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tv   Arts and Culture  Deutsche Welle  September 16, 2019 11:45pm-12:01am CEST

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teacher. and in our series 100 german must reads daniel can once measuring the world imagine the contrasting lives of 2 geniuses of the german and might not. all his life he tried to make an angular world a little more organic to do away with right angles and bend his will only to the rules of nature. was a maverick among designers crazy about cars and famous even though many of his designs never actually saw the light of day. has passed away at age 91 and that was our cue to look back on his legacy. luigi kalani was a visionary and one of germany's most eccentric designers his career spanned over half a century and he created thousands of designs and from the very beginning it was clear that everything he touched became around. we live on
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a planet and it's around us. began his career in the 1950 s. designing cars made of plastic that material inspired all his future designs aerodynamics and ergonomics have always played an important role in his visual language. for decades i tried to get european comic switchover to soft rounded functional and aerodynamic shapes i didn't succeed. but the old form tarried left 20th century international design kept barreling full speed ahead. worked in japan the us france and switzerland as well as germany. everything he made his unmistakable signature. many of his ideas were too expensive to produce they exist only as prototypes displayed in exhibitions.
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to many people kalani designs were outlandish but his inventiveness clearly knew no limits in 2003 he even tackled the world of fashion designing uniforms for the humber police force. to provide an example in this city and develop uniforms that a forceful formidable and functional spectrum fruit. in 2004 he and his studio team in calls for germany worked on a radical new idea the design of an entire city show. it's like a human body. is there when you look at this that's the head the administration the lungs are the park and sensibly the power station is in the middle of the park the thoughts. go city in southern china was one of
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colonies many castles in the sky. in fact about 70 percent of his ideas were never implemented. never stop thinking outside the box. or for years with our creator wanted to make a statement and now that he's made it it's almost tragic just how timely it is for forests is a replica of a european forest that's been erected in a football stadium in austria and the installation reminds visitors what it would be like to live in a world where trees think this only as an exhibit and it caused quite a stir. anyone expecting to see penalties at the vertices stadium in clark in fort lee in for a bit of a surprise there's not much soccer going on in this forest. for his project the swiss artist klaus lichtman was inspired by a drawing by the austrian artist max pite now called the un indeed attraction of
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nature. basically what i'm doing here is trying to produce a quite radical picture and i'm dealing with an underlying theme that max plight now also have both of us independently of each other and that's perception. how do we deal with our perceived nature we go to. visitors are not allowed to touch or into the forest look at us. and wanted to create a warning more new meant about the climate crisis it took him 6 years of planning to realize the full farce project. they work together with the swiss landscape architect in so anyhow it's nice to see . these are the difference in the cities here.
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those there are the black pines you've. been replanted 16 times. 299 trees were planted between the goalposts creating a mixed forest which has become quite rare in europe these days max partner whose artworks also feature in new york's museum of modern art is the visionary who imagined a stadium forest over 40 years ago. but is was not only wild mixed forest. if you see a story does it great that the forest is different from our on my way over here i was really scared that they had managed to capture my forest but now i'm really glad that they do it and will do it in the photo soon these get off the. wall forest is a sustainable project visitors can enjoy it and till the end of october the stadium opens tonight at night afterwards the trees will be transplanted again and will set
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down their roots not far away for the long term. amazing that trees can take so much punishment and my colleague melissa hall right has joined me in the studio welcome melissa this is an absolutely huge undertaking from the looks of it tells a bit more about it it's the largest installation in austria they've taken such as we've just seen some 300 trays between 8 and 14 meters tall some of the white as much as 6 tons and they brought them all into this stadium and that's very significant for a lot of reasons i think been for one we often count the destruction of forests into. of football stadiums we often hear this so when so many football stadiums with the forests are destroyed every minute also the fact that a football stadium is a place where people go to switch off and to relax and to not think and it's exactly there that they've put this very important installation and you know sort
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of asked the question what is our relationship to nature and also what is the why the game that's being play has really not allowing us any of that usual distraction in that in that feting this is obviously very expensive and i believe that fled to quite some controversy tell us about that it has cost a fair bit but i mean but not a penny of that money was taken from taxpayers and this is a myth that continues to persist. the most private fund it's all privately funded and there has been a lot of controversy surrounding the project littman was personally attacked into in the lead up to the opening the stadium itself was built for the european football championship in 2008 and is seen as the legacy of you haida a longtime far right leader who died later the same year there's an election coming up in the area and the right wing parties have been wrongly saying that this is funded by taxpayers money and that their football stadium has been taken over by
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a swiss artists fake news there but clearly it is difficult to kick a ball around in there while there's the entire forest standing there what is the local team actually doing yeah you're right yeah i mean obviously they come. over these trees that there has been taken over a little bit that is true and the local team has been put out the stadium was chosen because of its size and also because it's not used that much but then the local team got into the europa league so now for the next couple of weeks they're going to be playing in another stadium ok with the amazon burning and all of the forest fires that we've seen all over the world in siberia. southern france over the summer just to name a couple the timing of this seems crazy the tree has really become such a powerful symbol hasn't it the timing of this installation is just is pretty incredible really and it's also been a big surprise for lytton and as well in recent months as we've seen the climate change is very much in the news with what the future friday's 5th and many people
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many experts across the world say this is it we're in a do or die situation so yet the timing is is really critical. this this installation in a lot of ways is also stronger than partners drawing implies his drawing speaks about a dystopian vision where we have to look at a forest in a zoo like situation but we can never look at the forest in a zoo like situation because we need forests to survive in order to breathe in order to breathe ok well it definitely does is an installation that gets us to think twice about trees for forest on until the end of october going forward well as the whole right thanks very much for bringing us about background story. well no forest was too deep for i like sound of one who moderates and certainly no mountain was too high oppression aristocrat was an avid explorer and naturalist he
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was also a polymath and he was the 1st person to observe and actually describe this phenomenon of what we call human induced climate change on september the 14th he would have been 250 years old and here's a book tip to get a bit of a feel for his eccentric genius. are. you the world's top scientist but you've got fleas between your toes splitting too thick and someone has to constipation hey welcome to the 18th century. novel measuring the world is about geniuses with aches and pains and bad digestion . back then this through i think some of what homeboy was the rock star of his day the adventurer and naturalist was constantly off exploring the goal of. fending off swarms of female admirers and mosquitoes they came out of the trees the air the
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water they came from all sides filling the air with their whining stinging sucking and for every one that got squashed there were 100 more meanwhile the world's top mathematician gauss did his work at home he didn't even like to get out of bed you don't have to be a genius to know what that's like the book is about 2 big thinkers with very different approaches to the same goal measuring the world. yeah there's also a movie but you're better off with the original people who read this longer. finally just last year they were inducted into the rock n roll hall of fame and they reunited to play for the occasion america. band the cars who topped the charts back in the late 1970 s. and eighty's well sadly the cars front man ric ok sake has passed away at 75 and so
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we'll leave you with one of their best known hits drive and of course wish you all the best until we meet again next time cheers.
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i do see business with billions of euros katana and much of the rubbish used to make incomes come time here at good cause 20 undershoot plantations the starvation wages in extreme unhealthy conditions get the german manufacturers lobby claims because the units are fresher all the way down to the farmers. the closer to 30. w. . her 1st day of school in the jungle. her 1st clue listen and then stores a grand moment to run i'm joined here i'm getting on her journey back to freedom in our interactive documentary torah and the ranting returns home.
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i was 15 when i arrived here i slept with 6 people in a room. it was hard i was fair. i even got white hair. learning bit my language head not often this gets me and could help us maybe 2 in truck loads of say you want to know their story in the migrants her fighting and reliable information for margaret's. world unto itself. with its own gravitational pull. the finest musical compositions. with some mysteries terrific. lol. i don't believe that he was into them don't. i mean the.
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food you know and the joint you come off in the morning. you listen to music of your home is. the problems. start talk to berlin on t.w. you know. this is deja vu news these are our top stories. global oil prices have spiked after 2 drone attacks on saudi arabian oil facilities the weekend strike saw the world's crude oil output drop by 5 percent despite initially hinting at the possibility of military retaliation u.s. president donald trump has since stated he has no interest in going to war with the red u.s. blames tehran for the strikes. turkish president wretched tie affair no one has met with his russian.

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