Re: Kultur
Verfasst: 8. Mai 2020 19:11
I just finished watching for the first time and WOW! Just wow! Gorgeous ballet, exquisitely filmed.
[...] INITIALS R.B.M.E. is a masterpiece of neo/classicism. A real tour de force for the large corps de ballet, not just principals and soloists.
A gift of a ballet - exquisitely etched and delivered. Total joy; especially in these most challenging of times.
What a treat RBME is! I had some difficulty in identifying the dancers - but will definitely watch again. In some ways it reminded me of his Brandenburg Concertos, full of energy, beautiful dancing.
Fabulous. What a ballet! Moving, joyous, heartfelt & some extremely challenging choreography for all concerned. I’ve only ever heard about it so what a joy to see from home!
Unter Westfalen hat geschrieben:Eine untergegangene Welt.
West-Berlin vor der Wiedervereinigung:
https://www.berliner-zeitung.de/zeitenw ... obal-de-DE
Nilkheimer hat geschrieben:Der ist doch zu laut.
In short, the results are outstanding: Burger Rudacs split the enormous spatial program of 13,000 square meters into five parts, placing them along one straight line over the site. But given the site’s steepness, the five parts of this huge building in fair-faced concrete form a terrace-like and repetitive structure, reminiscent of the wine-growing structures of the region. This design enabled the architects to formulate two different faces, each with its own entrance. On the western, lower end lies a public entrance that leads to the theater stage, a sculptural and expressive wall, five stories high and facing a busy city square next to Stuttgart’s Staatsgalerie and City Opera. The entrance to the boarding school is placed at the building’s eastern end, facing a sleepy residential neighborhood with a quiet facade of concrete and dark anodized aluminum panels. Here, the school forms a four-story building as a moderate and friendly neighbor.
In between those two ends stretches one corridor, wide and long, functioning as an internal street. It links eight rehearsal spaces, each one with a panorama window to the city, a small open courtyard, and an inner window from where schoolmates can watch. Walking down the corridor, one encounters a repeating pattern of spaces and broad views to both the building and the city outside. “We interpreted the different areas of the program as one continuous organism,” says Rudacs. “Everyone in this house wants to dance. So dancing is the glue, that keeps everything together. And analogous to dancing, we sorted the spaces in sequences and rhythmic repetitions.”
The minimal palette of materials and colors—wood, steel, and concrete in gray, brown, or black—underscores the design’s astounding calm and highly concentrated atmosphere, and forms a perfect backdrop for the joy of dancing. With this building, the John Cranko School has finally received a building to fit its world-class reputation.
Tamasi hat geschrieben:
Tamasi hat geschrieben:Dazu ein Auszug aus Bananensee: