Russian Cities to Host Exhibitions on Bank of Russia's Museum

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Russian Cities to Host Exhibitions on Bank of Russia's Museum ул. Неглинная, 12, Москва, 107016 8 800 300-30-00 www.cbr.ru Новости Russian cities to host exhibitions on Bank of Russia’s museum collections 13 сентября 2019 года Новости From September to November 2019, passers-by and visitors will be able to enjoy the exhibitions Bank Premises, 250 Years of Russian Banknotes, and the Magic of Theatre that will be installed on central pedestrian streets and boulevards, in libraries, theatres and exhibition centres across 23 Russian cities. The Bank of Russia has a rich history, many of its branches are housed in historic listed buildings, and its museum contains fascinating collections. The 37 forthcoming exhibitions have the aim of opening this all up to the general public in cities throughout Russia including Kazan, Belgorod, Nizhny Novgorod, Pskov, Kursk, Arkhangelsk, Kostroma, Bryansk, Veliky Novgorod, Vologda, Vladivostok, Vladimir, Yoshkar-Ola, Ivanovo, Izhevsk, Kaliningrad, Ryazan, Saratov, Syktyvkar, Tver, Penza, and Petrozavodsk. The interiors of ancient buildings in these cities where Russia’s main bank operates will be open to the public, and visitors will be able to explore Russia’s history through its money and see unique collections of Russian coins. All the exhibitions will be of the highest artistic quality. The exhibits will be displayed alongside images and interesting facts. Bank Premises — Belgorod, September 10-29, Belgorodsky Arbat (Ulitsa 50-Letiya Belgorodskoy Oblasti), 32 paintings — Kazan, September 23-October 4, Ulitsa Baumana (the city’s central pedestrian street), 23 images — Kostroma, September 23-November 30, Alleya Kultury, Prospect Mira, 40 images — Kursk, October 1-15, Ulitsa Lenina, a photo exhibition installed on advertising stands (lightboxes), 25 images — Nizhny Novgorod, November 1-30, Exhibition Centre of the Avtozavodsky District of N. Novgorod, 28 images — Nizhny Novgorod, September 12-30, the Library named after A.S. Makarenko (in the ‘Obyektiv’ exhibition hall), 28 images — Pskov, December 9-27, Pskov State University, 20 images The Magic of Theatre — Arkhangelsk, October 15-December 17, Arkhangelsk Regional Scientific Library named after N.A. Dobrolyubov, 10-12 images — Bryansk, October 10-November 10, Bryansk Drama Theatre, 2nd floor, 19 images — Veliky Novgorod, October 8-29, the large reading room of the Novgorod Regional Universal Scientific Library, 19 images — Vladivostok, September 17-October 8, Mariinsky Theatre (Vladivostok branch), 5th floor, 19 images — Vladimir, October 7-18, Vladimir Regional Academic Drama Theatre, 2nd floor, 10 images — Vladimir, October 21-November 1, Vladimir Regional Library For Children And Youth, 10 images — Vologda, October 15-November 15, Vologda Drama Theatre — Ivanovo, October 7-31, Ivanovsky State Regional Theatre Complex, in the lobby, 19 images — Ivanovo, November 1-27, Ivanovo State Philharmonic, 2nd floor, 19 images — Izhevsk, October 21-November 3, the Library named after N. A. Nekrasov, in the conference room, 12 images — Yoshkar-Ola, September 4-26, Blagoveshchenskaya Tower Cultural and Exhibition Centre, 19 images — Kaliningrad, September 16-28, Children's Puppet Theatre, 19 images — Kaliningrad, October 7-20, Municipal Autonomous Educational Institution Gymnasium No. 11, 19 images — Kursk, September 28, Kursk State Philharmonic, 1st floor (second Open Day space), free entry, 19 images — Moscow, November 1-7, State Public Historical Library of Russia, 2nd floor, 20 images — Penza, July 24-September 24, Penza Regional Library named after M.Yu. Lermontov, 2nd floor, 8 images — Petrozavodsk, September 17-27, the National Theatre of the Republic of Karelia, 19 images — Pskov, October 7-31, Pskov Drama Theatre named after A.S. Pushkin — Ryazan, September 14-18, Ryazan Puppet Theatre, 2nd floor, 20 images — St. Petersburg, September 10-27, Russian State Academic Drama Theatre named after A.S. Pushkin (Alexandrinsky Theatre), New Stage, 19 images — St. Petersburg, November 14-30, Russian State Academic Drama Theatre named after A.S. Pushkin (Alexandrinsky Theatre), New Stage, 19 images — Saratov, October 1-31,Saratov Academic Opera and Ballet Theatre, blue lounge, 14 images — Syktyvkar, October 1-15, State Academic Drama Theatre named after V. Savin (part of the 3rd Northern Theatre Festival), 19 images — Tver, September 4-22, Tver Regional Academic Drama Theatre, 2nd floor, 12 images 250 Years of Russian Banknotes — Vladivostok, October 15-31, Congress and Exhibition Centre of the Far Eastern Federal University, bldg. B, level 6, 26 images — Ivanovo, September 9-25, Ivanovo State Polytechnic University, lecture hall building, 3rd floor, 19 images — Moscow, November 8-13, State Public Historical Library of Russia, 2nd floor, 20 images — Nizhny Novgorod, October 1-30, Moskovskaya metro station, 32 images — Nizhny Novgorod, November 1-30, Exhibition Centre of the Avtozavodsky District of N. Novgorod, 32 images — Pskov, November 11-30, Prostoria Sports and Entertainment Park, 20 images.
Recommended publications
  • Schriftenverzeichnis Von Michael Müller-Wille (Stand 21.02.2017)
    Schriftenverzeichnis von Michael Müller-Wille (Stand 21.02.2017) HERAUSGEBERSCHAFT Von der Eisenzeit zum Mittelalter. Siedlungsforschung auf Sylt, in Angeln, Schwansen, Ostholstein und Mitteljütland. Kollo- Zeitschriften und Reihen quium der Deutschen Forschungsgemeinschaft vom 20.–23. März 1985 in Kiel. Bericht der Römisch-Germanischen Kom- Archäologisches Korrespondenzblatt. Redaktionsmitglied: 1, 1971 mission 67, 1986, 357–546. – 31, 2001. Oldenburg – Wolin – Staraja Ladoga – Novgorod – Kiev. Han- Bibliographische Beiträge (Bibliographie zur Archäologie der del und Handelsverbindungen im südlichen und östlichen norddeutschen Küstenländer) 1, 1980 – 5,1984. Ostseegebiet während des frühen Mittelalters. Internationale Elisenhof. Die Ergebnisse der Ausgrabungen der frühgeschichtli- Fachkonferenz der Deutschen Forschungsgemeinschaft vom chen Marschensiedlung beim Elisenhof in Eiderstedt. Mithe- 5.–9. Oktober 1987 in Kiel. Bericht der Römisch-Germani- rausgeber: Bände 5 (Frankfurt 1985), 6 (Frankfurt 1994) und schen Kommission 69, 1988, 5–807. 7 (Offa-Bücher 80 Neumünster 1999). Niende tværfagelige vikingesymposium. Kiels Universitet 1990 Forschungen zu Groß Strömkendorf. Beiträge zur Ur- und Früh- (Aarhus 1991). geschichte Mecklenburg-Vorpommerns. Mitherausgeber (zu- (Zusammen mit R. Rolle und K. Schietzel), Gold der Steppe. Ar- sammen mit H. Jöns und F. Lüth): Band I (= Beiträge... 43, Lüb- chäologie der Ukraine (Neumünster 1991). storf 2004), Band II (= Beiträge... 44, Lübstorf 2005); ab Band Starigard/Oldenburg. Ein slawischer Herrschersitz
    [Show full text]
  • Situne Dei Årsskrift För Sigtunaforskning Och Historisk Arkeologi
    Situne Dei Årsskrift för Sigtunaforskning och historisk arkeologi 2018 Redaktion: Anders Söderberg Charlotte Hedenstierna-Jonson Anna Kjellström Magnus Källström Cecilia Ljung Johan Runer Utgiven av Sigtuna Museum SITUNE DEI 2018 Viking traces – artistic tradition of the Viking Age in applied art of pre-Mongolian Novgorod Nadezhda N. Tochilova The Novgorod archaeological collection of wooden items includes a significant amount of pieces of decorative art. Many of these were featured in the fundamental work of B.A. Kolchin Novgorod Antiquities. The Carved Wood (Kolchin 1971). This work is, perhaps, the one generalizing study capable of providing a full picture of the art of carved wood of Ancient Novgorod. Studying the archaeological collec- tions of Ancient Novgorod, one’s attention is drawn to a number of wooden (and bone) objects, the art design of which distinctly differs from the general conceptions of ancient Russian art. The most striking examples of such works of applied art will be discussed in this article. The processes of interaction between the two cultures are well researched and presented in the works of a group of Swedish archaeologists, whose work showed the complex bonds of interaction between Sweden and Russia, reflected in a number of aspects of material culture (Arbman 1960; Jansson 1996; Fransson et al (eds.) 2007; Hedenstierna- Jonson 2009). Moreover, in art history literature, a few individ- ual works of applied art refer to the context of the spread of Viking art (Roesdahl & Wilson eds 1992; Graham-Campbell 2013), but not to the interrelation, as a definite branch of Scandinavian art, in Eastern Europe. If we apply this focus to Russian historiography, then the problem of studying archaeological objects of applied art is comparatively small, and what is important to note is that all of these studies also have an archaeological direction (Kolchin 1971; Bocharov 1983).
    [Show full text]
  • Information for Persons Who Wish to Seek Asylum in the Russian Federation
    INFORMATION FOR PERSONS WHO WISH TO SEEK ASYLUM IN THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION “Everyone has the right to seek and to enjoy in the other countries asylum from persecution”. Article 14 Universal Declaration of Human Rights I. Who is a refugee? According to Article 1 of the Federal Law “On Refugees”, a refugee is: “a person who, owing to well‑founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of particular social group or politi‑ cal opinion, is outside the country of his nationality and is unable or, owing to such fear, is unwilling to avail himself of the protection of that country”. If you consider yourself a refugee, you should apply for Refugee Status in the Russian Federation and obtain protection from the state. If you consider that you may not meet the refugee definition or you have already been rejected for refugee status, but, nevertheless you can not re‑ turn to your country of origin for humanitarian reasons, you have the right to submit an application for Temporary Asylum status, in accordance to the Article 12 of the Federal Law “On refugees”. Humanitarian reasons may con‑ stitute the following: being subjected to tortures, arbitrary deprivation of life and freedom, and access to emergency medical assistance in case of danger‑ ous disease / illness. II. Who is responsible for determining Refugee status? The responsibility for determining refugee status and providing le‑ gal protection as well as protection against forced return to the country of origin lies with the host state. Refugee status determination in the Russian Federation is conducted by the Federal Migration Service (FMS of Russia) through its territorial branches.
    [Show full text]
  • REFORM of POLLUTION CHARGES in the RUSSIAN FEDERATION: Assessment of Progress and Opportunities and Constraints for Further Improvement
    REFORM OF POLLUTION CHARGES IN THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION: Assessment of Progress and Opportunities and Constraints for Further Improvement OECD ORGANISATION FOR ECONOMIC CO-OPERATION AND DEVELOPMENT ORGANISATION FOR ECONOMIC CO-OPERATION AND DEVELOPMENT The OECD is a unique forum where the governments of 30 democracies work together to address the economic, social and environmental challenges of globalisation. The OECD is also at the forefront of efforts to understand and to help governments respond to new developments and concerns, such as corporate governance, the information economy, and the challenges of an ageing population. The Organisation provides a setting where governments can compare policy experiences, seek answers to common problems, identify good practice, and work to co-ordinate domestic and international policies. The OECD Member countries are: Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Korea, Luxembourg, Mexico, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, Portugal, the Slovak Republic, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, the United Kingdom, and the United States. The Commission of the European Communities takes part in the work of the OECD. OECD Publishing disseminates widely the results of the statistics gathered by the Organisation and its research on economic, social, and environmental issues, as well as the conventions, guidelines, and standards agreed by its Members. This work is published on the responsibility of the Secretary-General of the OECD. The opinions expressed and arguments employed herein do not necessarily reflect the official views of the Organisation or of the governments of its Member countries. © OECD (2004) No reproduction, copy, transmission or translation of this publication may be made without written permission.
    [Show full text]
  • Foreign Relations
    Foreign relations STU MTF forms cooperation on the basis of good partnership relations which are typified by mutual cooperation, profit in the area of research activities, or experience in education. The active cooperation of our constitution, reflected in agreements concluded with foreign partners, is proof of the necessity for searching new partnerships and cooperation. Institutes which signed contracts of cooperation with the Faculty: Agreements on cooperation with Foreign Partners Foreign Partner Country City/Town Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden Germany Rossendorf Technical University of Brandenburg Germany Cottbus Leibniz-Institute for Solid State and Materials Research Dresden Germany Dresden Anhlat University of Applied Sciences Germany Koethen Faculty of Machining, University in Ljubljana Slovenia Ljubljana St. Petersburg State University of Engineering and Electrotechnics Russia Saint-Petersburg Institute of Energy in Moscow Russia Moscow Buehler GmbH Germany Düsseldorf Ukrainian Academy of Engineering and Pedagogy Ukraine Charkov Faculty of Applied Informatics and Robotechnology, UGATU UFA Russia Ufa Faculty of Economics, Management and Finances UGATU UFA Russia Ufa National Institute of R & D for Materials Physics Romania Bucharest Faculty of Physics, University of Bucharest Romania Bucharest University of Science and Technology in Pohang South Korea Pohang Faculty of Organisation and Informatics, University of Zagreb Croatia Zagreb Bekaert Belgium Zwevegem Faculty of Machine Building, Technical University of Cluj-Napoca Romania Cluj-Napoca
    [Show full text]
  • The Situation of Minority Children in Russia
    The Situation of Children Belonging to Vulnerable Groups in Russia Alternative Report March 2013 Anti- Discrimination Centre “MEMORIAL” The NGO, Anti-Discrimination Centre “MEMORIAL”, was registered in 2007 and continued work on a number of human rights and anti-discrimination projects previously coordinated by the Charitable Educational Human Rights NGO “MEMORIAL” of St. Petersburg. ADC “Memorial‟s mission is to defend the rights of individuals subject to or at risk of discrimination by providing a proactive response to human rights violations, including legal assistance, human rights education, research, and publications. ADC Memorial‟s strategic goals are the total eradication of discrimination at state level; the adoption of anti- discrimination legislation in Russia; overcoming all forms of racism and nationalism; Human Rights education; and building tolerance among the Russian people. ADC Memorial‟s vision is the recognition of non-discrimination as a precondition for the realization of all the rights of each person. Tel: +7 (812) 317-89-30 E-mail: [email protected] Contributors The report has been prepared by Anti-discrimination Center “Memorial” with editorial direction of Stephania Kulaeva and Olga Abramenko. Anti-discrimination Center “Memorial” would like to thank Simon Papuashvili of International Partnership for Human Rights for his assistance in putting this report together and Ksenia Orlova of ADC “Memorial” for allowing us to use the picture for the cover page. Page 2 of 47 Contents Executive Summary ........................................................................................................................ 4 Summary of Recommendations ..................................................................................................... 7 Overview of the legal and policy initiatives implemented in the reporting period ................. 11 Violations of the rights of children involving law enforcement agencies ...............................
    [Show full text]
  • Baptist Union Council Meets in Moscow
    Occasional Papers on Religion in Eastern Europe Volume 28 Issue 3 Article 3 8-2008 Baptist Union Council Meets in Moscow William Yoder Department for External Church Relations of the Russian Union of Evangelical Christian-Baptists, Moscow, Russia Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.georgefox.edu/ree Part of the Christianity Commons, and the Eastern European Studies Commons Recommended Citation Yoder, William (2008) "Baptist Union Council Meets in Moscow," Occasional Papers on Religion in Eastern Europe: Vol. 28 : Iss. 3 , Article 3. Available at: https://digitalcommons.georgefox.edu/ree/vol28/iss3/3 This Article, Exploration, or Report is brought to you for free and open access by Digital Commons @ George Fox University. It has been accepted for inclusion in Occasional Papers on Religion in Eastern Europe by an authorized editor of Digital Commons @ George Fox University. For more information, please contact [email protected]. BAPTIST UNION COUNCIL MEETS IN MOSCOW William Yoder Dr. William Yoder, with extensive experience in Germany as journalist, as well as in Poland and more recently in Russia, is now contributing a weekly news release in English and German for the Department for External Church Relations of the Russian Union of Evangelical Christian-Baptists, Moscow, Russia. Yoder is known to REE readers through numerous articles and his longtime role on the Editorial Advisory Board. The following is a composite of four news releases (appearing between October 22, 2007 and June 2008), with some editing. Despite setbacks, things are moving forward. That was the verdict following sessions of the Russian Union of Evangelical Christians-Baptists (RUECB) Council in Moscow on 20 and 21 March [2008].
    [Show full text]
  • Russian NGO Shadow Report on the Observance of the Convention
    Russian NGO Shadow Report on the Observance of the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment by the Russian Federation for the period from 2001 to 2005 Moscow, May 2006 CONTENT Introduction .......................................................................................................................................4 Summary...........................................................................................................................................5 Article 2 ..........................................................................................................................................14 Measures taken to improve the conditions in detention facilities .............................................14 Measures to improve the situation in penal institutions and protection of prisoners’ human rights ..........................................................................................................................................15 Measures taken to improve the situation in temporary isolation wards of the Russian Ministry for Internal Affairs and other custodial places ..........................................................................16 Measures taken to prevent torture and cruel and depredating treatment in work of police and other law-enforcement institutions ............................................................................................16 Measures taken to prevent cruel treatment in the armed forces ................................................17
    [Show full text]
  • February 14Th 10.00 Sedov Vladimir Valentinovich (Moscow IA RAS
    February 14th 10.00 Sedov Vladimir Valentinovich (Moscow IA RAS) Principal outcomes of the excavation of the church of the Annunciation at Gorodishche near Novgorod in 2016-2017: archeology and architecture The paper presents the main results of the extensive architectural and archaeological excavation of the stone church of the Annunciation at Gorodishche, built in 1103 by Prince Mstislav the Great and rebuilt in 1342-1343. This latter church, having survived in part, was conserved, and the current plans for the museumification of the 1103 church allowed for its complete excavation, which provided an opportunity to assess the architecture of this second oldest stone church building of Novgorod (the Sophia of Novgorod being the earliest). We now see this monument as a transitive point in local architectural history. Its large size, common type and architectural details firmly link it to the south Russian tradition of Kiev. At the same time, it stands at the very beginning of the Novgorod architectural tradition. The paper also covers some of the most vivid details of the monument and the traces of its rebuilding, as well as information on the pre- church layers unearthed during the excavation. Gippius Alexey Alexeevich (Moscow, HSE, ISS RAS), Mikheev Savva Mikhailovich (Moscow, ISS RAS) Complex of the Glagolitic graffiti of the church of the Annunciation at Gorodishche The paper discusses ten 12th- century Glagolitic graffiti, one of them being the longest old Russian Glagolitic text. The inscriptions are of interest both in terms of their content and of their paleography, which has allowed us to presume the existence of a specific Novgorod school of Glagolitic writing in the 11th and 12th centuries.
    [Show full text]
  • Three Hundred Years of European Integration and Relations Between Churches in St
    THREE HUNDRED YEARS OF EUROPEAN INTEGRATION AND RELATIONS BETWEEN CHURCHES IN ST. PETERSBURG Archpriest V. Fedorov Three hundred years of St. Petersburg is not an especially long period in the history of Christianity, whereas it spans almost a third of Russia’s Christian history. The Jubilee encourages us to look deeper into what now is within the realm of history. St. Petersburg had its prehistory. Our city was founded 128 km to the West from the rst capital of Northern Russia—Ladoga,1 which was for the rst time mentioned in the eighth century. In the ninth and tenth centuries it was one of the political centres of the Medieval Russian state. The town of Staraya Ladoga, which a month ago was celebrating its 1250th anniversary, grew from a fortress on the famous route “from the Varangians to the Greeks.” Archaeologists say that it was here that Slavonic and Finnic tribes rst met Scandinavians and other Europeans. They were craftsmen, war- riors, and merchants. “Slavonic Ladoga may be called a cosmopolitan town, a town of international culture, a town where there were not any serious con icts generated by ethnic prejudices.”2 Later, Orthodox Christianity was preached here by Novgorodian missionaries, who were backed by secular authorities. In the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, Russians were beating back the incursions of Swedes and the Livonian Order. Historians believe that in the fteenth and sixteenth centuries there were 35 churches and about twenty mon- asteries and convents around Ladoga, Oreshek, Koporye, and Yam- gorod. In 1610, the Swedes took Ladoga and Veliky Novgorod.
    [Show full text]
  • Russia and Siberia: the Beginning of the Penetration of Russian People Into Siberia, the Campaign of Ataman Yermak and It’S Consequences
    The Aoyama Journal of International Politics, Economics and Communication, No. 106, May 2021 CCCCCCCCC Article CCCCCCCCC Russia and Siberia: The Beginning of the Penetration of Russian People into Siberia, the Campaign of Ataman Yermak and it’s Consequences Aleksandr A. Brodnikov* Petr E. Podalko** The penetration of the Russian people into Siberia probably began more than a thousand years ago. Old Russian chronicles mention that already in the 11th century, the northwestern part of Siberia, then known as Yugra1), was a “volost”2) of the Novgorod Land3). The Novgorod ush- * Associate Professor, Novosibirsk State University ** Professor, Aoyama Gakuin University 1) Initially, Yugra was the name of the territory between the mouth of the river Pechora and the Ural Mountains, where the Finno-Ugric tribes historically lived. Gradually, with the advancement of the Russian people to the East, this territorial name spread across the north of Western Siberia to the river Taz. Since 2003, Yugra has been part of the offi cial name of the Khanty-Mansiysk Autonomous Okrug: Khanty-Mansiysk Autonomous Okrug—Yugra. 2) Volost—from the Old Russian “power, country, district”—means here the territo- rial-administrative unit of the aboriginal population with the most authoritative leader, the chief, from whom a certain amount of furs was collected. 3) Novgorod Land (literally “New City”) refers to a land, also known as “Gospodin (Lord) Veliky (Great) Novgorod”, or “Novgorod Republic”, with its administrative center in Veliky Novgorod, which had from the 10th century a tendency towards autonomy from Kiev, the capital of Ancient Kievan Rus. From the end of the 11th century, Novgorod de-facto became an independent city-state that subdued the entire north of Eastern Europe.
    [Show full text]
  • A Simple Mechanistic Model of the Invasive Species Heracleum Sosnowskyi Propagule Dispersal by Wind
    A simple mechanistic model of the invasive species Heracleum sosnowskyi propagule dispersal by wind Ivan Chadin1, Igor Dalke2, Denis Tishin3, Ilya Zakhozhiy2 and Ruslan Malyshev2 1 Molecular Biology Facility, Institute of Biology of Komi Science Centre of Ural Branch of Russian Academy of Sciences, Syktyvkar, Komi Republic, Russian Federation 2 Laboratory of Plant Ecological Physiology, Institute of Biology of Komi Science Centre of Ural Branch of Russian Academy of Sciences, Syktyvkar, Komi Republic, Russia 3 Institute of Environmental Sciences, Kazan Federal University, Kazan, Republic of Tatarstan, Russian Federation ABSTRACT Background. Invasive species are one of the key elements of human-mediated ecosystem degradation and ecosystem services impairment worldwide. Dispersal of propagules is the first stage of plant species spread and strongly influences the dynamics of biological invasion. Therefore, distance prediction for invasive species spread is critical for invasion management. Heracleum sosnowskyi is one of the most dangerous invasive species with wind-dispersed propagules (seeds) across Eastern Europe. This study developed a simple mechanistic model for H. sosnowskyi propagule dispersal and their distances with an accuracy comparable to that of empirical measurements. Methods. We measured and compared the propagule traits (terminal velocity, mass, area, and wing loading) and release height for H. sosnowskyi populations from two geographically distant regions of European Russia. We tested two simple mechanistic models: a ballistic model and a wind gradient model using identical artificial propagules. The artificial propagules were made of colored paper with a mass, area, wing loading, and terminal velocity close to those of natural H. sosnowskyi mericarps. Results. The wind gradient model produced the best results.
    [Show full text]