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tv   Afrimaxx  Deutsche Welle  April 29, 2023 10:30pm-11:01pm CEST

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in brussels is the one i guess, michelle michelle, president of the european congress, conflicts with a 60 minute. what's what on what do you double? you know, what are sports all a scoring? do we say there about never giving up sports? like every weekend on d. w. have you ever experienced one of those days where you find yourself at a breath taking the beautiful place while i'm at the marriage foundation, a truly enchanting place there ought and nature collide. but before we take a beautiful stroll in this paradise. so hush meant shows us exquisite approach to jewellery that is sure to leave a footprint in rwanda. we turned to mum sources and he's innovative,
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opposed to creating art that envisions a utopian africa through the use of currency. then discover the only winery in malawi that is producing a range of local fruit life. i'm sure no problem with that and you oh, i think ever max ah, ah, velez summer galvan and award winning disruptor and an artist in every sense of the word who brings form function and african duty into the world of interior design enjoy. ah, how to create a proud d, self african design empire, known as the african trained dictator. the laser more cockburn was the 1st female african design and collaborate with the swedish fashion company,
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18 m. i. m a queen of style and play. and i really wanted to create a capital collection that could bring this very same sense of style into people's homes. and now she's been tearing into de cole. i come from a creative background. it's a trait that i get from my dad. he is super creative. my brothers 3 is older than me. he's a graphic designer and i always saw myself in him. i. i knew that i was creative and talented, a really young age. and fashion seems like the courage, the vehicle to sort of express my in my creativity. i live in a constant sort of state of an inspiration. i believe that inspiration is fluid. i have got to trust every thing you know that i feel, i mean, i'm intuitive. like i said, i'm, you know, i'm creative. so i'm really just a sponge when it comes to beautiful things and i take them and i use them and i
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infuse them in my work pallet them okay. bone is recognized for her fears. 80 yet elegant prince lines. which analogy incorporates into her interior design piece of her latest collaboration is with one of south africa's largest home where companies to create a print collection based on a heritage believe that drew from her memories to create these print. and each prince is firmly rooted in the continent we call home. so i created a, a range of for, for prince. and one of them is called township jazz. the township jazz at design during cove. it, but there wasn't a lot happening except that a lot of people were just passing away in some of them were my rules, you know, musical heroes. and i've just set in that space. i found myself just kind of sitting in that space and, and sort of coloring it and making it's, you know, beautiful in drawing in from it. tasha jazz was the soundtrack of my childhood in
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when we woke up to you must get a we will go to sancho more though he woke up to me or my care by. we woke up to order them and they were all just graham in so many of our heroes passed away during that time. and i wanted to celebrate that. and i did that by playing the music as loud as i could. and then, and then getting down to, to the nitty gritty, which is where they from, which is from the township. you know, they're from so into, i'm originally from grants that just that free state. and my parents moved to the voucher angle or when, as a teenager, but i am, i am a job based designer. so and, and i followed to these, these, his musical heroes for a really long time. so i was just really kind of, you know, processing the loss. i may, i miss, i'll african, i'm a creative, i'm a woman. i have a very strong sense of self and i'm just wired in a very kind of graphic way. and it only made sense for me to, to celebrate my people, my culture, my background with the most bold. and i just kind of in your face. ah,
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you know, prince, that have got a lot of attitude. it's not just about making bold statements on the runway or now with interior pieces, but he also takes the stand one of palaces, recent campaigns was with an insurance company to encourage women to live fearlessly. so i did a collaboration along with his, as he been a to z, who is our miss universe from 2019. and it was a campaign that was centered around the notion of being fearless. and again, it came to us right after you know, cove it at a time when people were really, you know, uncertain though a lot of uncertainties. and i think women all over the world needed to hear you know that message. and for them to think of me as someone that can carry that flag and can spread that message, it meant a lot for me to be a part of that because i needed to be fearless at the time. supporting local
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creators is dear to polezza. she urges the government, do they part is there is a lack of support for the creative industry. i don't think i do a lot of deliberate sort of social ags, but i run a, you know, standard company of where people have been here with me for many long time. and i take that as like a social, you know, act and a stand. and i take care of them. this is an industry that can curb unemployment if, if it's invested in africa lives in a, in a constant state of inspiration. i don't feel this way because i am in, i want to, it's because of where i'm from. and i think it's because of our history, and i think it's because of our future. we are dreamers, we, we are workers. we are workers. and then on top a head we have, you know, tons amounts of canons and creativity. the world should be scared of us. she's bold
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and distinctive and has gone one step further in bolding, her empire. fearless and proudly felt african. ah, the nurse foundation is located at the cradle of human kind. the perfect space to celebrate passion, peace, and promise. through contemporary art, we are joined by lira croft to the narrow events and operations manager. leroy we are at the cradle of humankind, essentially the birthplace of who we are. this history beneath our feet. what is the inspiration behind the narrow examination things situated here, i would say being situated in the cradle of human kind, which is the largest collection of hominid fossils in the world. the things that the themes that happen through residencies tend to be around these shared common
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ancestry that we have, you know, it's also a very deep mythical question. and i would say that art is here to ask the question, rather than to give the answer fuel for thought. but comes out of having the residency. it's quite something you've partnered with the klan and what a villa will trust. what can one expect from this? for the clarity, what will trust has recently enabled with my route, the creation of the vanilla haughty centers sculpture. it is a generous of space for the creation of art comprising of full, fully equipped sculpture workshop on the one side. and, and exhibition and projects based on the other side. also including a library. as a generative space for the oddest to my ross, to be able to create their work before that large scale sconces to very much bring . and bry bring your own bry kind of situation to bring your own tools. and now we
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don't have to do that narrow. thank you so much for showing us around here. and actually basically helping us experience is beautiful place. it's time to take a trip to rhonda to speak to someone who's traveled all over east africa. and as you to experience is to inform her artistic journey and jewelry design led me to to horseman, handling accessories with clearly recognizable african designs that crosses boundaries. that's what su smith is known for. how i cross boundaries is i could walk into a hardware store, pick up a giant and bring it back home and look at it and say, what am i going to create out of the news news. this piece right here is one of my personal favorites. i like to be rejected. beads which are faulty and this is one of them. this is also
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very good example of how irving corporate home cursory, the crystal beads i've got. this is an old t shirt that has been converted into strands that we have now used into this piece . oh, i've got some very old beads here from tanzania. i picked this up a long time ago in sandy bar. there were in a strand and i just broke them up and used the linda's so ha, is what one might call a true east african born in the coastal king and c t o. my thought she let us called in uganda. and as mel made her home in her warm dark where she lives with her family, there was not much for me to do here. so i kept exploring and visiting the curious doors and looking at the bead work they had here. then i started playing with beads, i said, okay, let's try to create some, some aid work just to keep myself busy and to tap on that starts which i had before
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of trying to make something. so i started going to craft stores and craft markets and buying beads and breaking them apart and recreating something from that just to pass time. and i started really enjoying news here we have a difficult piece of home for me, the marseilles, yoko. these colors are so so traditional, when you go to canada and you look at them aside, you will see them draped in this ciocca, keep themselves warm or just as a traditional dress for them. what i have done here is i have incorporated crystals from austria and turned it into a scarf that's suitable for the international market. mm. with a couch of gift hands. andrew material sources east africa from kenya,
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uganda and wanda swash. myths, accessory designs come to life. their board and unique, they proudly incorporate african tribal art and techniques in a sustainable way. oh, oh. oh, my designs are supposed to fit every style. who has perpetual process when creating a collection for either e are in necklaces, briskin is or baskets, is to always collaborate with other women. she shares her desires and visions, i'm together. they get to exchange knowledge and skills with the techniques. each one is gifted in such as be to walk cli work or weaving with fabric cycle or thread when accentuating. they've wandered couch through the products, colors, or patterns. for me,
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inspiration is all around me. i can walk out on the street, look at the trees, look at the beautiful view of kigali. it inspires me. ah. so would it take, you know, for my way so my flow, so wait a slave, my creative if it have a look at the finished product i use of cipher threat and play. i renewed to mother nature liddy, often discounted by products. oh, various industries source and turned into something you knew the other material i like that you as i like to work with a lot of natural gems. those here for example, i have chelsea dani would say imported from the u. s. a purely because of quality and high and finish. so it gives the finished product and nice finish touch
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. here i also have ro aquamarine mixed with pearls. these us were all sky pearls. and these are more like the, the statement pieces between myself and my friends shop, where i always go for inspiration. it's just a walk up the street. i'll show you why i love his store. there's always something i can pick and incorporate that into my design. let me show you why we look at this. doesn't that just green african beauty to you? this just inspires me to like, 1st of all reminds me of the ocean and then you've got these reds. i think this thieves have been struggling to beat into strand this right here is inspiration. i think this is really pretty. i like the fact that it has lake i think this is shells definitely and it has the
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face of ropes on it. let's try and see where we can incorporate this with how creativity and intelligence spirit combined tradition and african crafts with a more than taste. she crosses boundaries. i am countenance just with accessories or design to her has not only empowered herself through her jewelry designs but women all over africa with her exquisite pieces that tell unique stories. i have stumbled across an artist who caught my eye with an exhibition that will change your perspective on aunt. hi nga. it is evident in your art that you inspired by you is a closer routes. how do you find the balance between your closer heritage and your modern character in your pieces? oh, well, for me it's, i suppose, occupying a complex space in between both those identities, right? not ascribing to one over the oh, describing importance to one over the other. but to really sort of embrace both and
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i'm, it's kind of how i was raised more than anything it was you know, are both those things were praised and sort of encouraged in my family and practice . i suppose. so i think it's always been about keeping that alive for myself and that complexity in my own identity in we, in the cradle of human kind as being in the space of fixture work in any way. and how does the culture and the heritage of it affect you? well, this is a very interesting context. and yeah, i think to sort of know that, and to think about that, to think about human origins to think about, you know, an ancient r 10 rock are to think about ancient relationship with the landscape and, and, and how we sort of come to establish these cultures that we sort of occupy in
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practice now and yet to think about the origins of those things is quite interesting to me. and i, i think i always one to go back to that um, to that sense of origin, that sense of, you know, where i come from. yes. but i guess, yeah, in a greater sense considering where we all come from and what we are all a product of innocence, anger, thank you so much for joining us here today. you've not only brightened up our past, but also showed me the culture road ahead and feel it. thank you. my saw cease is a visionary artist from senegal, who aspires to unite the african continent with his design of a universal currency called the afro. his vision, the liberation of africa from its colonial legacy. his be call for achieving man the afro occurrence. he created himself. through this project, the artist months were seized presents as utopian demands for the africa of the future. bear uproar, i have considered the afro is an artistic currency for africa,
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will be fixing in 14 african nations that used to be french colonies. absolutely. to this day, people pay for things with money that comes from france. ones that are available, grabbed in foreign crash gamma if they are, it's called the currency of the french colony in africa. any, if i just wanted to put a stop to that and for stopping the afro is the future. if these so come months was cease was born in senegal, he's been working on the afro project for 20 years. he's printed so many notes. he has no idea how many each and every afro is an art object. but at the same time, he wants his currency to challenge ideas of what constitutes art. the hobbins zirulnik line of excellence. we set up little currency exchange is all over the car dhaka. it was a hit with the younger generation, most of all come on feed. we almost had the problem that people thought it was real currency hub, right. but politicians are responsible for money related matters. go to. so muffin doesn't with the look at the dollar,
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it's made of paper him to our nick. i know the after us also made a paper, a lot of property, but it's not been recognized yet about the underneath in an account owns it is not in his anika. when months was cease moved from the car to the german capital in 1993. he found himself increasingly drawn to subjects like identity and tradition, tackling them with a good portion of humor. but above all, berlin has made his work more political. what's known as the berlin west africa conference took place here in 1884 and 85. at the meeting, the 14 european colonial powers, clark, the african continent between them without inviting a single african does its own force daily by it's unimaginable unfair and is the berlin conference was our inspiration for the foundation of the laboratory as a kind of discourse with the west that as i know, how can we live together invested? how can we live it ourselves from this colonialism coming on say before i am for
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these are called in dallas most in 2001. so see, and 2 other artists founded what they call the d berlin ization laboratory. as well as the afro the product was also devised with a global pass, granting free movement to all citizens of the world. one source sees also promotes his vision in his homeland. he wants his art to inspire dreams and foster hopes of economic independence on the whole african continent. although the afro hasn't been recognized as a courtesy yet, sometimes dreams do come true. and when they do months or will be waiting at the villa, godfrey, the artist center in the capital on the petticoat so many kilometers from the car, a place where he can really feel free and that his dreams run riot. ah, after having enjoyed all that odd
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a nature, it's time to enjoy the artist taste straight from malawi. these wind producers pride themselves in creating exciting wines made from native and home from fruits guaranteed to spice up your life. the malawi has some of the best agronomic conditions in the world for growing tropical food, such as mangos, bananas, strawberries, and gem builder, which are often used to me through a curious as to that there was our present day plaintiff routine loud. so they defended our list, just be 10 our abilities to make when ag into a business by using the they trading me foot that we have in the country from what started as a hobby making communion, wine out of her business resellers. dr. timothy and clear, developed a recipe to produce a range of 100 percent natural additive and sugar free food. twice. this said linda winds on the path to becoming the only commercial producer of what is
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a niche market in africa. the main men and puts them in our the pita edition. if you see in the villages, there's a lot of foods that are just being sometimes wasted. we are focusing on those people that are in the villages that are producing, but they don't have enough market to. so there exists ah, fluids. the food is source from different small sees no food or trips from across finale. i'm saying my, my staff to go and, and unless has been very good to me cause as area i was having marital surprises. and as of now they're taking all my stuff. our men publish a yes to to person. they've heard that you have printer, but at the same day more so to have to use good according to food so that we should at least end up with her. i say product, i take good care of my my price i most of the times i don't buy much fed laser.
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that's why you see my strawberries out of good quality. i have good taste. yeah. the switch. after harvesting and delivery, the fruit is immediately washed, chopped, and left overnight in boiled water. once the want a cools, they add an enzyme to soften the fruit, then leave it for 2 days. the next step is squeezing the food in a squeezing bag. this is done manually to calanda to get the juice. so it is very modest for florida, i mean accomplish from a new one because one of their main pillars, the sustainability, even the way they produce says recycle to feed the trees in their garden, produce the nor wine they. then i g 's, which has been activated by putting it in a quarter of the juice and step after we how i did dish we did rita of b to be exposed to oxygen. we need to accident the initial stage for preparing for
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and i our next to stage. we weren't a number of yourselves to please. so that during been out over from additional show like this number, a good number of yourself. a week later, the mixtures transferred to lucy close drums to allow carbon dioxide to escape, or keeping the oxygen out to avoid oxidation. after weeks 13 and 6, they filter out the wine to remove the sediment which is thrown away before the wine is moved into a maturation seller where it stays for a year before butting, all of it for the same process. the difference is that with we are appreciating that we are growing and we noticed that every year we have the ink is ronelle graph. people. i liking it, people as to knowing it and big ralph is going in there,
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market is increasing and according to the production, we can say the codecs showing louise, we need to increase their production door mean damage. despite only an estimated 20 percent of malawi and drinking alcohol lingo, wine says that that festival reviews that wind shows and festivals in the region the u. k, and europe and has achieved consistent growth. the 1st border was dispatched in december 2022 to zambia. the model has been to focus on organic growth and promotion using partnerships of local malawi and brand celebrities and cultural figures. and it's paying off it test to very good with troop wine is a delicious and versatile beverage with a unique flavor that pairs well with any meal, whether you're season wine connoisseur or you're starting to explore the world why there's always an adventure to be head. cheer ah
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ah, that's all the time we have for you today because i am going to get lost in this beautiful garden. for more please check us out, and d, w dot com, forward slash f re max season a ah ah, with
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who into the conflict zone with sebastian have enormous 5 months of virtual style made on the battlefield of ukraine. and yet, europe and america are clear that if one get to the fighter aircraft a long range weapon systems, the good will seen from brussels is the one. i guess this shall michelle,
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president of the european council conflict zone in 30 minutes spawn w. oh no, jerry and trafficking networks. she said, i you go very well even make it in, you know. and when i got at that this me flaming dining, they'll tell me yesterday out in force him to position the movie to walk, to make sure that that shady dealings in 60 minutes. oh d w. ah, who did you do the food i changed the channels. fantastic. ah, she survived. oh schmidt's thanks to music. and he was the nazis favorite
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conductor to musicians under the swastika, a documentary about the sounds of power and inspiring story about survival. music in nazi germany, watch now on youtube. d. w. documentary of species populate our planet. most of them are here long before us. it was own when humans came along that the great mass extinction began and amusing diversity of species still exist on the coast of the british isles and they are calling to preserve this habitat. ah dory. oh,
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wild dials starts me on d w ah ah, this is dw news live from berlin, a desperate humanitarian crisis as the fighting in sudan enters a 3rd week. doctor say 2 thirds of hospitals and the conflict zone are out of service. most western nations have finished evacuating their nationals, leaving sudan civilians to cope as best as they can. russia blames.

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