tv Arts and Culture Deutsche Welle July 27, 2019 1:45am-2:00am CEST
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and in our series underground europe we're off to denmark to see a world war 2 bunker that's been brilliantly converted into a museum. quentin tarantino is back with once upon a time in hollywood which opens in u.s. cinemas this weekend and once again the maverick filmmaker who's best known for his penchant for over the top violence has teamed up with 2 all of the industry's biggest stars les in order to caprio and brad pitt who are clearly having the time of their lives. the 9 film from quentin tarantino. you kept you as a favorite t.v. cowboy branch of his stumps man but he's officially what he. has been our characters are kind of 2 sides of the same coin he's my he's my stunt double yet we developed this very unique relationship that helps us navigate our own
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survival. from the brilliant mind of quick turn to you know to put these all these different pieces together well it's very exciting and it's like one that i've been waiting a long time to make and now i could've made it along the way and i'm making it now and it seems kind of perfect for like. you know wrapping up a career in hollywood to make a movie about hollywood because kind of lovelace to my right is the last series lead and jake cahill unself rick dalton and to my left is rick start double cliff booth once upon a time in hollywood is the movie making a movie. required to do a lot of dangerous. cliff years meant. is that how you describe your job with kerry and his load. right. these $969.00 everything is changing and the longtime partners struggling to find their place. we get into
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a fight i accidently killed. anybody accidentally kills anybody in a fight to go to jail it's called manslaughter the movie already won the claim in cannes earlier this year and it's classic terence who you know. the beautiful thing about this one it seems to be a confluence of all these films there's a little bit of the an ocular from jackie brown to. jane doe it's all. it seems like accumulation of everything it's pretty wonderful. and as you know there's also a joke son and undercurrents of. every scene in my own language. thank you the movie about the son said some of hollywood's golden age in an encounter with a murderous manson family. well it's not
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everyone who can look back on a 40 year career and a body of work that defies categorisation japanese swiss artist lake to has had not one but 2 retrospectives devoted to her this year one in tokyo and one currently on in basel and before we talk to her right here in the studio let's have a quick look at her work. drawings paintings and sculptures show figures floating in landscapes or dissolving. mining female figures. or delicate war seeing. their fertility. as works express a deep sadness. the japanese swiss artist says she's interested in exploring vulnerability and weakness as characteristics. categories or pigeon holes especially those that are in as an artist and as a human being. $29000.00 is an especially successful year for the painter
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graphic artist and song. at the beginning of the year a retrospective exhibition at the renowned national art center of tokyo provided a comprehensive overview of her 4 decade career the current show at the equally groundbreaking current museum basle toward new season shows a considerable selection of her work. career got off to a different start back home in japan they were initially studied spanish and emigrated to spain in the early seventy's at the age of 21 she then started painting in seville a few years later a summer job took her to switzerland where she appreciated the greater freedom women enjoyed in comparison to japan or spain through marriage she obtained a swiss passport which she continues. to this day. germany for many years
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now 67. has studio. and it's a great pleasure to welcome to our studio here this evening in the flesh thank you so much for coming in like 02 big solo exhibitions this year one in tokyo one in basel as we just saw there what's it like to see 40 years of your life's work gathered and juxtaposed together like this. it was amazing for me to see them once again because usually i don't see is a you know i walked away yeah but you know so you know collectors if it's a purchase if so museum on i don't see them so it wasn't like i was meeting. their children or how much or their income level to be and also at the same time going back to tokyo you know this is very emotional for me yeah
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because i left the 40 years ago my country and it's means a lot. that's an interesting point you 1st came to europe via spain and then went to switzerland and of course finally settled in germany and you live here in berlin now what was it about this german speaking realm that made you decide this was a place where you could thrive and never planned it and never thought as i could live in the country like so code but. right now it's so hard as an exception so yes i can work we can work and maybe enjoys a life somewhere. you know i appreciate a lot being here and having friends of course but obviously there were cultural parallels i think between germany and japan that search that inspired you in the piece an 82 percent that and i didn't see that before and i was in spain i saw too you know i'm a more connected and the more close to spain and italy and to france culture
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here is exactly the male culture image mediterranean mediterranean culture but at the same time as you're right we have a similar history the 2nd the war the war and so restore in the country and the economy so we have a kind of a pattern situation or a lot of very bad health quickly something about your creative process how do you decide. add which medium it is that you wanted use you do so much whether you want to approach your tea for instance in 2 dimensions or 3 dimensions why i started the 8 is a menu with the drawings it was kind of a base and the zen slowly slowly i started to be a painter and being a painter and so long way i think and i says that to me because i'm never be happy about i'm doing as i'm singing always one day i would be the best painter.
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one day obviously one always strives for perfection not women and children interesting lee also memories and dreams those are big themes for you and you've said that art is less of an intellectual pursuit and something that you or something that you just like to let it happen. are you often surprised at what comes out yes this is the most beautiful thing because if you do it just for you plan or want to have an idea i think idea is just. one possibility but we have encounters encounters of more important to not only with somebody else but also at most where the nature of culture of things and also you know reading a book or many things and so at the sinks is that of and i'm a working as a studio. and counter was made a year and something happens it's. i'm the most happy
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person in this moment yeah. something literally rising out of you but i think you something unknown exactly yes the thrill of the unknown wolf thank you very much for coming in to see a. retrospective toward new seize on until september 1st thanks so much for joining . us on next we are on the west coast of denmark near they where near the end of 1944 german forces started to build their largest bunker complex yet near the town of blue avant and the project was never completed and because it was so difficult to destroy it the danes converted it into a museum most of which is underneath the existing topography. it's only when you get up close that you get a glimpse of the interior of this group and on. the structure which is made
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glass concrete and steel is mostly underground. it's part of the chip it's museum and was designed by the renowned danish architects office ingles. you are so young in the western city of the marks of the wind is always blowing very strong to be a tucked into the dunes it's a sure it was like. in the middle of the sometimes violent nature of where the modern. then you have building is connected to the original museum which is located in a world war 2. the huge facility was built by the germans in 1944 but it was never completed the exhibition inside the bunker explains. has been conceived as the antithesis of the bunker so the bunker. this sort of
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concrete hermetic object rejecting the surroundings whereas the museum is an open area and welcoming meeting place in the heart of the dunes. the new a part of the museum opened in 2017 visitors can choose among 3 interactive exhibitions one of them is dedicated to anbar. this one takes us back in time during the last ice age the tsunami flooded the north sea coast submerging barge parts of. the museum to pick some more recent history to. pick submissions on the on usual location have made to fit a huge hit with this is fierce. oh before we go just a heads up for art's 21 that i meet the artist special featuring vietnamese
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canadian author came to a who was only 10 when she left vietnam her family managed to settle in canada and she is now the author of 3 highly successful novels and sabina kids about who will be meeting had met with her in montreal well that's coming up this weekend hope you can catch it that's all for today until next time all the best and.
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we take a look at the 2nd generation range rover evoque. one who's the best selling this to be all about. fancy a tiny car the micro lino might be just what you're after. you could revolutionize urban traffic. trying to get 30 minutes on d. w. . check it check out germany's amanda many links. leans on someone who knows. too little songs on the ship me in which this region with his trouble reports about brandenburg the best. castles and people i am following in his footsteps. brandenburg this vacation land. 90.
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that top itself is in danger. but there is a glimmer. the biggest companies are uniting to create global. possibility. not only animals will be sent. to. the lions share. of the conservation of. libya's coast guard and red crescent have recovered dozens of bodies of europe found migrants are perished at sea search operations continue after up to $150.00 people went missing when their boats capsized in the mediterranean scores of others were rescued by the libyan coast guard.
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