tv Afrimaxx Deutsche Welle September 10, 2022 10:30pm-11:01pm CEST
10:30 pm
unity hope that silence was immoral. think us goldschmidt and we want all the jews in russia to get out now. conflict zone. in 60 minutes on d. w. ah raring to read. ah . everyone who loves books has to go insane. a t. w literature list 100 german must reads like kate said in the heart of the head is that this urban context is designed to be a 360 degree ecosystem. this gives artisans, creative, and entrepreneurs, the opportunity to live in the community. welcome to victoria eod. coming up, discovered creates of values behind design accessories coming from the hearts of
10:31 pm
a class and gotten up all the way to hollywood. find out how this modern dance group has more leave than just entertaining the audience. and later, how to turn a skeptic into our super mall with this delicacy and us. i mean, it's a and this is that re max? oh, oh. the council is stacy called at for theater, is and is taking hold all over the continent. we visit the latest in feta for his new form of art. in the art of cyrus could bureau, discarded technology is given new life. abandoned radios becomes space, age communication devices, or wrapping fear bicycles called white mothers are turned into
10:32 pm
sculptures that could have been left to her by an alien civilization. the series of eye glasses called c standards mate, keep you famous. constructed from trash collected on his travels. there are mash up of different cultural traditions for me after that is that for future late gets upon by national different culture. different material will differ from like global but to have something new currently in the be a little more awfully. can they look more is you know, it's more awful. pizza kind of canyon photographer osborne materia, reimagined, kenya's. legendary mal mouth independence fighters as high tech opticians, who helped over throw colonialism from a korea afro futurism is about reimagining an african past either stolen or
10:33 pm
forgotten with all the african countries apart from the thought kill colonized and then people didn't get to settle. see that history or see themselves in the history or a lot of that history was, was more to documented or was i'll type these heroic images to find the mostly negative view of africa seen in western media. this will have our issues, but our issues don't, don't have to revolve around, pull the tv from my disease, no war, this tories that we can tell that sort of keep a different perspectives. my walk with owners bold hold, feel confident. the message of financial is a, be a boy's perception of africa across the continent in a poo, john nigeria, afro futurism is also taking root. a new generation of african artists is looking at their own culture from a new angle of a book artist a you to g ma,
10:34 pm
kinda credits, black panther applicable for now has been known to be probably a thud would call tree. and then black point that brings each $2.00 to $4.00 phone as a war to power. that is completely loaded with technology. it was miner blurry africans everywhere with wow, black panther might have brought afro futurism to the mainstream. but my kinda believes the next wave of story telling will be home grown. that way we talk about appropriate choices. it is like up into fiction or for quite think technology science fiction is shed african, the tallest african traditions and african culture. the culture denito, ologies are more or we do not follow 20 from yet because we are more connected with
10:35 pm
whether in comics, movies, music, or design, the art of afro futurism combined tradition with imagination. the vision, a brighter future for africa and the world. ah. ah, franklin temporary african design to practical application. it's our yards is a commercial have and social development projects. this precinct appreciates nature . people modern design and attention to detail transforming what was a derelict industrial space into a trendy functional hat is a what happens at victoria? ok, it's hard to do it in just a little bit, but i'll do my best. it's. there's actually a lot of layers to victoria, you know we, we have meaningful community engagement skills transfer and for food sustainability . but one of the main things about victoria that we really like to boast about is our gardens. okay, so all of our gardens organic and we produce
10:36 pm
a lot of greenville leverage things like that in the community actually coming and are able to buy it from us at obviously hugely reduced prices. so we work with the tenants to make sure that they employ people from the community when they can to give them meaningful employment, gainful employment, and also to transfer skills to them. so besides all of that is also things like we have events that we see that we have on a monthly basis and we have a market that we have on a monthly basis. so it's a huge hybrid kind of thing of community members from the outside. but then also the victorians community that works really closely together. what influence the decision to face and yeah, well the buildings have always been. so basically we, we became involved in 2016 and when i say we the, the company victoria arms with 4 been so the original sort of part of it was it
10:37 pm
for to be a community way. people could work with each other and sort of have an understanding that they could create something by working together. tell me a little bit about the support that deter you as if hands the japan years. so that's, it's really important question because people around lorenzo, i mean it's, you know, it's become a quite a depressed area in terms of economic opportunity for people in the area. so we live very closely with some of the n g o that we, that we house at victoria yards. they've got a podcast room. they've got very fast internet. and so young people can come in and obviously use the internet for research and it, but they do it under the guidance of makers, valleys, to teach them entrepreneurial skills and also boost the ideas that they have and try and make it from, you know, theory into practical use, i think one of the biggest challenges with getting people buy in to become tenants
10:38 pm
here. i think because a lot of them came here or few people came here in the beginning and looked at what was here. so nothing that you see in terms of the gardens of the pathways was here . it was just all you know, eroded soil and everything. so getting people to come in was was interesting. what can people take away when they leave the career yard at the moment when people visit victoria yards they, i think the 1st thing that they will probably be inspired by the gardens because it's a very visual thing that i see. and a lot of people engage with us to say, how can we do that? how can we do that? can you teach us about because she, which is a so we will culture that enriches the soil. some people have said to me, you know, they really like the sense of community that they feel it. people who want to be kind of come here. and they like, i can't be here and i'm like, i don't have face at the moment, you know, but we'll put you on the list. we looking at expanding victoria on to the property
10:39 pm
that we own next door. and that's why we're excited about the development across the river because to be able to open that up to everybody else. so yeah, i think people walk away here with the same. so feeling like they've been the community for a few hours. that's important. ah. the think goes another day in africa and that, that done. but hong landon and his troop, the finest dance goes much deeper than just entertainment. let's see what lies beneath those down smooth without don, i don't know why i would be right now. i think it's important for you to not means you're not new. you're good. somewhere along the line, you will need to show people where you come from. that's what makes you original. that's what will make me different if i'm dancing in the africa is the continent that is rich in colleges and traditions and central to this is the vibrant
10:40 pm
tradition of dime as in other parts of the world. traditional don storing renown so that we can car younger and performer. tom langdon had used his talent to few traditional buns, and it was our don form creating a unique and richly cultured contemporary guns. busy when we started to finance doesn't 7. i love my dad. and while i was, you know, getting over, trying to find a coping mechanism with raising my father. i live then lost my mother in 2008. african johns is centered dances give themselves to the rhythmic pulses of they've done, interpreting the protective patches of the music through their post of judges and deb funds or allies, you know, it's a very fast paced top or something that we call the pedal power. so basically it's a way of how they came, all the changes. so the same have
10:41 pm
a pen and paper movement is how they should be done when they should be done thing as fun. so are you said from the township of good there for the long and dead on its own kind of gave birth to sports because when you look at it, it's not fast paced yet it's very technical by the majority of the technique or how we move in and you see this one and then now lukia's piano. so when you watch piano, you see all the, just basically like a generation of dances. it's more like a marriage now, you know, be somehow becoming one. so they all, you know, things that to be literally relate to another country. so a button down still tells us that i think it all depends on who you are,
10:42 pm
as the choreographer and how in touch you are with us. i think that very important . i mean, when you look at how dances now, you know it now being very huge on tick tock, social media, and so forth. it becomes very difficult for the old hands to i just because these are things that the young generation are a little pdx feeling very well and you know, that's down for i think its idp of the all generations go. so i teach the young, you know, the basics of what done, you know, i think once a tons have gone to bed, it's interesting because a lot of times initially we didn't even need music fading issues, you know, only either with or trying to or banging one because on the floor, so that's how we make noise and you, the avail i've been to connect, you know, some people might call it connecting with how we come together and you never find
10:43 pm
that anywhere else for 15 effort. so i just didn't, like i said, so it's very important to keep a old guys a window where does it come from? is say, so it would be it would tub with in many traditional culture. music and johns is as much a part of everyday life as the thing and thing, john has been one of many forms of expression, storytelling and enjoyment across the kind when it is said that the present only contains the pie. and today, african cultural dime has grown, evolved and spread throughout the world. ah, dinah, i see that she is or not for his signature, in spite design pieces, which provide bold and unique accessories to touch up says move. check this out.
10:44 pm
in the line to write the star, it will always glorify the hand. so until we are able to tell are almost always in a way that we knew it won't be had in a way that the shoes. now every used to be legal, tender, and so was very valuable. the way to design, modernize the still i will tell you, blew me away. it's so beautiful. ah, governor is well known for its rich cultural heritage. not only displaced with vibrancy of cities like a class, but also your creative work of many who live here. ah, one such person as if she, well known for her way, necesary designer book creates wearable art. 70 roots at an african tradition. yeah,
10:45 pm
lots of africans are on the old who are trying to connect back to the arrows in different countries, not just africa. so combining different african pieces from different countries to help project and then the connected if it, if you're not gone in and you get a piece, you know, this piece is coming from my view. yeah. yeah. able to connect to the has bit of africa that projects the image of africa and a design that we need for the past 10 years. has money to turn out creative pieces that tend to redefine what more designs look like. ah, these are some of the sheets of print accessories. ah, ah, i see. and made international headlines when had designs were featured in the hollywood blockbuster coming to america. coming to america, i received a meal, introduce themselves and what they wanted to do with the pieces i 1st i taught for
10:46 pm
this come because our thing, dana and i was not all that moon after sending the design, there was no communication. so i was like, ok, maybe i lost, maybe i didn't, i was just lazy and then where the movie was out. my name was our so excited about the whole thing and how 5 designs had gone the african fashion and artifacts. we use our lots, expose the new way that is supposed to be in adapt to sustain the facts, recreate new designs because they don't get time. what is useful will be useful, something you will come by when they incorporate that in the fashion is because their lifestyle and it continues who's affect, gets ready with the latest collection known as i am africa, which features at several exhibitions. and one way in dubai. and europe,
10:47 pm
africa, collection, that's where, that's african ism and power as the african in us. we are descendants of greece, people, and we need to know who we are and accept. we, wherever you go, wherever you travel around the world, you go as an individual, but you are an african. wherever you find yourself, you represent the all africa. ah, a few small but creative team before they go out to shoot her shows for peace from i am africa in the streets of our car. i know you kill this so less clear. make africa proud. ah, my hawkins, that the rest of the world appreciate more the african fashion and the african as we do have, ah, a few suitable and style designs big from the traditional poll?
10:48 pm
well connected to the modern pulse of africa. ah, the to see for myself how one initiative is supporting visual artists by creating a space equipment and training this out. what are the main aim of the space? we have many and i think the main aim is to facilitate a strong sense of visual and collective responsibility towards our presentation. given the colonial history photography in africa, and also a desire to contribute in a meaningful way to african photography, as well as the lives of local youth. why do we need these types of initiative? i think that's in the age of social media and information technology, official literacy and critical thinking skills form a very,
10:49 pm
very integral part of an increasingly valuable school fit which is an essential way to navigate the massive images between count on a daily basis. i think that now more than ever, we need of a photography that sensitize is us to each other, to unique ways of seeing the world in the diverse weights of expediency. we ran photography courses all the way from kennesaw at 5 level as well as online mentorships in person and online. he's usually one and one for people who can't be in a class setting like this. we also also really try to create opportunities for our photographers thinks that they work in the spaces as a means to being transferred to their practice and also to prepare them for the demands of the professional history. give us a snapshot of a day in the studio. well, a day in here involves
10:50 pm
a lot of thinking and discussing and looking at images of classes and workshops, a very dialogue based. so it's not a thing of a teacher standing up in front of class. it's really about engaging everybody's opinion and really think critically together about photography. so through a system of assignments, close personal mentorship and critical feedback. we work with our photographers for the development of a larger narrative body of work that's heaven is on. as says already he, the queen of snails is, is kind of very magic for transport. gets sick into a regular customer that has been referred to as a queen. of snail, i feel like even a character i feel like something where they get time. oh boy. so they're always moving fully. he never saw me. ah. have you ever wondered why your smells never really paid like warm a restaurant mill?
10:51 pm
well, today we'll reveal that secret about the fish market. well be meeting up the shuttle be picked through the road about really interesting delicacy. i'm not someone who i think you really good out of my way to look for. let's talk about looking for the best. how do you get people like me to understand that it's me something you should look? i feel like wow, preference of course. i mean it's like, it looks like much like something where i mean you might have tried to like do it, but i'm pretty choice. you have it, we have it as you own. so when you come into markets that you like, we are here today. what you look up for when you want to pick up until you run it by refreshing. of course, before i find any restaurant, what intrigue?
10:52 pm
so this is very intriguing, this is beautiful. it's about the shadow ridge. this is in the show, the show here about water was bit one call. it's really big and fun. it's quite common. he's now how do you know the right one to buy, smell like anything else? it's time to head to the restaurant where the humble fail will be transform easily, mouth watering this and i'll find out if i can because i did love the food tricia proteins. i'm very curious to see how sample base signature is prepared and what she can offer on the how to get this dish own kitchen. i'm not the biggest fan of sales, but who knows?
10:53 pm
she might just call me at the end of the day, the walk, the whole of the free experience. the market must be willing to be back in your space. okay, i'll definitely control it that way. so what this dish hold exactly that it's not line. and now we'll set it up with a bit of camera live onion and i'm a bit of a why did you choose nails as you arabic? because they are surprised at what smells like in my hand. so again, could you take a look through the process? so this now when we get it, we actually get them with the show. we cook, cook them for a while, for while we move them from the cell and then well, put them and everything and then come again last week them and then we got them really, really small. so that we can put them in the show because he actually said them in detail. 5 you want them to be really small,
10:54 pm
like almost like the melting your mouth with the cream sauce. know is actually cooking a. got a cream sauce after all the processing they have to go through. and they are talk a bit of the lights, we can and, and until the oil, how to the oil actually and some oil. okay, so what makes it take different from what it has to try. i mean, this experience you need to understand that it fails locally here. i feel like why are seals are not as our hero dish? because we don't understand the, the complexity of the, of the ingredient to start with. you know, sales do have that be much for me, you know, texture flavor. and then you cook them with a bit of cream and it kind of elevates it. it gives it the spot that he needed, and that's why stands out a little bit chilly and the bills are obviously, the still is the delicate that we're looking at today. what are the other things
10:55 pm
you need locally here? everything we actually do in the menus look with the niger in menus and german, whereas i'm one night during kitchen. so we're trying to take local dishes and flavors and elevating them sanders, so anyone can have them and enjoy them. and even, i mean our, our other africans exasperating, come back and love and try things that are local and they feel like it's things that they've had where have you ever been to in the world actually takes really nice been shredded. you can feel like once you put in your mouth, almost awakened the tape, but for us now come out of reach out. it only means that the land and what the creature finally taking the rightful place. i've been healthy and delicious mail on so many menu. the next time you visit west africa, make sure you come and try this wonderful delicacy by the clean of snails herself. chef obeyed. i might not need to wait until i get with africa, child bed,
10:56 pm
10:57 pm
10:58 pm
was immoral. the think of scotch met and he wants all jews in russia to get out now . conflict zone. in 30 minutes on d. w. the some are prepared to evacuate to safety and others just let the situation unfold. but are some of them bringing these disasters on themselves? nature survivors. the adaptability of wild life. in 60 minutes on d w. oh. come have a few g t v highlights you every week in your in box subscribe. now with
10:59 pm
when you work as an architect, like all in or not at all women in architecture, why are they so invisible to the larger public? we decided to ask them and if women grow up with insufficient little models, they can't identify with certain professions about their guiding principles. massis i, what is the poetry, the secret of a house, and i'm house about their motivations. i think i'm a texture does so much to you, it easier. the real goal of architecture is to create habitat for humans about their struggles and dreams. your responsibility is huge. they have so much to lose and shattering the glass ceiling. women in architecture
11:00 pm
dismiss has to be really, really good. start september 30th on d. w. ah, ah ah, this is d, w. news live from building russian church withdraw from key areas of hockey as the cranium counter offensive gained momentum, as the cranes ami liberates dozens of settlements from russian occupation in the east. it finds more devastation also coming up.
22 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on