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tv   Afrimaxx  Deutsche Welle  September 24, 2023 6:30pm-7:01pm CEST

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and we've got some hot tips for your package. the manage, the code is parts affinities. check on some great cultural memorials to be w travel regarding the within the city of cape town in the silo district as seldon. gild a contemporary odds and design gallery which suitcases and promotes the work of south african artist and design is. but before we explore this amazing od redid construct south africa's food culture in cape town with some rather unique flavors. grow through multi with photography. i too much idea by then we see how a luxury fashion brand from nigeria. newton's buffalo, new culture,
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i'm here, which is to create time this statements. he says, my name is pamela im tenga, and you'll watching at 3 megs the skinny, an architect augustus, which just finished, has suitcase he's create to bend in by building and constructing a modern, stylize building into a crowd. this landmark positions itself in the full front of the countries local ok take just seen more than i could said to in the sense of the world how government sports seeking. some is showcasing the better and the more sustainable future the we happen to be in the topic. so i responses last respond to the topics the need for the over the need for she did.
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and you're also the need for connectivity, for greece and the a to fluid in the spaces because we haven't truly enjoyed power. if power goes down right now, kind of buildings, the wic, what guess that's where to send. knows what he talks about. if he's the one to give to him a, it's new architecture as the same level face the we pick the uh, elements of what camera and begin to bring a bit of back into their brand at least so that at least that because of warranted to respect its little colors, fix its location and therefore hopes to reach the building to the exact please. i'm not can take some action to the fact that we call before it. can you not to check the street? you start the, the, the, the name when he comes from the fact that they are pointing these pieces. however, if you're knocking 13 mazda nissan excellence, and i think that's the beast, right. what does excellence is it a guardian thing? so when we do architecture, we must benchmark a globe and to see are we creating excitement and we must pursue that without see
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or fremont tomorrow, also known as the hubble c t is fits with a directly on the grid, which maybe didn't. there was a reluctance you'd. it is right now for what's been done. a lot of people with says us, the vice or transportation hop. well, to my has gave a commission as an industrial censor says if accomplishments in the early $96.00 these and it's also boast of an impressive architecture landscape. we then design the building, which i think can be summarized by industrial mortgage. buildings must be property orientated, or at least i, if i pride reorientation, it's about bringing us back to that stopped, which was a great start by books, address, and informa. we must go on to that discussion and that is what we're trying to do with the building to show that we and hopefully a change that landscape formed within that the time us would be nice. it was joe in his youthful years that richardson felt a strong calling towards the field of i could set you even in primary school. he
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effortlessly grasp the concepts of lots and lots us and pause us and natural talents with sketches. little did he noise affinity for numbers and i suspect expression would eventually lead him to become a co founder over not conceptual fan. what makes your unique is your philosophy and the view points that you get out of keats and the concept coming up of this building here has been of great success. so the people of tim, uh it does create an employment because 95 percent of our stuff. yeah, yeah. visitors of them. so we've created improvement on top of attending the focus of how people are viewing. tim, uh, as a city is now a city where you don't have to go to a crowd blue for tells of this level you can order is i will this in one place. yeah, that's what we do to respond to locations by saying that, look, it's important to invest on 1000 cation is. we have the benefit to the all the
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world visiting drama, almost every december and tories, and is on the high architect to hold the singular power to transform this country by creating unique responses, locked responses, investigating you locked responses, assets into by responses that respect the culture of the police and create buildings that are or one the for kind and that really respond to who we are and aspirations such as people barely to schools, architecture and government sofa. it needs investment. and whenever we have to build is that your, your home, is it your hotel? is it your office? the question you have to ask yourself is, what are you trying to leave at the new address for the from fully, if we understand this, we will create this country profit. the architectural phase of tim is let's up because what you're saying is add this in design input, post full struck to fit for the locations death given that could set to eligible for the future. solving skills gallery
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host exhibitions collaborates with. autism participates in international odd phase and plays a vital role in the south african design as fine arts industries. i'm not joined by the sales manager, jacob, click go, and jacob low needs to be on the left. so why did you decide to be located in the side of the district of cape town, but we, we moved to a gallery head when the side of the district began. so we opened in conjunction with the site smoke and we were very excited 5 as the creative hub in the city. tell me a bit more about the galleries approach to design and art. what makes it distinctive and unique the categories since it began has really acted as a pioneer and for the cut tools, assign category on the content. and in the past 2 years, a program has really evolves an expanded walk me through the different types of
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office and design is that you were present in the space. so we work with a very diverse group of office terms and sign us from across the continent. your current exhibition was odd to send new mahoney. tell us a bit more about how that collaboration came to life. the connection is that over the course of the year, we found a shared vision and a shed a thoughts. and that's definitely a area of expertise for solving go. they have produced the largest pony of sculptural problems. what so wonderful. i'm a very proud of the work has been produced. thank you so much for your time. i cannot wait to take a look at all the amazing work and catch up data. wonderful cape towns, diverse food scene to showcase is a fusion of african european and asian influence is, is because a destination for food and foods. yes. as it is a reflection of the cities cultural heritage. what is the unique mix of flavors?
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welcome to stuff. is that a place where we said, i mean africa through, hadn't made tend to advice. if you're craving an old fashioned chocolate strawberry or not, i told you were looking in the wrong place here at the top. the top is the ice cream flavors. on spied by african super fluids like tiger not sole government. ty, apple, this little ice cream shop. and cape tons, alternative photo observatory sub is no longer a hidden gym, just for locals to p. what change the flavors every week and there anything but vanilla? this is the little fish leisure gets in the continental africa, it typically people washouts or inside of the salt in is but in discipline does there. so these are the thoughts and is to provide flavor. the name tommy toppy is a play on google. his 1st name, but it also means sweet sweet in his mother tongue shona. the molecular biologist
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locks to play with different flavors. so far this in bob we and has created more than $600.00. each one more unique than the last top he was, sees his ice cream as an ode to the african continent. so i'm interested in creating conversation around going back to the foods that involves with the people in the land of its confidence is really important to me that between bracey i look, i did but what does ice cream made out of dried fish? actually taste like i can do, like a salting as of the fish, as well as like the rich sweetness and the factory nose from night. the caramel and the top, the so called wild foods are the latest trained in cape tons of color in every scene. local plants which were largely forgotten of the colonized section of the cape on know, experiencing a revival across town in the community, got it, and kindly to township pharma. is all already profiting off this trend on top of
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the regular vegetables, like tomatoes, peppers and spinach. local super foods such as doing spinach, ice, blonde cell or fix and spectrum, or once again popping up in harvest at 1st with some found it hard to believe that people would spend money on plants that are widely considered common weeds. but skepticism is giving way to infuse, yes, and no doubt helps by the fact that they top up the monthly income quite nicely. plans to be taking is the we stay day, the ice plant that when we pull up a lot and take to the chromebook, we just know it's wonderful doing what now, where is it just cool because even those when i show you are these include you just come out and then when i see it, i keep always cleaning, make it. i'm asking the babies. i loved them to cool. indigenous launch have adapted to the climate of the western cape. they quite literally grow like weeds. no fertilizer needed for centuries. people switch them out for nutrition and
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integrated them into the diet, but with colonization and apartheid people were driven away from the ancestral lands. and so the knowledge about these wild foods vanished. but young people like waves, though, and seen tim bailey, are curious about their routes. for a long time, the 2 university grad struggled to find a job. faced with the prospect of ending up on the streets, they decided to help out at mock our bus bomb slowly that passion for farming and wild foods group. we vegetables that do our for fun that you've created. we don't kids now the moment because what, what do you do now? we did what is a big thing just to us, there's a lot of vegetables that were, you know, even though we are our editor, these my 1st time to get it within my mind. but i'm thinking about all of those coming up. i've been showing, you know, way it's been 4 years. i've been trying it out with the students finish. it can also like help us economically, because if we can know and have knowledge and that we can cultivate this and send me this a to hotels, that's the only cub unemployment in our country to boost the economy. because now
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we are introducing something different into the market because it is nutritionist at the same time. what once ended up on the funds comp us cheap is now most of the play to buy 5 scholarship. rudy leaving the the executive chef of the luxury mountain nelson hotel has been incorporating local wild foods into his cruising for the past decade. i wanted something that really resonated with what was in the ocean. what was on that and how you can bring the 2 together without finding something that was imported when they should have grown specifically. got a lot to do with what? the people of south africa 8 before we started putting out all the we, i mean that's what they would have lived. i mean, that was nutritious. it is healthy, is full of the payments, and that's why we putting it back into the place. it took them awhile to find the right balance of flavors using too much of some plants can leave a bit off the taste. but watch began as an experiment has evolved into fine cuisine,
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leap and book. it likes to serve june spinach spec boom, add ice on from a cup of god and with fresh muscles and kink lip. now more of his colleagues are taking a leaf out of his book. i think a lot more fits those funding to use it, which is good. and with that and luck will guess will be asking for it. and it will be expected because for too long roofing just taking going things, this is not really needed at our sales price is very good for growing a lot of the secular, i mean business green. i know that they take the weather in underground ice cream follows on or because these these passionate foods are gone, the extra mile to ensure a south african wild foods make a well deserved come back fish flavored ice cream. now that is not something i would imagine people would line up for, but it is definitely worth it. shy. now back to you, jacob, what role does the gallery play in the international recognition of african office
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and design is what with our collaborative. so we work a lot with other categories and institutions to shows our office work internationally. and often our office will go in participation. amazing residences right now for a number of us to sophisticate, to kick time winter. we've got an artist in california and a number of us as an australia at the moment. um, so i'm very excited to see what they purchase and how we use supporting the managing office and the south african community. last year we started the guild residency, which is an incredible program where i imagine i'm just stablish office come and stay with us to produce a volume, considering that time will provide an mentorship. awesome in spoken to office to really take that work to another level. that sounds really exciting. i'd like you to lead me in on more of your initiatives and projects that are upcoming for we've
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got a very full and very exciting program for the and so we're going to be participating in amr in new york this year for the 1st time. and i think the most exciting development is the news that we're going to be opening a gallery in l. a next year in february. and we're one of the very few, well african o african galleries to have a permanent space in the us. jacob, thank you. so much for your time. thank you. the arts and science of photography made its way to africa and the 19th century pioneers, by former slaves, photographers would go door to door, offering base services. following this tradition is far too much idea by tate with his mobile studio, the african photographer for 2 months. how do you have it's a studio is a rolling box passers by pose for the camera. and the about
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a captures the moment is happening. it's very popular, people like it so much they like to come to be photographed in this small colored mini bus with the colors of molly of been a cool. and that's us. at the 2023 by my coal encounters. the rolling studio is a meeting point for local students to get up close and personal with the project and the art since it's launch almost 3 decades ago. the bomb i co encounters has become the most important event dedicated to contemporary photography, on the african continent. the vietnam is having a big impact. the co encounters has shaped and made known many great personalities, like monique citibank, c to k, to and other, for can photographers. and the 2023 edition of the encounters over 75 artists are showcasing their work across a venue. among
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them are, it's holly and senegalese artist beans. deos works for art explorers, migration and identity, and often use his hair as a recurring symbol. the event is also celebrating renowned artists with retrospectives such as moroccan photographer and filmmaker diode, a loud sigh on or cuban born artist and maria magdalena. come both phones and 5 to my time. do you have bad days? use nothing pointed to a future as a photographer. despite the objections of her family, she became one of the 1st women to be trained at the photography school of by my cold. she finds it important to empower young people, especially women. to send me to molly is loved photography. it's an artistic profession, but it's not easy to make a living from it. however, it's like this here in money. every sunday there's
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a wedding. we have a lot of celebrations where the young people can take their cameras along. and if they know how to use them properly, they are the photographers a decision that is very motivating, serious thing. and i'm truly impressed that more and more young people are taking out photography. but i'd like it to be even more of us, especially more women for her colleagues is shola octo women on camera are the statement the artist from been in use. the 17th and 18th century paintings found in european museums to inspire his photographs. re imagining african queens long forgotten by history about 2 months idea about a has also often for trace women to give them a face strength, power, and history. that's what the women have always been. one of my favorite motifs. selective for the d about today's association
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offers, creative workshops and educational projects, especially for women because they continue to be under represented in photography. while for me, there is no profession that has a gender, anyone can practice the profession, he or she wants. if you take that history of photography, it was invented by a man, the artists like that too much idea about to prove that african photography is an established and dynamic form of creative manifestation. as the saying goes of pick to tells a 1000 was and 5 to my to test has been beautifully. he says she would need julian, economists to fashion design in language is incorporating the vibrant and beautiful full on the culture into her designs. a one of a kind pieces, marriages,
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culture and contemporary fashion. really here he is. a country was a rich cultural heritage at silva buying shape whose designs celebrate. had northern heritage on the phone. let me try in a bold and innovative way. i always now and i just fashion i always knew that i wanted to fuse heritage with you know, the more western type of fashion. i shop by or she who is a little faced fashion designer who's brand celebrate the beauty of the philosophy . people and the magic group of people found the cross west africa. it may take you from what the original idea was hundreds of years ago to what it can be now. so what it can be in the future. okay, so here we have the original. so i need, we've had this in the office, i served as the expiration for the collection. and you can see it's in the carrier
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fabric. it's closer to live in. it's live because of, you know, the no magically use of people. and what we've done is of taking this as this ration we've translated it into a comp top with, you know, call uh, um, sleeves like you can see on the model which makes it a bit more modern. and in line with the times that we're in, we've also changed colors. well, we've given different variations. so heads a bit bribes uh for the clients who was the brides fund. playful. i have it's know, it's a bit down cause it's a new said. so useful part of the statement, but not as loud to learn fashion, the former economist went to paris and milan, then later, stop at home, buy some brand back home in 2017 may go off of the city. the pulses with creativity
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and energy loss as a huge expiration in and my life. and i'll just buy some inspiration. i'm calling from every way that i've been calling from people it comes from travel, comes from research, it comes to movies. so i'm not strictly influenced by before any culture. my inspiration is as wide. it's this that an open misstep. i shot associates with the full i me who as nomads move from place to place. that just style and embrace of color serve as an inspiration for the brands coming, a septic to modernize the full and the cost to is part of our homecoming. so my sister and our clary, now, you know, just organize in the closets and we found a cos channels, which i think i really feel for letting me go has and, and did. reminds we started of a conversation on why the con, get to with this, you know, dates of the red line, right? that has to be like for independence day or something. it's basically going out. so
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a tradition for us and that conversation was what's really swaps the designs around the heritage on the fly me, i'll fix on all of that. and then looking back up to that collection was executed. i found this sketch that actually did a refresher. the school will fly me inspired, i'll say it and you know, i think that we can just came full circle from that. are you stop by your seems passion for fashion. and when i julian culture, all the driving forces behind a brand, she believes that fashion is a way to create and preserve cultural traditions, while also creating something new and beautiful. i like to think of the brand as a story telling brand where you're educating people. people express quotes in different ways and food in an academic yeah. and any kind of glue sticks all of
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that book for me, it's telling my story to fashion. okay, so welcome. so uh, production room. the head is where the magic happens, the tail ours, and we have the be the here you have different options for fabrics up production. yeah, i sure p i do read this is actually as you read, i'm a mix in boy the past 10. and then you have the traditional address. sometimes my design plus says, depends on my frame of mind. and sometimes it depends on what is in my visual arrives. so i can see something randomly. i take that idea, break it down into different beds, sketch it's out, trying to work with different fabrics. sometimes it's the fabric before the sketch . so i see
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a nice fabric that interest me in that i'll take that fabric and see what designs work with. it's through my designs, i tried to call them message, all authenticity of heritage of culture. and it's fine for us to allow the western world influenza us for, you know, less not completely forget who we are. right, which is why with the designs, it's a blend of tradition. me, it's the western world of the old and it's the new so that we, we, we don't forget who we are and we still adapt to more than time. the fashion is more than just clothing. it's a reflection of leon, cultural heritage and personal style. that's all we have time for today. we hope you enjoy this to remember to take us out on d, w dot com, forward slash for next school. and so next time, okay,
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by the the,
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we love us. we love diversity. anything unusual. no mountain is too high. the road is too long. in such a faithful, ordinary we all this specialist of lifestyle, 009. in 30 minutes on d w,
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the these places in europe stepped into a bold adventure. if the treasure map for modern globetrotters describe it as some of us for bridging sites on youtube and also in the manuals in janesville, you won't be long for the 77 percent because i don't go to 65 for the last last goals. and here's 3 reasons why 1115. we are here to help you make up your mind. because i'm much up to you from campbell topics, the new culture financial team. and let's say, well, quote, the change can be viewed as natural conclusions of
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the like the trying to change the age of enlightenment. and it's 300 year old ideas be responsible for today's problem. and could they help us solve them? i believe our futures in our past, the power of the beginning of the done as a series of the great philosophers to all present and future enlightenment says progresses in our hands and that means so it's really it's up to the series project and stuff. so services on dw
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