Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
My Life in Ruins (released as Driving Aphrodite in the United Kingdom) is a 2009 romantic-comedy film directed by Donald Petrie and starring Nia Vardalos, Richard Dreyfuss, Alexis Georgoulis, Rachel Dratch, Harland Williams and Alistair McGowan.
Carlos Garaicoa began his career in the 1990s, as Cuba was thrust into economic depression by a lack of support from the USSR, combined with the US embargo. [8] This was a difficult time for artists, but Garaicoa persevered by gaining international recognition through social commentary and political discourse in his art. [8]
Hanaa Malallah (born 1958) is an Iraqi artist and educator living in London, England.Her surname also appears in English as Mal-Allah. [1] She is noted for developing the technique called the Ruins Technique in which found objects are incorporated into artwork.
This was a massive installation presented in 2013 during the summer cultural event Le voyage à Nantes, located in Plaza du Boffay, one of the most central squares of Nantes. The measurement of the installation was of approximately 20 m x 20 m and it was composed by some 2000 figures and buildings of cement on scale semi destroyed representing ...
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Donate
Jocelyne Saab (30 April 1948 – 7 January 2019 [1]) was a Lebanese journalist and film director.She is recognized as one of the pioneers of Lebanese cinema. [2] A reporter, photographer, scriptwriter, producer, director, artist and founder of the Cultural Resistance International Film Festival of Lebanon, Saab focused on the deprived and disadvantaged – from displaced peoples to exiled ...
Giulio Aldinucci was born in Siena in 1981, he began composing in his teenage years.Aldinucci has a musical and an academic linguistics background. In 2001 he started the project Obsil (the word Obsil stands for "observing silence" [4]): under this name, he released three albums between 2006 and 2011. [5]
In the Ruins is a 1984 radio play by the British playwright Nick Dear, in which George III of the United Kingdom looks back on his life in 1817, the year before his death. . It premiered on BBC Radio 3 in June 1984 [1] and was adapted for the stage at the Bristol Old Vic in 1990, [2] starring Patrick Malahide and directed by Paul Unw