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Culture

No gashes in the Hofburg!

A bitterly cold night on the 27th of January saw thousands of people to gather to protest against the annual WKR Ball. Why demonstrate against a ball you ask? What’s wrong with a bunch of people not being able to waltz and wearing uncomfortable clothes?

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Cinemania in Vienna

Sans_titre1.pngBy Tania Berman, translation by Audrey Plaza


Living between Vienna and Bratislava at the beginning of November is a cinema fanatic’s dream. The international film festival of Bratislava takes place right after the Viennale, the Vienna International Film Festival. Some of the most anticipated films this past autumn were presented at both events: Somewhere, Des dieux et des hommes, Copie Cachée, Machete, and Another year.

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Not just a City of Waltzes

ImpulsTanz_workshop.JPG


By Sheena Keller


For four weeks each year, in the hot summer months of July and August, Vienna comes alive as the center of the contemporary dance world while the city hosts the ImPulsTanz Vienna International Dance Festival. What began in 1984 as a project between cultural manager Karl Regensburger and choreographer Ismael Ivo has now grown into Europe’s largest contemporary dance festival.

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The Unknown Ally: Bulgaria in World War I

By Perrine Recours
Translation:
Alexandra Skwara


Discover an “unknown ally” in World War I – this is the objective of a special exhibition which runs until February 21, 2010 at the Museum of Military History (Heeresgeschichtliches Museum) in Vienna. The temporary exhibit shines a light on the role of Bulgaria, and its largely unknown alliance with the Central Powers Germany, Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman Empire. It is an eclectic and enriching exhibition, despite a lack of explanations which can leave a visitor hungry for more information.

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Mucha in Vienna

A comprehensive exhibition at the Belvedere reveals the many facets of this Czech artist

By Daniel Spichtinger.

Born in Moravia (today part of the Czech Republic) the Czech Art Nouveau painter Alphonse Maria Mucha (1860-1939) is best known for his posters immortalizing the performances of the famous French actress Sarah Bernhardt, which were created during his Paris period. These works, including the ads for Gismonda and Medea are on prominent display in the exhibition of Mucha’s work in Vienna’s Belvedere. However, the exhibition goes far beyond these iconographic posters and displays exhibits that are less known but equally beautiful. They range from the very small – like jewellery designed according to his specifications – to the monumental, like the pavilion for Bosnia-Herzegovina which he decorated for the 1900 Universal Exhibition in Paris.

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