Archive for the ‘Culture’ Category

Perhaps time for Queen Nefertiti to leave Berlin – Egypt asks for return of prized bust from Neues Museum

Monday, December 21st, 2009

Berlin  20-12-2009 

Egypt has again asked for the return of Queen Nefertiti’s bust from a Berlin museum .

The 3,400 year-old limestone bust of Nefertiti was discovered in Egypt in 1912 at Tell el-Amarna, the capital city of her husband, Pharaoh Akhenaten. Its almond-like eyes, fine elongated neck, and Mona-Lisa like pensive stare have made this piece of antiquity draw millions of visitors from around the world. 

It was found by a German – Ludwig Borchardt -who discovered the head in 1912 and had it shipped to Germany in 1913. However it now seems almost certain  – after reading his diaries -this with done using deception in order to get it out of Egypt. 

He had to pretend it was just some ordinary bust – pass it off as a less significant find -and with-hold its true significance as a major piece with great value. In fact the treasure was taken unethically – or in normal parlance – stolen. 

It is expected that Egypt will make formal applications to ask for the return of the bust while the German Culture ministry will most likely reject the claim saying procurement of the bust was lawful at the time and that Egypt has no legal grounds to demand its return. 

As in many cases like this – possession is nine-tenths of the law – and Germany refused to lend the statue back to Egypt temporarily in 2007, citing its “fragility”. In other words they were afraid that the Egyptians would “steal it back”!

There has as of yet been no comment from the Prussian Cultural Heritage Institute, which manages the museum regarding this particular issue.

The Egyptian request does not occur in a vacuum -  the repatriation of Nefertiti is part of a larger campaign for the return of ancient treasures including [amongst others] the Rosetta stone, from the British Museum.

Egypt initially demanded the return of Nefertiti bust in 1925 during the Weimar republic, and Germany then did in fact later agree to hand it back to Egypt in 1935.

However Hitler personally interceded and stopped its return– so this means it’s probably a good idea to give it back now.

Martin Scorsese film ‘ Shutter Island ‘ to premiere at Berlinale

Saturday, December 19th, 2009

The new film ‘Shutter Island’ by director Martin Scorsese’s  will premiere at the Berin Film Festival next February, but will not be competing for the Golden Bear prize – the best film of the Berlinale.

The organizers of the Berlinale only select 26 films for the festival’s competition lineup.  

It will be Sorsese’s latest film and stars Leonardo DiCaprio.

The film – a drama ‘horror-thriller’ – is set in 1954 US where a local policeman investigates the odd disappearance of a criminally insane murderer who has escaped from a hospital hiding on a remote island.

The 2010 Berlin International Film Festival, the 60th,  starts February 11th and runs until February 21st.

New Polanski film ‘Ghost Writer’ to premiere at Berlin film festival

Saturday, December 19th, 2009

Berlin   18-12-2009

It may be a “virtual” star that will highlight next year’s Berlinale film festival. 

A new film by French/Polish director  Roman Polanski has been selected to premiere there however he remains under house-arrest in Switzerland. A live video feed could  have the embattled director participate from distance.

His new politcal drama,  ’The Ghost Writer’ -by the former english journalist and  BBC reporter Robert Harris – will feature Pierce Brosnan and Ewan McGregor in the leads with Kim Cattrall and Olivia Williams taking  support roles.

The 77-year-old director was arrested in Switzerland where he was to accept another film award, but was rewarded by being jailed instead. This due to Swiss authorities upholding an international arrest warrant issued against him in the late 70’s by the US.

 The Berlin film festival wanted to support him in this way and still consider him one of the world’s most outstanding film directors.

The 60th annual Berlinale international film festival will start in 2010 on the 11th February and run till the 21st.

Berlin Wall, Israeli Wall and Mexican Border wall – All wrong!!!

Tuesday, November 3rd, 2009

What is probably the most interesting, compelling and artistic commemoration of the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall is the WALL PROJECT taking place in Los Angeles.

Artists have provided works that show clear analogies between the Berlin Wall and the wall the Israelis have erected along the border with the occupied Palestinians and the wall the US has erected along the Mexican border.

This Berlin Wall anniversary remembrance is being organized by the Wende Museum, a private entity, in collaboration with the City of Los Angeles.

Included will be “The Wall Across Wilshire,” scheduled for the 8th November in which a 20m replica of the Berlin Wall will be re-constructed on a part of Wilshire Blvd. in front of the County Museum of Art at midnight.

This commemoration has put the former US president/actor and Hollywood resident Ronald Reagan’s famous slogan “Tear down this wall!” into historical perspective as a somewhat opportunistic rant – while the US government is complacent in the building of the Israeli wall and actually building the wall on the Mexican border.

Kammerkonzert am 05.11.2009

Monday, November 2nd, 2009

Donnerstag, den 05.11.2009 um 20.30h

Geigerin Nadja Zwiener wird begleitet von dem Pianisten Michael Abramovich die ersten beiden Schumann Violinsonaten spielen.
“Daß Nadja Zwiener die Tür zu unserem Piano Salon gefunden hat, ist ein Wunder, ist sich doch unter den Geigerinnen ein absoluter Superstar, Konzertmeisterin eines der renommiertesten Orchester der Welt, von The English Concert unter Trevor Pinnock. Sie hat auf unzähligen Aufnahmen mitgewirkt, mit ebenso vielen Großen als Solistin oder Konzertmeisterin gearbeitet wie z.B. Simon Rattle, William Christie, Trevor Pinnock, John
Eliot Gardiner oder Emmanuelle Haim.”

Weitere Informationen finden sich unter http://www.englishconcert.co.uk/biographies/detail.php?ID=1294

—-
www.konzertfluegel.com

The Berlin Weinerei is not a Schweinerei!

Monday, November 2nd, 2009

[In German a big gyp, or a fraud type scandal is called a <<Schweinerei>>.]

In Berlin a system of you <<pay what you think this is worth>> system has been in operation for over a decade at the Berlin Weinerei.

It may sound like a completely backward way of running a business, but in fact you go and eat, [and drink after 2000hrs!] and then you pay what you think it was all worth. They do emphasize that you should be respectful with your payment, which means you should average at least 2 Euros a glass but for the quality of the wine this is often a great deal One cannot argue with success however because the Weinerei has been around over 10 years and is doing fine thank you very much.

The history of the pricing-option came about by the owners trying to bring out the sommalier in us all. They started with a wine shop on Veeteranen Str and as their customer base grew they decided to turn the often all too elite world of wine on its head by offering everyone the chance to sample and experience different wines for cost. So in keeping with their small-business mentality and basic trust in their customers left the pricing as an option at the end of the meal – <<please leave your money in the box at the front door>>.

People in the neighborhood loved the place and it has become so successful that there are now 3 separate Weinerei all in the area of Zionskirchplatz in Berlin Mitte.

After one of your meals you may want to visit the nearby Zionskirch [Zions church] which has recently been the focus of a renovation campaign on on the outside, but is still completely barren inside.

This is where the German Luthern theologian and heroic resistor to the Third Reich, Dietrich Bonhoeffer was a pastor.This great and heroic figure stands out in recent German history as a moral giant – especially when compared to his opponents, the moral pygmies, the rat-like nazis.

Konzerte am 29. und 31.10.2009

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

Donnerstag, den 29.10.09 um 20.30h
Lieder- und Arienabend mit der wunderbaren und nicht minder schönen israelischen Sopranistin Dana Marbach begleitet von Dan Deutsch am Flügel

Samstag, dem 31.10. 09 um 20.30h
Vom bekanntesten Klaviertrio some handsome hands ein sechshändiges mit Sicherheit sehr illustres Konzert

Weitere Informationen finden sich auf dem angehängten Flyer und unter
www.somehandsomehands.de

Und noch etwas Erfreuliches gilt es zu berichten: die unvergleichliche Maria
Masycheva, deren Konzerte wir zweimal in diesem Jahr erleben durften, hat
den renommierten Wettbewerb Long-Thibaud in Paris gewonnen. Anbei der link
zu einem Bild vom Wettbewerb:
http://jpanconiphoto.free.fr/ltweb/Data/page.htm?18,0

—-
www.konzertfluegel.com

Private Soviet art exhibition in Berlin

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009

For the first time in Europe, a private art exhibition is being presented, followed by an auction,which is focused specifically on narrating the art historical period of Socialist Realism in the former Soviet Union.

On 6 November   BEHIND THE IRON CURTAIN – Art of Socialist Realism will open at the Jeschke-Van Vliet in Berlin. This exhibition will display a collection of 300 classics of this genre.   It may very well be the beginning of a revival of interest in a form that up to now has often been dismissed by arrogant Western art critics as at best “well made kitsch”, and at its worst “political propaganda”. The truth lies elsewhere because much of these works are very moving and all are well painted.

These paintings represent an extraordinary cross-section of the everyday life of that time in the Soviet Union and conjure up the anxieties and emotionality of artists in an atmosphere of apparent calm and determination

From the web site of the the Gallery:

These works are primarily representations of labor in all areas of life [in agriculture, in industry, in schools, etc.] and additionally, landscapes, portraits and history paintings of epic scenes reaching from the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917 up to works dealing with World War II. The paintings were created between the end of the 1930s and the 1980s in the U.S.S.R. and are part of a sizeable and unconventional private Italian collection, which consists of 600 works that have been collected over the years.

The purpose of the exhibition is to present this period in the absence of any political motive: Artists in the Soviet Union were civil servants and were therefore not permitted to sell or give away their works, because these were legally the property of the state, as the patron that had commissioned them. Every artist managed to create a space, in which to express his or her humanity and world-view, despite working for the state on official commissions. Because of this, those viewers who are willing to search carefully, will find interesting elements that can be drawn from various details in the works. Extraordinary discoveries were made in the course of restoration and conservation work. These discoveries offer sufficient evidence to prove the importance of this historical period and its art:

The canvases are made of crude materials: mostly burlap or pieces of canvas taken from military tents and sewn together. These materials were adapted for their new function by hand on the basis of traditional techniques.

Industrial products were not used to prime the majority of the canvases either instead, this was done by hand with crude materials such as cement powder from construction sites or boiled vegetable oil.

Even though they were executed according to precise instructions from the political leadership of the U.S.S.R., the artworks testify to humanity and individual experience to an extraordinary and exciting mixture of struggle, joy and sorrow. They were often carried out with an amazing mastery of technique: Special analyses have revealed that there are no preliminary drawings under the paint surface. This offers a clear proof of the talent of these artists, who maintained proper proportions and produced stylistically consistent works, even while working with a palette knife in a virtuoso painterly manner on gigantic paintings of up to 10 m². A large number of notes on the reverse sides of the canvases relate anecdotes about various talented artists, who had to work at other jobs in order to feed themselves and their families: an interesting and poetic trace and indication of lived history. (Excerpt from a written statement by the curators of the exhibition)

To view the paintings on the Internet:

http://www.kunstauktion-berlin.de/aktuelle_auktion.html

Verdi-YES, Baritone Domingo YES, Berlin Staatsoper stage director NO!

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009

With roaring applause, the Berlin Opera public yet again clearly let it be known where their preferences lay.

Berlin opera audiences, as is their wont, rarely just relax and sit on their hands at the end of a performance. They are at either extreme end – of either booing with catcalls [or just booing if they are in a polite mood] or the opposite are widely enthusiastic and shout and clap for tens of minutes with blusteringshouts of approval.
The extreme negative expressions are usually reserved for conductors, and   orchestras. But their favourite villains and for whom the most opprobrium is saved are stage directors – those daring artists who like to challenge conventional and standard performance wisdom.

Simon Boccanegra, is Verdi’s somber opera about a 14th century Genoese doge with a complicated life story, a dead girlfriend, a missing daughter and many enemies.
This Saturday Placido Domingo, conductor Daniel Barenboim, diva Anja Harteros and the Orchestra of the Staats Oper won enthusiastic applause, while stage director Federico Tiezzi was thoroughly and loudly booed.
First-night Berlin viewers howled their displeasure at unknown Italian director Tiezzi’s absurdly decorative staging. Singers weighed down by proto-Renaissance robes, brought to mind “Batman” and “Shrek.” Domingo sings his final death scene in a floor-length gold frock with matching tea-cosy hat, while his daughter stood about in white lace.

Saturday’s premiere was all about Domingo, aged 68, and applause broke out the moment the Spanish singer set foot on stage. Placido Domingo who now sings as a baritone, is a former tenor of iconic fame. He has aged without losing his good-looks appeal, although he no longer can sing the high tenor notes that brought him earlier fame.
Verdi’s opera “Simon Boccanegra” is set in perilous times – by a politically involved composer -the opera is full of conspiracies and confusing shifts of power; women take a back seat.  Simon is a melancholy man whose only relationship is with his long-lost daughter Maria, who turns up in the arms of an enemy.
Hindered by Tiezzi’s catastrophically static staging [resembling a museum exhibit]   Domingo never lost the plot and remained focused throughout.   Domingo simply did what he does so well. He sang with brilliant presence, musical intelligence, fastidious attention to detail, and bold imagination. The low notes are not always the loudest, but the high notes are effortless, and everything in between is utterly compelling.

“This is a co-production with Milan’s La Scala where Barenboim is also musical director. “Simon Boccanegra” runs five more nights at the Staatsoper Unter den Linden.

Klavierabenden mit Benjamin Moser

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009


Klavierabenden mit Benjamin Moser

20. & 22.08.2009, um 20.30h


Verehrtes Publikum,

mit besonderer Freude darf ich zwei besondere Konzerte ankündigen und dazu
einladen, wird doch der renommierte Pianist Benjamin Moser zwei verschiedene
Klavierabende im Salon geben. Benjamin Moser ist ganz sicher schon jetzt ein
Großer der Tasten, man darf eine große Karriere auf in den wichtigen
Konzertstätten der Welt von ihm erwarten. Er entstammt einer der
berühmtesten Musikerfamilien überhaupt und erfreut sich und sein Publikum
spätestens seit dem Gewinn des Tchaikowski Sonderpreises bei dem wohl
wichtigsten Klavierwettbewerb überhaupt durch eine weltweite
Konzerttätigkeit sowie atemberaubende Aufnahmen.

Daß Benjamin Moser gleich zwei aufeinanderfolgende Abende im Salon geben
wird, ist mehr als Grund zu Freude und Aufregung, wir verdanken wir dies dem
unermüdlichen Insistieren des geschätzten Ulugbek Palvanov. So können wir am
Donnerstag und am Samstag, an letzterem Termin unter dem Patronat der
“IFA-Langen Nacht des Hörens” zwei verschiedene Programme hören, die die
ganze Breite der Klaviermusik von ihrer besten Seite zeigen werden, Piano
Recitals in der Tradition großer Pianisten. Die Programme finden sich auf
dem angehängten Flyer.

Sehr herzlich

Christoph Schreiber
Piano Salon Christophori
www.konzertfluegel.com