Sunday, October 5, 2008

Travesti World Mature

COC German Archaeological Institute in the Sala Europa of Badajoz


The exhibition 'Blick Watch' The photographic archive of the German Archaeological Institute in Madrid is exhibiting at the European Chamber of Badajoz. The sample resume in 88 photos 50 years of collaborative research institute and English and Lusitanian.
The exhibition is organized by the Ministry of Culture and Tourism Board of Extremadura and the Archaeological Museum of Badajoz and the opening was attended also the director of the National Archaeological Museum of Tarragona, Francesc Tarrats, the German Archaeological Institute investigator of Madrid, Michael Kunst, and Professor of Archaeology University of Extremadura, Enrique Martín Cáceres Cerrillo.
This exhibition has been produced by the National Archaeological Museum of Tarragona and the German Archaeological Institute in Madrid and includes 88 images in black and white panels with text and pictures, a sequence of different actions and projects that have worked this center in collaboration with schools archaeological research English and Portuguese along the last fifty years.
images are exposed several "high technical and artistic quality" from the library of the German Archaeological Institute, an archaeological graphics files "in the world, with some funds close to 134,000 images on sites, monuments and various aspects Archaeology of the peninsular.
In a press release, the Board explained that the photographs are a "great repertoire of photographic techniques in black and white 'and a" singular and representative view of archaeological research peninsular and society in the second half of the twentieth century. "
The German Archaeological Institute is a scientific institution under the Ministry of Foreign Affairs German, with several branches spread all over the world. It is" one of the relevant European research Archaeological more roots and greater global reach by opening some of their headquarters in the late nineteenth century.
Madrid headquarters officially opened its headquarters in 1954, however, the activity of the German School of Archaeology in the Iberian Peninsula dates the last third of the nineteenth century. Extremadura, archaeological research undertaken by German archaeologists is "too early" to work in Mérida and Cáceres.
The exhibition will remain open until 26 October and will be open from 10.30 to 14.30 hours and 18.00 to 20.30. Sunday afternoon will remain closed. This exhibition has toured previously Tarragona, Berlin, Valencia and Murcia.

0 comments:

Post a Comment