["8uSIkQX","Sb7tyN6","Bw5e8KD","v027icb","KApMOWf","ZXwBmMW","pH1i2wQ","TrQych4","LR7YbRc","3jRw3yQ","WaJWcnz","tqbUTQK","Zz15rjT","axfr6E1","6VMLGmb","1M8rbxC","NjIdyvi","hTRgTto","sXsT6Gz","tX4QBBL","KNt8MTx","BwmujNm","xMbAY6F","vXgPFlR","FlibDan","udAlasM","pIANzcK","eUYk1uE","QWbHlzo","lwhcypJ","ObfjJnJ","xrdRRmW","Ech7QTI","BVX9mRA","HORBqGt","fsm8WNE","7I8C7d7","fqP6jDf","2AuRuNR","lzcrBgc","il0OdYK","txJ7Cfc","OUGAHKx","C97UCou","E3Nv0ce","NcGeqO3","KdV9HmR","p0uLPHd","YMhwt0J","PV0k9xg"]

Watchlist You have 50 videos in your watchlist – Show, Play or Clear it.

Hide

Your watchlist was cleared.

All episodes from Arts 21

 
PreviousNext
  • Our TOP 3 Concentrate on the Future as well

    Our TOP 3 Concentrate on the Future as wellNow playingNew episode

    TOP1: «Avatar» – James Cameron's visionary 3D spectacle, a glimpse into the future of cinema TOP2: «Languages of Futurism» – An exhibition in Berlin on artists' belief in the future TOP3: «Humanoid» – In Tokio Hotel's latest album, the world belongs to cyborgs

    • 12/27/09
    • Comments: 0
    • Votes: 0
  • The Guru of the Future – Matthias Horx on his Latest Book

    The Guru of the Future – Matthias Horx on his Latest BookNow playingNew episode

    Matthias Horx is a modern-day prophet. In his latest work, the trend and future researcher draws lessons from the past and warns of the danger of anxiety and collective hysteria. Horx himself takes an optimistic view of the future and urges readers to see change as an opportunity to be seized. ARTS.21 talks to Horx about his vision of the future.

    • 12/27/09
    • Comments: 0
    • Votes: 0
  • Music of the Future – The Internet and New Paths to Fame

    Music of the Future – The Internet and New Paths to FameNow playingNew episode

    The Internet has transformed the music industry. File-sharing has meant that many people are no longer prepared to buy CDs. But what has been creating panic in the music industry is being seized as an opportunity by some musicians. They present their music or help raise funding for a new album via blogs and social networks or on their own homepages. Everyone is talking about the rise of the digital age, but what does it mean for the world of music? ARTS.21 looks at new ways of rising to fame.

    • 12/27/09
    • Comments: 0
    • Votes: 0
  • Those were the Noughties - Five Clips from the Cultural Highlights of the Past Decade

    Those were the Noughties - Five Clips from the Cultural Highlights of the Past DecadeNow playingNew episode

    The decade is coming to an end. Some cultural events have bombed – some, however, are still resonating years later. Here at ARTS.21, we've been hotly debating our noughties' highlights and have narrowed them down to five favorites - one each from film, music, architecture, literature and the stage. You might be surprised at what we've chosen.

    • 12/21/09
    • Comments: 0
    • Votes: 0
  • The Power of the Feminine – Botticelli's Women

    The Power of the Feminine – Botticelli's WomenNow playingNew episode

    Sometimes seductive, sometimes strong, sometimes fragile: the female figures of the Renaissance painter Sandro Botticelli. The Frankfurt Städel Museum has brought 40 works from around the world together for a mammoth show. Seldom has so much timeless beauty been seen in one place in Germany. We let ourselves be enchanted by Madonna, nymphs and goddesses.

    • 12/20/09
    • Comments: 0
    • Votes: 0
  • Dubai Speed – The Failure of Culture in the Gulf Emirate

    Dubai Speed – The Failure of Culture in the Gulf EmirateNow playingNew episode

    Cultural entrepreneur Michael Schindhelm came to Dubai with a big project in mind: helped by the petrodollars of the sheikhs, he aimed to construct an exquisite landscape, complete with an opera house and museums. It was a project of superlatives - but then came the financial crash and it was called off. Only abandoned construction sites are left now. Schindhelm writes about the failure in his book «Dubai Speed» ARTS.21 went to meet him.

    • 12/20/09
    • Comments: 0
    • Votes: 0
  • No Hope of a Silent Night – Bach's Christmas Oratorio Stood on its Head

    No Hope of a Silent Night – Bach's Christmas Oratorio Stood on its HeadNow playingNew episode

    Bach sounds through the machine room of an old heating plant - the Christmas Oratorio, in fact. The independent opera company Novolot is presenting all six cantatas of the work will be performed in parallel on several floors on stages specially designed by world-reknowned architects Graft. The visitors wander from room to room - not pensive and dusty, but rather alive and modern. ARTS.21 is there, too.

    • 12/20/09
    • Comments: 0
    • Votes: 0
  • Countdown to 2010 – The Ruhr as Europe's Cultural Capital

    Countdown to 2010 – The Ruhr as Europe's Cultural CapitalNow playingNew episode

    It all starts up four weeks from now. The Ruhr Area celebrates its status as a cultural center, one of three so-called European Culture Capitals. People are beginning to get nervous. Are they ready to step onto the international stage? We accompany the photographer of the industrial complex the Zeche Zollverein, the architect of the Dortmund "U" and the creators of the world's first Biennale for International Light Art, as they put the finishing touches on preparations for the big day.

    • 12/13/09
    • Comments: 0
    • Votes: 0
  • Sudden Stardom – Herta Müller Wins the Nobel Prize in Literature

    Sudden Stardom – Herta Müller Wins the Nobel Prize in LiteratureNow playingNew episode

    It's a good week to be Hertha Müller: on Thursday, she'll be presented with the Nobel Prize in Literature at an awards ceremony in Stockholm. She arrived a few days early for the occasion, but she's not alone -- 50 guests will accompany her to the celebration. We joined Herta Müller during the most exciting week of her literary life.

    • 12/13/09
    • Comments: 0
    • Votes: 0
  • The Lawyers – A German Story

    The Lawyers – A German StoryNow playingNew episode

    In the early 1970s, Otto Schily, Horst Mahler and Hans-Christian Ströbele were young lawyers challenging the German establishment. Later, they would go their separate ways – one became the German interior minister, another a founding member of the Red Army Faction and later a convicted neo-Nazi, and the other a Green Party politician. Birgit Schulz has made a compelling new documentary about these three controversial figures whose biographies reveal more about German history than any textbook.

    • 12/6/09
    • Comments: 0
    • Votes: 0
  • TOP 3 – Three Books to Tide You Through the Winter

    TOP 3 – Three Books to Tide You Through the WinterNow playingNew episode

    TOP 3: Atlas der abgelegenen Inseln – The title means "an atlas of remote islands," and it features stories from islands you haven't visited – and probably never will. TOP 2: Georgian Spring – A Magnum Journal – Ten Magnum photographers turn their lenses on contemporary Georgia. TOP 1: Der einzige Mann auf dem Kontinent – The title means "the only man on the continent," and it's the latest novel by Terézia Mora

    • 12/6/09
    • Comments: 0
    • Votes: 0
  • Classical Music with Soldiers – An Orchestra Travels to China

    Classical Music with Soldiers – An Orchestra Travels to ChinaNow playingNew episode

    Even Haydn can become a political issue in China, at least when a German orchestra wants to play the composer's Nelson Mass in a small church. Conductor Enoch zu Guttenberg – the father of the current German defense minister – along with his choir and orchestra, found themselves suddenly surrounded by Chinese soldiers. But later on, both the audience and musicians were moved to tears. A concert tour full of surprises, and ARTS.21 was there.

    • 12/6/09
    • Comments: 0
    • Votes: 0
  • My Life After – Argentinian Playwright Lola Arias in Munich

    My Life After – Argentinian Playwright Lola Arias in MunichNow playingNew episode

    Lola Arias is an up and coming star of documentary theater. Born in Buenos Aires in 1976, she mostly writes about the feeling of having been robbed of one's childhood. Her latest piece is called Mi Vida Después, or My Life After. It stars young actors on a quest to find out about their families and the fates they suffered under the Argentinean military junta. The play is an historical investigation. Against a backdrop of photographs projected onto a screen, the performers journey into the past – collecting memorabilia, reading letters and listening to recordings. Arias turns the stage into the scene of a crime. We catch up with her at the Munich Kammerspiele.

    • 12/6/09
    • Comments: 0
    • Votes: 0
  • GoetheonMain – An ambitious culture project in Johannesburg

    GoetheonMain – An ambitious culture project in JohannesburgNow playingNew episode

    Johannesburg is considered one of the most dangerous places on Earth. But behind the dilapidated facades, a lively African art and culture scene has developed. Since May, the Goethe Institute has been running its GoetheonMain project in downtown Johannesburg - a room displaying artistic projects closely reflecting everyday life in South Africa.

    • 11/29/09
    • Comments: 0
    • Votes: 0
  • Egopoint – British DJ meets Russian dancer

    Egopoint – British DJ meets Russian dancerNow playingNew episode

    It is a liaison full of contradictions - the Berlin Staatballett's principal dancer Nadja Saidakova combines her vocabulary of classical movement with the pulsing beat of the international club scene, composed by the well-known London DJ Luke Slater. This exciting musical experiment is shown within the framework of the Berlin festival Spielzeit Europa.

    • 11/29/09
    • Comments: 0
    • Votes: 0
  • All that Jazz – Berlin celebrates the 70th birthday of BLUE NOTE records

    All that Jazz – Berlin celebrates the 70th birthday of BLUE NOTE recordsNow playingNew episode

    In 1939, the Jewish Berlin émigrés Alfred Lion and Francis Wolff founded the legendary Blue Note jazz label in New York. Their unique cover designs set standards for modern photography. Now, Berlin’s Jewish Museum is devoting an exhibition to the Blue Note label. And this year’s Berlin jazz festival is also celebrating Blue Note’s birthday. ARTS.21 and pianist/comedian Götz Alsmann explore the history of the label.

    • 11/16/09
    • Comments: 0
    • Votes: 0
  • TOP 3

    TOP 3Now playingNew episode

    Cult Shelves – Ikea’s top-selling item, the Billy shelving unit, turns 30 Not One of Us – New publications on the occasion of the 80th birthday of Hans Magnus Enzensberger Centenary – The Julia Stoschek Collection at the Performa 09 biennial of new visual art performance at the Museum of Modern Art in New York

    • 11/16/09
    • Comments: 0
    • Votes: 0
  • Beautifully fragile – Martin Schläpfer's New Classical Ballet in Düsseldorf

    Beautifully fragile – Martin Schläpfer's New Classical Ballet in DüsseldorfNow playingNew episode

    The tension ahead of the premiere was as great as the audience's approval. Martin Schläpfer, the new ballet director at the Düsseldorf Opera, has made a breathtaking debut. The performance entitled "b.01" is an ironic and humorous new beginning for classical ballet.

    • 11/12/09
    • Comments: 0
    • Votes: 0
  • TOP 3

    TOP 3Now playingNew episode

    "After the Fall" – Europe after 1989. Theater Festival in Dresden and Mülheim "Lenin on Tour" – A symbol of communism travels through the West "The Invisible Wall" – A photo journal by Stephan Kaluza

    • 11/12/09
    • Comments: 0
    • Votes: 0
  • LINIE 1, African style

    LINIE 1, African styleNow playingNew episode

    Taxis instead of subways, white Boer women instead of rich war widows, impoverished black people instead of jobless Germans. The Namibian version of “Linie 1” is harder than the original cult musical from Berlin. ARTS.21 attended the premiere in Namibia and experienced verve, comedy, and enthusiasm.

    • 10/28/09
    • Comments: 0
    • Votes: 0
  • TOP 3

    TOP 3Now playingNew episode

    TOP 3: Dancing with Leaves – Berlin Ballett Dancers Help Clear Away Autumn Foliage in City Squares TOP 2: "Languages of Futurism" – An exhibition in Berlin commemorates the 100th anniversary of the Italian art movement TOP 1: Super-Library – An architecture prize goes to Max Dudler’s Grimm-Zentrum of the Humboldt University Berlin

    • 10/28/09
    • Comments: 0
    • Votes: 0
  • Whispers of Scandal – China at the Frankfurt Book Fair

    Whispers of Scandal – China at the Frankfurt Book FairNow playingNew episode

    Chinese society is shaped by the contradictions between market economy and the power of the Communist party, between diversity and censorship, pluralism and bans. After ten years of preparations, China is now the guest country at the Frankfurt Book Fair. It's proved to be something that has already led to commotion.

    • 10/22/09
    • Comments: 0
    • Votes: 0
  • Novel of the Year – The 2009 German Book Prize

    Novel of the Year – The 2009 German Book PrizeNow playingNew episode

    This year's award goes to Kathrin Schmidt for her autobiographical novel "Du stirbst nicht", a touching family story of survival after a long coma. In selecting the winner of Germany's most prestigious literary prize, the jury paid tribute to Kathrin Schmidt's "powerful language" in describing a patient's inner world. Award-winning Kathrin Schmidt in an ARTS.21 interview.

    • 10/22/09
    • Comments: 0
    • Votes: 0
  • The Finalists for the German Book Prize

    The Finalists for the German Book PrizeNow playingNew episode

    ARTS.21 presents the shortlist for this year's German Book Prize. Rainer Merkel's «Lichtjahre entfernt» (Light Years Away) explores the vicissitudes of love. Norbert Scheuer's «Überm Rauschen» (The Rushing of Water) is a novel about childhood with autobiographical elements. Kathrin Schmidt's novel «Du stirbst nicht» (You're Not Going to Die) depicts the interior life of a woman who has suffered a cerebral hemorrhage. «Die Frequenzen» (The Frequencies) by Clemens J. Setz revolves around the stories of two childhood friends whose paths cross again. Stephan Thome's debut novel, «Grenzgang» (Walking the Boundaries) takes a look at the search for happiness. The critics' favorite is Herta Müller's «Atemschaukel» (Everything I Possess I Carry With Me), a novel about the fate of ethnic Germans from Romania, focusing on one young man in a Soviet labor camp after World War II.

    • 10/16/09
    • Comments: 0
    • Votes: 0
  • Creative and Indefatigable – The German Jazz Legend Gunter Hampel

    Creative and Indefatigable – The German Jazz Legend Gunter HampelNow playingNew episode

    Gunter Hampel is a musical pioneer who has made international jazz history. He has played with the jazz greats in the United States; and he improvises with young musicians. The 72-year-old is now on tour with his band "European Trio".

    • 10/16/09
    • Comments: 0
    • Votes: 0
  • The Arab World at the Venice Biennale

    The Arab World at the Venice BiennaleNow playingNew episode

    Never has Arabic art been in such evidence at the Venice Biennale as it is this year. The artists represented are both experimental and multi-facetted. Often they're self-taught, and deal with daily life in their home countries. In presenting their work. the Biennale is offering subtle glimpses into cultures that would otherwise remained closed to outsiders.

    • 10/16/09
    • Comments: 0
    • Votes: 0
  • Still Unbowed – Ai Weiwei in Munich

    Still Unbowed – Ai Weiwei in MunichNow playingNew episode

    Ai Weiwei is China's best-known artist, blogger and critic of the government. The Haus der Kunst in Munich is now hosting his largest solo exhibition to date. Ai Weiwei enjoyed long years of freedom, but ever since he investigated the victims of the Szechuan earthquake, he's come under pressure in China. Nonetheless, Ai Weiwei won't let himself be intimidated. ARTS.21 presents a portrait of the artist.

    • 10/16/09
    • Comments: 0
    • Votes: 0
  • Arts.21 | Part 8 of our Summer Guest Series: A Finnish Composer at Schloss Wiepersdorf

    Arts.21 | Part 8 of our Summer Guest Series: A Finnish Composer at Schloss WiepersdorfNow playingNew episode

    He composes New Music. His best-known work is a duet for two horns. The Finnish composer Juho Kangas has a 6-month stipend at Schloss Wiepersdorf, south of Berlin. Finnish horns now resound in the country house, which was the home of Ludwig Achim and Bettina von Arnim and is suffused with the spirit of romanticism.

    • 9/16/09
    • Comments: 0
    • Votes: 0
  • Arts.21 | TOP 3

    Arts.21 | TOP 3Now playingNew episode

    · TOP 3: “Schöne Neue Welt” – “Brave New World“, the new album by the German band Culcha Candela · TOP 2: Global culture – Berlin's House of World Cultures turns 20 · TOP 1: Succinct and informative – A guide to art in Europe

    • 9/16/09
    • Comments: 0
    • Votes: 0
  • Arts.21 | In Fun Or Serious? – The Strange 2009 Bundestag Election Campaign

    Arts.21 | In Fun Or Serious? – The Strange 2009 Bundestag Election CampaignNow playingNew episode

    In one month, Germany will elect a new parliament – but neither politicians nor voters seem terribly excited. What’s making headlines are the candidates in two satirical films. Is this a harmless expression of humor in politics, or a sign that German democracy is in trouble?

    • 9/16/09
    • Comments: 0
    • Votes: 0

Become active

About this episode

She is listening to the sounds of nocturnal birds, cicadas and the rustling of the forest. The composer Meng-Chia Lin finds inspiration in the rural soundscape of a little village in Saxony. The young Taiwanese woman currently has a scholarship from the Denkmalschmiede Höfgen foundation.

Comments for Arts.21 | Series Summer Guests: #5 Drumming in the Forest and on the Farm (0)

Your comment has been successfully saved but will be visible only after activation. Thank you for your understanding!
Want to leave a comment? Then login or join sevenload!
Advertisement

More shows in the Art & Culture channel

Advertisement

Video/Clip/Movie Arts.21 | Series Summer Guests: #5 Drumming in the Forest and on the Farm from deutsche welle english.