Tag: arts

Se gli oggetti degli emigrati diventano poesia

TORONTO – Ospiti d’eccezione, venerdì scorso, nella redazione del Corriere Canadese in Bridgeland Avenue: le professoresse Anna Ciardullo Villapiana e Maria Stella ci hanno fatto visita, accompagnate da Franco Misuraca (Anna è candidata, con Franco, alle elezioni dei ComItEs nella Lista Civica Italiani in Canada), per illustrarci un interessante progetto dedicato agli Italiani immigrati in Canada. Un progetto fra storia, cultura e poesia che è in fieri e che si propone di raccontare, in modo nuovo, originale, le tante vicende che hanno avuto come protagonisti, spesso silenziosi e sconosciuti, i tantissimi connazionali arrivati in Canada dal Belpaese. Ma partiamo con le presentazioni… Read More in Corriere Canadese >>> 

Il Grand Prize del “Rocky Mountain” al pianista italiano Andrea Simone De Nicolò

TORONTO – L’ennesimo premio, che si aggiunge agli oltre cinquanta già vinti in mezzo mondo. A soli 15 anni, Andrea Simone De Nicolò, eccellente pianista pugliese, vanta un curriculum impressionante al quale adesso può aggiungere anche il “Grand Prize” conseguito al concorso internazionale di musica “Rocky Mountain Musica Competition”, organizzato da Pulsar Music, con sede a Toronto, sotto la direzione artistica del Maestro Ekaterina Paniukova. 

The Grand Prize of “Rocky Mountain” to the Italian pianist Andrea Simone De Nicolò

TORONTO – Yet another prize, which is added to the over fifty already won all around the world. At just 15 years old, Andrea Simone De Nicolò, an excellent pianist from Puglia, Italy, boasts an impressive curriculum to which he can now also add the “Grand Prize” obtained at the international music competition “Rocky Mountain Music Competition”, organized by Pulsar Music, based in Toronto, under the artistic direction of Master Ekaterina Paniukova. 

জলবায়ু পরিবর্তনে বাংলাদেশি স্থপতি মেরিনার সাফল্য

যুক্তরাজ্যের গ্লাসগোয় জাতিসংঘের জলবায়ু সম্মেলন কপ২৬ সমঝোতায় শেষ হতেই গত ১৬ নভেম্বর অতি গুরুত্বে গার্ডিয়ান পত্রিকায় ‘এ ৩০০ পাউন্ড মনসুন-বাস্টিং হোম: দ্য বাংলাদেশি আর্কিটেক্ট ফাইটিং এক্সট্রিম ওয়েদার’ শিরোনামে স্থান করে নিয়েছে দক্ষিণ এশিয়া থেকে প্রথম ২০২১ সালের সন্মানপূর্ণ সোয়েন মেডাল প্রাপ্ত বাংলাদেশি স্থপতি মেরিনা তাবাস্সুম উদ্ভাবিত জলবায়ু পরিবর্তনের শিকার মানুষের জন্য স্থানান্তরযোগ্য ক্ষুদে বাড়ী প্রকল্প। 

Bangladeshi architect Marina’s success in Climate Change

As the UN Climate Change Conference COP26 just ended in a compromised deal in Glasgow in the United Kingdom, Bangladeshi architect Marina Tabassum, who won the 2021 prestigious Soane medal among the first architect from the global south for her design of Khudi Bari, a modular mobile house for the climate victims, appeared as ‘A £300 monsoon-busting home: the Bangladeshi architect fighting extreme weather’ in the Guardian newspaper on November 16.

In her words, Marina says, “As architects we have a responsibility to these people. The construction industry contributes half of all global emissions, but the people being affected by sea-level rise in the coastal areas have zero carbon footprint.”

Founding Marina Tabassum Architects in 2005, she embarked on a project called Bait ur Rouf mosque in northern Dhaka that gave her international prominence 11 years later for winning the Aga Khan award. Currently they are working in the Cox’s Bazar, home to 1.2 million Rohingya Muslims fled from ethnic persecution in neighboring Myanmar. Tabassum and her team have been designing food distribution outlets and women’s centres – for both the camp and its host community – aiming to create a more dignified experience than the usual tents for receiving handouts.

In the pic (from Sir John Soane’s Museum’s Twitter profile – @SoaneMuseum), Marina Tabassum