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tv   Euromaxx  Deutsche Welle  June 28, 2020 8:30am-9:01am CEST

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discovered the way you. subscribe to the domain documentary on you tube. in your. opinion glass as you've never seen it before we'll show you just how these works of art are created and i'm a. i'm without a warm welcome to euro max here's what else we've got coming up today. spend the night beside the sea and in german beach sleeping shack. the italian
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artist fabio v.l.a. decorates his model sculptures with all the others. first off we dive down into a form a submarine garridge back in 1941 german occupying forces began building a gigantic structure in the french ports of both door and almost one and a half 1000000 tons of concrete we used to create says for many years it remained an abandoned i saw and a bitter reminder of the war but now this massive complex has been given a totally new function and is the setting for a spectacular light show the best sunday noon yeah. night. and co-create they come together spectacularly in bordeaux's best sound then yeah well basins of the night. the
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opening exhibition pays tributes to artists stuff clint and clearly this it is to the multimedia show can immerse themselves in their way. i see visually this is my 2nd time at the exhibition it's magical just magical. dimensions. can really immerse yourself in the zombie arts here in the dark surrounded by the lights with fabulous contrasts of color and also classical music it's just very very beautiful doesn't have its of me have dilatation of this place with a magical effect. the concrete giant evokes negative associations for many of his residence built by the germans during the occupation in world war 2 it provided space for 15 nudge submarines. now the structures being completely reinvented 12000 square meters of projection surfaces complemented by reflections
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of the water to give the interior an if airy tail light. the conversion cost over $14000000.00 euros. of weapons only the 1st time i saw this building i was just overwhelmed by its gigantic dimension its and by its unique atmosphere mysterious almost frightening at its but at the same time poetic that inspired us to do something with it right away it's the challenge lay in confronting this gargantuan almost hostile place with the aim of staging really impressive exhibitions is your nose on your. 600000 cubic metres of concrete 20 into the structure. it covers some 10 square kilometer is of water. installing sophisticated audiovisual technology here was no simple task. and if you do there are over $100.00 video projectors all of them are concealed from view and
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that was pretty complicated and they're heavy and had to be installed in the basins at different heights. now nights in music dominated venue that once stood for who and destruction a structure with a don't history has been given a bright future through. research to the submarine pens over 10 years. after world war 2 the bunker was forgotten though it was a kind of poisonous gift to the harbor and the city and had virtually no function at all it just took some time until the turn of the century before the people of bordeaux could reconcile themselves with this former submarine base. today it's a very distinctive feature of a city one of. the current exhibition
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can be seen until early next year then other artists will be highlighted. it's a feast for the senses and a concrete example of how it can give even tainted locations new perspectives. to the czech republic now where young artists are creating a new perspective on an age old cruft their home country is famed for its ornate glass craftsmanship for centuries but he and gloss has been hand turned and blown into shape by mouth handful of young manufacturers have set themselves the goal of adding a contemporary touch to the tradition with innovative designs and spectacular installations we visited a particularly ambitious glass manufacturer and took a look behind the scenes. lamps accessories clothing or works of art they all embody the versatility splendor and long history
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of bohemian glass making craftsmanship most of the manufacturers are located in the north of the czech republic among them the last that label the glass works near the small town of know people or create delicate hand-blown designs in many shapes and colors. the glass blowers love for their craft burns in their hearts. if you doesn't this mother out. you can do it because this is so hard work. and it's also emotion work and yes a lot of. the glass works were founded in 2007 the label has become internationally known for modern product design and custom made items for luxury hotels for example . some of their light objects were created in collaboration with well known designers such as zaha hadid. the camp on our brothers. and levy.
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the company's driving creative force is maxime ville chomsky working with us it's about shaping the transparency because the glasses. which is liquid in the beginning and it's becoming solid at the end so we are actually working with this with this magic. such ideas as the sculpture titled simply diver originate in his product studio in the beginning of the process there is always a in my case and then trying to model the idea in a computer from a computer take it into the 3 d. printer we are printing to model out of so many thousands of small bubbles particles then we are trying to make this kind of models in reality and then we are blowing this huge bubbles and these bubbles are fixed into the into sport by the technicians. and this is the result. the 17 metre long diverse culture made of 18000 hand-blown class fears welcomes visitors to
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a skyscraper in south korea's capital seoul. not as massive but just as impressive as the collaboration with artist wonder valley retro the principal of this installations graffiti and graffiti is always like flat put on the wall and here all try to experiment with the colors of different techniques of glass so here you see some of the parts and samples if the if i touch them they. have to be always calculated in the right sport so the challenge is to place them in the right compositions so they don't touch each other they don't break they didn't chip. the czech capital pays tribute to the significance of bohemian glass in the portending a museum it opened in 2018 and is devoted exclusively to check glass objects. glass in general is very important for chicken dusty and also for the.
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first small one factorise also found. in recent years young design talents have brought fresh ideas to bohemian glass production among them are the creative forces behind the deck and bomber design studios and lucy called the creative director of the rockies label along with last bit of course their largest and most challenging object to date can be seen in a luxury hotel on the pacific island of cyprus. 260 meter long dragons form the world's biggest chandelier it's secured against earthquakes and already a candidate for a guinness world record. i have a feeling that we achieved really pretty much so i like to be more humble and. for me i have like this so many ways. of this of the dreaming we are cooperating with amazing artists from all around the world to be out of working on music
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projects around the world. even the manufacturers headquarters and know people who are incorporates both the traditional and the modern an approach that makes dreams in glass a reality. both by day. and by night. a night out with excellent dining and fine wine doesn't sound like a visit to the church but that's exactly what is possible in belgium the michelin starred restaurant the jane in antwerp is one of the most sought after a restaurants in europe and is located in a former chapel the altar has been converted into the kitchen and bibles are replaced by menus we visited the restaurant before the lockdown and since then belgium's eateries have once again opened up for business. the chapel of a former military hospital in antwerp belgium was once used by sunday worshipers
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today it attracts lovers of fine food the jane as it's now called is a design and call made temple the chef at the 2 star restaurant is nick brill from the netherlands 5 times a week he holds a kind of fine dining church service the menu isn't the only part that's divine architects designers and artists collaborated to create a unique atmosphere. nic bell had a very particular vision of a gourmet restaurant. i like a place to be energetic i love it when you can have fine dining which is not boring i love it when you can enjoy your table moment you know have a good chat with your table partner with your wife with a group of friends doesn't matter and i think that the atmosphere of a restaurant needs to support a kind of even encouraged kind of a good vibe at the table. area is the perfect blend of ancient and ultra
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modern suspended beneath the weathered 20 meter high voltage roof is a huge in lighting meant the chandelier weighs some 800 kilos who they've run 140 light bulbs and hang some 3 meters above the ground instead of biblical scenes the windows betray martin motifs. the furniture is custom made. and where the altar used to stand you now find a glass color in there east. we don't have so much stronger it gets it's quite lose its quality but it's for accessible and i think that makes also a russian not typical a fine dining michelin star restaurant but more really cool occasion to go to of course with a budget but i think what i've also younger generations are willing to spend more quality to make real quality also means an environmentally conscious use of resources even in winter the restaurant. own roof garden supplies herb's and vegetables blossoms and eggs car
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a cafeteria to not for cooking is providers of fertilizer the cop turned kitchen scraps into nutrients which returned to the plants through the water nick grill sees it as a place the new creative ideas. that i'm trying out a new vision i'll work with but it's quite sweet so i want to contrast the flavor with fermented vids and then this really strong bag of spicy buffering watch aggressor's. brill found the inspiration for this day visiting a luxembourg restaurant he enjoyed the broad palette of flavor and could hardly wait to recreate it i'm not one to one. i'm really interested knows how to have my own signature but then tweak a little bit with having different approaches of pressures in the city in addition to show i'm testing out a little bit with this show that's from $120.00 days and now i just slice it really raw because yes it's in there and we're just going to serve it pure so i just
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follow it to be got to make a little book get together with all the readers from the room to have a little sort of book at together with a pigeon show is going to be made course made and then the vegetable shop and out of all things from the fresh it up and give a lot of. good notion which. is a main dish. his 1st signature dish was made of lobster and caviar now he thinks. next brillant is 20 person kitchen crew are open to international influences and brill is always on the lookout for new challenges. everything that i just said new is working out well so now i need to figure out what elements do i implement and i'm going to approach it a little bit more japanese flavor the social i'm going to have a. it of ginger going on a little bit of piccadilly overflow or some more freshness
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a bit of more you know what factors. when the grill is busy in the kitchen pampering the patrons of his 2 star restaurant he devotes some time to his 2nd passion me sick. he's become a sought after d.j. he regularly performs the clubs and festivals. mixing diverse elements whether on the plate or on the turntable seems to be his forte. the fact that we have a food bar the fact that we have a d.j. playing in a weekend. and the fact that we have sheedy's finals sound cloud page a lot of other restaurateurs are contacting me colleagues like nick man really need to help us out with with the music for direction can you help us out can you advice can you provide so people know that we are strong on that level. an uplifting experience for the and above all the palate in
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a former house of worship the jane is a place of pilgrimage for disciples of good faith. and if you fancied more good food content and trying out a few german favorites cooked by yours truly check out our new you tube channel showcasing the best of european cuisine here's a little taste of what you might find. damages scenes. stories. to see as. the finale amazing the best chefs with their past chips from meat dishes to eat in diets and order recipes secrets while it's a modern world europe's diversity is a smorgasbord. you know. subscribe and enjoy deep down to you from. these beach chairs
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a found all across german beaches and can usually be rented out for a few hours of relaxation it's my mother's dream to own one and she presumably spend day and night relaxing inside it and now that is possible because in addition to the already comfortable beach chez of the baltic and north sea there is now the option of a sleeping beach chair does it off to the sound of the waves a lovely little holiday. dorf on germany's baltic sea coast early in the morning no visitors are on the beach and the beach chairs are all empty except for one. this extra large model is a beach sleeping chair equipped with a folding hood for protection against the wind and the rain daniella and you spent the night in it at the water's edge. and unbelievable
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impossible to describe its great night you hit the ruler of the sea fantastic. given what's so extraordinary is that you're really in such a small space but you hear the sound of the sea the whole night. and now and then you hear a ship or something as well. the couple live near the northern german city of kiel. they arrived at the previous afternoon for their very 1st night in a beach sleeping chair. it'll be an amusing night of it. really cozy. the chair is one metre 30 why the couple have brought along everything they need for the night. they make themselves comfortable as a hush falls over the beach is as is to tell it's an ideal way to slow down.
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looking out for the one and listening to the sound. normally you have to defend your towel and your territory this is great we've got the whole beach to ourselves . now over 50 such chairs are available for rent on germany's beaches starting at $45.00 euros a night. there are a variation on the traditional german beach chair that dates back almost 140 years . this type of beach chair is said to have been invented by the imperial court. basket maker wilhelm bartman from coombes bone near rostov in 882 at the request of a customer he built the very 1st wicker beach chair. if we define most someone called elfrida fun mud sign came to my great great grandfather's workshop. he was the court master basket maker and made traditional laundry baskets and she asked him to make a chair that would shelter her from the sun and when. to this day these beach
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chairs are handmade the baltic and north sea coasts are peppered with about 100000 of them a german phenomenon. the somewhat bogey wicker where chairs have never caught on in other countries. not even after chancellor angela merkel had the visiting heads of state posed for their official photo in an extra large beach chair at the 2007 g 8 summit in hiding and on the baltic. now the sleeping variety could well become an added attraction for holiday makers in germany the demand is there. but that's still going to get people love sitting on the beach here and actually you're not allowed to spend the night on the beach but with the something chair you have official permission to sleep a. night is falling and hiking north now daniella and you're going to these are alone on the beach enjoying the sunset from their beach sleeping chair beside the sea. may seem to be old the rage now but the practice of
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art on the skin has actually existed for at least 5000 years and is believed to have originated in egypt and europe however tattooing began much later the italian sculptor fabio is revising history with his installations since 2008 he has been tattooing copies of antique sculptures contemporary body art meets classical. this kind of tattoo doesn't go under the skin because it's not done with needles but with spray guns files and steel wool. interior and know that it's in the skull to fabio the alley uses these tools to tend to his marbles that cheese was the 1st of. all gathered up a lot of for me tattooing marble is
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a way of bringing 2 worlds together. it establishes a link to the past and creates a kind of chant meant. as if you would see the ancient sculptures with new eyes and an entirely different light. because. he gets help from another tattooist understand. the age doesn't just stay on the surface part of it has to be scratched off with a sharp foil and left over pigment scraped away with steel. in your show yet you have to use the most porous marble you can find so it will absorb the ink better. if you rub a layer of ink off the surface as here pigment will sink into the 1st millimeter of the marble. and it shouldn't look as if it were painted on it so it has to look like tattoos on our skin it is sort of. the process takes time 4 days of work
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until the tattoo of the model torso is complete. obviously alice studied school children material and honed his skills in the famous polly said carolla modern technology doesn't make the world like cheesy even with the help of 4 employees it still takes him about 6 months for a complete stop. he pays attention to detail as here with a copy of the head of mike and i mention those famous david. show here is an end in taishan curvature then another indentation and then another curvature unquote you can only see and understand that if you do the work yourself but it's fine details like these that make up the beauty of an artwork. fabia the olla transforms marble into the most unexpected objects like these paper bags titled thank you and goodbye . this hand appears to be made of styrofoam the seemingly giant plastic wall plug
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is another illusion. his blackfaced is actually made of that marble and these paper planes would hardly be as. he created this fruit crates out of a single block of marble as well as a boat named and weighing $600.00 kilos fabia the made his name with such up performances. you see that he has fun working with marble. there's nothing monumental about it with him marble is a material but tempts you to grandiose deeds but he treats it playfully and casually. and now he's started to to in this day this fist made of karrar a model carries a price tag. if some 12000 fabia viale doesn't work according to custom the requirements that any tattoos will pleases him such as a japanese cherry blossom 80 fun of a mr mine a. closet the file show. i always pick a tattoo pattern that enables me to make
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a connection between the sculpture and the motif of the school. and transferring this motif to the marble and altering of so every line harmonizes with the sculpture is the hardest part of the world and a part of the more vocal. keeps perfecting his technique for his tattoos although he doesn't have a tattoo of any kind on his own skin. same for me no tattoos yet but who knows what the future holds that's all from us for today but don't forget to follow us on social media you can find more european culture and lifestyle along with all of us draw on our website d.w. dot com slash live stop i'll see you again next week.
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most summer. meanspirited dancing. at a pretty cool musical. the odd the baroque classical close to her own playing sarah willis joins the with gusto. cuts 21 of. the 30 minute response to dolly and. master some plastic waste german consumers
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carefully gather separate unsafe plastics and there is still the biggest producers of plastic waste in india rather than recycling it they explore it why can't they get it odd looking for clues in waste. germany's problem must cluster. in 75 minutes on d w. michael . she painted me. and. the
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fascination of those who look at me and. the secret of mona lisa starts july 3rd d. w. . armstrong really walk on the moon. isn't the earth really slams how strong. the government can use planes to please our. conspiracy theories spread like wildfire on the internet. on the cause of small groups who shout louder than us and profit from a lack of interest among reasonable. in the conspiracy theories can provide comfort you don't like reality create another fish in the. film about knowledge and belief trust and deception democracy of the goal of all sorts july 1st on t w. plague
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