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Medica was launched in 1969 as the Diagnostics Week [5] in Karlsruhe, Germany, with 135 exhibitors and 2,500 square meters of exhibition space. In 1972, the exhibition moved to Düsseldorf, where it has been held annually ever since. In 1974 the fair was renamed Medica. It was originally conceived as a trade event for a national audience ...
2022: Cecilia Alemani: The Milk of Dreams Golden Lion for best artist of the exhibition: Simone Leigh; Silver Lion for the most promising young artist of the exhibition: Ali Cherri; Golden Lion for lifetime achievement: Katharina Fritsch, Cecilia Vicuña; Golden Lion for best national participation: British pavilion with Sonia Boyce [4] [5 ...
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It occurs every odd-numbered year, with a cycle that finds it at the Hanover Fairground in Hanover, Germany for 2 shows, then the Fiera Milano exhibition center in Milan, Italy for 1 show. The name EMO came from the name Exposition Mondiale de la Machine-Outil (Machine Tool World Exposition), and the scope of the content still reflects the ...
The IFA (/ ˈ i f ɑː / EE-fah) or Internationale Funkausstellung Berlin (International radio exhibition Berlin, a.k.a. 'Berlin Radio Show') is one of the oldest industrial exhibitions in Germany. Between 1924 and 1939 it was an annual event, but from 1950 it was held every other year until 2005.
Stands during MWC Barcelona 2019, a trade show for the mobile communications industry in Barcelona, Spain. A trade show, also known as trade fair, trade exhibition, or trade exposition, is an exhibition organized so that companies in a specific industry can showcase and demonstrate their latest products and services, meet with industry partners and customers, study activities of competitors ...
An auto show (also: motor show or car show) is a public exhibition of current automobile models, debuts, concept cars, or out-of-production classics. The five most prestigious auto shows, sometimes called the "Big Five", are generally considered to be held in Frankfurt, Geneva, Detroit, Paris and Tokyo. [1]
1801 – Paris, France – Second Exposition (1801). After the success of the exposition of 1798 a series of expositions for French manufacturing followed (1801, 1802, 1806, 1819, 1823, 1827, 1834, 1844 and 1849) until the first properly international (or universal) exposition in France in 1855.