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The aim of this article is to publicize a unique and valuable collection of honorary gifts and sports awards of interwar Lithuanian sportsmen that is preserved at the M. K. Čiurlionis National Museum of Art.In 1942, over 260 items, including prizes, automobile club badges, posters, flags and pennants from the former Physical Culture House, were transferred to the then Vytautas the Great Museum of Culture. Most of the exhibits were original works by Latvian, Estonian and Lithuanian artists Sigismunds Vidbergs, Verner Krisdon, Auguste Silinia, Otto Tammeraid, Eduard Taska, Jonas Juozas Burba, renowned goldsmiths from Riga, Tallinn, Kaunas and Western European countries. The collection includes the Latvian President Karlis Ulmanis’ gift to the Lithuanian national team, the prize winner of the 2nd European Men’s Basketball Championship held in Riga in 1937, the award established by the Lithuanian President Antanas Smetona to the winner of the 3rd European Men’s Basketball Championship held in Kaunas in 1939, won by the Lithuanian national team, and a copy of the sculpture of the Capitoline Wolf, the prize to the winner of the 2nd place in the 1st European Women’s Basketball Championship in Rome in 1938. The larger part of the sports prizes is now displayed in the exhibition at the Historical Presidential Palace.
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This study examines two contradictory attitudes towards twins in African culture and endeavours to find the common denominator that has induced a positive change in the perception of this extraordinary phenomenon. The motive to write this paper was not to idealise or demonise traditional African societies, but rather to understand some of their rough practices in the context of their respect for fertility and children.
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Je m’entretiendrai ici du romantisme, du besoin de se moquer sans fin et de ce que j’entends quand je dis : le travail est une honte. Comme j’aimerais être bref et compris par tous ! Mon intention est de faire le portrait d’un homme romantique qui possède toute la lenteur de l’Est et la sensibilité maladive de l’Ouest. Le contraste est dépassé et je ne dis pas cela en opposition au type patriarcal ou macho de la psychologie masculine. Il s’agit d’autre chose. À faire un discours objectif, je gagnerais la connaissance mais perdrais l’âme des choses. La vie n’est pas à considérer ou comprendre objectivement. Comprendre, c’est rester en dehors des choses. « C’est ce que Méphisto avait offert à Faust, c’est ce que Satan agite devant les yeux du monde des hommes. Le pouvoir au détriment de la réalité. »
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This paper focuses on the possibilities and limitations of the contemporary dérive as a form of ethnography in contemporary Delhi. The dérive, which originated as the Surrealist déambulation and subsequently became the Situationist dérive in the late 1950s, has now been re-imagined by walking artists and practitioners. In seeking to locate the Situationist dérive as an ethnographic practice within (Old) Delhi through Abdelhafid Khatib’s dérive, this paper dwells on the experimental origins of the Situationist dérive and its journey through contemporary pedestrian practices, and asks how walking as a gendered, autoethnographic practice of the city might help narrate and navigate Indian urban spaces.
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In modern world media images are everywhere: we look at them at billboards, newspapers, on TV, Internet... But how do we understand what we have seen? This article tried to explain photography - as a medium and a message by analyzing the relation between photography and presented reality. Barthes’ thoughts about photography are used here to show the creation of meaning in a photographic message. Although perception is usually very brief, message is not simple and literal one but it has two levels of meaning – denotative and connotative. It is a common expression that ‘pictures don’t lie’. Belief in trustworthiness of photographic record (photography as a witness) was supported by state use of photography (for ID, in police and juridical practice). In this text some answers on questions why do we trust photography and what are the changes in period of digitization are given. Light motif in this paper is the idea that the photographic expression is caused by reality, technical possibilities and culture. Its single-meaning and superficial look makes a picture powerful. Covered with the reflection of reality, there is a picture determined by culture. It’s no longer that only art historians, curators or media experts are dealing with pictures. They are part of everyday life and that is why there is a need for common people to understand their meanings, or, to use a term well known in western literature, to gain ‘visual literacy’.
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The paper deals with the opera The Bacchae from 1991, a collaboration between Swedish composer Daniel Börtz and Ingmar Bergman. It was one of the three operas Bergman ever directed. The paper examines The Bacchae in a broad context of modernist reception of Greek tragedy and mythology – an especially important frame of reference is the Dionysian, post-Wagnerian opera – and against the backdrop of Bergman’s other film and theatre productions that deal with his highly ambiguous relation to religion. Bergman incorporated some major themes of European Modernism in his staging. The Bacchae can be read as a part of the “invented tradition” of the black, antilogocentric, violent, obscene antiquity, created around 1900 as an opposition to the bright Winckelmann – inspired version of the past. This dark vision of the archaic roots of human culture corresponds with other modernist topics such as the crisis of language and the attempt to create alternative, body- based modes of expression, the blurring of gender identities, the transgressive nature of art and religion and the conception of music as a representation of the “oceanic” unconscious.
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Jak my, którzy lata 1939-1945 znamy wyłącznie z przekazów rodzinnych, książek oraz filmów, wyobrażamy sobie wojnę? Sądzę, że w naturalnym odruchu obsadzamy siebie w roli czynnych uczestników walk: żołnierzy i żołnierek, członkiń i członków ruchu oporu, powstańców. Głośna książka, która próbowała przeciwstawić temu wszystkiemu los cywila, czyli Pamiętnik z powstania warszawskiego Mirona Białoszewskiego, do dziś chyba wywołuje kontrowersje z tego właśnie powodu (wiele osób nie pamięta, że w recenzjach atakowali ją jako „defetystyczną” entuzjaści Mieczysława Moczara). No więc wystawa gdańskiego Muzeum II Wojny Światowej w podobny, co Białoszewski, sposób, przeciwdziała naszej skłonności. To nie muzeum wojska, lecz wojny. Skupia się więc przede wszystkim na doświadczeniu... większości. To znaczy na walce z poczuciem bezradności, na destrukcji bezpiecznego świata, na klęsce głodu, śmierci od ostrzału czy bomb, na grozie eksterminacji.
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The forty five years of continuous tradition of the Varaždin Baroque Evenings music and performance festival is an expression of the desire of its founders to support and promote music to the audiences in Varaždin, its immediate surroundings and the north of Croatia, as well as in Europe and the world. Musical performances and the accompanying programmes introduced the audience to the history of Varaždin, its musical, architectural and artistic heritage, as well as the beauty of its nature and tourist destinations. When the festival, with its beautiful performance spaces, countless associates and an excellent reputation, started growing out of its local framework and gaining international recognition, it started to contribute to the promotion of art not only in the north of Croatia, but also on a wider European level as well. This was achieved by using the urban locations and the magnificent architectural heritage of the region as concert venues. Even more importantly, the artwork on the posters, invitations and records published by the festival also featured the cultural heritage of the region, which was the subject of research of the many participants of conferences and symposiums that were part of the festival’s accompanying programme. Also part of the accompanying programme were the numerous exhibitions which, just like the performances that took place in the castles of Hrvatsko zagorje, testified to the organizers’ attitude towards the preservation and renovation of national heritage sites. More recently, in addition to promoting the arts in Croatia, the festival has also been promoting the heritage of partner countries. This dedication to the promotion of artistic heritage is an expression of the sensibilities of those who have been the moving force behind the Varaždin Baroque Evenings in the past forty five years.
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The article examines traditions and innovations of the functioning educational field of Ukraine. It analyzes European educational trends, identifies determinants of development and quality ensuring of cultural and artistic education in Ukrainian higher schools.
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O scurtă Prolegomena la prezentarea volumului Programul arhitectural al Bisericii Române Unite cu Roma. Episcopia de Gherla și Cluj-Gherla (1853-1947). Tendințe stilistice între Orient și Occident, Editura Mega, Cluj-Napoca 2018, datorat istoricului și criticului de artă, Ina Roșu Vădeanu, face trimitere – plăcută realitate – la o programată și succesivă alegere tematică a disertațiilor întocmite sub generoasa cupolă a istoriei artelor din cadrul Facultății de Istorie și Filosofie a Universității Napocense, cercetări integrate unei tradiții, unui proiect generos mai vechi, început încă în urmă cu o jumătate de secol de istoricii de artă din „echipa” Academicianului Virgil Vătășianu, cercetători și cadre didactice care au definitivat Repertoriul / Topografia monumentelor istorice din 10 județe ale Transilvaniei, iar între anii 1991-1998, au inventariat edificiile patrimoniale din 121 de localități săsești – dintr-un ansamblu de 241 de localități săsești – aflate în jud. Bistrița-Năsăud, în zonele Reghin, Sebeș, Valea Hârtibaciului, Sibiu și regiunea Târnavelor, topografie concepută după modelul folosit de secția de evidență a Direcției Monumentelor Istorice din Renania, Brauweiler, sub îndrumarea științifică a instituției germane și a Comitetului Național German ICOMOS (Consiliul Internațional pentru Monumente și Situri al UNESCO) în parteneriat cu Direcția Monumentelor, Ansamblurilor și Siturilor Istorice (DMASI) din România, Centrul de Proiectare, Academia de Artă și Institutul de Arhitectură “Ion Mincu” din București, Institutul de Arheologie și Istoria Artei al Academiei Române, Filiala Cluj, Institutul de Studii Socio-Umane Sibiu al Academiei Române, Muzeul Etnografic Brașov, colaboratori ai Muzeului Brukenthal din Sibiu și Birouri de arhitectură pentru relevee.
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Drawing on a few concepts of postcolonialism, including Edward Said’s idea of Orientalism and Stuart Hall’s theory on representation, this article explores the representations of Estonian culture and language in two films by Ingmar Bergman, This Can’t Happen Here (Sånt händer inte här, Sweden, 1950; also known as High Tension) and The Silence (Tystnaden, Sweden, 1963). Through a descriptive textual analysis of the Estonian representational elements in these films, the article suggests that Bergman uses Estonian language and culture to establish a certain kind of Otherness, marking a cultural hegemony and exotifying a new foreign element in post-war Sweden. An additional aim of the article is to present and contextualise the exiled Estonian actors that starred in This Can’t Happen Here, as this has not been done in a scholarly context, and since the film ended up being their only cinematic appearance in their new adopted country.
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The review of: Anna Estera Mrozewicz, Beyond Eastern Noir: Reimagining Russia and Eastern Europe in Nordic Cinemas, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2018, ISBN 978-1-4744-1810-2, 230 pp.
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If aesthetic and teleological judgments are equally reflective, then it can be argued that such judgments can be applied concurrently to digital objects, specifically those that are products of the rapidly developing sophisticated forms of artificial intelligence (AI). Evidence of the aesthetic effects of technological development are observable in more than just experienceable objects; rooted in inscrutable machine learning, AI’s complexity is a problem when it is presented as an aesthetic authority, particularly when it comes to automated curatorial practice or as a progressively determinative aesthetic force originating in an independent agency that is internally self-consistent.Rooted in theories of the post-digital and the New Aesthetic, this paper examines emerging new forms of art and aesthetic experiences that appear to reveal these capabilities of AI. While the most advanced forms of AI barely qualify for a ‘soft’ description at this point, it appears inevitable that a ‘hard’ form of AI is in the future. Increased forms of technological automation obscure the increasingly real possibility of genuine products of the imagination and the creativity of autonomous digital agencies as independent algorithmic entities, but such obfuscation is likely to fade away under the evolutionary pressures of technological development. It’s impossible to predict the aesthetic products of AI at this stage but, if the development of AI is teleological, then it might be possible to predict some of the foreseeable associated aesthetic problems.
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The thinking power of Homo sapiens made human beings the lord of all creation. The ability to reason is also the premise of human existence. We, however, now know that this is not confined only to human but to Artificial Intelligence. Over the history of humankind, human beings have attempted to create an immortal being that could surpass their abilities and complements their inferiorities. We are making something immortal and transcendent, which are different properties from our own. Artificial Intelligence may be able to evolve on its own like humans have been doing. As a kind of numerical being, humans are able to be omnipresent with the technology provided. This new kind of existence makes us think about and see things differently. Humans are attempting to create ‘beings’ that can generate art, take care of weak human beings, talk and discuss human issues, and even fall in love with humans. As our minds can run beyond the boundaries created by our body limitations, we would like to infuse our creativity into AI that might evolve from its original state. Similar to what Prometheus did, humans are attempting to share their legacy with another existence. Recently a research team from Rutgers University in New Jersey proposed a system named CAN: Creative Adversarial Networks for generating art with creative characteristics. The team demonstrated a realization of this system based on a novel, creative adversarial network. Their proposed system possesses the ability to produce novel artworks which make people believe human artists produced them. The data the team proposes proves that AI now attempts to do something considered as a creative activity. With this research, the definition of art should be reconsidered. Since the Fountain(1917) by Duchamp, open concepts toward artworks have been embraced by many artists and their colleagues. However, it is time to contemplate the new phase. When we regard something as artwork, should it be created, selected, and combined by human beings? Is it possible that the thing that is accepted as artwork by people can be art? This paper seeks to propose several opinions regarding these questions.
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Presupposing artificial intelligence (AI) is an ‘intellectual subject’ rather than merely a product of complex operation is a prerequisite to discussing how AI and human intelligence inherently understand time and space. This article argues that AI as an intellectual subject and human intelligence have their respective origins and connotations, and different intelligent characteristics also lead to the difference between them in the way of inherently understanding time and space; different inherent understandings of time and space and whether to think with time and space as an ‘object’ are the underlying differences between AI and human intelligence. Meanwhile, so far AI is unable to process space-time issues by means of ‘non-objectification’.
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The article considers the “sociology of exceptionality” of the contemporary French art sociologist Natalie Heinich, who corrected, developed and widely applied the sociology of the artistic field elaborated by P. Bourdieu during the 19th century. She pays much attention to the formation of an autonomous artistic field and the social institutes connected with the artist’s identity and status. She explores exhaustively these aspects against a wide historical background.
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The article describes what kind of visual elements can be found in present-day theatre, classifies them, and analyses visuality in theatre art. The author makes a semiotic scheme of possible visual components in the theatre at the turn of the 20th and 21st century. The article states how important visuality is in postmodern theatre art, and which tendencies it faces in Lithuania, how visual components correlate with words, sounds and music, and how these components are created.
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In contemporary society’s decentralisation, fragmentation and indetermination, the perception of the process of normalisation is resolved and transformed. The social and cultural structure, which was formed by binary partition, is resolved and, more important, becomes a field which is ignored and is not public. So in contemporary structures, a different and opposite identity is named as marginal. Marginal identity is not indiscrete. It is resolved, decentralised; it is made from fragments, and reshaped. So marginal identity doesn’t identify itself with traditional cultural or social elements and instead creates itself as different. When the perception of identity changes, the position of some discourses changes as well. Some of the important discourses which have changed their positions in contemporary social and cultural structures are the treatment of space, body and gender. Body/gender become multifunctionals and change their positions. The body could be named as the place of identity. The body can help to understand the world, and at the same time to create a different identity. With the term marginal it is possible to link different, not researched, theatrical phenomena, which is not the same as traditional theatre. Marginal theatre can not be called avant-garde theatre because of its localisation and the negation of traditional, official, institutional theatre. That’s why marginal theatre develops as an individual phenomenon, which exists in a marginal space.
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