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tv   Afrimaxx  Deutsche Welle  December 10, 2022 9:30pm-10:01pm CET

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political adviser to berlin, ocean opposition, leader strip lamasta's. he kind of sky, she claims to be the national leader of bella luce, but home. the gentleman is her claim. conflict in 60 miles on d. w. how about taking up your rent? you could even take a chance on what i reread to me. ah, don't expect a happy ending literature list. 100 german histories. hey, we're out on the social scene to day here at august house into hands work with this art center opened its doors for the public to enjoy a variety of art and meet the artist behind the frame. this art center opened in 2006 with the aim of being a commercial space and bridge the gap between creators and
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a market. we're going to mingle with the artists and bias alike as we bring you today's show. we show up on the doorstep of interior designer, a yes or clue for works. her magic even spaces. abraham songy has moved from his native burkina, faso to italy and built a popular take away joint with the locals. can't get enough of his pizza. and later we traveled to lawanda with st. photographer and his how you manda takes us on a day around kigali, where she practices her art home. i am pamela m tenga, and you're watching f. re max with
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the vibe, he had all this house is absolutely electric and bouncing with the public. an artist as all this house closed, they're open studio day over 35 artists have opened up these studios to show the public what they have been working on. and also give them an opportunity to purchase some of the odds before i immersed myself deeper into this exciting event, we joins above you and born of bill muscle book, who is making waves in the comic book genres space with his unique african authentic stories and characters check this out. the world needs more african superheroes because we are now in an era where people are taking ownership of their narrative. and that's important because a lot of the time when other people tell you a story, they use information that either dated or wrong. and being able to bring truth to the story is the most important thing that i can think of right. her art based
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comic book artist will message, is the creator of the 1st african superheroes kept in south africa and read them and will believe that make sense to see and side by more inclusive, it is important for his audience to see themselves in the words that he creates this fresh approach to the comic book. jaundra. has mabel a hit within the new ron road? fanbase include in south africa. what i love about being in south africa is the feeling that really hard to describe. you feel when you're driving and you're seeing the skyline and you see black people in the adverts. there's a common understanding of the hustle and bustle that is of africa. i became a kind of an artist because i know because i this is who i am not what i do. my audience is young african. i want them to observe the country as the way they are to want more of themselves in it and not question why there's only one black character that holds the entirety of africa, the shoulders of created
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a lot of characters over the years. my most popular, i would say are a capital africa and reason that comes with africa is a black south african women who champions social rights. i came to study at rhodes university and there was a lot of money for movements in home campaigns for change. the people that i saw championing this movement were very strong women. i holy and completely oh, the foundation of guns are for the to those movements to those women. it's difficult to wrap my head around in the fact that superior is like the don't really exist and i'm doing a lot of legwork trying to educate people on why i kept the science is important. the easier work is raise a man, my love letter to japanese munger. bull has a respected voice in the comic book space in africa and we've even highlighted as an up and coming on history. d. c, comics, global event, d. c. vendor was invited to showcase his work and take part and paneled discussions
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and comic on africa 2022 in johannesburg. and events that attracted over 69000 people over 4 days representation in the genre of fantasy and find why it is so important. because historically we've been excluded from the narrative. when people talk about going to space, it's white people and alien. a lot of the time africans, black people, usually see the narrative, the speak of slavery. and if you consistently and persistently only have that it limits people belief and self and limits people's belief in a better tomorrow. it's like you're a part of history, but not a part of the future. a lot of means and joe come out of like african content movies. so for us to be making like take him seriously and outwards like these actually being good and decent. and like, comparing to big production studio is very welcoming and intriguing the positive a bull is today has not always been easy. and he attributes
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a major factor in his success, being the support he has from his mum grade. my mom got me into our club when i wasn't allowed to do art as a subject in school. my dad didn't believe in art or cartoon. just having someone believe in you, it goes away. when i have big events, she travels with me. she's there in the audience, cheering the loudest. and i feel like i have my dreams. i'm no longer waiting for them to happen. she's there with me living. creating an opening for the young africa to understand that he can be super heroes in african quantity. because most of the children don't know that they can be i'm so powerful. pool is not just the comic book artist. he is also a storyboard artist for hire, as well as a published fantasy author. he regularly comes to johannesburg for work and conventions, and he always made sure he gets
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a much needed time in with his brother ted who lives here. i support my brother's goals because i think what he's doing is very, very important and noble work. he is trying to create a universe of heroes that like local africans, can look up to. it's important for me because it's aspirational. i like to dream of certain things, and it's easier to dream if you can see something like one fly look to the cloud. i'm going to leave you with the way my work paved the way for future coming from artists in africa is very specifically, i've drawn the 1st 150 pages of copies of africa. i don't want to write volume to, i want to use it as an opportunity for other people to get in 2 comic books. this is your foot in the door. and even if i can just guides you, even if i can just say, hey, i like your work, this is what i think that's what i can provide. i really wish that someone to that
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for me it was difficult. it was difficult for me and i want to make it easier for other people. today is the fees for the eyes as i am joining the public, engaging with art, an artist at the august house open studio day resident art is already to to foster is already a well known name within the art industry. so it was really excited to see where she lives and works you address an important issue, which is agenda based biden's in very unpopular perspective. tell me a bit more about what you wanted to achieve when you were choosing that angle. my intention with the auto of south korea to create this cause so that we can unpack the, the traumas that cause i mean to be violent. because i believe that
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a lot of them have emotions bottled up because they never in touch with their own feelings. a lot of young boys are always taught them as a show, any weakness and them must be strong. a typical example is if your daughter falls down, you're gonna, they gonna comfort her. if the son falls down, then he's most likely to get a lecture and they say like, brush it all, you know, it was about taking like hot industrial materials such as culpa and burn the staples and portraying them in a data could solve it as they take manner, so if it was commentary on how something can haunt n, he's fall, but you know, it doesn't just have to be hot. thank you're late. you for letting us into your space and showing us your beautiful and incredible pieces of art. they so much more to see in this, in a city on have but 1st it see how a young man from the kina fossil has need a home for himself in northern italy,
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hebrew, him sonia once had a dream. he aspired to bake the perfect pizza for katya and pizza on the go. again, when he rang, sonya ran without looking at my name is abraham and sonya. i'm 30 years old from burkina faso. as soon law, no one believed in my project at 1st. what does that? my was finally made my dream come true. i always added my son, and my joint was even named one of the top 50. take away pizzeria in italy, thought besedia thus bought vidalia. his restaurant is right next to the main square of the northern italian city of toronto. there's always something going on in the little takeaway pizzeria. the boss serves customers himself too, but funnily enough, the pizza is an acquired taste for him. lucky saline thriller if it's at 1st i didn't like pizza and stuff. well, i just didn't enjoy the taste. i thought i thought it was new to me because i'm
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from burkina. faso and pizza wasn't a thing there yet. thank god. but with time he took a liking to it. sonya puts zucchini blossoms. basil cream. oh pistachios on the pizza base to make his go may take away creations. and he comes up with a new type every week. just an or like either i like odd combinations. fanatical is specially with intense flavors, little romance and colors that remind me of africa thought about africa. when abraham sonya came to italy as a 12 year old, he was the only black child in his class. and when he opened his pizzeria in 2018, he hardly had any customers. at 1st, many people were skeptical of a black pizza baker. only once he had hired white employees,
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did his business take off new spirit their net. i'm ya, she, this discrimination often angered me in sunday morning, but when you get up in the morning to do something you enjoy, you can do anything you put your mind to death while cause i couldn't coffee because your work doesn't feel like a burden to la santana, and it's just wonderful either. at ammunition, august the father and customers gradually warm to him, and they love spaces in the meantime, his now famous pizzeria is even featured in many travel guides. his secret recipe is sour dough made with top quality flower. he lets it rise for at least 24 hours, making his pizzas extra aromatic and easy on the stomach. he even has his own special baking method, then also to present or not look the aqua to that we make our pete's us twice. look to the 1st we do, just a doe was sent out, then, and toppings and bake it all again, boss like him, and you end up with an extra crunchy dough that's fluffy and light at the same time with it. you can really see it here. these nice air bubbles that formed during
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baking if she could. i know he tried pizzas from all over italy to figure out what he liked best. abraham. sonya only uses high quality ingredients in his takeaway paces. and yet he still keeps the starting price that $2.00 euros and $0.50 a slice. his pizzeria has become one of the most popular in the city and has a reputation even outside of trenton. that can go every one likes his feet, says and they've got great ingredients. honey is moon remote, but you can tell he puts his heart into his pete says good qualities, home to ever authentic and mate with love with pizza. so specify customers pay for an extra pizza, said that a person in need can pick it up later up. some donors write a personal message on the receipt to the initiative is a real hit on line with people expressing their thanks. annoyed. yeah,
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we give people their pizza along with the receipt and a little hello from the donor. know it puts a smile on their face. the bell, the donations keep coming and the local was growing appetite for his pizzas has now led abraham sonya to open up a 2nd restaurant in trenton. now i'm off to mingle while we see how alice chi manda uses photography to tell her story and document life in her home country. all rwanda and abroad, she shows as how her creative faces wake ah, i discovered that the hot deck i pulled on my i when i was 5 years old thought i was playing and then i put my hand on one eye in that cannot see when i was younger,
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could sit there like and a bit of something, but as i go on, the left side has become totally black. i cannot see anything. my poco is kind of pressing because i think if i've not had that problem well, not been focused as i am to be self style, st photographer alice k. bender has an uncanny way of telling vivid stories to her lance, her artist, captivating and exquisite. it draws the viewer and gives an unfiltered, glimpse into african lives immortalized in photos. one of my project life in the shadow heated just about people who have been missing. the reason that the project was for advocacy so that the government can reduce the stocks on some screen so they can have some screen not for double price
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my photography kind, black and white, i've never been attracted by color. color photography may be because my, when i was a kid, my dad was shooting black and white, maybe and for me. but he will never let me tell you. please come because he thought i was going to break him. alice's photos recently featured at the world press photo exhibition, a traveling showcase of photographic talent that is seen by millions of people across 50 countries who project. but one was kind of crazy for the, for what there could be us one cuz because we are talking about my, my journey with depression, then i met another project about, hey,
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i've been working on mental health projects. and i use my as, as the model, depression is kind of a heavy subject for some people, even for those who never experienced it. and for those who experienced it, i think it's kind of a personal project. that's why i chose to execute the my project on here. when i look at the they have project now, i think it's like 15 my journey of healing, how i hear the of the patient. i think a lot of photos in a rural area, but they are low a lot of nice things. so since you get a like the car freeze on there also they can work and hear a lot of people shopping. other people carrying a lot more from the fly and i left i think it was because he was a guy and he has
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a nice and lets me take the full social on the call. it's very unusual for me when people upset mississippi protocol. so when i find the funding fund, the person next size up, well, i just took a couple photos. i'm going through them very happy them in the village. what happened is like i like go and talk to the people, introduce myself, and then something to forget me. and on becoming industrial, how i'm able to capture genuine emotion and really do it out of editing because those train of a photo journalist. so maybe that's why i don't the way the editing. so then after
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that some of the photos in black and white too full for my project on the sub 5 person, but i lost people and i think people beautiful in reason both people think good people. when i pick up some stuff never seen. what i can call in i could so guilty of people is when you're seeing my photograph, i try to show you before when i try to capture when they see like your mother looking at the child, i feel the moment when i see something positive on the 1st time i try to capture it such beautiful odd pieces. tell me a bit more about your creative process. i like to observe interesting textures.
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that gives me an idea of the kind of work that i want to present. so technique that i need to create my art is called let and drips and split. so what i do is i take the, the paint part of my hand and flick it on the, on the, on the canvas or paper that helps create the textures that they can, that you see in the, in the was people find it difficult to understand my work is because it doesn't have a new presentation. so i include figures to bring in that kind of familiarity within the war. so for people that don't familiarize themselves with abstract, they get a little bit of sense of how can the bring in their own interpretation of something that is familiar to them. i'm talking to some of the artists who are at the organs house open studio day, and i must say the beauty of a work is feeding my soul. we are off to gone to join a yes. i hope you who is turning the interior design space in crop on its head. i
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have worked in politics and economics, and i ended up becoming an interior designer because i truly believe interior design is a way of life. it's the bed to sleep on the food you eat, the, the things that you put up on your wall. so it's really part of what i became a interior designer because i was interested in progressively being part of the people that and the culture in the queue. retail, african art and beauty, laureen, eater, oak, who is always on the lookout for new, exciting and edgy design. my clientele are mainly returning but also local or does their high middle class that
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are growing in, in gardner particularly. and i think the middle class is obviously looking for something that is, you know, more functional, more, more, more, more fresh and more, you know, more progressive. and i think my design normally were present more in africa. and one of the privileges that i had with the threw up of my grandmother and donna is home. nothing can replace it. i think as a child, when you are culture it didn't you. it's very difficult for it to leave you. governor is also a place where there is full of opportunity. there's so much that needs to be done. and i think i came back because i saw that i have a place here and i have a role to play. she visit one of her favorite artists to the next some pieces for
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her liters interior design project thought locally, promote the economic growth of this country. and it's something that i've seen over the past 15 years that have been here. i've worked with so many autism and for me, what i've seen is, and then when they get the right support from the community, they're able to really make an impact within the 1st 5 years. as a creative age, i believe that if you are able to come up with an idea, there's another person i will be willing to exchange money for it. i renovated the house. it's a very old house. i'll try it as much as possible to be cost effective for the clients. and so i turned a 2 bedroom house into a 3 bedroom. ah,
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she fully understand how a creative minds it has an impact not only on building a successful business, but also how this approach can support in a lift your community. the shipper cry is the place where you will find a lot of different artists and crafts. it's important that we, it's a place like that because i think 10 years ago i was trying to figure out how to assimilate some of the products that i was looking for. my interior design for this and it was very difficult. i always get what i want. when i come to today, i pick some piece of up which is alum pulled up. made up of cocoanut ross. we tell you for my me, for i, it's basically help the same, the financial echo of the economy, the people that are bringing, staffing, sarah,
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it was to make money and then reproduce. and you know, amplify and also enlarged our profit margin in order to be able to decent, wants to settle and, and we've seen so many people who have come started with us with a few products and in, haven't yet wanted shop with . we worked on my face, i failed to get out. she did everything from conception to, you know, delivery and i was so happy with it. so i co way full coffee to open up estimates for them. so i appreciate what you're trying to do. i know have a profound up station for 8. what does she say? must i interior design? like hey i, it's incredible. that's all from us to day, but i still have
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a few hours to wonder do the 6 blow is enough on but maybe by a piece of us want to you never know remember to take a 1000 d w dot com, forward slash after maxwell more see you soon i with ah ah, ah, with ah,
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with conflict zone with a rash banner d velez also support in russia since the start of the war in ukraine. what is the support of the sector escalated into something more active from that? we are shortcut. you've political advisor to bella lucian, opposition, leader,
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threat law to kind of car up. she claims to be the national leader of bella, luce. but holden, the gentleman, is her claim. with through email d, w, a necessity for all aspects of life. climate change is not just about computers, it's more than that. draughts and floods in the himalayas feel in the youth. and when people are you, when he came back to by climate change because of the intersecting vulnerability, the weight of the human cost of climate change in 60 minutes on d w. o. i see scott is just a thought so great
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a middle ensure my welcome to my podcast, love matter by and by celebrities influences and experts to talk about all plain labs from day to day. nothing less because all these things and more and then you see the plot can make sure to tune and wherever you get your past and join the conversation because you know it love matt in a reporter tracks down the arctics major players. and with your unfolded,
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there is russian warships and guys, and i don't have any guns for shadow. but it starts december 23rd on d w. ah, this is going to be news live from bill. a corruption scandal strikes the european parliament. police in brussels make arrests, as prosecutor said, they targeting an influence peddling scheme by a gulped state also coming up a man suspected of killing his mother the.

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