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Istanbul: European Capital of Culture 2010 Highlights
  20.10.2010


Home to a wealth of history, a vibrant arts and cultural scene and the unique cosmopolitanism of a city linking Europe and Asia, the West and the East, Istanbul is gearing up for its title of European Capital of Culture in 2010.



 


As European Capital of Culture for 2010, the city will launch the celebrations with a party on 16th January, followed by a year-long plethora of events encompassing the visual arts and museums, music and theatre, literature, cinema, and traditional arts.

Many projects are already underway, from restoration work on historic sites to the construction of brand-new art and cultural centres, from ongoing festivals and arts events to the commissioning of new artistic works for 2010. All of these aim to revive Istanbul’s cultural heritage, to reinforce the city’s cultural infrastructure to allow the largest participation possible and to bring about a gigantic urban transformation with art and culture at its centre. In short, Istanbul is re-emerging as one of the world's great metropolises, with a cultural vibrancy that flows through its every artery.

Reflecting the city's setting on seven ancient hills, we have chosen the seven following categories to highlight the cultural and celebratory activities for Istanbul: European Capital of Culture 2010 – Where Cultures Meet.

Heritage
In preparation for 2010, extensive restoration work has been carried out on some of Istanbul’s most important historical sites and monuments.

The mosaics and hand-drawn decorations in several sections of the Hagia Sophia have been restored.
The kitchens of the Topkapý Palace which house the palace’s Chinese and Japanese porcelain collection, one of the richest such collections in the world and the largest outside China have also been restored.
Plans are in place to establish an icon museum at the Hagia Irene, which would house a research, documentation and educational centre and increase the capacity of the area in order to display the Byzantine icons and mosaics.
The Architect Sinan Research Centre and Architect Sinan Museum will be opened inside the Süleymaniye Mosque complex, which was originally designed by renowned Ottoman architect Sinan between 1550 and 1557. This research centre and museum will aim to increase international awareness of Turkish art and architecture and to ensure that Sinan, the Ottoman Empire’s most talented and influential architect, takes his rightful place in the history of world art and architecture.
The Hasanpaþa Gasworks Cultural Centre Project aims to transform an important part of Istanbul’s industrial legacy, which has been lying idle since 1993, into a cultural centre. Situated near the main transfer station of the Marmaray Project on the Anatolian shore, the planned cultural centre will make an important contribution to the city’s cultural life. The venue, which is expected to be finished by the end of 2010, will be opened for multi-purpose use both for local and international artistic-cultural projects.
An international competition will attempt to find a solution from architects around the world for the display of the remains of the port of Theodosius which were unearthed in Yenikapý during the building of the tunnel for the Marmaray Project which will link Europe and Asia under the Bosphorus strait. The Marmaray and metro stations, which were designed independently of each other, need to be reassessed in order to display these exciting finds which have fundamentally changed what is known about the history of Istanbul.
Visual Arts

Lives and Works in Istanbul will invite seven internationally acclaimed artists who have completed major visual art projects in the EU and influenced artistic movements there. The artists will hold workshops for the younger generation of local artists and work with them in a shared space. Over two years 100 local artists will participate in the project housed at a special arts centre in Yenikapý. Begun in December 2008 with a visit from Italian artist Remo Salvadori, it was followed by Antoni Muntadas (Spain) and Victor Burgin (UK). Other artists will include George Lappas (Greece), Sanja Ivekovic (Croatia), Peter Kogler (Austria) and Sophie Calle (France). Istanbul 2010 is also organising International Artists’ Exchanges between artists in Istanbul and Berlin, one of the goals of which is to produce an exhibition entitled Breaking the Stereotypes, which will tour European countries including Austria and Italy.
Portable Art will present contemporary art in an interactive manner throughout the city's residential districts and throughout 2010 in an attempt to ensure that the whole population can enjoy and participate in such works.
The Photograph Parade based at the Mýsýr apartment building on Istiklal Caddesi will host a whole year, from September 2009 to 2010, of exhibitions, talks, seminars and workshops for both adults and children.
The exhibition Traditional Turkish Book Arts – Modern Masters will aim to reveal the work of past and modern masters from 1453 until the present working in such fields as calligraphy, ornamentation, ebru, miniatures, binding and cutting.
Film

The documentary Istanbul Goes to the Movies compiled by Safa Önal will show the city through almost 7000 films and images from the early days of Turkish film to the present day showing Istanbul's architecture, fashion and music. It will open the Istanbul Film Festival in April 2009.
Istanbul Crossroads Specials, three film nights in May-June 2010, will be run as part of Breaking the Stereotype which will look at the ways in which both the Orient and Occident have been stereotyped.
Performing Arts

The Atatürk Cultural Centre, which houses Istanbul’s opera and ballet companies and the State Theatre Company, is considered one of the most important monuments of Turkey’s Republican era. It is being substantially renovated to transform the building into a dynamic, living performance centre in a project that will be the first in Turkey to restore a modern work of architecture.
The International Ballet Contest, the first round of which was held in 2008, will continue in 2010.
Music

Estonian composer Avro Part will compose a special piece for Istanbul entitled Adam’s Lament which will receive its premiere on 7 June 2010.
A Story for the City, Constantinople, Istanbul will be an original music project on the theme of cross-cultural interactions between civilisations and the turning points which Istanbul has faced with European societies and their impact on today's Istanbul. US-based Professor Dr Robert Labaree will play the Ottoman-Turkish harp, the cheng, which he has rediscovered after its loss for 350 years. The event will also feature Schola Cantorum, Ensemble Trinitas and 35 artists from Ince Saz-Fasil-Anatolian Folk and arabesque troops.
Legendary rock band U2 will perform on the stage of the Istanbul Atatürk Stadium on 6 September 2010 as part of their 360º tour.
Building on the Istanbul Universities’ Theatre Festivals in 2008 & 2009, the European Universities Theatre Festival will be held again in 2010. The goals of this international theatre festival are to nourish young theatre movements, to turn Istanbul into a destination for people involved in theatre and to strengthen communication between young people in the region.
Istanpoli, or ‘towards the city’, is a project hosted by avant-garde performing arts venue Garajistanbul. Foreign performance artists Michael Laub, Rimini Protokoll, Claude Wampler and Meg Stuart have been invited by local artists Mustafa Avkýran and Övül Avkýran, also art directors of Garajistanbul, to spend some time in Istanbul and translate their experiences into expression and comment. The resulting productions will be performed in Istanbul and then tour various European cities, the performances and related workshops being documented in a DVD and book.
Held in various venues around the city will be the International Istanbul Puppet Festival, featuring modern and traditional puppet shows from many cultures alongside documentaries, workshops and a symposium. Distinguished groups will participate from France, Russian Federation, Hungary, Spain, Spain / Brazil co-production, Japan, Czech Republic, Germany, Greece, Iran, Italy and Turkey.
A dance and music production featuring the life of Kaptan-ý Derya (Fleet Admiral of the Ottoman Navy) Barbarossa Hayreddin Pasha and the Mediterranean sailors of the 16th century, and also mankind's relationship with water in modern life and in history under the auspices of the Barbarossa Project will be staged in 2010. Featuring dancers of the Turkish State Opera and Ballet, there will also be choreography by Beyhan Murphy.
Museums & Exhibitions

As part of the preservation strategy for the Sur-i Sultani (Sultan’s Walls), an area which includes the Topkapý Palace, Istanbul Archaeological Museum, Hagia Irene and Gülhane Park, on display in March/April 2010 will be the Sur-i Sultani Strategic Plan Exhibition. Planned as a museum park which will open in 2023, the 100th anniversary of the Turkish Republic, the open-air museum will tell the story of ‘One City and Three Worlds’ – Istanbul as the capital of the Ottoman, the Byzantine and the classical worlds.
The Istanbul Islands Museum will be dedicated to the culture and history of the Princes’ Islands. The islands’ rich history encompasses both the Ottoman period and the Turkish Republic, having been shaped by the different communities — Turks, Greeks, Armenians and Jews — that have made the islands their home. The museum, which will be located in the former Büyükada Primary School, will include a library and archive.
An exhibition, Istanbul 1910-2010, articulating Istanbul's building and architectural history between those years will be shown at Santral between April and October 2010.
The Breaking the Stereotype 2010: From Orient and Occident to a Mutual Understanding of Images exhibition in May-June 2010 will be run as part of the larger project of the same name which will look at the ways in which both the Orient and Occident have been stereotyped.
The much-awaited Museum of Innocence museum, inspired by the novel of the same name by Nobel Prize-winning Turkish writer Orhan Pamuk, will offer a poetic and documentary representation (through films, photos and other memorabilia) of the culture and daily life of Istanbul from the 1950s to the present. Opening in summer 2010 the museum will be located in Istanbul’s Çukurcuma neighbourhood, an area which has preserved much of its traditional architecture from the turn of the 20th century.
Following interviews with individuals living in Athens, its vicinity and Thessaloniki, Longing for Istanbul will be presented as a book, documentary and exhibition during May-June 2010 projecting the longings and concerns of Greeks about Istanbul, the city they left many years ago.
Literature & Poetry

Literary happenings include Istanbul’s third annual International Poetry Festival in May 2010 and the Istanbul Literature Map, a journey of discovery about writers who were born, grew up or worked in Istanbul. Research is being conducted into the houses formerly inhabited by Istanbul’s most important authors, some of which will be converted into museums. The information will be published in a special brochure in various languages with a map for literary-minded travellers to use when visiting the city.
The Breaking the Stereotype 2010 creative writing workshop in May-June 2010 will be run as part of the larger project of the same name which will look at the ways in which both the Orient and Occident have been stereotyped.
With so many events and developments on offer, Istanbul is set to become one of the world’s most important artistic and cultural capitals, in 2010 and far beyond.

 

 

  
  

Source :
Hit : 1631


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Medasist International - Copyright 2005
Istanbul: European Capital of Culture 2010 Highlights
   
 
 


Please submit your e-mail address to get the latest news

Istanbul: European Capital of Culture 2010 Highlights
  20.10.2010


Home to a wealth of history, a vibrant arts and cultural scene and the unique cosmopolitanism of a city linking Europe and Asia, the West and the East, Istanbul is gearing up for its title of European Capital of Culture in 2010.



 


As European Capital of Culture for 2010, the city will launch the celebrations with a party on 16th January, followed by a year-long plethora of events encompassing the visual arts and museums, music and theatre, literature, cinema, and traditional arts.

Many projects are already underway, from restoration work on historic sites to the construction of brand-new art and cultural centres, from ongoing festivals and arts events to the commissioning of new artistic works for 2010. All of these aim to revive Istanbul’s cultural heritage, to reinforce the city’s cultural infrastructure to allow the largest participation possible and to bring about a gigantic urban transformation with art and culture at its centre. In short, Istanbul is re-emerging as one of the world's great metropolises, with a cultural vibrancy that flows through its every artery.

Reflecting the city's setting on seven ancient hills, we have chosen the seven following categories to highlight the cultural and celebratory activities for Istanbul: European Capital of Culture 2010 – Where Cultures Meet.

Heritage
In preparation for 2010, extensive restoration work has been carried out on some of Istanbul’s most important historical sites and monuments.

The mosaics and hand-drawn decorations in several sections of the Hagia Sophia have been restored.
The kitchens of the Topkapý Palace which house the palace’s Chinese and Japanese porcelain collection, one of the richest such collections in the world and the largest outside China have also been restored.
Plans are in place to establish an icon museum at the Hagia Irene, which would house a research, documentation and educational centre and increase the capacity of the area in order to display the Byzantine icons and mosaics.
The Architect Sinan Research Centre and Architect Sinan Museum will be opened inside the Süleymaniye Mosque complex, which was originally designed by renowned Ottoman architect Sinan between 1550 and 1557. This research centre and museum will aim to increase international awareness of Turkish art and architecture and to ensure that Sinan, the Ottoman Empire’s most talented and influential architect, takes his rightful place in the history of world art and architecture.
The Hasanpaþa Gasworks Cultural Centre Project aims to transform an important part of Istanbul’s industrial legacy, which has been lying idle since 1993, into a cultural centre. Situated near the main transfer station of the Marmaray Project on the Anatolian shore, the planned cultural centre will make an important contribution to the city’s cultural life. The venue, which is expected to be finished by the end of 2010, will be opened for multi-purpose use both for local and international artistic-cultural projects.
An international competition will attempt to find a solution from architects around the world for the display of the remains of the port of Theodosius which were unearthed in Yenikapý during the building of the tunnel for the Marmaray Project which will link Europe and Asia under the Bosphorus strait. The Marmaray and metro stations, which were designed independently of each other, need to be reassessed in order to display these exciting finds which have fundamentally changed what is known about the history of Istanbul.
Visual Arts

Lives and Works in Istanbul will invite seven internationally acclaimed artists who have completed major visual art projects in the EU and influenced artistic movements there. The artists will hold workshops for the younger generation of local artists and work with them in a shared space. Over two years 100 local artists will participate in the project housed at a special arts centre in Yenikapý. Begun in December 2008 with a visit from Italian artist Remo Salvadori, it was followed by Antoni Muntadas (Spain) and Victor Burgin (UK). Other artists will include George Lappas (Greece), Sanja Ivekovic (Croatia), Peter Kogler (Austria) and Sophie Calle (France). Istanbul 2010 is also organising International Artists’ Exchanges between artists in Istanbul and Berlin, one of the goals of which is to produce an exhibition entitled Breaking the Stereotypes, which will tour European countries including Austria and Italy.
Portable Art will present contemporary art in an interactive manner throughout the city's residential districts and throughout 2010 in an attempt to ensure that the whole population can enjoy and participate in such works.
The Photograph Parade based at the Mýsýr apartment building on Istiklal Caddesi will host a whole year, from September 2009 to 2010, of exhibitions, talks, seminars and workshops for both adults and children.
The exhibition Traditional Turkish Book Arts – Modern Masters will aim to reveal the work of past and modern masters from 1453 until the present working in such fields as calligraphy, ornamentation, ebru, miniatures, binding and cutting.
Film

The documentary Istanbul Goes to the Movies compiled by Safa Önal will show the city through almost 7000 films and images from the early days of Turkish film to the present day showing Istanbul's architecture, fashion and music. It will open the Istanbul Film Festival in April 2009.
Istanbul Crossroads Specials, three film nights in May-June 2010, will be run as part of Breaking the Stereotype which will look at the ways in which both the Orient and Occident have been stereotyped.
Performing Arts

The Atatürk Cultural Centre, which houses Istanbul’s opera and ballet companies and the State Theatre Company, is considered one of the most important monuments of Turkey’s Republican era. It is being substantially renovated to transform the building into a dynamic, living performance centre in a project that will be the first in Turkey to restore a modern work of architecture.
The International Ballet Contest, the first round of which was held in 2008, will continue in 2010.
Music

Estonian composer Avro Part will compose a special piece for Istanbul entitled Adam’s Lament which will receive its premiere on 7 June 2010.
A Story for the City, Constantinople, Istanbul will be an original music project on the theme of cross-cultural interactions between civilisations and the turning points which Istanbul has faced with European societies and their impact on today's Istanbul. US-based Professor Dr Robert Labaree will play the Ottoman-Turkish harp, the cheng, which he has rediscovered after its loss for 350 years. The event will also feature Schola Cantorum, Ensemble Trinitas and 35 artists from Ince Saz-Fasil-Anatolian Folk and arabesque troops.
Legendary rock band U2 will perform on the stage of the Istanbul Atatürk Stadium on 6 September 2010 as part of their 360º tour.
Building on the Istanbul Universities’ Theatre Festivals in 2008 & 2009, the European Universities Theatre Festival will be held again in 2010. The goals of this international theatre festival are to nourish young theatre movements, to turn Istanbul into a destination for people involved in theatre and to strengthen communication between young people in the region.
Istanpoli, or ‘towards the city’, is a project hosted by avant-garde performing arts venue Garajistanbul. Foreign performance artists Michael Laub, Rimini Protokoll, Claude Wampler and Meg Stuart have been invited by local artists Mustafa Avkýran and Övül Avkýran, also art directors of Garajistanbul, to spend some time in Istanbul and translate their experiences into expression and comment. The resulting productions will be performed in Istanbul and then tour various European cities, the performances and related workshops being documented in a DVD and book.
Held in various venues around the city will be the International Istanbul Puppet Festival, featuring modern and traditional puppet shows from many cultures alongside documentaries, workshops and a symposium. Distinguished groups will participate from France, Russian Federation, Hungary, Spain, Spain / Brazil co-production, Japan, Czech Republic, Germany, Greece, Iran, Italy and Turkey.
A dance and music production featuring the life of Kaptan-ý Derya (Fleet Admiral of the Ottoman Navy) Barbarossa Hayreddin Pasha and the Mediterranean sailors of the 16th century, and also mankind's relationship with water in modern life and in history under the auspices of the Barbarossa Project will be staged in 2010. Featuring dancers of the Turkish State Opera and Ballet, there will also be choreography by Beyhan Murphy.
Museums & Exhibitions

As part of the preservation strategy for the Sur-i Sultani (Sultan’s Walls), an area which includes the Topkapý Palace, Istanbul Archaeological Museum, Hagia Irene and Gülhane Park, on display in March/April 2010 will be the Sur-i Sultani Strategic Plan Exhibition. Planned as a museum park which will open in 2023, the 100th anniversary of the Turkish Republic, the open-air museum will tell the story of ‘One City and Three Worlds’ – Istanbul as the capital of the Ottoman, the Byzantine and the classical worlds.
The Istanbul Islands Museum will be dedicated to the culture and history of the Princes’ Islands. The islands’ rich history encompasses both the Ottoman period and the Turkish Republic, having been shaped by the different communities — Turks, Greeks, Armenians and Jews — that have made the islands their home. The museum, which will be located in the former Büyükada Primary School, will include a library and archive.
An exhibition, Istanbul 1910-2010, articulating Istanbul's building and architectural history between those years will be shown at Santral between April and October 2010.
The Breaking the Stereotype 2010: From Orient and Occident to a Mutual Understanding of Images exhibition in May-June 2010 will be run as part of the larger project of the same name which will look at the ways in which both the Orient and Occident have been stereotyped.
The much-awaited Museum of Innocence museum, inspired by the novel of the same name by Nobel Prize-winning Turkish writer Orhan Pamuk, will offer a poetic and documentary representation (through films, photos and other memorabilia) of the culture and daily life of Istanbul from the 1950s to the present. Opening in summer 2010 the museum will be located in Istanbul’s Çukurcuma neighbourhood, an area which has preserved much of its traditional architecture from the turn of the 20th century.
Following interviews with individuals living in Athens, its vicinity and Thessaloniki, Longing for Istanbul will be presented as a book, documentary and exhibition during May-June 2010 projecting the longings and concerns of Greeks about Istanbul, the city they left many years ago.
Literature & Poetry

Literary happenings include Istanbul’s third annual International Poetry Festival in May 2010 and the Istanbul Literature Map, a journey of discovery about writers who were born, grew up or worked in Istanbul. Research is being conducted into the houses formerly inhabited by Istanbul’s most important authors, some of which will be converted into museums. The information will be published in a special brochure in various languages with a map for literary-minded travellers to use when visiting the city.
The Breaking the Stereotype 2010 creative writing workshop in May-June 2010 will be run as part of the larger project of the same name which will look at the ways in which both the Orient and Occident have been stereotyped.
With so many events and developments on offer, Istanbul is set to become one of the world’s most important artistic and cultural capitals, in 2010 and far beyond.

 

 

  
  

Source :
Hit : 1632


Strategic Market Intelligence: General Insurance in Turkey – Key Trends and Opportunities to 2022
Africa a priority market for Turkish health care tourism
Turkish economy grows 4 percent in 2015
Turkey s new central bank chief signals simpler policy
Turkish inflation drops to 3 year low
Turkey s Central Bank cuts overnight lending rate
The 3rd edition of the XPRIMM Turkey Insurance Profile launched at the 7th International Istanbul Insurance Conference
Insurance contract may be made electronically
Agencies will not use insurance on their name
Fitch has announced Turkish insurance industry report
Turkey s Halkbank pension and insurance sale, sources say
Turkey launches new health data system
Turkey: Achieving a transition to a new economy
New Milan expo displays best of Turkish culture
Turkey s insurance sector strengthens as investor confidence grows
Turkeys insurance sector posts 6.4 pct growth
Turkish Halk insurance units privatisation tender details unveiled
Turkey´s economic star continues to shine
Turkey more than doubles exports in last decade
Ministry of Health offers services in six languages
Foreign investment in Turkey worth $10b in 2014
Incentives to boost birth rate to cost Turkey $400 mln
Fitch upgrades Turkey s growth forecasts
Turkish tourism yield on rise

 
Medasist International - Copyright 2005