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Added on the 22/02/2017 13:12:53 - Copyright : Euronews EN
A massive smoke cloud billows over the Gaza Strip after a series of explosions, seen from southern Israel. The leader of Hamas is visiting Egypt as hopes grew that Israel and the Palestinian militant group may be inching towards another truce and hostage release deal in the Gaza war. IMAGES
Gjakova (Kosovo), Sep 26 (EFE / EPA).- (Camera: Valdrin Xhemaj) The Kosovar artist Alkent Pozhegu makes a mosaic as a portrait of the German Chancellor Angela Merkel in Kosovo. FOOTAGE OF ANGELA MERKEL'S MOSAIC MADE BY ALKENT POZHEGU IN KOSOVO.
Nabeul (Tunisia), Sep 17 (EFE / EPA).- (Camera: Mohamed Messara) The 53-year-old Tunisian artist Mohamed Al-Sharaiti manufactures human and animal-shaped sculptures from auto parts in his workshop in Nabeul, in Tunisia.FOOTAGE OF THE TUNISIAN ARTIST MOHAMED AL-SHARAITI WORKING IN HIS WORKSHOP IN NABEUL (TUNISIA).
London, Jul 29 (EFE / EPA) .- (Camera: Neil Hall) The London War Museum presented on Monday the new work by Chinese artist Ai Weiwei History of Bombs, which reproduces 50 bombs from World War I to the present day.A work that aims to raise awareness about the number of people who have died or left their homes because of these weapons and which will be the main focus of the venue, which reopens its doors on August 1.FOOTAGE OF THE WORK.
Damascus (Syria), 28 July, (EFE/EPA), (Camera: Youssef Badawi).- The young Syrian artist Mohamed Ramadan, who has grown and developed his art during the war since 2011, seeks to reflect in his works the duality of human beings and the world. FOOTAGE OF EXHIBITION BY SYRIAN ARTIST MOHAMED RAMADAN.
Belgrade, Jul 2 (EFE / EPA) .- (Camera: Andrej Cukic) Art against negationism and oblivion. Just before the 25th anniversary of the Srebrenica massacre, an artist has transformed Ratko Mladic's war journal - the military leader convicted of genocide for the massacre - into an artwork against war.Four hundred pages of the Bosnian war journal (1992-95) of the former Bosnian Serb commander have been carefully recreated with ink drawings by Serbian artist Vladimir Miladinovic, which displays them in Belgrade until July 29 in an exhibition titled "Diary".FOOTAGE OF THE WORK.SOUNDBITES OF ARTIST VLADIMIR MILADINOVIC.Translation: -What I’m doing is dealing with some kind of reviving the documents that already served its purpose and what intrigues me is the possible potential of the remains in a different field of modern visual art-So, throughout the diary one can actually recognize that very disciplined military language of JNA (Yugoslav people's army) trained staff which speaks a lot about the attention the socialist Yugoslavia schooled its staff that were later to be a part of its own toppling.-My deep belief is that art can actually, in not anything else, show the things that happened in the past and make it possible for us to move to better relationships in the present and the future.-Actually the material is in front of us, but the question is are we capable of facing the material.