Apart from being one of the most gripping crime thrillers, ‘Money Heist’ has treated us to some of the most picturesque locations from around the world. We have listed the top five shooting locations every fan must visit once the world is COVID-free.
Travelers may find themselves in the sweet spot between reopening and overcrowding. share this article
During the past year, weâve focused our travel inspiration on wild and remote experiences, including road trips, national parks, and beach destinations made for social distancing. But now, with Europe reopening, could this summer and fall be the perfect time for urban exploration before the certain return of overcrowding? Visiting a city now, says Black Tomato owner and cofounder Tom Marchant, is like âpolishing away some of those rough bits that can make a city visit challenging.âÂ
Bespoke travel company Black Tomato, based in the U.S. and U.K., launched in 2005 and plans personalized trips for clients all over the world, as well as special brand launches like the new Remarkable Drives of Discovery partnership with Auberge Resorts, featuring five new immersive itineraries in New England, Colorado and Utah, Texas and New Mexico, and more.
Wexford Festival Opera: Curtain up on a historic 70th year Director Rosetta Cucchi is looking forward to anniversary celebrations after a tough lockdown
Tue, May 11, 2021, 08:00
It’s been a tough 13 months in the arts, not just in Ireland, but also in Italy, where Wexford Festival Opera’s artistic director, Rosetta Cucchi, lives. “With the theatres closed it hasn’t been easy,” she says. “But, actually, I’ve recently completed a very exciting project. We made an opera movie, of Cilea’s Adriana Lecouvreur. ” The opera, which dates from 1902, is named after the 18th century French actress Adrienne Lecouvreur, who was celebrated for the naturalism of her style. “We put together the worlds of opera and theatre. We were working in the Teatro Comunale di Bologna, and we decided to use not only the stage but the whole theatre. We turned the whole space into our set, the corridors, the boxes, the foyers. We made a real movie in the 18th century theatre. It was a s
Giulia Peyrone: art where it’s least expected
Interview with the Italian-Thai contemporary artist and designer
Jane Farrell
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Italian-Thai artist Giulia Peyrone is a contemporary artist and designer who established her first studio in Brooklyn, New York, in 2016. Now in Florence, you may have seen her large-scale installations beside Ponte Vecchio and piazza de’ Pitti in a somewhat unusual setting: construction sites. Giulia was inspired to beautify the otherwise cold exterior of scaffolding and to insert contemporary art into contexts where it might not be expected.
With a background in fashion design, her work takes a fabric focus with textiles as her main artistic output. Three years after opening her studio in Brooklyn, she launched ‘GIULIA’, her soft accessories line consisting of Thai silk scarves, bags and, most recently, furniture. In August 2020, Peyrone introduced her second studio to pursue her varied practices of painting, drawing, printma