Stieglitz Academy of Art and Design
At the Stieglitz State Academy of Art and Design in Saint Petersburg, Russia, the students are taught classical technics to base their future work upon.
The Academy founded in 1876 is divided into two: the Faculty of Design, and the Faculty of Monumental and Decorative Art.
In this video the second year student Jekatirina Loganova takes you around the workshops behind the scenes of the public museum at the Academy.
Chopin Statue, Warsaw, planned destroyed by Germany, restored by Polish People's Republic 1958
During the occupation of May 31, 1940, at the behest of governor Hans Frank , Chopin's monument was blown up by the Germans and cut into smaller pieces by burners.
According to local legend, the next day a handwritten sign was found at the site which read: I don’t know who destroyed me, but I know why: so that I won’t play the funeral march for your leader.
The scrap metal obtained in this way was used as a raw material for industrial production. The Germans also tried to destroy all copies of the monument kept in Polish museums. One of the employees of the Wielkopolska Museum in Poznan managed to hide a copy of the monument's head in the basement. The Germans, however, destroyed all the plaster replicas and a wooden copy of the sculpture on a scale of 1: 2, which was handed over to the Poznań museum by the author himself.
Chopin's monument was the first (according to other sources, the second, after the monument of Ignacy Mościcki ) a monument destroyed by the Germans in occupied Warsaw . Apart from the negative attitude towards the composer's work, other probable reasons for the destruction of the monument were its location in the German quarter, the location near Belweder (the official residence of Hans Frank during his visits to Warsaw ) and the action of collecting scrap metal for the needs of the armaments industry at that time. Third Reich . According to information obtained by the Polish employees of the Municipal Board from the German authorities, the decision to destroy was to be influenced by the alleged ugliness of the monument.
As a result of the activities of the Germans, the reconstruction of Wacław Szymanowski's work after the war posed many difficulties. Searches were made for replicas and preserved copies of the monument that could serve as a model for its reproduction. In 1946, Chopin's head was found in the State Refining and Processing Plant in Wrocław. It turned out, however, that it was not the head from the monument in Łazienki, but one of the test casts on a much smaller scale. The original cast was completely melted down .
A complete copy of the whole monument was found only during the clearing of the destroyed Szymanowski's house in Mokotów . Based on this copy, an attempt was made to make a faithful replica of the original. In 1946, a group of sculptors under the direction of Władysław Wasiewicz made a model of the monument's cast using the author's model (scale 1:10), wooden sculpture of the composer's head by Władysław Szymanowski, photogrammetry made by Leon Suzin and pre-war photographs [10] . The monument was cast in a cooperative Bronze Decorative (formerly the Łopieńscy Brothers ).
The reconstructed monument was unveiled again on May 11, 1958.
On the plinth there is an inscription with the content The statue of Fryderyk Chopin, destroyed and seized by the Germans on May 31, 1940, will be rebuilt by the Nation. 17-X-1946. Another inscription with the date of unveiling informs that the monument was rebuilt from the contributions of the Social Fund for Reconstruction of the Capital . Engravings from Konrad Wallenrod Adam Mickiewicz were also engraved :
The flame will figure out the painted story,
Swords of the sword are devastated by thieves,
The song escapes ...
The system of lawns and alleys around the monument was designed by Longin Majdecki. Geometric rebates are planted with pink bushes. Around the monument, there are mostly red oaks , as well as maples and snow-white shrubs. The entire garden setting with amphitheater-planted trees was supposed to resemble a concert hall .
From 1959 from May to September, each Sunday at the monument, two concerts of Chopin's music are held, organized by the Towarzystwo im. Fryderyk Chopin and Stołeczna Estrada. The shape of the piano and piano canopy, which is set up next to the piano, refers to the shape of the concert shell of the Sydney Opera .
Monument is the only example of Art Nouveau in monumental architecture in Warsaw
The idea to commemorate Fryderyk Chopin appeared among the members of the Warsaw Musical Society in 1876, but in contemporary political conditions it could not be realized . The situation changed in 1901, when the Polish opera singer Adelaide Bolska received the oral consent of Tsar Nicholas II for the erection of the monument, and the general Governor of Warsaw gave permission to establish on January 1, 1902 the Committee for the Construction of the Chopin Monument in Warsaw.
The results of the competition provoked public discussion and criticized part of the press. The work selected in the competition also had to be approved by the Imperial Academy of Fine Arts in St. Petersburg , which ruled that (...) In May 1914 a contract was signed for the monument with the French company Ancciennes Fonderies Thiebaut Fréres belonging to Renè Fulda. The monument was unveiled on November 14, 1926
Eric Owen Moss: “I’ll See It When I Believe It”
Eric Owen Moss, MArch ’72, was born in Los Angeles, California. In 1973, after completing his studies at UCLA, UC Berkeley, and Harvard Graduate School of Design, he founded Eric Owen Moss Architects. Today, his firm is an award-winning 25-person office that designs and constructs projects in the United States and around the world. As documented in monographs on the firm’s work, such as Eric Owen Moss Construction Manual 1988–2008 (2009), Moss has placed a distinct emphasis on the act and process of building. His many essays on design theory and reflections on architecture as a discipline have been published in collections including Gnostic Architecture (1999) and Who Says What Architecture Is (2007). His most recent book The New City: I’ll See It When I Believe It (2016) documents his rehabilitation of more than fifty buildings in the Hayden Tract between Los Angeles and Santa Monica: that abandoned industrial district was transformed into an enclave of creative and new media companies, made possible by his close, decades-long collaboration with a developer.
Moss has lectured widely and held teaching positions at major universities around the world, including Harvard, Yale, Columbia, University of Applied Arts in Vienna, and the Royal Academy in Copenhagen. A longtime professor at the Southern California Institute of Architecture (SCI-Arc), he served as its director from 2002 to 2015. Among the many honors he has received are the AIA|LA Educator of the Year in 2006; the Most Admired Educator Award from the Design Futures Council in 2013; and the Jencks Award from the Royal Institute of British Architects, in 2011. In 2014 he was inducted into the National Academy and in 2016 he received the Austrian Decoration of Honor for Science and Art.
The Garden as a Picture: Agnes Northrop’s Stained-Glass Designs for Louis C.Tiffany
Alice Cooney Frelinghuysen, the Anthony W. and Lulu C. Wang Curator of American Decorative Arts at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, will build on her extensive study of the work of Louis Comfort Tiffany. This lecture will bring to light new research on Agnes Northrop, the only truly independent woman designer Louis Comfort Tiffany employed. In spite of her prominent role at the time, few windows, until recently, have been attributed to her, and her significance has been long overshadowed by Tiffany himself and by other women in his employ. The lecture will explore Northrop's pioneering work as a designer of windows in a male-dominated field.
Timothy Snyder ─ Ukraine and Russia in a Fracturing Europe
Skip ahead to main speaker at 1:54
Timothy Snyder is the Bird White Housum Professor of History at Yale University, specializing in the history of central and eastern Europe. He received his B.A. from Brown University and his doctorate from the University of Oxford, where he was a British Marshall scholar at Balliol College. He has also held fellowships in Paris, Warsaw, and at Harvard, where he was an Academy Scholar. A frequent guest at the Institute for Human Sciences in Vienna, he has spent about ten years in Europe. He speaks five and reads ten European languages. Among his publications are five award-winning books, all of which have been translated: Nationalism, Marxism, and Modern Central Europe: A Biography of Kazimierz KellesKrauz(1998); The Reconstruction of Nations: Poland, Ukraine, Lithuania, Belarus, 1569-1999 (2003); Sketches from a Secret War: A Polish Artist’s Mission to Liberate Soviet Ukraine (2005); The Red Prince: The Secret Lives of a Habsburg Archduke (2008); and Bloodlands: Europe Between Hitler and Stalin (2010). Bloodlands has won ten awards including the Emerson Prize in the Humanities, a Literature Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, and the Leipzig Award for European Understanding. It has been translated into twenty-five languages, was named to twelve book-of-the-year lists, and was a bestseller in four countries. Most recently Snyder helped the late Tony Judt compose a thematic intellectual history, entitled Thinking the Twentieth Century (2012), which is appearing in fourteen translations. Snyder is also the coeditor of two volumes: Wall Around the West: State Borders and Immigration Controls in Europe and North America (2000) and Stalinism and Europe: Terror, War, Domination, (2014). He is at work on four books: a study of the Holocaust, a biography of Marx, a global history of eastern Europe, and a family history of nationalism. His scholarly articles have appeared in Past and Present, the Journal of Cold War Studies, and a number of other journals; he has also written for The New York Review of Books, Foreign Affairs, The Times Literary Supplement, The Nation, and The New Republic as well as for The New York Times, The International Herald Tribune, The Wall Street Journal, and other newspapers. He takes regular part in conferences on Holocaust education and sits on the editorial boards of the Journal of Modern European History and East European Politics and Societies. He is a member of the Committee on Conscience of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum and sits on the advisory councils of the Yivo Institute for Jewish Research, the Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies, and other organizations.
Rusya Gezisi Özel - Moskova Tchaikovsky (Çaykovski) Konservatuarı
Emre Yücelen Şan Dersi 2019
Emre Yücelen Vocal Coach Istanbul
#Russia #Tchaikovsky #Trip
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Предметный дизайн в России, рассказывает Ярослав Мисонжников [КОНКУРС]
Сегодня в выпуске, мы решили поговорить про предметный дизайн (индустриальный дизайн).
А именно, порасспросить Ярослава Мисонжникова, который придумал часы Сатурн-5 для нашей мастерской Past Indicator, каково это вообще быть предметным дизайнером в России и разузнать про его предыдущие проекты в этой сфере.
А также мы проводим конкурс, на лучшее название наших наручных часов! Победителю мы подарим наши часы на лампах ИН-12.
Сайт Ярослава:
Наш сайт, где можно найти каталог с нашими ламповыми часами:
Также узнать больше о нас можно в наших социальных сетях:
#ЯрославМисонжников #NixieClock #VadimAntonov #PastIndicator
Musical Ambassador: Russian Tour Highlights
The Department of Music at St. Petersburg College provides specialized training in music to prepare students for professional work or continued university study, for teaching music, for working in the music industry, and for general cultural enrichment. The curriculum is designed to present the learning of music as an integrated whole. Solo and ensemble performance, theoretical and historical studies, concert attendance, and electives are intended to provide a balanced education.
The department offers course work and performance opportunities for all SPC students and members of the community. Classes include music theory, applied music lessons, class piano, Music History, Music & Computers , Fundamentals of Music, various ensembles, and more.
In addition to the educational experiences described above, the faculty and students of the Department of Music are active in the musical affairs of the Tampa Bay area. The faculty are available for consultation and service is offered through workshops, performances, publications, and leadership roles in professional organizations.
About St. Petersburg College:
In 1927, St. Petersburg College (then known as St. Petersburg Junior College) became Florida's first private, non-profit, two-year school of higher learning located in downtown St. Petersburg. Full accreditation followed in 1931 and in 1948 SPC became a public college.
In June 2001, SPJC officially became St. Petersburg College when Florida's governor signed legislation making it the first community college in Florida to offer four-year degrees. On Dec. 11, 2001, the college received the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools' accreditation to offer courses leading to bachelor's degrees.
In 2002, St. Petersburg College began offering courses leading to bachelor's degrees in Education, Nursing and Technology Management. The college's commitment to its two-year curriculum, which has earned it wide recognition and annually wins it high national rankings, remains as strong as ever.
Today, SPC has eight learning sites throughout Pinellas County and recently became the first college in Florida to offer a four-year degree in Dental Hygiene. This program's offerings augment its two-year program, which has been in operation since 1963. SPC added four-year degrees in Veterinary Technology, Public Safety Administration and Orthotics and Prosthetics in 2005.
College Accreditation
St. Petersburg College is accredited by the Commission on Colleges of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools to award associates degrees and to offer courses leading to bachelor's degrees in the following areas: Banking, Nursing, Business Administration, Orthotics & Prosthetics, Elementary/Secondary Education, Paralegal Studies. Educational Studies. Post-Baccalaureate Teacher Certification. Dental Hygiene. Public Safety Administration. Health Services Administration. Sustainability Management. International Business. Technology Management. Management & Organizational Leadership. Veterinary Technology.
SPC also offers access to junior and senior level courses for bachelors and graduate degrees at the University Partnership Center. The UPC partners with the University of South Florida, University of South Florida at St. Petersburg, Eckerd College, University of Florida, Florida State University, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, University of Central Florida, Florida International University, Florida A&M University, Saint Leo University, Florida Gulf Coast University, Florida Institute of Technology, Barry University, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland State University, Indiana University, and St. Petersburg College.
Steven Conn: The Encyclopedia, the Museum, and the Collection
The Eda G. Diskant Memorial Lecture
Steven Conn, W.E. Smith Professor of History, Miami University, Oxford, Ohio
This symposium is organized in conjunction with the Philadelphia
Museum of Art’s exhibition Old Masters Now: Celebrating the
Johnson Collection, November 3, 2017–February 19, 2018.
In 1917, John G. Johnson, the most famous lawyer of his day, left
his astonishing trove of European art to the city of Philadelphia.
One hundred years later, we continue to gain new insight into the
formation of one of this country’s most remarkable collections of
treasures by the great masters, including Botticelli, Hieronymus
Bosch, Titian, Rembrandt, and Monet. Far from being a static
group of objects, the Johnson Collection is subject to constant
study and scrutiny, inviting us to consider Johnson’s legacy in the
context of the rich tradition of art collecting in Philadelphia over
the centuries
Symposium presented at the Philadelphia Museum of Art November 3 & 4, 2017
[previously hosted on Vimeo: 76 views]
Casanova: The Seduction of Europe Symposium
Welcome and Introductions—Eric M. Lee, director, Kimbell Art Museum and George T. M. Shackelford, deputy director, Kimbell Art Museum
Introducing Casanova: The Man and His World—C. D. Dickerson, head of sculpture and decorative arts, National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC
The Lust for Luxury—Thomas Michie, Russell B. and Andrée Beauchamp Stearns Senior Curator of Decorative Arts and Sculpture, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Dress and Undress—Pamela A. Parmal, David and Roberta Logie Curator of Textile and Fashion Arts, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Canaletto and Tiepolo: An Odd Couple—Frederick Ilchman, Chair, Art of Europe, and Mrs. Russell W. Baker Curator of Paintings, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Casanova in Pompadour's Paris
Esther Bell, Robert and Martha Berman Lipp Senior Curator, Clark Art Institute,
Williamstown, Massachusetts
Francis Hunger - Media Art, Installation, Conceptual Art, Feminism & Media History
MFA Fine Arts presents a talk by Francis Hunger (1976, Dessau), an artist who lives and works in Leipzig, Germany.
In his practice, Hunger combines artistic and media-theoretic research with the capabilities of narration through installations, radio plays and performances, and internet-based art. His works realize a critical examination of the historiography of technology as ideologically charged knowledge and power constellations. In the frame of his Ph.D., he researches the underlying concepts of electronic database technology, its historical roots, and social and cultural frictions. Learn more here.
Niklaus Wirth, 1984 ACM Turing Award Recipient
More information:
History: UKRAINE
Crimea:
Cossacks helped Russia get Crimea from Turkey 39:43
Donbas (East) 56:55
Crimea turned over to Ukraine 2:16:28
Russia 12:46 / 31:16
UKRAINE - THE BIRTH OF A NATION (2008) / A Jerzy Hoffman Film
1:34 Kyiv (401 - 500)
2:16 Byzantium (330–1453)
2:45 Princess Olga (890 - 969) adopted Christianity
3:28 Chersonesus in Crimea
4:06 Volodymyr the Great (958 - 1015)
4:29 Prince Yaroslav the Wise (978 - 1054)
4:39 Saint Sophia's Cathedral (1100)
5:31 Anna the Queen of France (1030 – 1075)
6:41 Volodymyr II Monomakh (1053-1125)
7:20 Yuri Dolgorukiy (1099 - 1157)
7:26 Moscow
7:37 The Mongols
10:16 The Principality of Galicia–Volhynia or Kingdom of Rus
10:49 Lviv
12:37 Ivan III of Russia (1440-1505)
12:46 The myth about Russia
13:07 Crimea
13:53 Roxolana (1502 – 1558)
15:20 serfdom (Polish oppression)
15:40 printing press
17:14 Zaporizhian Sich
18:33 Ukraine replaces the name Rus
18:40 cossack
20:15 Brest Union
20:18 The uniates
21:08 Hetman Sagaidachny (1570 - 1622)
23:05 Orthodoxy
23:28 Yarema Vyshnevetsky (1612 – 1651)
23:31 Catholicism
24:54 Bohdan Khmelnytsky (1595 – 1657)
30:04 The Pereyaslav Council -------------------------------------------------1654
34:39 Ivan Mazepa (1639 - 1709)
37:06 The Battle of Poltava on 27 June 1709
40:11 Zaporizhian Sich (1552-1709)
40:27 Solovki
French Revolution--------------------------------------------------------------------- 1789
47:03 Dumy - historical ballads
48:18 Greek Catholic Church banned
48:49 Kyiv University (1833)
49:48 The Order of Basilian Fathers
50:55 Taras Shevchenko (1814 - 1861) (age 47)
54:57 Blue and yellow banner
55:45 The Cyril and Methodius Brotherhood
56:32 national liberation movement
56:55 Crimean War ----------------------------------------------------- 1853 to 1856
57:07 Alexander II (1818 - 1881) abolished serfdom
57:26 city of Donetsk (1868)
58:56 Green wedge
59:23 Volodymyr Antonovych (1834 - 1908)
59:28 Mykhailo Drahomanov (1841-1895 )
1:00:42 Lesya Ukrainka (1871 - 1913) (aged 42)
1:02:13 The Shevchenko Scientific Society (1873 )
1:11:03 Mykhailo Hrushevsky
1:03:27 Ivan Franko (1856 - 1916)
1:04:22 History of Ukraine-Ruthenia
1:04:49 Metropolitan Andrey Sheptytsky (1865 - 1944) 1:45:42
1:06:31 World War I------------------------------------------------------------------1914
1:07:32 Dmitro Dontsov (1883 - 1973)
1:07:57 (1914) Russian occupation
1:11:24 Symon Petliura
1:11:24 West Ukrainian People's Republic
1:19:27 Ukrainian Galician Army
1:23:30 Nestor Makhno
1:30:48 The Russian famine ----------------------------------------------------1921
1:41:21 Ukr National Democratic Alliance, (UNDO)
1:42:20 Ukr Sich Riflemen
1:42:43 (UVO) Ukr Military Organization
1:42:51 Yevhen Konovalets
1:43:10 Dmytro Dontsov
1:44:01 The Organization of Ukr Nationalists (OUN)
1:44:52 (1933) Stepan Bandera head of OUN
1:47:07 Avgustyn Voloshyn
1:47:33 Melnyk's and Bandera's
1:39:06 collectivization (1939)
1:38:55 *** ???????????????????????????? ????????????????: !!! ???????????????????? 1:39:33
World War II ----------------------------------------------------------------(1939 - 1945)
1:51:24 The Nachtigall Battalion (Nightingale)
1:51:43 Independent Ukr State
1:44:50 Stepan Bandera (1909 – 1959) -----------------------------------1933
Between Hitler & Stalin: Ukraine in World War II
Wehrmacht Saves Innocent Civilians In Ukraine 1941
1:53:42 Babi Yar
1:55:40 partisan warfare
1:44:01 Organization of Ukr Nationalists (OUN)
1:57:42 Roman Shukhevych
1:58:37 Volyn
1:58:57 UPA - Ukrainian Insurgent Army
2:00:04 ethnic cleansing (1943)
2:02:32 SS Galicia Division
2:02:33 Banderavists (Bandera) split of OUN (former UVO) 1:47:26
2:02:25 Melnykovites (Melnyk)
2:02:57 SS Galicia crushed by the Red Army
2:04:51 Nikita Khrushchev
2:05:21 Joseph Stalin
1:39:56 RUSYN replaced the term Ukrainian
2:06:14 Gulag
2:06:31 Yalta
2:10:30 Operation Vistula (Polish: Akcja Wisła)
2:12:00 The Greek Catholic Church abolishment
2:12:21 Josyf Slipyj (1893 - 1984)
1:49:25 annexation of the Western Ukraine
2:16:33 turning Crimea over to Ukraine
2:18:25 Thaw (early 1950s to the early 1960s)
2:30:09 (April 26 1986) - Chornobyl disaster
2:35:30 Rukh - Movement
2:37:29 (1991) Declaration of Sovereignty of Ukraine
1:13:48 The Ukr People's Republic of 1918 - 1920
2:50:29 The Orange Revolution (2004)
Geographic Information Science (GIS) Day 2019
Join us as we celebrate GIS (Geographic Information Science) Day on Nov. 13 with an all-day series of talks on the use of GIS technology and 3D mapping in cultural heritage preservation and disaster response.
GIS Day — held during Geography Awareness Week (Nov. 12-18) — is an annual, global celebration of GIS and mapping technology, with events held by organizations around the world. Formally started in 1999, GIS Day aims to provide a forum to promote the benefits of GIS research, demonstrate real-world applications of GIS and foster open idea sharing and growth in the GIS community.
The Library’s morning session will open with a keynote address by Sen. John Boozman of Arkansas, co-chair of the Congressional French Caucus focusing on Cultural Heritage Preservation Mapping and Congressional Policy. The morning also will feature talks on the aftermath of the Notre Dame Cathedral fire and the use of GIS and computer vision in disaster response planning and cultural heritage preservation.
The afternoon session will concentrate on applications of the technology with case studies on historic building and engineering archives in cultural preservation, advanced spatial analysis and 3D mapping of UNESCO World Heritage sites
Schedule
Welcome and Introduction of Librarian
Paulette Hasier, Chief, Geography and Map Division
Opening Remarks
Carla Hayden, Librarian of Congress
Cultural Heritage Preservation, Mapping and Congressional Policy Sen. John Boozman of Arkansas
Notre Dame, Computer Vision and the Future of GIS in Cultural Heritage Preservation
John Hessler, Library of Congress & Topology Lab for Virtual Geographic Environments
Documenting Cultural Resources Through GIS
Diedre McCarthy and Catherine Lavoie, Historic American Buildings Survey,
National Park Service
Afternoon: 1-3:30 p.m.
Architectural Archives in Cultural Preservation
Mari Nakahara, Curator of Architecture, Prints and Photographs Division
The Evolution of Data Driven 3D GIS at the National Capital Planning Commission
Kenneth Walton, National Capital Planning Commission, Policy & Research Division
Lhasa VR - Documenting the Historic Tibetan Capital Through 3D GIS
Will Rourk and Guoping Huang, Scholars Lab, University of Virginia.
Questions and Closing Remarks
All Speakers
Historia Ukrainy (z napisami i tłumaczeniem)
o Krymie:
39:43 Kozacy pomogli Rosji wygrać Krym z Turcji
56:55 Donbass 2:16:28 Krym zostaje przeniesiony na Ukrainę
o Rosji 12:46 / 31:16
???????????????????????????? ???????????????????????????? ????????????????: 1:47:38
NARODZINY NARODU (2008) Jerzy Hoffman
1:34 Kijów (401-500)
2:16 Bizancjum (330-1453)
2:45 Księżniczka Olga (890 - 969) akceptuje chrześcijaństwo
3:28 Chersonese
4:06 Wołodymyr Wielki (958 - 1015)
4:29 Jarosław Mądry (978-1054)
4:39 Katedra Św. Zofii (1100)
5:31 Anna - królowa Francji (1030-1075)
18:41 Vladimir Monomakh (1053-1125)
7:20 Yu Dolgoruky (1099-1157)
7:26 Moskwa
7:37 Mongołowie
10:16 Księstwo Gal-Vol lub Królestwo Rosji
10:49 Lwów
Termin MALOROSCIA: początek XIV wieku
12:37 Iwan III Grozny (1440-1505)
12:46 Mit o Rosji
13:07 Krym
13:53 Roksolana (1502 - 1558)
15:20 Polskie pańszczyzna
17:14 Zaporizhzhya Sich
18:33 UKR zmienia nazwę RUS
18:40 Kozak
20:15 Brest Union
20:18 Unici - wschodni katolicy Kościoła
21:08 Hetman Sagaidachny (1570 - 1622)
23:05 Prawosławie
23:28 Jestem Vishnevetsky (1612 - 1651)
23:31 Katolicyzm
24:54 B Chmielnicki (1595 - 1657)
30:04 Perejasław Rada 1654
34:39 I Mazepa (1639 - 1709)
37:06 Bitwa pod Połtawą (1709)
40:11 Sycz w Zaporożu (1552-1709)
40:27 Solovki
- Rewolucja Franza (1789)
48:18 jest zabronione przez Kościół greckokatolicki
48:49 Uniwersytet Kijowski (1833)
50:55 T. Shevchenko (1814 - 1861) (47 lat)
54:57 niebiesko-żółta flaga
55:45 Bractwo Cyryla i Metodego
56:32 ruch wyzwolenia narodowego
56:55 Krymska wojna (1853-1856)
57:07 Aleksander II (1818 - 1881) znosi poddaństwo
57:26 Donieck (1868)
58:56 Zielony klin
59:23 W Antonowiczu (1834 - 1908)
59:28 M Drahomanov (1841-1895)
1:00:42 L Ukrainka (1871 - 1913) (42 lata)
1:02:13 NTSh (1873)
1:11:03 M Grushevsky
1:03:27 I Franco (1856 - 1916)
1:04:22 Historia Ukr-Rus
1:04:49 Metropolitan A Sheptytsky (1865 - 1944) świadomość narodowa na emigracji
1:06:31 Pierwsza wojna światowa z 1914 roku
1:07:32 Dontsov (1883 - 1973)
1:07:57 (1914) Rosyjska okupacja
1:11:24 Z Petliurą
1:11:24 Zah-ukr Nara Response ZUNR
1:19:27 Ukr Galicyjska Armia
1:30:48 Ros. głód (1921)
1:41:21 HOLODOMOR (1932-1933) 11 000 000 ofiar
1:45:55 (1937-1938) zostały wykonane aresztowania - Gułag
1:46:54 niszczenie ukr ident
1:49:11 Ukr Sojusz Narodów Demokratycznych (UNDO)
1:42:20 Strzelec Ukr Sich
1:50:49 (UFO) Ukr Army Org (Praga) Istnieją Konovalety
1:51:19 D Dontsov - ideolog z ukr. nacjonalizm
1:52:00 (młodzież) UWO jest członkiem -: Org Ukr Nat (OUN)
1:52:52 (w Polsce w 1933 r.) Wraz z Banderą zostaje szefem OUN
1:55:03 I Wołoszyn
1:55:27 Upadek Karpaty-Ukrainy dzieli OUN na dwie frakcje: Melnikovtsev i Banderivtsi 1:56:11
Druga wojna światowa (1939-1945)
1:59:17 ślady NKWD - Batalion Nachtigall (słowika-Bandera) 1:51:43 Niezależny Ukr. Państwo
1:44:50 Bandera (1909 - 1959)
1:53:42 Babin Yar
1:55:40 Wojna partyzancka
1:44:01 Organizacja nacjonalistów Ukr (OUN)
1:57:42 Roman Szuachewicz
1:58:37 Wołyń
1:58:57 UPA - Ukraińska Armia Powstańcza
2:00:04 czystki etniczne (1943)
2:02:32 SS Dywizja Galicyjska
1:39:56 RUSIN zmienia termin ukraiński
2:06:14 Gułag 2:06:31 Jałta
2:10:30 Operacja Wisła
2:12:00 Anulowanie Kościoła greckokatolickiego
1:49:25 aneksja Zach Ukr
2:16:33 Powrót Krymu na Ukrainę
2:18:25 Odwilż (1950-1960)
2:30:09 (26 kwietnia 1986) - Katastrofa w Czarnobylu
2:35:30 Ruch
2:37:29 (1991) Niezależność
2:50:29 Pomarańczowa rewolucja (2004)
Leading the Change: Orchestra Innovation & the SHIFT Festival
Symposium for the inaugural SHIFT Festival, presented in collaboration with the Kennedy Center and Washington Performing Arts. The symposium included several speakers, panels and a performance:
Speakers:
Robert Newlen, Deputy Librarian of Congress [:26]
Jenny Bilfield, president and CEO, Washington Performing Arts [6:07]
Rhona Wolfe Friedman, commissioner, DC Commission on the Arts & Humanities [12:35]
Panel Discussion I [20:45]
Jenny Bilfield
Rhona Wolfe Friedman
Thomas Wilkins, music director of the Omaha Symphony & principal conductor of the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra
Stanford Thompson, trumpeter and executive director of Play On, Philly!
Performance:
Georges Bizet, Farandole from L'Arlesienne Suite no. 2; Play On, Philly! [1:02:09]
Remarks:
Rep. Barbara Comstock (R-Va.) [1:09:32]
Karen Dillon, bestselling author & former editor, Harvard Business Review, Getting Innovation Right [1:15:10]
Panel Discussion II [1:44:35]
Karen Dillon
Jesse Rosen, president and CEO, League of American Orchestras
Kevin Shuck, executive director, Boulder Philharmonic
Sandi Macdonald, president and CEO, North Carolina Symphony
Sarah Kirkland Snider, composer
For transcript and more information, visit
How Does The Civil War Qualify as the First Modern War?
For 5,800 years of recorded history, wars were fought with pre-modern forms of transportation ad communication, where the world was powered by windmills, watermills, literal horse power and human muscle. However, this all changed with the invention of the steam engine and its implementation in the 19th century. In fifty short years, macadamized roads, canals, steam trains, steam boats, steam presses and telegraph communication revolutionized the transfer of energy and power. By the 1850s, every aspect of western civilization looked and functioned differently than it had for thousands of years. It was in this milieu the Civil War was fought. What did the first modern war look like and how did it differ from previous wars? How did wartime observations by foreign emissaries alter the course of future wars?
История Молдовы | третья серия
Documentary History of Moldova | part three - with English subtitles
Basile Baudez: Architects and Interior Decoration in the Age of Gouthière
During the eighteenth century, architects increasingly assumed the role of coordinator of interior decoration. This lecture examines the ways in which Parisian architects during the second half of the eighteenth century assembled and communicated with their teams of artists and artisans.
This lecture was recorded February 8, 2017 at The Frick Collection, New York.
[previously hosted on Vimeo: 456 views]
Management Lecture Series - Eileen Bewley, President, Bevcorp, LLC
April 16, 2019
Eileen Bewley is the president of Bevcorp, a North American based company that provides fillers, blenders, seamers and handling equipment for high speed food and beverage producers, headquartered in Willoughby, Ohio Bevcorp is known in the industry for being a leader in reliability and is fully committed to improving customer productivity. Bevcorp does this by leveraging our application and design expertise, customer orientation, service and parts capabilities, while maintaining a small company feel.
Eileen graduated from University of Maryland with a degree in Spanish and political science. She completed her masters in applied behavioral science from Antioch University. She has worked in packaging equipment for over 25 years, primarily in Midwestern American companies doing business globally.
An impassioned linguist, Eileen speaks fluent Spanish and German and dabbles in Russian, Mandarin, Portuguese and any other language that she has a chance to learn. She is a world traveler, enamored by culture and customs. Eileen is a fitness enthusiast. She is interested in mentoring young people through work and general life events and most of all, in the health and happiness of her family, including four grandchildren.