tv Inas Nacht Deutsche Welle December 19, 2021 6:00am-7:01am CET
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monday to friday on d. w. how long does it ah, or an eternity? time it can be measured precisely, and yet each person it seems, is it differently as if there are different forms of type type phenomena. a dimension and illusion about time starts december 31st on d, w. mm. mm. ah, this is d w news, and these are our top stories. the authors be, that's prime minister mark we're to, has announced i had lockdown in the netherlands. i have a christmas little because of the fast spreading, omicron karone of ours period boss. when a chop was filled, city straight ahead of the announcement,
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all non essential shops are to be closed as our bars, restaurants, schools, and cultural facilities restrictions are planned until at least the 14th of january . you can break it minister, david frost has resigned due to disillusionment. with prime minister barak johnson's government, it comes after a disastrous wake for the prime minister, with a bi election to faith and rebellion from his own in pace over the introduction of additional coven restrictions. hong kong is holding legislative elections where only candidates deemed as patriots by a government committee are allowed to run. it's the 1st election since by jing imposed sweeping reforms on the territory earlier this year in an attempt to crack down on a pro democracy movement. this is d w. news from berlin. you can get a lot more news at our website to be found at
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d. w dot com ah hold. ah. hi there, i'm over it to myself. saxony, secret capital, at least that's what the people here liked colin. i'll be taking a trip back in time to see what germany's oldest castle used to be like. i'm also in research for fine china, so i'll be visiting famous, my son partial in my church. and of course, are we checking out the highlight of this useful city near drayton along the way. so let's go with
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wild alex. truly majestic. i'm going to go and take a closer look. mm. surrounded by vineyards, the city of mason is home to just under 30000 people. even from afar, albrecht burke castle and the cathedral. catch your eye. both sit on a hill high above the river elder. i drive through the medieval gate house. ready for my 1st appointment. alber expert castle is a masterpiece of late gothic architecture. in hello contact. become welcome to mason. i'll break spoke castle in terms of history
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. this is the most significant place in the state of saxony. this story here began in the year 929, king henry, the 1st germany captured this hill and built a fortress. in the course of history, the building was developed further. you were standing in germany's 1st castle, built in 1471 by arnold from vest, fallen out from the online twin was trying to help me imagine what castle life was . light back then move him here shows me the his to pat. it's an interactive tablet that allows me to step back into the 15th century with the help of augmented reality and historical reconstructions and 3 d life. this magnificent room was once the banqueting hall in the banqueting hall was where the feasts were served for she says, and where the royal household, $89.00 on the histo pad. recreate that we can see precisely,
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we know of what they 8 is in us with you. that's right. and in what order the various courses were eaten, it's all been researched. so you can see the various specialties of the time squirrel was particular highlight ice ones. oh why? oh, it helps, and i've never tried it, so i couldn't tell you how many meter we had upper floor to learn about. another chapter in the castles history august as the strong elector of saxony commissioned alchemist johan friedrich. but come to create pure gold for it cut didn't quite managed to do that, but he did help to invent what was known at the time as white gold european porcelain. and in 1710, the castle was transformed into europe's 1st porcelain manufacturer.
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wow, i can actually see exactly what it used to look like here in the manufacturer where they all worked for the next a 153 years. albert spurred casso was basically a factory, the production site of the famous mice and porcelain and val, why was the castle used to manufacture the porcelain? is easier. we can see the outbreak spoke castle on top of the fortresses hill. it's location meant it could be ideally protected from the outside world, and there was a gape here where you could monitor who was coming in to the factory. and there were these watch stations all to ensure that the formula for making porcelain was kept secret for as long as possible lung it from the wrong. i explore a few more of the castle secrets traveling further back in time and even take a selfie to see what you used to look like back in the day. ah,
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allow me to introduce lady of the castle, hannah, on whom. oh, that was so interesting. i've never done a trip back in time like that before. the next part of my journey takes me through mason's old time. mason is famous for its long winding alleyways, much better explored by fit. i'm. a afraid you can't come with me, lou, to learn more about my son. i've arranged to meet a local target efforts. oscar has brought me a local pastry called a formal he missed the former war. the mice and farmers was invented when mice and began manufacturing porcelain augustus the strong, who was the lecturer at the time,
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had opened the porcelain factory at albert's boat castle. this but it was a bumpy start. the china produced wasn't very good we had so he regularly sent messengers to my son from his residence and dressed and to check up on things at the factory and to bring back some pulls on the bus. they were supposed to ride straight back to dresden had. but our gustavo had no luck with his messages. im after going to the factory, they'd end up at a local tavern and by the time they got back to dresden, they'd forgotten what they had to report. oh no, and of course a lot more helpful and the porcelain samples were broken. so augustus gave orders to the bakers gilding my son to produce a pastry that was so light and fragile that it could only be brought home and tacked by someone who was sober, la overpaid. and that's now my task to carry the mason from all around the city without breaking it. ah, i have heard, i heard that my son is known as saxony, secret,
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or historical capital. why is that of the fire, or the thing with the guns that dates back a long way in the 10th century, this was slavic territory on bomb. it was then conquered by the german king henry the 1st. and my son became the capital. as far as you can talk about a capital in those early days just and that lasted till about 1500. and then the government was moved to dressed. and what did you think your luck faithfully? ah athos shows me the town hall, which dates back to the 15th century. the huge roof structure is divided into 5 stories. a building designed to impress. these integrated seats were once a popular place for locals to stop for chat. ah, to reach our next destination, we'll need to claim a lot of stacks. hopefully the formal will make it intact. ah,
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if i was to show me something up at special we ask soft buses also here we are. this is the alphabet stone, idaho. malo come. it's a simple monogram, stone with the letters a, b, c, and d. but with a little imagination, you can find the entire alphabet. i can already see the h and my initials are h h. so that's perfect here. easy amendment also find your partners, initials, and their entwined with yours, you know all as well by with alice. oh, well i'll keep that in mind with it, so thank you very much for the tour and the formal is still intact. it's not wonderful . you thank. thank you. have a lovely day the same to you choose. so now i'm gonna think this to range from oh,
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actually take slight look to advertising. oh yeah, i can see why it's not really into the right city, but it was a fun experience. i still have a little time before my next appointment to explore the surrounding area and enjoy a quick snack. i am on my way to learn more about my sins, biggest star. but 1st to practicalities. my little friend here needs been juice, but i at least have enough energy to get me to my next destination. mm. the alumnis fed house. my son will tell me everything i want to know about my son porcelain. the museum has $33000.00 exhibits, but only a small portion can be displayed at a time. the exhibition is changed regularly. i knew hell shows me her favorite pieces and tells me about the early days of production. when german porcelain
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artists sought to emulate chinese masters, ah, i'm unsung had my at 1st they actually copied asian porcelain. i'd say literally $1.00 to $1.00 to practice and develop the necessary dexterity. good. when damn, it must have all been new as a man. what exactly they were working was a new material all by and porcelain paste. as a bit of a diva, the diva they had to get a feel for it to find out what shapes were possible and how would behave when fired . and then you needed a glaze that also became an important step on the path to success. boy, it took a few years for the artisans and mice and to develop their own european style. but soon, the signature of floral patterns began to emerge along with battle scenes and hunting motifs. the slim
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gradually became more opulent. a breakthrough moment was vis snowball blossom design. to this day, each blossom is shaped by hand. one of the most successful designs is known as the blue onion. so the name is something of a misnomer. as will tell you that aren't actually onions. there melanie, you see here, onion, like melons, and a peach and every now and then a pomegranate. when came on, the thing cannot do why i need is i know like a mom because the artists didn't know what they were painting. as these fruits were common in asia, but unknown and saxony at the time, she needs joy. and oh, okay, so what's typical? nice in today. nice to push my what's typical is that the work is done by hand, especially the painting, regardless of the actual design in even sport shoes are painted by hand. here in 2020 these speakers with porcelain overlays sold at auction for a $126000.00 us dollars. ah,
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now i want to see what goes on behind the scenes. so it's time to go to the factory . my tourist starts in the archive of molds. it boosts around 700000 plaster molds, and some are nearly 300 years old. it's the largest and oldest collection of its kind worldwide. practically every piece of porcelain and mason's long history can be reproduced to precision sites to be small. to day, the method used to make porcelain is no longer a state secret. one of the key ingredients is kaylin. a white clay minerals this comes from the manufacturer is own mine, located nearby, and then goes through a purification process, enlarge bass. before the final porcelain paste is ready to be used at 1st has to be dried up to 6 months.
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the factory has countless different workstations, each with its own particular porcelain specialty, around $450.00 people work at the manufactory, which now belongs to the state of saxony. i'm amazed by just how many pairs of hands have worked on each individual piece of porcelain. the crossed blue swords of mice and are one of the oldest trademarks in the world. the creative hearts of the manufactory is them mice. natalie. this is where designer lena hensley works. hello. and so what's your role here? it's been design, nathan, i'm a designer at the mice,
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natalie. a lighter and leave the department for product development. i to a moment. right now what i'm working on a new design, cold, giant bloom. it's a very expressive and colorful design inspired by a vase. either this giant blue vase is a limited edition. it's only made to order and costs almost $50000.00 euros. laina has spent about a year and a half working on the new plural designed, which is also available on cuts plates and saucers for a much lower price among other sources, she draws inspiration from classic mason motifs dammon on glass. there's an unbelievable wealth of material from which we can and should
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draw because it's what defines my son, but it's cultural heritage if you like, which we are continuing and developing and isn't it my snotty all the designers here are young, so our involvement automatically transforms this heritage of our designs are created for today's customers. have certain tastes and wishes that often and wouldn't unfold a home. i show you ho also works at the most natural. she's designed a series of vases, the farms of which echoed the landscapes and wild lifetime and talked cartoon . she studied product design in shanghai and has been working and mice and since 2016 and talks car is her 1st theories. yeah, the fall,
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my inspiration for the antarctica serious the i find that the shape of a penguins body and their silhouette and profile is very sweet and so neatly that we can use hope again was just a rough sketch where i imagined a whole family of penguins oh yes, i can see. exactly. so you have daddy penguins mummy penguin, baby penguin and a brother as well as i knew grew up in china, back to my deal. yes. and that's still influences my ideas. for example, these fish mouth vases were inspired by chinese artifacts to what i'd like is to add a modern touch on a new design language with a symmetrical shape or are soft and organic forms by organic cell phone. when developing an idea, the porcelain designer always begins by making
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a clay motto ah, today i can join in an attempt to malta my own small penguin vas. jo, you shows me how it's done. she says she loves working with her hands. ah . what do you think i have pro, considering it's your 1st penguin of us. i think it's very good. it's a bit of a even fatter in i wonder what it's like to live and work in mice. and if you grew up on the other
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side of the world, to find out more, i'm meeting a woman who lives here all the way from australia. she works in a local wine shop. okay. right. yeah, i'm hannah and i think he asked me and she has lived in sex me for 6 years. so you moved here for love? exactly. what's the story there? well, the stories i in germany in, in australia had a restaurant and a go from my son actually arrived there and asked me for a job. and it ended up being a really beautiful friendship. and i ended up marrying her best friend. wow, that's such a romantic story. very much so. but the story is that we met in austria inside said well, her, she. okay. and we've known each other for yeah, right. well, what are we going to do now? so you picked up and you move your whole life. jeremy,
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knowing this guy for 4 day casey, it's crazy and, and i'll be worth it to any. did you guys get married straight away? and i took a couple of years because my son is on that spontaneous well, i mean, i have to try continent for him to marry me. have you felt like you've been here nicely? absolutely. yeah. you've been a good life. you're, if you're yeah, i really do think so. that was easy to do because people in my son a just really welcoming and then they really down to earth and quite, quite humble and also hard work and you know, all those things that use that that's just nice fits and well. yeah. yeah. so can we go in? yes, i really looks beautiful and here. thank you. have a particular way that you can recommend i do actually it's the go to reasoning. i'm
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. it is a great friday that we only go here. oh wow. i mean, but i have to try and trying it and she is a qualified consultant for wine. some fact me so she knows her stout. her parents were originally from germany, but emigrated to australia when she was 5. it's amazing. her destiny has brought her back to germany as a next step she plans to also work as a tour guide and my son. very unique. yes. oh, so nice to just sit in a nice wine garden. i relax sigma. you know i was him. my son's a small enough am to always feel safe and for it to feel like a homely environment. but it's big enough that you never board. although she sees the german, whether it did take some getting used to. even just in january i went to open the
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wine shop and there was no, you know, all in front of my door and i was just like, what do i do now? you know, i've not had that or the 1st time i had to like scratch my window free. you know, somebody yeah. yeah. i was like, oh i'm home to try it. what i do now and what is the future look like then? are you, do you think you'll stay here? oh, i think we will. yeah, yeah. we've got so much to see and do yet, and i just feel like really got to place now where we need to be as trail always be home as well. both countries are amazing and i'm so grateful to have both. that's great. it sounds like you've really built yourself a wonderful life here with i'm film i thing a great photograph to remind me of my time here in mice. and for that i meet
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eric franka. he's an instagram who lives near mason. he loves nature and architecture, and regularly posts, photos of his travels and discoveries. he likes to go off the beaten track to find places that not everyone knows about. with something for from john i bought a camera about 5 years ago. i had always been into gadgets and had done a lot filming, and tried at different things. and because i've always loved landscapes, i started with that. i was done. i went to saxon switzerland near here where i also made new friends my. we started a group called the sexily explorers and now we meet every week with our preference, her muzzle a vision, little as a member of her grip. eric often posts beautiful photos of his home state of saxony,
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fullness anapestic fever mitten. and there's a nice perspective here with the flowers in front of you. i always say it helps to have something good in the foreground. i'll show you. he's a see you have these nice red flowers with the leaves in the foreground and in the motif behind him. all that had been i'd like to try. can you show me? yes, in all kinds of mature of info. okay. thought bethany, and i'll do a wide angle. yeah, exactly. of. i'm go a bit closer to the flowers. a bit lower go so. yep. you got it mentioned like that you have a nice focal point in the foreground. good. ah, very nice. looks good. if we could off, so where we had a nice eggs and we'll go down the river elbow where we have a good view of alba expos castle. if they go to other school signs. great. the river bank in mason is the most popular spot for taking photos of germany's boldest castle.
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ah, it looks particularly dramatic to day with the cloudy sky. and i can't let it go with i said joyce selfie 1st with nice. thanks a lot. you're welcome. just another to come back again later this evening when the lights are on at sunset. yes, that's definitely worth it on. another tit for me. perfect. i'll do that. enjoy. thank you. i fall eric's advice that same evening. doesn't lick beautiful. oh.
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before i leave my son, i want to claim the tower of the fallen kit yet or church of our lady have even been given the key. mm. another $193.00 steps to climb. oh, the gluck and she'll r carolyn is of course made of my c porcelain. what else would you expect? incidentally, my son has applied for recognition as a unesco world heritage site. best of luck to them with that mason was a city. there's so much history here yet, it also feels very much alive over all a great experience the next day. ah
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a celebration of democracy and peace. daniel and architect motions a. d. w. with creating christmas spirit. that's something for professional decorators. we'll show you the most beautiful styling tips for europe o t to do with max in 60 minutes on d. w. stories that move people the world over d, w on facebook and twitter up to date and in touch. follow us lou william how to inc. on will give gonzalez will i and was hi and if i had
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known that the boat would be that small, i never would have gone on the trail. i would not have put myself and my parents in that danger. who caught up the fema? it'll fit akita. slater would love one central hospital on the liberty and to give them i had serious problems on a personal level. and i was unable to live there, but it wasn't good of it. you want to knew their story. you so migrants clarified and reliable. information for migrants ah, just like great poetry or music, great architecture can tell the story of the human soul. it can let us see the world through a completely different lands. ah ah
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. ah, buildings breathe. and just like humans, they have a body and a soul. but how do you design a building that can sing? where do you start? ah, my parents beginning of our courtroom and i became a virtuoso and of course to play back corner for so many years. it becomes part of your body. but i think the, the true connection between the korean and architecture is that it's vertical, the keyboard, everything the base, it's old, vertical, and architecture. also vertical header play the piano, which is horizontal. maybe i would have never been an architect. i
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should take to star architect, world architects have been around for a very long time. but some architects only became star architects when the world of architecture claimed this kind of globe balance. he for its selfish and unable to say, we build buildings that are primarily photogenic and thus promote not only themselves, but also the architect and the place where this building was created him to a small vac. and stump nicera. ah oh danny, you've asked him to san li biskin tis without doubt. one of the most interesting and exciting architects of the late 19 ninety's went on give to him, then less duty. only bas kent. that leap is kent brand, if you like. and that portrays a 2nd esthetic is tatic dash j van to best the star architecture neva. and that runs through his entire life's work. backer
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i the me ah. busy ready ready grounds you're working the mini experts, traffic expense, economics experts, experts and plenty. and i suddenly realize, oh my god, it's not at all about those things. it starts with a memory of dose, thousands of people who died on that day. ready and it has to really. ready develop out of that memorial place into the powers, into an emblematic and also symbolic space of the power $7076.00, declaration of human rights. first one in america and in the world. and of course, create a sense of connection to the spectrum of liberty. i saw myself and my parents arriving
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on the day, you know, across the atlantic entering and looking up at the statue of liberty, which at that time looked so large to me, bigger than, than any empire state building. and i thought about it, liberty, freedom of people. it won't buildings. it's not armies. it's not rocket. it's not going to the moon. the biggest thing in the world is the spirit of freedom. i leave us can see month athens, i'm hintock, when he'll leave. his kins background has enabled him to combine very different mindsets and to have unusually high expectations of all his buildings. he wants us to experience them as sensuous palaces, but in all essential ality. also places that makes sense where there's more to than them we can see and believe at 1st glance as often s and 60 in on cloud and chron
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i i lived in paul until i was 11 years old. but it was kind of communism of dictatorship. of december 2000 and then we were lucky to be able to leave down the place. you can go to that time was israel. and then of course my father who is only surviving sister, survived. oxford was an america. so he was determined to come to america and that me home is not a piece of real estate. it's really something that is very close to your heart and can be taken away from you.
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my mother was a very free thinker. she said, become an architect. she gave me the right advice. i don't feel that i gave up music and i started architecture. it's a continuum when you played the right note. it's very much like drawing the right lines, building the right ideas on paper, getting them built in space. the both about precise vibrations, vibrations of soul, and the vibrations of straight a levy skinned in sign of fluid in his early theoretical phase lipa kent is very interesting because he says himself that he was obsessed by drawing. ah, it height if i am. and i find his early face, so the 1st half of his life's work very exciting, very inspirational, zachary conceptual deity, very theoretical on there. that's why he was considered an avant garde architect by experts. back then i pushed on the asset size,
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the 1st drawing cds, and not flooring as built architecture. i think about my stick to a he used the drawings to dissect research and also the spicy dog a forced. thus creating a new architectural language, joystick goodness, i. when i came to architecture, i wasn't thinking about building buildings, not at all. i thought, well, architecture is going to combine. oh, my love of all these things, of numbers of vibrations of music, of the past, of the future. and somehow, the mr. you has proven correct that architecture is kind of a mystery. believe me. no one is an expert in architecture was good huh. oh oh
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i oh, i. ringback oh, but in tim havoc saw, so at the chamber works i, i saw the drawings. and the 1st thing i thought was, wow, i had never really thought about architecture before. and it was really something brand new. and for most cons, noise ah, just perform just you have shapes in classical music, you have shapes. in other music you have shapes too, of course, there's a structure and here you have to create a structure yourself, who says continuously on tom. oh
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. the chamberlain is very closely related to music because there are many contrapuntal effects. there are few there to cut us there. inversions reversals that different tonalities, different modalities, because architecture is, of course, an acoustical. art it, our sense of balance is not in the eye, but in the inner ear and left the way you're reading the dr. symptoms, you read them very figuratively. sometimes you read them just as they're almost the
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kind of a test on your own possibility of interpret it. i think that's kind of was my intention to drawing for architecture. festus kind of stuck auto. oh. home. and then there some lines wet. oh, i really admire how you are going about it. don't you leave us can push mitten of auto. daniel leave is kent breaks with expectations . when we enter a building we take for granted that the flow will be absolutely horizontal. we can rely on that is a finish. leap is came to always aims to coal. the certainties into question, to disrupt them out and called for his buildings are almost like explosive devices in the way they work with what we perceive to be certainties are shy and he very deliberately confronted them. perhaps to emphasize the fragility of our way of life as well as a doctor. oh,
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you have to be radical. you have to go to the roots. that's what radical means. go back to the roots of the problem. the roots of the house, the roots of the city. any method that takes you beyond the traditions that are habits that have pied you up into a not the more you can break out of it, the more you can discover that their world is far more interesting. than you've been taught by your teachers or by the shop of successes, o'rando ah . yeah, hang on his i thought. so. i think the entry hall is very impressive and it's, it's like you're in a museum to vendor and there are red wools, the steep stairway leading upwards just penthouse. the penthouse at the top was designed according to the wishes of the client, cliff. and if we take
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a look at the pictures and we see the typical leap is kent element into the size there. so the reflection of the fireplace has exactly the same line as the facade of the building. he also has harder about and if look at the built in sunny chair in the house, it's classically biskin and beaver's cond elementary houses, or the paneling in the living room when we talk about storage space, lavender abashed all the corners and etches. if the house were modified, so that inside, you can also get this typically biskin feeling eva skins or food on a con, con, ah, where that's san francisco. whether it's dressed and whether it's in berlin, whether it's in denver, there's always something else already there. we already inherit something that it was not ours, but as part of who we are, when you build something new, it's still just independent. the city is always already there,
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so everything you build has to be connected to what is already there by daniel, is that he wasn't good with daniel. the surprising thing is that he rejects more than he creates and oh, and he demands the same from the people who work for him as it is this process of always questioning, always taking things apart, cutting them, i'm putting them back together again. you can really see it in the architecture, thus is i'm, it's a process that triggers creativity. on this openness is initially shocking and radicals, but it's also incredibly liberating. he's about 1 o'clock his profile lou lou
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ah, ah, where there's a jewish resume in berlin. grounds. you're only on there, we're not that struck dumb from some distance. they were right here into heart. and how lucky that i was able to bill just because in berlin, because it's very closely related to my experience, to me as a person don't own meta instantly to room with the fallen leaves. installation remains unique. no matter how often you see it for someone to museum, also has these elements that serve as memorials. gillum, so it's a memorial, it's commemorative and a museum at the same time. oh,
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you just going to sign my leave is caned is a master of complexity. he tries not to integrate the different aspects into his buildings, but to let them occur there and placed them under tension with dog. and i think this tension between opposites that he always creates his something that will continue to inspire architects with blue. between the lines have been that between the lines combines 2 different kinds of drawing. i drawing that is his own investigation and i space and the drawing that forms the basis for the architecture itself. go makeing that that's how we noticed that he really wanted to work with these drawings. and the way he presented them in an unconventional way, boyd to,
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oh, you know, i remember in my 1st building i never booked anything before the jewish museum. but when i took one window and just tilted it to alter to view, people said, oh my god, this is the end of the world. this is horrible. but you know, it's just people are so bound by convention to break out of it is, is good in the less drawing that you have. i would be just the how you would begin this. oh i i oh, ah ah
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ah, when i was thinking the truth is in 1st they thought about the music that is no longer played in berlin as a result of what happened to germany. 1933, and i started thinking of schoenberg of moses and aaron, his amazing opera, where he, you know, himself, an exile from berlin, started to think, what about god, what does this mean? where is the music coming from now after these events? oh, vaught. to wagner dot media, hey, at the create your musical answer in the center of their voice as the reverse on faith that your echoes with the footsteps of the visitors. and i thought yes,
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that's the 3rd act of moses and our death answered trumpet was waiting for the echoes of the footsteps across a void. and that's the physician. and the transfiguration of architecture as well. ah the med yorba hot and when you listen to the opera, you noticed that the singing voices of aaron and moses as the 2 main parts are very different aaron sings in coloratura is with very wavy lines. while moses, almost exclusively speaks, was almost without intonation. mark lives. so moses stands for constant speech though uncle dan is in tucson. now when we look at the building, the interesting thing is that there's an order to the rooms along the length of
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which at the end there also the museum rooms. while an empty line, the line of the voids seems to cut through the building again and again like a zigzag sack lena in love, you don't. so schneider, chime and inch turned on and empty places are created vertically at these sponsor throughout the entire building. so if we compare the opera, moses and aaron, we can say one line represents the museum, a kind of aaron line oft, while the line of the voids that penetrates everything could be described as the moses line. here moses stands for the unspeakable, moore's astute here food of mountain . bottom leave is king, doesn't just build his buildings to make them look unique. he wants to demonstrate something with them, can express something that's very important to him. that reality, as we usually perceive it is only part of what surrounds us and what makes up the world of that beyond these realities,
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there are principles that have to be called into question and dismantled again and again. so that we don't get too comfortable and believe we are living a truth that we don't actually recognize any of his cognition. oh ha. ah. deaf ah, when within god this to me the experience was the garden of exile in the jewish museum is always an experience of the boundary in math, in the garden. natural decide to proceed very intentionally to control everything but to try to keep my balance. for example, math and then i feel happy space, office resistance. i sit what the great architects have told us from the beginning of time. the architecture is about
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culture. it's about what human beings are, where they are going, where they have been, what they want to do. it's not about bricks and mortar and, and would own the military. it is not the opposite opinion. in many ways, the military and the history of worth tells us that it's one of the ways we can keep our freedom. and so when i built several military museums, i was very aware of the importance of military in democracy. and what i really mean there are war museum north in manchester. i sort of what about the world is the world's really this emblem that we see on tv or on the screen? no. the world's a real world that has been broken. i took a little english teapot,
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threw it out of my studio window and went down and picked up the pieces, reassembled them there, and that's really the term war museum and magister the chart of air where things strike us from the air. the shot of the earth, the chart of the water. so bringing up all these elements and creating really a space which gives you a sense that you're part of the world ah, in it's been been designed in the sense the tristan and his older ins. brooke, and very clearly takes a fragment from a chamber works drawing and the stage elements develop out of this this via an art on because it's like a vocabulary of space that's 1st designed and then using these fragments is of course, another story altogether. you can see that
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clearly in the sets for tristan and his older that we took this objects that was created and divided it up again into different segments and then used these segments in very different ways on the stage. which comes with an a and b premier her on her to, than to i remember the premier welsh there was thundering applause, as well as deafening whistles after a premiere party. i was dentist. of course, the 1st thing i asked daniel at the after party was what it had been like for him. and he said it was great. the moment you cause such a reaction, you know that you've sent a message asked by a so he was very satisfied. and it was then that i understood just how relaxed and laid back he is in seeking out the radical in of work last night or in the study told me was, can believe his kins. buildings are designed to inspire us to take us on
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a journey into the unpredictable will. so when you enter a building, you don't know what's waiting for used. it's also easy to get lost in the buildings . and it's also an allegory, of course. i know it's a symbol for always being open to surprises and questioning what tends to be taken for granted. ah. the message that you actually gave to me is don't forget, look at the history because it's a path that if you don't watch out, can lead you to a dead end helix. no spon talk me a big lesson. when i look at a self portrait with the identity card, with that wall behind him, with a chimney with smoke up above him. he told me, look at yourself,
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because what you might see is not what you expect to see. ah, to me there is that magic in the crystal. i look at the crystal, not the way the romantics looked at the crystal. not the way come for david. frederick looked at the crystal. i look at the chris and the following grade. it has a millions of facets. it's kind of the symbol of democracy because you can see right through it. but there are so many different angles, and there's always this kind of center that leads you to a sort of an infinite dispersal point to hold a chris focus is in a way to hold the dna, which is the crystal, is to hold the stars. we try to crystal is to hold the world.
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continues this season. the stories focus on hate speech, cholera, prevention, and sustainable charcoal production. all episodes are available online. and of course you can share and discuss on d, w, africa's facebook page, and other social media platforms, crime fighters, tune in. now, how long does the, ah, or an eternity time, it can be measured precisely. and yet each person experiences it differently as if there are different forms of type type phenomena. a dimension and illusion. about time starts december 31st on d, w with
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. mm hm. mm ah, ah, this is day w, news life from berlin authorities in europe extend corona virus restrictions in the hope of limiting the spread of the all micron variance. the netherlands calls a snap christmas lockdown with hobbs and non essential shops close for business. london declares a major incident after it stays a drum.
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