Thursday, June 27, 2019

New Game Of Thrones Legacy Attractions Announced, Filming Locations From The Hit HBO Series Are To Open As Tourist Attractions In Northern Ireland In 2020



As Game of Thrones finishes filming after a decade in Northern Ireland, TV network HBO has revealed that it will create a major boost to the show’s legacy by converting several filming locations into tourist attractions in the region.

For the first time, fans of the Emmy®- and Golden Globe-winning series will have the unique opportunity to visit iconic sets from the show and immerse themselves in the world of Westeros.

Building on the success of past Game of Thrones live branded experiences, including the Touring Exhibition and Game of Thrones Live Concert Experience, HBO will open up the archives and share them with the series’ loyal fans.

In true Game of Thrones fashion, the attractions will be on a scale and scope bigger than anything the public has ever seen, offering the first opportunity for fans to set foot inside some of the most iconic locations from the series and see how the world’s biggest TV show was made.

Each site will feature not only the breathtaking sets, but will also exhibit displays of costumes, props, weapons, set decorations, art files, models, and other production materials. The visitor experience will be enhanced by state-of-the-art digital content and interactive materials which will showcase some of the digital wizardry the series is known for.

“HBO is thrilled to celebrate the work of the Game of Thrones creative team and crew by preserving these locations and inviting fans to visit Northern Ireland and explore Westeros in person,” said Jeff Peters, Vice President, Licensing and Retail, HBO.

“We look forward to opening the gates and sharing the excitement of stepping inside these amazing sets with Game of Thrones fans from around the world. The opportunity to celebrate Northern Ireland’s pivotal role in the life and legacy of the show and share its culture, beauty and warmth is also a huge inspiration behind these legacy projects.”

Given the unique and impressive nature of the production work in Northern Ireland, HBO is 


 considering including the standing sets for iconic locations such as Winterfell, Castle Black, and Kings Landing alongside a formal studio tour of Linen Mill Studios, which will showcase a wide array of subject matter from the series and span all seasons and settings. 

While fans have already come to Northern Ireland in their thousands to experience the stunning landscapes, coastlines and mountains in the series, they will now be able to immerse themselves more fully in the world of Westeros through the new attractions.

A description of the full scope of the Game of Thrones Legacy project will be revealed at a later date after an exploratory process is completed.

www.ireland.com

Saturday, June 22, 2019

World's Best Airlines For 2019 Revealed By Skytrax

Image result for World's Best Airlines For 2019 Revealed By Skytrax


(CNN) — The results are in -- Qatar Airways is back on top with flying colors, nabbing the top spot at the 2019 Skytrax World Airline Awards.
Last year, the Gulf carrier was pipped to the post by Singapore Airlines, but now QatarAirways is celebrating its fifth time grabbing the prestigious accolade -- having previously won in 2017, 2015, 2012 and 2011.
Qatar Airways also won World's Best Business Class, World's Best Business Class Seat and Best Airline in the Middle East.
Singapore Airlines -- the carrier known for running the world's longest flight -- took second place but also won key awards including World's Best Cabin Crew, World's Best First Class, Best Airline in Asia and World's Best First Class Seat.
In the world of budget air travel, AirAsia won World's Best Low-Cost Airline and Japan Airlines won World's Best Economy Class and Economy Class Seat.
"It is a proud moment for the airline as our constant innovation and service standards set the benchmark in our industry," says Qatar Airways Group CEO Akbar Al Baker.
The Skytrax awards are seen as among the most prestigious in the business -- they're voted for by consumers.
Airline executives celebrated at a ceremony held at the Paris Air Show in Le Bourget, France.

Big winners

The top 10 is a familiar who's-who of the aviation world -- with no big shake-ups.
Qantas Airways nabbed number 8 on the list, after failing to make the top 10 in 2019.
Lufthansa is still the only European airline able to break the top 10.
British Airways, which failed to win any accolade in 2018, this year won Best Airline Staff in Europe, Best Airline Staff in the United Kingdom and Most Improved Airline in Europe.

Last year, US carriers failed to win any of the global awards -- but this year, United Airlines won World's Best Business Class Lounge.
The Best Airline in North America is still Air Canada -- which also scooped the prize for World's Best Business Class Lounge Dining.
Air France continues its reputation for haute cuisine in the sky with its win for World's Best First Class Onboard Catering, while if you're flying economy you'll apparently find the best food on board an EVA Air flight.
Best inflight entertainment went to Emirates and EVA Air also topped the ranking of the World's Cleanest Airlines.
Qatar Airways was named the World's Best Airline for the fifth time.
Qatar Airways was named the World's Best Airline for the fifth time.
KARIM JAAFAR/AFP/AFP/Getty Images

World's Best Airlines for 2019

1. Qatar Airways
2. Singapore Airlines
3. ANA All Nippon Airways
4. Cathay Pacific
5. Emirates
6. EVA Air
7. Hainan Airlines
8. Qantas Airways
9. Lufthansa
10. Thai Airways

World's Cleanest Airlines for 2019

1. EVA Air
2. Japan Airlines
3. ANA All Nippon Airways
4. Singapore Airlines
5. Asiana Airlines
6. Hainan Airlines
7. Swiss International Air Lines
8. Cathay Pacific
9. Qatar Airways
10. Lufthansa

Best Airlines -- by Global Region

Northern Europe -- Finnair
Western Europe -- Lufthansa
Eastern Europe -- Aeroflot Russian Airlines
Africa -- Ethiopian Airlines
Australia / Pacific -- Qantas Airlines
Central Asia / India -- Air Astana
China -- Hainan Airlines
Central America / Caribbean -- Copa Airlines
South America -- LATAM
North America -- Air Canada
Asia -- Singapore Airlines
Middle East -- Qatar Airways
Europe -- Lufthansa

Best Low-Cost Airlines

Africa -- Fastjet
Australia & Pacific -- Jetstar Airways
Asia -- AirAsia
Central Asia / India -- IndiGo
China -- West Air
South America -- Sky Airline
Southwest Airlines -- WestJet
Middle East -- Flynas
Europe -- EasyJet

Best Airline Catering


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Air France impressed with its haute cuisine.
Courtesy AirFrance
Economy -- EVA Air
Premium Economy -- Austrian Airlines
Business -- ANA All Nippon Airways
First Class -- Air France

Best Airline Seats

Economy -- Japan Airlines
Premium economy -- Virgin Atlantic
Business -- Qatar Airways
First class -- Singapore Airlines

Best Regional Airlines

World's Best Regional Airline -- Bangkok Airways
Africa -- Royal Air Maroc
Asia -- Bangkok Airways
South America -- Azul Brazilian Airlines
North America -- JetBlue Airways
Central Asia / India -- Azerbaijan Airlines

Best Airline Lounges

First class -- Swiss International Airlines
Business Class Lounge -- United Airlines
Airline alliance lounge -- Star Alliance Los Angeles
Independent airport lounge -- Plaza Premium Heathrow Terminal Two
First class lounge dining -- Air France

Best Airlines Staff Service -- by Global Region

Africa -- South African Airways
Australia / Pacific -- Fiji Airways
Central Asia / India -- Vistara
China -- Hainan Airlines
Central America / Caribbean -- Copa Airlines
South America -- Azul Brazilian Airlines
North America -- Delta Air Lines
Asia -- Thai Airways
Middle East -- Flynas
Europe -- British Airways
Francesca Street, CNN

Friday, June 21, 2019

The Barnes Foundation to Present Exhibition by Pioneering Video Artist Bill Viola

I Do Not Know What It Is I Am Like: The Art of Bill Viola Curated by John G. Hanhardt 


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Bill Viola, Ablutions, 2005. Color video diptych on two flat panel displays. Photo: Kira Perov.


Philadelphia, PA—In its first exhibition devoted to video art, the Barnes Foundation is presenting a survey of works by pioneering American video artist Bill Viola (b. 1951). Organized for the Barnes by distinguished guest curator John G. Hanhardt, I Do Not Know What It Is I Am Like: The Art of Bill Viola is the first large-scale exhibition of Viola’s work to be presented in Philadelphia. This exhibition brings together a selection of the artist’s major pieces dating from 1976 to 2009, including the rarely seen large-scale installations He Weeps for You (1976)Pneuma (1994/2009), and Ascension (2000), as well as smaller screen-based works. On view in the Barnes’s Roberts Gallery from June 30 through September 15, 2019, the exhibition shows how Viola has redefined the moving image with a compelling and distinctive oeuvre that challenges the senses.
I Do Not Know What It Is I Am Like: The Art of Bill Viola is sponsored by Comcast NBCUniversal.
During the 1970s, Bill Viola was a vanguard leader experimenting with the new medium of video. He paved the way for subsequent generations of media artists and throughout his career has created genre-defying, mind-expanding work that invites meditations on human consciousness, spirituality, and the cycle of life and death.
The exhibition draws its title from Viola’s 1986 work I Do Not Know What It Is I Am Like, an ambitious 89-minute, single-channel video that envisions an epic quest for transcendence and self-knowledge. A touchstone for the exhibition, this work—which Viola describes as a “personal investigation of the inner states and connections to animal consciousness we all carry within”—will be presented in the Comcast NBCUniversal Auditorium at the Barnes. Seven additional works, including three full-room installations, will be on view in the Roberts Gallery.
“For our first exhibition dedicated to video art, we are thrilled to present the work of artistic visionary Bill Viola, whose immersive installations explore the nature of human consciousness,” says Thom Collins, Neubauer Family Executive Director and President. “Uniquely suited for a presentation at the Barnes, this exhibition reveals Viola’s myriad global influences, which are echoed in the diverse holdings of the Barnes collection, where European modernist and Italian Renaissance paintings are displayed alongside African and Asian art, and Native American jewelry and textiles.”
“It’s exciting to bring the first large-scale Bill Viola exhibition to Philadelphia,” says guest curator John G. Hanhardt. “The collection at the Barnes presents a wonderful context in which to celebrate Viola’s remarkable achievements and his contribution to world art.”
Exhibition highlights include:
  • Ablutions (2005): A video diptych with a woman and a man on separate screens slowly cleansing their hands in a ritual of purification.
  • Ascension (2000): A signature piece and one of the most dramatic in Viola’s oeuvre, this work shows the transformation of the body as it plunges into water and is transfigured by light. The movement is a compelling expression of rejuvenation in the space between life and death.
  • Catherine’s Room (2001): An exquisitely detailed five-channel video, its form is based on the predella in St. Catherine of Siena Praying by the 15th-century painter Andrea di Bartolo Cini. It is a private view into the room of a solitary woman who performs daily rituals from morning until night, seen simultaneously in a series of five screens arranged in a horizontal row.
  • The Greeting (1995): A celebrated work, which premiered at the Venice Biennale and was inspired by Pontormo’s Mannerist painting Visitation (1528–1529). It is the unfolding of a meeting between three women that depicts in extreme slow motion, every nuance and detail of their emotions and movements.
  • He Weeps for You (1976): Rarely seen and the earliest work on view, this large-scale landmark closed-circuit video installation explores our perception of time, focusing on a single drop of water that contains a reflection of the room and people in it. It repeatedly and slowly forms and then falls, striking an amplified drum. The magnified drop is seen as a large projection in the room.
  • I Do Not Know What It Is I Am Like (1986): This single-channel video, with an 89-minute running time, is structured in five parts: Il Corpo Scuro (The Dark Body)The Language of the BirdsThe Night of SenseStunned by the Drum, and The Living Flame. It envisions a metaphysical journey of rational and intuitive thought, from the natural world to spiritual rituals. Viola’s poetic investigation of subject and object, observing and being observed, and his search for knowledge of the self is encapsulated in an indelible visual metaphor: an image of the artist reflected in the pupil of an owl’s eye.
  • Observance (2002): Displayed on a narrow vertical screen, this work portrays an evocative and emotionally charged scene, where people file forward in shared anguish and grief to observe the object of their sorrow.
  • Pneuma (1994/2009): In this dreamlike installation, room-size projections create an immersive environment that invites contemplation. “Images alternately emerge and submerge into a field of shimmering visual noise, the ground of all images, and hover at the threshold of recognition and ambiguity,” Viola describes.
EXHIBITION ORGANIZATION
I Do Not Know What It Is I Am Like: The Art of Bill Viola is organized for the Barnes by distinguished guest curator John G. Hanhardtwith the collaboration of Kira Perov and the Bill Viola Studio.
CATALOGUE Published by the Barnes and edited by curator John G. Hanhardt, the exhibition catalogue I Do Not Know What It Is I Am Like: The Art of Bill Viola, offers an unprecedented view of Bill Viola’s work, revealing his creative process while placing his art and thought in a rich cultural and philosophical context. The catalogue focuses, for the first time, on the global texts and thinkers that inspired and shaped Viola’s art across the span of his career, in an exploration of the artist’s thoughts on philosophy, theology, and spirituality. The catalogue includes new material from the Bill Viola Studio’s archives, including drawings, notes, and production photographs from the artist himself. The catalogue also features new scholarship, including essays by Hanhardt; Thomas Carlson, professor of religious studies at the University of California, Santa Barbara; and the artist’s close collaborator and partner, Kira Perov.
ABOUT THE ARTISTBill Viola (b. 1951) has exhibited widely both in the US and internationally. His major solo exhibitions include presentations at the Museum of Modern Art, New York (1987); the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York (1997); the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York (2002); the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles (2003); Mori Art Museum, Tokyo (2006); Grand Palais, Paris (2014); the National Portrait Gallery, Washington, DC (2016); Palazzo Strozzi, Florence, Italy (2017); Guggenheim Bilbao, Spain (2017); and the Royal Academy, London (2019). Viola represented the US at the 45th International Art Exhibition, la Biennale di Venezia in 1995. His works are included in major museum collections globally, including the Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; the Los Angeles County Museum of Art; Tate Modern, London; Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris; and Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofia, Madrid. He lives and works in Long Beach, California, with Kira Perov, executive director of Bill Viola Studio and Viola’s partner and collaborator for over 35 years.
SPONSORS
This exhibition is sponsored by Comcast NBCUniversal.
Generous support for this exhibition comes from the Jill and Sheldon Bonovitz Exhibition Fund, the Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation, and Aileen and Brian Roberts.
Critical support for all exhibitions comes from contributors to the Barnes Foundation Exhibition Fund.
The exhibition catalogue is made possible with generous support provided by the Lois and Julian Brodsky Publications Fund.
AROUND TOWNBill Viola: The Veiling
June 26—October 6, 2019
The Fabric Workshop and Museum, Philadelphia
The Veiling is one of five video and sound installations that Bill Viola produced to occupy the five rooms of the US Pavilion during the 46th Venice Biennale in 1995. Through a collaboration with the Fabric Workshop and Museum, Viola created a system of nine sheer scrims that catch the light from two video projections. Images of a man and a woman can be seen slowly walking toward each other, passing through the scrims, and merging at the center before moving apart again. This ghostly action, repeating over and over, becomes hypnotic. Like much of Viola’s work, The Veiling has a dreamlike quality and suggests the multiplicity of experience that exists both in our own thoughts and our understanding of our interaction with another human being.
Bill Viola: Ocean Without a ShoreJune 28, 2019—December 31, 2019
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts (PAFA), Philadelphia
Ocean Without a Shore (2007), acquired by PAFA in 2010, is a major video installation and a profound experiential work by Bill Viola that combines a reverence for the traditions of figuration and realism in Western art with cutting-edge technology. Entering Ocean Without a Shore, the viewer stands in a darkened room before three large monitors. In turns that last an average of three to four minutes on each of the three screens, a total of 24 people emerge individually from behind an invisible wall of rushing water, and eventually return the way they came. Viola describes Ocean Without a Shore as “a series of encounters at the intersection between life and death.” Originally commissioned for the 2007 Venice Biennale, the work was first shown in the 15th-century Church of the Oratorio San Gallo, a short distance from the Piazza San Marco. Inspired by the writings of Senegalese poet Birago Diop, it takes its title from Andalusian Sufi mystic Ibn Arabi, who wrote, “The Self is an ocean without a shore. Gazing upon it has no beginning or end, in this world and the next.”
ABOUT THE BARNES FOUNDATION
The Barnes Foundation is a nonprofit cultural and educational institution that shares its unparalleled art collection with the public, organizes special exhibitions, and presents programming that fosters new ways of thinking about human creativity. The Barnes collection is displayed in ensembles that integrate art and objects from across cultures and time periods, overturning traditional hierarchies and revealing universal elements of human expression. Home to one of the world’s finest collections of impressionist, post-impressionist, and early modernist paintings—including the largest groups of paintings by Pierre-Auguste Renoir and Paul Cézanne in existence—the Barnes brings together renowned masterworks by such artists as Henri Matisse, Pablo Picasso, Amedeo Modigliani, and Vincent van Gogh, alongside ancient, medieval, Renaissance, and non-Western art as well as metalwork, furniture, and decorative art.
The Barnes Foundation was established by Dr. Albert C. Barnes in 1922 to “promote the advancement of education and the appreciation of the fine arts and horticulture.” Since moving to the heart of Philadelphia in 2012, the Barnes has expanded its commitment to teaching visual literacy in groundbreaking ways, investing in original scholarship relating to its collection and enhancing accessibility throughout every facet of its program.

The Barnes is open Wednesday–Monday, and tickets can be purchased on-site, online, or by calling 215.278.7200. Ticket prices and current hours are listed on our website.