Posts Tagged ‘cultura’
José Mário Branco (1942-2019)
Obrigado!! Uma obra genial!
Sempre actual!!
Outras:
Fonte:
YouTube
A Terra é plana ou redonda?
Há cada vez mais pessoas a pensar que a Terra é plana…
… e a culpa é do YouTube.
Fontes:
Arte ou Vandalismo?
Bom dia a todos!
Há que saber distinguir Arte de Vandalismo. Há quem saiba aproveitar certas geometrias das cidades para colocar alguma dose de humor e fazer alguma Arte. Fiquei abaixo com algumas.
Fonte:
Foto(s) do dia

For centuries, the small villages in Transylvania, Romania, have preserved their hay meadows, raised cattle, and operated self-sustainable farms.
TRANSYLVANIA: BUILT ON GRASS
The Borca family relaxes after a working day that started early. Gheorghe (white shirt) and Anuta Borca (also in white) were married in July 1995, right in the middle of the grass-cutting season. “We started making hay again one week after the wedding,” Anuta said.
For centuries, the small villages in Transylvania, Romania, have preserved their hay meadows, raised cattle, and operated self-sustainable farms. Having survived the collectivization of Ceausescu’s Communist regime, this fragile rural environment now faces the modern threat of industrialization and globalization as a result of Romania’s 2007 entry into the European Union.

The Borca family relaxes after a working day that started early. Gheorghe (white shirt) and Anuta Borca (also in white) were married in July 1995, right in the middle of the grass-cutting season. “We started making hay again one week after the wedding,” Anuta said.

Cooking up plum jam in the autumn is usually a man’s job. It takes eight to ten hours of uninterrupted stirring to make sure the jam on the bottom of the pot doesn’t burn. This grandfather from Sârbi, Romania, wears the traditional small Maramures hat.

Corn is shelled, then fed to the cattle. Ion Petric and his wife, Maria Vraja, who live in Breb, Romania, look after their neighbors’ daughter, seven-year-old Adriana Tantas. For centuries, the small villages in Transylvania, Romania, have preserved their hay meadows, raised cattle, and operated self-sustainable farms. Having survived the collectivization of Ceausescu’s Communist regime, this fragile rural environment now faces the modern threat of industrialization and globalization as a result of Romania’s 2007 entry into the European Union.

Andrei Rus, 12, relaxes in his father’s palinca still in Strâmtura, Romania. Palinca is the name for all kinds of fruit brandy that can be as much as 58% proof here. For centuries, the small villages in Transylvania, Romania, have preserved their hay meadows, raised cattle, and operated self-sustainable farms. Having survived the collectivization of Ceausescu’s Communist regime, this fragile rural environment now faces the modern threat of industrialization and globalization as a result of Romania’s 2007 entry into the European Union.

For about three dollars, villagers can rent time at this privately owned wooden washing machine in Sârbi, Maramures, Romania. It’s never more popular than when cleaning household rugs the traditional way, with surging river water, for Christmas or Easter.

Anuta Visovan, 70, tends the fire at a still owned by her neighbor, in Breb, Romania, for making palinca, the plum, apple, or pear brandy whose name means simply “distilled spirit”. A fiercely delicious dram of it is given to every visitor. “When the first thing you do is have some palinca,” said Lorint Opris, mill owner at Sârbi,

In her parents’ house in Budesti, Romania, Ileana Borodi, 24, minds her baby son, Ioan, nine months, while her three-year-old daughter, Marioara, occupies herself. For centuries, the small villages in Transylvania, Romania, have preserved their hay meadows, raised cattle, and operated self-sustainable farms. Having survived the collectivization of Ceausescu’s Communist regime, this fragile rural environment now faces the modern threat of industrialization and globalization as a result of Romania’s 2007 entry into the European Union.

Alfalfa stacks stand sentinel outside Breb, Romania. For centuries, the small villages in Transylvania, Romania, have preserved their hay meadows, raised cattle, and operated self-sustainable farms. Having survived the collectivization of Ceausescu’s Communist regime, this fragile rural environment now faces the modern threat of industrialization and globalization as a result of Romania’s 2007 entry into the European Union.
The other photos here.
2014, Observed Portraits , 3rd prize stories , Rena Effendi
Paris: estações de metro abandonadas passam a piscinas?
Está ser ponderada a transformação das suas linhas de metro abandonadas em restaurantes, auditórios, teatros, galerias, clubes nocturnos e até piscinas subterrâneas.
A mentora da estratégia é Nathalie Kosciusko-Morizet, provável candidata às eleições parisienses – que está a trabalhar com os arquitectos Manal Rachdi e Nicolas Laisné em várias propostas para transformar as estações-fantasma de Paris em novos espaços.
Nas últimas décadas, as estações de metro abandonadas têm sido utilizadas, sobretudo, para filmagens e arrecadação para o metropolitano local. Se Kosciusko-Morizet, de 40 anos, ganhar as eleições, será lançada uma plataforma colaborativa para que arquitectos e designers sugiram ideias para transformar estes espaços.
Na verdade, nem é preciso esperar pelas eleições. A candidata aceita todo o tipo de propostas, basta enviar-lhe um tweet.
Veja como poderão ficar algumas estações já desactivadas.
Good night
Grande artista! Boa música!
Good night
Conheci este grupo (BALLA) no programa 5 Para a Meia-Noite. Muito boa música!
Jeju Loveland: parque com esculturas eróticas
Seja bem-vindo ao Jeju Loveland, um parque de exposição permanente de esculturas eróticas. São mais de 140 obras de arte relacionadas com o tema do sexo: corpos despidos, posições sexuais, não faltam ainda tabuletas em forma de pénis ou homens nus a fazerem de bebedouros.
A ilha de Jeju, na Coreia do Sul, tornou-se num famoso destino turístico para casais em lua-de-mel após a guerra da Coreia. Os casamentos, porém, eram arranjados, e os pares sentiam-se constrangidos quando estavam juntos. Para facilitar a comunicação, alguns hotéis da ilha contrataram profissionais para ajudar os recém-casados.
Partindo desta ideia, em 2002 cerca de vinte artistas da Universidade de Hongik (Seul) decidiram criar o único parque do país dedicado ao sexo. Dois anos depois Jeju Loveland abriu oficialmente as portas, e desde então é um sucesso em todo o mundo. O local abriga ainda um museu, dedicado ao sexo e saúde.