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tv   Arts and Culture  Deutsche Welle  February 8, 2020 3:02am-3:16am CET

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hello very warm welcome to news from the world and culture and here's what's coming up today. in tents and intimate. builds up a close relationship with the subjects of her photos. and the optical illusions created by the artist says she. means you get to for the price of one. now interior design can make all the difference to a room giving it a great. style and also make a difference to how we react and feel in a room a great interior designer can transform a hotel room an office space or a bar perhaps stephanie designs are a wonderful example of this and she's just being rewarded for her efforts with the
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job and design. period designer stephanie tatton likes to mix things out she has self is described her taste as eclectic. because. i see her room as a stage and. what we're doing is setting the scene. talking to set the scene in private homes restaurants and hotels from munich to mediocre she has a penchant for mid century modern clean lines geometric shapes and playful touches she gave the techies a bar a new nick a look that's vintage james and. i knew i wanted to shock carpet which of course is very unusual for a bar but that was the atmosphere i was after i wanted it to feel like you're home in your own living room with the wood paneling and ceiling evoking a cigar box. in. the sort of place where you simply
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into a plush sofa and ordering your 3rd whisky before you know it unfortunately the bar didn't last neighbors complained about the noise at the tetley's a grill which the designer cones with her husband there's also no shortage of plush velvet but here it set off against heavy concrete tables. this is a custom made concrete table we contrast it was really lovely fabric textile and concrete in harmony and contrast thing was a very striking wallpaper when you're working in restaurants you can go a bit more overboard than you know home and picking. as i didn't i if you want to polarize. the horse likes an eye catching centerpiece at the tate is a restaurant that's an ultra modern chandelier designed by david chipperfield. is a wonderfully you know if he's fabulous sound and here we have in a central position over the bar is the highlight of the theories out if you touch it this happens the lances shift here today unless. this
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very exclusive opticians is hidden away below munich's elegant maximilian symbol of . death in that store used to be a night to have very special venue transforming a nightclub into not titian's was pretty challenging not least the fact it's a basement like this once in collapsing. the glass is a contained in a sweeping smooth closet system. that displayed behind tented glass illuminated the best effect. the centerpiece here is a table designed by jim or a milan. complimented by the color and pattern of the wall tiles the overall effect is one of art full artlessness.
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tartan wholesale faces an upscale shopping neighborhood right now she has 15 projects on the go including designing a range of design fittings and furniture. in her signature riot of patton one color . and if the title is to step up to tatton hospital is colorful a riot of color and bold color combinations. latest restaurant project is the. in uni the deep blue canopy at the entrance is a nod to a filmmaker who's also known for a distinctive a static. we wanted to use a lot of parts of. and that got us thinking about giving the interior the look of a wes anderson film this in and. simple but complex sophisticated but
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fun a design that's classic stephanie tartan horst. the belgian photographer because the reporters pictures tell great stories but she came to the attention of the elite photo agency magnum in 2016 became the youngest ever photographer to be accepted books now she has a own solo exhibition and does hold off showing people in the every day live off the very intimate fly on the wall type. do you still. close next. to just how close can photography get to a person is there a way to close the gap between the person portrayed and the photographer be could a portrait seeks answers to these questions in various ways the relationship by half it to people i photographed superimportant and i don't know. as an
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answer some questions i have or like problems i have that this like every project it starts from. yeah from like a conflict in my mind to the top 10 starts with a chance encounter like that with a long term model i got the 2 happy working together for 2 years. i was in paris for a project so there was this guy standing being the bouncer of a strip club and he invited me to go ahead and i got our ass dancing there. and this is how i met her we were very close immediately and i told her i was a photographer and i photographed her. very happy because i love to do something clicked this makes them feel shocking provocative something that maybe pushes boundaries in terms of sexuality because i like this concept.
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i started to as this identity as a stripper as a sex worker and i started to project a lot of that in our collaboration is a bit she feels that she pushed me towards that because and this is a man this size and this will help me. so what about the rest on civility of the photographer toward substract he could deporter and says in the exhibit for the 1st time with a letter. here i got out i want to go to a project it's become too close and i feel guilty and interesting question that is never really asked and photography i think and that also quite important and not
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our journey was what if i stop taking pictures what will happen and then this is the last thing we kind of explored and we're still doing. a lot of questions arise in a project about michael who is bipolar became met him in portland and he invited her into his home. i am told in his home and his house was full of pictures and. she wanted to share his life obviously michael gave her 2 suitcases full of personal items then a 3rd one she sent him postcards to which she never replied later on she found out that he had sent a letter calling for help she went back to portland but michael had disappeared without a trace. so i decided to. like to to try to find him and try to understand his life detective search for miko followed its own path and through the work beacon deporter looks francis the pictures look for
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close notes and they often say more about what can't be seen not the person in front of the camera but the one behind. the spanish artist's. owes his success to sweets as a child he always used to eat as candy just so he could get the flip image card that went with it a card where the picture changes when you tip it back and forth if you know what i mean when he became an artist he decided to have a go at doing this with his paintings it took about a long time to figure out how to do it and now he's revealed his secret to. a woman. suddenly cries out as if in pain a smiling girl. becomes a frowning boy. to fully appreciate sounds he could then as work the viewer has to look at them from different angles the spanish painter loves double meanings.
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when i was little we had these cards with flip images and they gave me the idea for my technique for oil painting is a bit different and always surprises the viewers of. the painting a studio is in his house in a small that it's near to ren and catalonia. he's a self-taught artist and is currently working on a portrait of a girl who changes into an old woman but as the perspective of the feeling changes . he asks friends neighbors and family to serve as models sasha catania starts with a photograph to paint from it takes him about a month to complete her work. how does he create the illusion of the transformation is not i use a special painting paste to make the relief for my foot the image. his secret tool
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and i sing back. to surfaces to make the 2 images. one on this side one on the other side. then he makes a sketch. as the oil paints at a constant angle of $45.00 degrees to the canvas. from here i see one image otherwise it's the same as painting on a flat surface. you have to get used to the lines being broken and not continuous on the canvas. his words hang in private collections around the world now museums have begun to purchase some of this. marilyn monroe changes into. it einstein. said she could do you know his plans to p. painting his optical illusions in future but his latest idea is all painting for
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viewing with 3 d. glasses. but i leave you with this year's. festival a national institution in italy and actually the inspiration for the eurovision song contest this festival discovers new talents but also some of the greats of the italian music scene take to the stage like here. with their classic hits babar from now. you. can. lead to. a.
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fake hair and real story. where i come from a lot of women who like me have fake hair sometimes the hair style takes up to 2 days it's a lot of time that needs to be filled so people at the salon talk about what's happening in their lives so i became a journalist to be a storyteller and i always want to find those real authentic stories from everyday people who have something to share. with all the time i spend at the salon i know i'm good quality hair when i see it's and from a good story when i hear it. my name is elizabeth shaw and i work at steve.

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