co-exist with the communist system and opened a vast new world of possibilities at the same time however it up ended everything about their creative motivation and their lives for 30 years on an exhibition in leipsic looks at the art that was produced during this turbulent period. doris siegler doesn't see herself as someone who can see into the future but what the light sic art has painted just a year before the fall of the wall did come to pass people peacefully demonstrating with candles crossing a border bridge. as nutty it was spring 980 s.
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and i explain it to myself as a type of wish fantasy for change and also one of personal change. in this has really been awful this. siegler is one of more than a 100 artists whose work documents the years are painful the collapse of the g.d.r. the full of the wall and reunification a few of the paintings do express euphoria but more commonly loss and even pain. as well. it was a kind of amputation not from the g.d.r. of but from friends colleagues from your life the life in the west was totally different so we came from the warm nest of state support into the free market soon after the fall of the war i went to frankfurt and that was like jumping into very cold water indeed codice was all the exhibitions curator says that even today east
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german artist works value and their own role in the peaceful revolution is both politically and artistically undervalued as a scan swish it's important to remember and this was largely forgotten after 989 that in the eighty's it was a visual artist who made creative spaces in the studios in their workshops in their private gallery spaces were a group to course where it could stamp a shit sell for a couple of phone calls and most of the works here have never been on display in public before even experts in the field are amazed at what. it. is i don't know around 80 percent of the works here because they really did stay in the a tele a for. i did not expect that these dormant pieces of art would see the light of day in my lifetime but today i realized that people just wanted to look to the future and didn't want to be reminded of the pain of the past it was a new type of person that was called for and somehow i just got left behind to
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mention to good time. to work. now interest in these pieces has been sparked again she is after the fall of communism there's a treasure trove of art to rediscover. yet another treasure trove at the tate modern in london where for alias on has once again occupied the famous turbine hall 16 years after the last time he did it well the major retrospective of his work includes a ton of lego bricks a long corridor of dense fog and even a huge wall of reindeer moss from finland sun has been billed as a new model of artists who challenges how we interact with the world and now his fans can see the full range of his work. order for early our son is a superstar he put the song in a museum 2000000 people kind to see it but it still remained
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a poetic experience of. his master of lights and the elements in 200-1000 created waterfalls in new york a magical natural spectacle in the midst of the metropolis. his biggest show to date just opened at the tate modern what do we see in his own thoughts what's real what is perception and what is real about perception we are supposed to provide the answers ourselves. i'm cool shafi when i look at it i create the story in this picture i look at the picture and then i project my feelings my dreams my ideas my thoughts onto the picture and so it is sometimes a bit of work to go to the museum it's not like going to the supermarket and saying now i feel good we are here to question ourselves and to examine ourselves and to
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see ourselves within the context of the wider world. order for us on as many sources of inspiration the nature in iceland is one of the most importance . is the house or from a high school and from a means the arctic landscape extremely slow and very frightened child like my parents are icelandic as a child i was often out and about in nature my father was an artist and as a painter he was out in nature in a conventional manner and as a little child i went along often only has fans can survive. he is still drawn to it today and many of his ideas originate here the. water and lights and installation that creates a rainbow. visible and invisible there or not there at home real but only in our perception.
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random our school from 1904 day flora cried buildings everywhere. experience and participation knowledge that comes through perception of physicality and movement families to experience all of 4 of the awesome that plays with this. break from the roof of his studio. here is his laboratory and his thing tank and own machine he works together with 120 creative people craftsmen scientists and all he techs this is the only way to realize that large scale collaboration is with climate activists the un the world economic forum and partners in the private sector. provides a comprehensive overview of this multi communicator
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a particular highlights the tonneau of. disorienting spatial experience providing space for associations and encounters. suddenly it's like art is listening to you and doesn't tell you you have to do it one way or the other doesn't talk down to you it listens to you good to hear. and if we also listen it creates the attention that we need to apply to the world. and that's on in london until january 5th just in case you can manage to make the trip well speaking of paying attention to our world this week in our series. underground europe we're looking into some of the wonders lurking below the surface here in europe and this time we're in switzerland where the southern town of sally or not boasts the largest subterranean like on the continent and it's
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a cool and you really do you feel place to duck into on a hot summer day. as the only inhabitants of the biggest natural substrate in $1000.00 europe they were specially brought here to the lake under the small swiss with only a nod to maintain the water quality and also as an extra attraction for tourists. citrix regularly guards visitors of cross the like he's fascinated by the karl. although we live in a world where we're trying to get closer to nature to return to the essential things of life this is a place where we can be more at one with nature away from the outside and the excitement of. the suffering in like is 300 metres long and 20 metres wide behind the rock formation is a case that stretches for over a kilometer but it's not accessible to. the large projection salute to an old
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legend which said the goals of saleyards would come here to see the faces of the future husbands reflected in the now the like attracts some $80000.00 visitors a year just see things have been strengthened to prevent pieces of rock forming on the tourists. the case has a constant temperature of 15 degrees celsius perfect for storing wine this one is from local village not christoph but 3 say because opinion at 70 meters apart for like an ideal location. the locals here were always aware of this water filled but it was only in the 1940 s. that it may. i'm more accessible following the life. of a sudden sleepy village all the anon the track to the songs on the familia
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attention. every year around a dozen concerts are held in the cave tonight there are about $100.00 people in the audience on stage the 2 folk country and blues from. the musicians have toured the world but they've never played on such an unusual stage before. it's magical there's an incredible silence you know and i think that the odium feels it so there was silence in some pieces and that changed our way of playing it left the spaces if we could play with the silence as well and
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that was impressive. simplicity. and finally we can't sign off without the news that the orleans has lost another musical legend as art neville passed away on monday at age 81 a celebrated funk musician behind the meters and the neville brothers he was nicknamed pop funk and he had major successes with his brothers in the late eighty's and ninety's with albums like yellow moon for brothers keeper and so we'll leave you with a track from that last one here it's the neville brothers performance of falling rain all the best year from berlin. a song to be. played the same.
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cold blood lead to the fall of. long player with a bomb or a. bomb lead player or bomb. the flame.
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her 1st day at school in the jungle. first camillus of the. band doris crane the moment arrives to. join the ring a tank on her journey back to freedom. in our interest in such an intrigue. story on bringing 10 returns home on d w dot com from its hangs. above. raring to meet. the but not everyone who loves books has to go insane. d.w. literature list 100 german must reads. catholic. church fully. don't move soon to be nice to be
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a good. match. discoverable. subscribe to the documentary to. the quiet melody resume smuggle lighten the mood. ready and do it soon. resonate with it it's all. the mind and the music. we took from 1st 2019 from september 6th to september 29th.
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this is deja vu news live from berlin forrest johns it takes over as britain's new prime minister and in his maiden speech at 10 downing street he insists that he will take these u.k. out of the e.u. in less than 100 days deal or no deal well that's our correspondent in london if you can deliver on those promises also coming up a dramatic day unfolding on capitol hill robert mueller delivers his long awaited testimony on russian interference in the 26000 election.

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