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The Vienna Method in Amsterdam: Peter Alma's Office for Pictorial Statistics Benjamin Benus, Wim Jansen
The Vienna Method in Amsterdam: Peter Alma’s Office for Pictorial Statistics Benjamin Benus, Wim Jansen The Dutch artist and designer, Peter Alma (see Figure 1), is today remembered for his 1939 Amstel Station murals, as well as for Downloaded from http://direct.mit.edu/desi/article-pdf/32/2/19/1715594/desi_a_00379.pdf by guest on 24 September 2021 his earlier involvement with the Cologne-based Gruppe progres- siver Künstler [Progressive Artists’ Group]. Yet Alma also pro- duced an extensive body of information graphics over the course of the 1930s. Working first in Vienna at the Gesellschafts- und Wirtschaftsmuseum [Social and Economic Museum] (GWM) and later setting up an independent design firm in Amsterdam, Alma became one of the principal Dutch practitioners and promoters of the design approach known as the “Vienna Method of Picto- rial Statistics.” To date, most accounts of this method’s history have focused on its chief inventor, Austrian social scientist Otto Figure 1 Neurath, and his principal collaborators, Germans Marie Neurath August Sander, photograph of Peter Alma, (née Reidemeister) and Gerd Arntz.1 Yet Alma’s work in pictorial late 1920s. Private collection. Reproduced by permission from Sinja L. Alma and statistics also constitutes a substantial chapter in this history, Peter L. Alma. although it has not yet been fully appreciated or adequately docu- mented.2 In addition to providing an account of Alma’s role in the 1 For a detailed history of the Vienna development and dissemination of the Vienna Method, this essay Method, see Christopher Burke, Eric assesses the nature of Alma’s contribution to the field of informa- Kindel, and Sue Walker, eds., Isotype: tion design and considers the place of his pictorial statistics work Design and Contexts, 1925–1971 within his larger oeuvre. -
Diplomarbeit
DIPLOMARBEIT Titel der Diplomarbeit Romania and Cross-border Regional Development at the External EU Borders including a case study from the Romanian-Serbian border Verfasserin Susanne Hanger angestrebter akademischer Grad Magistra der Naturwissenschaften (Mag.a rer. nat.) Wien, im März 2009 Studienkennzahl lt. Studienblatt: A 453 Studienrichtung lt. Studienblatt: Theoretische und Angewandte Geographie Betreuerin / Betreuer: Ao. Univ.-Prof. Mag. Dr. Martin Heintel Romania and Cross‐border Regional Development at the External EU Borders including a case study from the Romanian-Serbian border Acknowledgement The last few years taught me that I cannot achieve everything at once. Hence, this thesis had to come to an end, covering only fragments of what I wanted to say. However, a lesson I learned was that every once in a while it is necessary to finish what you are doing and start something new. I want to thank the people who supported me during all these years of learning: My parents, my brother and my closest friends; The people who built organisations with me, who believed in me and who showed me what great things can be achieved, if you are confident to do them; All the motivated students at the Department of Geography and Regional Research, who contribute to a great atmosphere of exchange, friendship and challenge and prove that Geography is really cool. Matthias Kopp who is responsible for the competent proof‐reading and moral support at all times, which I am truly thankful for. In terms of this thesis I also want to thank Martin Heintel, who inspired my interest in borders and regional policy and who was willing to supervise my thesis. -
Willem Sandberg – Portrait of an Artist – Chapter 6
Willem Sandberg – Portrait of an Artist – Chapter 6 ARTIST ORGANISATION AND RESISTANCE It wasn’t until 1932 that I stuck my head in the life of the Dutch artists organisation. I received a request at that time to become a member of VANK, the Vereiniging voor Ambachts- en Nijverheidskunst – the Association for Trade and Industry Art. I had never heard of the VANK, but I became a member. At a certain moment, I was even an active member and held administrative offices, including a seat in the Committee for non- permanent exhibitions in the Stedelijk Museum – for VANK members and others – and in the Exhibition Committee for the Dutch department at the World Exhibition in Paris. The Chairman of the VANK was Jean-François van Royen, a master typographer and, as we always said, in his spare time secretary-general of the PTT. He was owner of the Cunera Press and that was his real work. This man had, between the two great wars, a positive influence on the whole artist community, the life of the artist association and the position of the artist. First, he had a lot of work to award via the Postal services: for designing postcards or stamps, fitting out post-offices, designing letter boxes and so on. But he extended his influence far beyond this. He had, together with his friend , the architect De Bie Leuvelink Tjeenk, a great influence on the artist association life in this country. Tjeenk was, at the time that I knew him, Chairman of the BNA, the Bond voor Nederlandse Architecten [Association for Dutch Architects]. -
Last 24Th of July, the New York Times Published a Story on a New
New trends on international communication The Rotary Club of Newport-Balboa, Corona del Mar, CA, 92625 September, 23, 2009, Teresa La Porte Assistant Professor of International Political Communication . Last July 24th 2008, the New York Times published a story on a new communication strategy started by Hamas, the Islamic fundamentalist group of Palestine. The headlines said: “Hamas shifts from rockets to culture war”. And latter explains: “Hamas has suspended its use of rockets and shifted focus to winning support at home and abroad through cultural initiatives and public relations”. After describing some of the events organized with that purpose (such as a theater play, a movie premiere, a presentation of a book of poems), the New York Times highlights a statement of the minister of culture from Gaza (Osama Alisawi): “We are not terrorists but resistance fighters, and we want to explain our reality to the outside world. We want the writers and intellectuals of the world to come and see how people are suffering on a daily basis”. I do not know yet what the reaction of other countries was, but at least in Spain, only some days later from this story, main newspapers brought out a report on Palestine children trying to get a Guinness Award. The challenge was to fly simultaneously the largest number of kites ever: pictures showed a beach, packed with young Palestinians trying to fly three thousand kites. Although nobody from Guinness World Records was there to register the event, the strategy set by Hamas had achieved it first hit being present in Spanish front pages with a different image. -
Leveraging the Israeli Diaspora in the US
Conceptual Framework for the ILC's Potential Leadership Role Leveraging the Israeli Diaspora in the US Final Draft for Comments Submitted to ILC Management and Board Kislev 5772 December 2011 1 November, 2011 Table of Contents Executive Summary ........................................................................................................ 2 Guidelines for Quick Reading ....................................................................................... 4 Background and Introduction ....................................................................................... 5 Part 1: The ILC’s Playing Field: Changes taking place among the Israeli Diaspora .......................................................................................................................................... 7 Background: Jewish Peoplehood is taking center stage - The changing relations between Israel and the Jewish world ............................................................................ 7 Major trends affecting the Israeli Diaspora: the current mindset ............................. 8 Major Trends affecting the Israeli Diaspora: the changing reality ......................... 10 The emergence of a new type of identity: The Israeli ‘New Tipus’ ......................... 12 Development of 'New Tipus' identity .......................................................................... 13 Who is the ‘New Tipus’? .............................................................................................. 16 The potential of the 'New Tipus' towards -
Sheila Hicks CV
SHEILA HICKS Born Hastings, Nebraska 1934 EDUCATION 1959 MFA, Yale University, New Haven, CT 1957 BFA, Yale University, New Haven, CT SELECTED SOLO EXHIBITIONS 2018 Sheila Hicks: Life Lines, Centre Pompidou, Paris, France, February 6 – April 30, 2018. Sheila Hicks: Send Dessus Dessous, Domaine de Chaumont-sur Loire Centre d’Arts et de Nature, Chaumont-sur Loire, France, March 30, 2018 – February 2, 2019. Down Side Up, Sikkema Jenkins & Co., New York, NY, May 24 – July 6, 2018. 2017 Sheila Hicks: Glossolalia, Domaine de Chaumont-sur Loire Centre d’Arts et de Nature, Chaumont-sur Loire, France, April 1 – November 5, 2017. Sheila Hicks: Hilos Libres. El Textil y Sus Raíces Preshispánicas, 1954-2017, Museo Amparo, Puebla, Mexico, November 4, 2017 – April 2, 2018. Sheila Hicks: Stones of Piece, Alison Jaques Gallery, London, England, October 4 – November 11, 2017. Sheila Hicks: Hop, Skip, Jump, and Fly: Escape from Gravity, High Line, New York, New York, June 2017 – March 2018. Sheila Hicks: Au-delà, Museé d’Arte Moderne de la Ville de Paris, Paris, France, December 1 – May 20, 2018. 2016 Si j’étais de laine, m’accepteriez-vous?, galerie frank elbaz, Paris, France, September 10 – October 15, 2016. Apprentissages, Festival d’Automne, Musée Carnavalet, Paris, France, September 13 – October 2, 2016; Nanterre-Amandiers, Paris, France, December 9 – 17, 2016. Sheila Hicks: Material Voices, Joslyn Art Museum, Omaha, Nebraska, June 5 – September 4, 2016; travels to: Textile Museum of Canada, Toronto, Canada, October 6, 2016 – February 5, 2017. Sheila Hicks: Why Not?, Textiel Museum, Tilburg, The Netherlands, March 5 – June 5, 2016. -
Zvi Gitelman
ZVI GITELMAN Reconstructing Jewish Communities and Jewish Identities in Post- Communist East Central Europe The communist era left the Jews of East Central Europe with a varied legacy, but what they have had in common since 1990 is the ability to choose whether and how to identify as Jews and to reconstruct public Jewish life. They do not do so in isolation, but are influenced both by the societies and states in which they live and by world Jewry and Israel. Ultimately, the choices are theirs, but they are shaped by these external actors. The major issues to be resolved are the nature of Jewish identity and its meaning; how to relate to the post- communist states, their neighbors, world Jewry and the State of Israel; how to deal with the communist past and those who shaped public Jewish life in that period; the restitution of public and private Jewish properties; and the seemingly perennial issue of anti-Semitism. In the course of half a century (1939–1989) the great majority of Jews in East Central Europe were murdered, and the majority of those who survived were deprived of their Judaism and Jewishness. Unlike the Nazis, the communists did not try to destroy Jews, but their policies of official atheism and forced acculturation seriously eroded Judaism and Jewish identity, though the latter was kept alive in most East Central European societies by social and governmental anti-Semitism. Unlike the Soviet state, communist states in Eastern Europe did not identify Jews officially as such on their internal passports, but they kept records which allowed them to identify Jews. -
Româneasca Anul 7 Nr
„Înnumelevorbitorilordelimbăromânăai UniversitățiiTel-Aviv,exprimsincereaprecieri pentruînaltulnivelcultural,caformă șiconținut,cucareGazetaRomânească prezintăactualitateaisraeliană” Acad. Jean-JacquesAshkenazy 18 șekeli AZETA (Eilat 15,40 șekeli) Româneasca anul 7 ۞ nr. 327 G 14 Kislev 5780 ZIAR ISRAELIAN ÎN LIMBA ROMÂNĂ GAZETA ORIGINARILOR DIN ROMÂNIA Apare în fiecare joi ۞ www.efamilia.org ۞ joi, 12 decembrie 2019 pag. EPIGRAMA LU’ GHIȚĂ „Doar o 11 Planuri de vacanţă Cum am ajuns cu datorii la rude minune de Şi la conflicte ample cu vecinii, Crăciunu-l voi petrece în... Bermude Hanuka Şi-apoi, Revelionul în... Bikini. poate forma pag. Afacerea 10 Guvernul” submarinelor Se reiau Bibi nu va cere colonizările imunitate pag. 6,11 Ambasada pag. României: 3 subiect închis! Rachete în sudul ţării pag. 16 pag. Miss Univers 7 2019 pag. Oferte Tarom 27 de sărbători pag. 22 xvcbzfhgkshgkscaneascaGAZETA - BLOC NOTES Conferinţă religioasă în Bahrain Rabinul șef sefard al Ierusalimului, Shlomo Amar, a făcut istorie luni, când s-a întâlnit cu regele statului Bahrain, Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa, în capitala Manama abinii municipali sunt amenințarea iraniană considerați reprezentanți ofici- din zonă. ali ai Statului Israel, dar nu și ai Ministrul său de ex- Rguvernului său. terne, șeicul Khalid bin Amar, fostul rabin al comunității Ahmed Al Khalifa, a dat sefarde din Israel, s-a deplasat în statul mâna cu omologul său din golf pentru a participa la un forum israelian Israel Katz la religios împreună cu clericii din Kuwe- Adunarea generală anu- it, Liban, Egipt, Iordania și alte țări ală a Națiunilor Unite din New York, arabe și islamice. -
The Strzygowski School of Cluj. an Episode in Interwar Romanian Cultural Politics
The Strzygowski school of Cluj. An episode in interwar Romanian cultural politics Matthew Rampley Introduction: the legacy of Josef Strzygowski It has become increasingly evident that perhaps the most influential Viennese art historian of the interwar period was Josef Strzygowski. Although a decisive figure, whose appointment as Ordinarius in 1909 led factional rivalries and an institutional split, Strzygowski’s work achieved a far greater audience than his contemporaries. This was particularly the case in central Europe, where his work was adopted as a model in territories as disparate as Estonia and Yugoslavia. In part his influence was due to his sheer industriousness and the volume of his output, both in terms of research publications and students. Between 1909, when he took up his appointment at the Institute in Vienna, and 1932, when he retired, nearly 90 students graduated under his tutelage; this compares with 13 under Thausing and 51 under Riegl and Wickhoff combined. As one subsequent commentator has noted: ‘Looking back at Strzygowski’s career with the hindsight conferred by time, the most striking impression is that he was never still, perpetually buzzing around like a fly in a jam jar.’1 The range of subjects his students wrote on was bewilderingly diverse, and covered topics as diverse as Arnold Böcklin, murals in Turkestan, Iranian decorative art, domestic architecture in seventeenth-century Sweden, Polish Romanesque architecture and the sculpture of Gandhara.2 Many of Strzygowski’s students would go on to become prominent members of the art historical profession across central Europe, such as the Slovene Vojslav Molè (1886-1973), who would play an important role at the University of Cracow, Stella Kramrisch (1896-1993), Emmy Wellesz (1889-1987), Virgil Vătăşianu (1902-1993), a leading art historian in Romania, Otto Demus (1902-1990) and Fritz Novotny (1903-1983). -
Finding Aid to the Grabhorn Letterpress Printing Ephemera Collection
Finding Aid to the Grabhorn Letterpress Printing Ephemera Collection Finding Aid by: Samantha Cairo-Toby Finding Aid date: November 2018 Book Arts & Special Collections San Francisco Public Library 100 Larkin Street San Francisco 94102 (415)557-4560 [email protected] Summary Information: Repository: Book Arts & Special Collections Creator: Grabhorn, Robert Title: Finding Aid for the Grabhorn Letterpress Printing Ephemera Colletion Finding Aid Filing Title: Grabhorn Letterpress Printing Ephemera Collection ID: BASC 1 Date [inclusive]: 950 CE-2018 (bulk 1890-2018) Physical Description: 230.4 linear feet (300 boxes) Physical Location: Collection is stored on site. Language of Material: Collection materials are primarily in English, but includes French, German, Dutch, Italian, Latin, Welsh, Russian, Greek, Spanish, and Chinese. Abstract: The collection contains ephemeral materials printed with metal or wood type using a letterpress. Ephemeral materials include: prospectuses, notices, fliers, postcards, broadsides, bookmarks, chapbooks, pamphlets and small books/accordion fold books. The collection dates range from 950 CE (China) to present, with the bulk of the collection ranging from 1890 CE to present. Additions to the Collection are ongoing. The earliest printed materials in the collection come from China and Europe, but the bulk of the collection is from California and the United States of America printed in the 20th century. Preferred Citation: [Identification of item/Title of folder], Grabhorn Letterpress Printing Ephemera Collection (BASC 1), Book Arts & Special Collections, San Francisco Public Library. Custodial History: Ephemera has been part of Book Arts & Special Collections since 1925 when William Randolph Young, a library trustee, was instrumental in establishing the Max Kuhl Collection of rare books and manuscripts, after the destruction of the Library’s collection in the 1906 earthquake and fire. -
Hicks, Sheila CV
SHEILA HICKS Born Hastings, Nebraska 1934 EDUCATION 1959 MFA, Yale University, New Haven, CT 1957 BFA, Yale University, New Haven, CT SELECTED SOLO EXHIBITIONS 2021 Sheila Hicks: Off the Grid, The Hepworth Wakefield, Wakefield, United Kingdom, November 27, 2021 – May 2022 Sheila Hicks: Music to My Eyes, Alison Jacques Gallery, London, UK, June 4 – July 31, 2021 Sheila Hicks: Cosmic Vibrations, Galerie Nähst St. Stephan Rosemarie Schwarzwälder, Vienna, Austria, May 28 – August 21, 2021 Sheila Hicks: Cosmic Arrivals, Francesca Minini, Milan, Italy, May 19 - July 17, 2021 Sheila Hicks: The Questioning Column, Moody Center for the Arts at Rice University, Houston, TX, May 17 – August 28, 2021 2020 Sheila Hicks, Galerie nächst St. Stephan, Vienna, Austria, December 22, 2020 – February 6, 2021 Sheila Hicks: Thread, Trees, River, Museum of Applied Arts [MAK] Vienna, Vienna, Austria, December 10, 2020 – April 18, 2021 2019 Reencuentro, Museo Chileno de Arte Precolombino, Santiago, Chile, August 8, 2019 – January 31, 2020, curated by Carolina Arévalo Sheila Hicks: Secret Structures, Looming Presence, Dallas Museum of Art, Dallas, TX, June 30, 2019 – January 12, 2020 Sheila Hicks: Seize, Weave Space, Nasher Sculpture Center, Dallas, TX, May 11 – August 18, 2019 Sheila Hicks: Line by Line, Step by Step, Demisch Danant, New York, NY, April 29 – June 8, 2019 Sheila Hicks: Campo Abierto (Open Field), The Bass, Miami Beach, FL, April 13 – September 29, 2019 2018 MIGDALOR, Magasin III Jaffa, Tel Aviv, Israel, October 11, 2018 – February 15, 2019 Down Side Up, Sikkema Jenkins & Co., New York, NY, May 24 – July 6, 2018 Sheila Hicks: Sens Dessus Dessous, Domaine de Chaumont-sur Loire Centre d’Arts et de Nature, Chaumont-sur Loire, France, March 30, 2018 – February 2, 2019 Sheila Hicks: Life Lines, Centre Pompidou, Paris, France, February 6 – April 30, 2018, curated by Michel Gauthier 2017 Sheila Hicks: Au-delà, Museé d’Arte Moderne de la Ville de Paris, Paris, France, December 1, 2017 – May 20, 2018 Sheila Hicks: Hilos Libres. -
Curating Now: Imaginative Practice/Public Responsibility Full Text Edited by Paula Marincola
QUESTIONS OF PRACTICE Curating Now: Imaginative Practice/Public Responsibility Full Text Edited by Paula Marincola THE PEW CENTER FOR ARTS & HERITAGE / PCAH.US / @PEWCENTER_ARTS CURATING NOW: IMAGINATIVE PRACTICE/PUBLIC RESPONSIBILITY OCT 14-15 2000 Paula Marincola Robert Storr Symposium Co-organizers Philadelphia Exhibitions Initiative Funded by The Pew Charitable Trusts Administered by The University of the Arts The Philadelphia Exhibitions Initiative is a granting program funded by The Pew Charitable Trusts and administered by The University of the Arts, Philadelphia, that supports exhibitions and accompanying publications.“Curating Now: Imaginative Practice/Public Responsibility” has been supported in part by the Pew Fellowships in the Arts’Artists and Scholars Program. Philadelphia Exhibitions Initiative 230 South Broad Street, Suite 1003 Philadelphia, PA 19102 215-985-1254 [email protected] www.philexin.org ©2001 Philadelphia Exhibitions Initiative All rights reserved ISBN 0-9708346-0-8 Library of Congress catalog card no. 2001 131118 Book design: Gallini Hemmann, Inc., Philadelphia Copy editing: Gerald Zeigerman Printing: CRW Graphics Photography: Michael O’Reilly Symposium and publication coordination: Alex Baker CONTENTS v Preface Marian Godfrey vii Introduction and Acknowledgments Paula Marincola SATURDAY, OCTOBER 14, 2000 AM 3 How We Do What We Do. And How We Don’t Robert Storr 23 Panel Statements and Discussion Paul Schimmel, Mari-Carmen Ramirez, Hans-Ulrich Obrist,Thelma Golden 47 Audience Question and Answer SATURDAY,