CALENDAR

Flat View
Thursday, May 17, 2012

Wednesday, May 02, 2012

Fairytale Images and Books (6:00 pm)

Opening: Wednesday 18 April, 6.30 - 9.30pm

Join us for celebrating Romania’s presence at the London Book Fair, with a special exhibition of book illustrations created by the Romanian Illustrators’ Club, which reaches its 7-year anniversary since they started to concoct  “images that tell stories” – as was the title of their first exhibition in Bucharest in 2005.

“The Club has over 50 members, but it is not an institution; at the heart of the Club there are artists that enjoy talking, drinking tea and working together” – says Stela Lie, the coordinator of the Club.

At the beginning, the Club’s exhibitions presented mainly works of art, most of them by professionals prepared to become, occasionally, illustrators. After various collaborations with ICR, CreArt, AER- Bookfest, ARCUB and books printed and edited by themselves, like fanzines, they launched Bookataria de texte şi imagini – a book for which the artists invited 39 well-known authors to write new texts that they illustrated with an exuberant creativity.

The exhibition Fairytale Images and Books, conceived by Stela Lie and Irina Dobrescu, presents for the first time almost everything the Club has created in seven years, each artist with his/her own books, plus Bookataria 1: fantastic landscapes, out- of-this-world animals, medieval and digital fairytales characters, sumptuous ballrooms, crinolines and harlequins, delicious sweets from grandmother’s cupboard. An impressive harvest of fresh texts and images that you must not miss!

The exhibition continues until 18 May, Mon - Fri 10am - 5pm.

Free entrance.

 

Thursday, May 03, 2012

After the New Man: Photographic Exhibition by Dana Popa (6:30 pm)

Opening: Thursday 26 April 6.30pm

Fascinated with her homeland, photographer Dana Popa returns to Romania and looks at the generation born here just before or after the fall of the Communist regime. After the New Man is an intimate portrayal of a society that is slowly healing, of  youth and fleeting memories of a bygone era that still permeates the selves and the landscapes. The exhibition is organised in association with Foto8 Gallery.

Traces of Popa’s own childhood pervade not only through the blocks of flats and through the cars from another era, but in the mindsets of old and young. This legacy of the recent past and the ubiquitous Western-inspired ideals of lifestyle and consumerism construct a portrait of a displaced generation, struggling to reconcile their place in history.

The exhibition brings together Popa’s own socially engaged work with her old family photographs and remnants from the past.

Dana Popa (b. 1977) studied a Masters degree in Documentary Photography at the London College of Communication. Her work focuses on contemporary social issues with a particular emphasis on human rights. ‘Not Natasha’ was Popa’s first major body of work, which looked at the effects of sex trafficking on girls and families in The Republic of Moldova who had firsthand experience of it. The project has been exhibited around the UK, Europe and US and was published as a book (Autograph ABP, 2009). Popa is based in London.

Related Events

Artist’s talk with Dana Popa - Tuesday 1 May, 6.30pm.

The exhibition continues until 26 May 2012. Opening hours: Mon - Fri 10am - 6pm; Sat 11am - 4pm.

Luiza Borac returns to Belgravia for a rare treat of piano mastery (7:00 pm)

Luiza Borac returns to Belgravia for a rare treat of piano mastery

03/05/2012 @ 1 Belgrave Square, SW1X 8PH

The May recital of the Enescu Concert Series features Luiza Borac, winner of the coveted BBC Award 2007 for the best instrumental CD of the year. Luiza has gained international recognition through her dazzling stage presence, her passionate interpretations and her sovereign technique. Enjoy the opportunity to hear a timeless piano repertoire that includes pieces by Schubert, Debussy and of course Enescu.

Programme:
Franz Schubert - Songs (Transcriptions  for Piano Solo by Franz LISZT)
Claude Debussy - 3 Preludes (Debussy - 150th Birthday Celebration), Le Vent dans la pleine, La sérénade interrompue, Les collines d’Anacapri
George Enescu - Sonata Op. 24 No. 3 in D Major, Vivace con brio, Andantino cantabile, Allegro con spirito

Hailed as “a virtuoso of fantastic brilliance” and "poetic artist" by the Süddeutsche Zeitung, Luiza Borac held a scholarship from the Hannover Chopin Society to complete her studies at the Hannover Music Academy, where she graduated with the highest degrees. She has also studied at the Bucharest Conservatoire and Juilliard School of Music in New York. Luiza Borac has performed solo recitals at Carnegie Weill Hall in New York, Steinway Hall in London, Cologne Philharmonie, Concertgebouw Amsterdam, Athenaeum Bucharest, Puccini Hall Milan, Radio Hall Hamburg, Liederhalle Stuttgart and she has appeared in festivals including Aldeburgh Music Festival of Music and the Arts, Schleswig-Holstein Music Festival, Oslo Grieg, Prokofiev at the Barbican Centre London, Enescu Bucharest, Chopin Festivals in Vienna and Milan, Bohemian Music Festival, Braunschweiger Classix, I Palpiti Los Angeles.

She has performed as soloist with Netherlands Philharmonic Orchestra, Philharmonic Orchestra of Nations, Bucharest and Cologne Radio Orchestras, Utah Symphony Orchestra and has worked with artists like Vladimir Jurowski, Murray Perahia and Radu Lupu among others.

She has recorded for the Radio Bucharest, Radio Bremen, Ambitus, BMG Ariola and Avie Records as well as for many CD, radio and TV productions around Europe and the USA and has taught piano and chamber music classes at Hannover Academy of Music and Mozarteum Salzburg. Luiza played in charity concerts for the homeless and orphan children in Romania. The 1991 UK Tour for the Romanian Relief featuring concerts in the Barbican Centre and Coventry Cathedral as well as the 2001 charity event of the Melanchton Church Hannover enabled fund raising to be delivered directly in Romania.

Her 2003 recording of George Enescu’s Three Piano Suites for AVIE Records was highly acclaimed throughout the world not only for her wonderfully idiomatic performances -  “excellent playing” Gramophone, “formidable interpreter” San Francisco Chronicle, “best performance” BBC Music Magazine - but also for the truthful quality of the recorded sound. For the German leading music magazine Fono Forum the recording was the “Star of the Month” in December 2003 and a hybrid-SACD version was subsequently released about which What Hi-Fi magazine UK said - “Luiza Borac’s take on Enescu’s Piano Suites is a testing mix of rapid-fire notes, an uncluttered acoustic and moments of breathtaking subtlety.”/p>

When: 3 May 2012, 7pm;
Where: Romanian Cultural Institute, London.

Admission is free, but places are limited. Early booking is well recommended.

Please reserve your seats at T: 020 7752 0134, E: office@icr-london.co.uk.

Images:  Ralf Bauer and Henrike Schunck.

 

Monday, May 07, 2012

East Meets East: The Romanian New Wave in the Olympic Boroughs (10:00 am)

Four internationally-acclaimed Romanian filmmakers are part of an exciting project dedicated to young people from London’s East End. It is a unique and special opportunity to learn from some of the best names in recent Romanian cinema, who will bring their contribution to the community’s development in the Olympic boroughs.

The project entitled ‘East Meets East’ is part of the Romanian Cultural Institute’s programme during the Cultural Olympiad 2012. It addresses to teenagers coming from disadvantaged environments and aims to offer them the chance to develop valuable skills in the process of filmmaking.

We are honored to have on board:

·        director Radu Muntean, winner of the Golden Owl Award for Best Film at the Leeds International Film Festival and numerous official selections at international festivals - Un Certain Regard Cannes, New York, Gijón etc.
Selected filmography: Tuesday, After Christmas, The Paper Will Be Blue, Boogie, The Rage, Vorbitor.

·        actress Anamaria Marinca, BAFTA award winner in 2005 for Channel 4's Sex Traffic and Best Actress at Palm Springs and Stockholm International Film Festival.
Selected filmography: 4 Months, 3 Weeks & 2 Days, Holby City, Storm, The Countess, The Last Enemy, Hotel Babylon.

·        screenwriter Alexandru Baciu, Best Screenplay Prize at Hamptons International Films Festival.
Selected filmography: Tuesday, After Christmas, Principles of Life, Gruber's Journey, Boogie, Vorbitor.

·        editor Catalin Cristutiu, Gopo - Romanian National Film Award winner.
Selected filmography: If I Want to Whistle, I Whistle, Medal of Honor, The Happiest Girl in the World, California Dreamin’.

They will all work with and help twenty selected students to learn about scriptwriting, storyboarding, sound, camera, acting, editing and post-production.

There will be three free workshops and masterclasses which will take the participants through the filmmaking process from script to screen and will encourage new skills in different aspects of filmmaking, as well as helping to build confidence, boost creativity and develop teamwork and social skills.

East Meets East is a partnership between the Romanian Cultural Institute and Four Corners Film, with support from East End Film Festival.

The event will take place throughout April, May and June, followed by a screening gala of a short film created by the participants and one making-of documentary at the East End Film festival which takes place between 3 and 8 July 2012.

When: 23 April – 29 June 2012;
Where:  Romanian Cultural Institute London and Four Corners.

Wednesday, May 09, 2012

Meet “the ROlympians” (1:00 pm)

Part of the Romanian Programme during the Olympic Season, in short the ROlympics, this photographic depiction of athletic and cultural excellence celebrates our most enduring international achievements in sports and arts. The heroes of tracks and arenas meet the demigods of letters, stage and music to form an immortal community of Romanian “Olympians”, blessed with talent and glory.

The exhibition, set up by the ICR London team, opens under the patronage of HE Dr Ion Jinga, our ambassador to the Court of St James’s.  Join us also for a presentation of the Romanian Programme during the Olympic Season for ears, eyes, and palates.   

 “The ROlympians” (Rolimpienii) brings together legendary gold medallists such as Nadia Comăneci, Iolanda Balaş and Ivan Patzaichin with renowned artists Constantin Brâncuşi, Angela Gheorghiu, Herta Müller and many more, revealing subtle correspondences and solidarities between athletic and artistic achievements born from a passion to succeed and a disdain for the status quo. It offers fresh insight into over 40 stories of success, through witty ideas, images and illustrations, designed by visual maverick Arnold Estefan, who he has exhibited at La Triennale, Paris (2012); No Pass Biennial, Budapest (2009);  MNAC, Bucharest (2006); and Play Gallery, Berlin (2004).

The exhibition continues until 26 July.

Free admission.

Fairytale Images and Books (6:00 pm)

Opening: Wednesday 18 April, 6.30 - 9.30pm

Join us for celebrating Romania’s presence at the London Book Fair, with a special exhibition of book illustrations created by the Romanian Illustrators’ Club, which reaches its 7-year anniversary since they started to concoct  “images that tell stories” – as was the title of their first exhibition in Bucharest in 2005.

“The Club has over 50 members, but it is not an institution; at the heart of the Club there are artists that enjoy talking, drinking tea and working together” – says Stela Lie, the coordinator of the Club.

At the beginning, the Club’s exhibitions presented mainly works of art, most of them by professionals prepared to become, occasionally, illustrators. After various collaborations with ICR, CreArt, AER- Bookfest, ARCUB and books printed and edited by themselves, like fanzines, they launched Bookataria de texte şi imagini – a book for which the artists invited 39 well-known authors to write new texts that they illustrated with an exuberant creativity.

The exhibition Fairytale Images and Books, conceived by Stela Lie and Irina Dobrescu, presents for the first time almost everything the Club has created in seven years, each artist with his/her own books, plus Bookataria 1: fantastic landscapes, out- of-this-world animals, medieval and digital fairytales characters, sumptuous ballrooms, crinolines and harlequins, delicious sweets from grandmother’s cupboard. An impressive harvest of fresh texts and images that you must not miss!

The exhibition continues until 18 May, Mon - Fri 10am - 5pm.

Free entrance.

 

Thursday, May 10, 2012

After the New Man: Photographic Exhibition by Dana Popa (6:30 pm)

Opening: Thursday 26 April 6.30pm

Fascinated with her homeland, photographer Dana Popa returns to Romania and looks at the generation born here just before or after the fall of the Communist regime. After the New Man is an intimate portrayal of a society that is slowly healing, of  youth and fleeting memories of a bygone era that still permeates the selves and the landscapes. The exhibition is organised in association with Foto8 Gallery.

Traces of Popa’s own childhood pervade not only through the blocks of flats and through the cars from another era, but in the mindsets of old and young. This legacy of the recent past and the ubiquitous Western-inspired ideals of lifestyle and consumerism construct a portrait of a displaced generation, struggling to reconcile their place in history.

The exhibition brings together Popa’s own socially engaged work with her old family photographs and remnants from the past.

Dana Popa (b. 1977) studied a Masters degree in Documentary Photography at the London College of Communication. Her work focuses on contemporary social issues with a particular emphasis on human rights. ‘Not Natasha’ was Popa’s first major body of work, which looked at the effects of sex trafficking on girls and families in The Republic of Moldova who had firsthand experience of it. The project has been exhibited around the UK, Europe and US and was published as a book (Autograph ABP, 2009). Popa is based in London.

Related Events

Artist’s talk with Dana Popa - Tuesday 1 May, 6.30pm.

The exhibition continues until 26 May 2012. Opening hours: Mon - Fri 10am - 6pm; Sat 11am - 4pm.

Unsettling "Red Gloves" at the Romanian Cinematheque (7:00 pm)

Don't miss Radu Gabrea's latest feature Red Gloves (2010), a poignant story about a young man crushed by the repressive Communist regime. 

Adapted from the Romanian-German writer Eginald Schlattner’s autobiographical novel, the film dares to confront the “obsessive decade” (as the ’50s were dubbed in Romania) in all its disturbing complexity: Felix (Alexandru Mihăescu), a young student of German (Saxon) origin, finds himself arrested and tortured for a crime he never committed, in order to turn in on his friends and his brother. This political drama reveals how easy it was for a totalitarian state to impose itself by fear, randomly rooting out individuals and turning them against each other. 

Bitterly ironic and brutally honest, Gabrea's film is a cathartic work. Respectfully recommended, Red Gloves is a deeply and pervasively tragic film.

Libertas Film Magazine

Romania | 2010 | 117min | director: Radu Gabrea | cast: Alexandru Mihăescu, Udo Schenk, Marcel Iureș, Alexandra Pirici, Andi Vasluianu. In Romanian with English subtitles.

See the trailer here.

The Romanian Cinematheque project is realized in partnership with the National Centre for Cinematography in Romania (CNC).

When: 10 May, 7 pm.
Where: Romanian Cultural Institute London

Admission is free but seats are limited. Early booking is well recommended. Please reserve your seats at T: 020 7752 0134, E: office@icr-london.co.uk.

Monday, May 14, 2012

East Meets East: The Romanian New Wave in the Olympic Boroughs (10:00 am)

Four internationally-acclaimed Romanian filmmakers are part of an exciting project dedicated to young people from London’s East End. It is a unique and special opportunity to learn from some of the best names in recent Romanian cinema, who will bring their contribution to the community’s development in the Olympic boroughs.

The project entitled ‘East Meets East’ is part of the Romanian Cultural Institute’s programme during the Cultural Olympiad 2012. It addresses to teenagers coming from disadvantaged environments and aims to offer them the chance to develop valuable skills in the process of filmmaking.

We are honored to have on board:

·        director Radu Muntean, winner of the Golden Owl Award for Best Film at the Leeds International Film Festival and numerous official selections at international festivals - Un Certain Regard Cannes, New York, Gijón etc.
Selected filmography: Tuesday, After Christmas, The Paper Will Be Blue, Boogie, The Rage, Vorbitor.

·        actress Anamaria Marinca, BAFTA award winner in 2005 for Channel 4's Sex Traffic and Best Actress at Palm Springs and Stockholm International Film Festival.
Selected filmography: 4 Months, 3 Weeks & 2 Days, Holby City, Storm, The Countess, The Last Enemy, Hotel Babylon.

·        screenwriter Alexandru Baciu, Best Screenplay Prize at Hamptons International Films Festival.
Selected filmography: Tuesday, After Christmas, Principles of Life, Gruber's Journey, Boogie, Vorbitor.

·        editor Catalin Cristutiu, Gopo - Romanian National Film Award winner.
Selected filmography: If I Want to Whistle, I Whistle, Medal of Honor, The Happiest Girl in the World, California Dreamin’.

They will all work with and help twenty selected students to learn about scriptwriting, storyboarding, sound, camera, acting, editing and post-production.

There will be three free workshops and masterclasses which will take the participants through the filmmaking process from script to screen and will encourage new skills in different aspects of filmmaking, as well as helping to build confidence, boost creativity and develop teamwork and social skills.

East Meets East is a partnership between the Romanian Cultural Institute and Four Corners Film, with support from East End Film Festival.

The event will take place throughout April, May and June, followed by a screening gala of a short film created by the participants and one making-of documentary at the East End Film festival which takes place between 3 and 8 July 2012.

When: 23 April – 29 June 2012;
Where:  Romanian Cultural Institute London and Four Corners.

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Fairytale Images and Books (6:00 pm)

Opening: Wednesday 18 April, 6.30 - 9.30pm

Join us for celebrating Romania’s presence at the London Book Fair, with a special exhibition of book illustrations created by the Romanian Illustrators’ Club, which reaches its 7-year anniversary since they started to concoct  “images that tell stories” – as was the title of their first exhibition in Bucharest in 2005.

“The Club has over 50 members, but it is not an institution; at the heart of the Club there are artists that enjoy talking, drinking tea and working together” – says Stela Lie, the coordinator of the Club.

At the beginning, the Club’s exhibitions presented mainly works of art, most of them by professionals prepared to become, occasionally, illustrators. After various collaborations with ICR, CreArt, AER- Bookfest, ARCUB and books printed and edited by themselves, like fanzines, they launched Bookataria de texte şi imagini – a book for which the artists invited 39 well-known authors to write new texts that they illustrated with an exuberant creativity.

The exhibition Fairytale Images and Books, conceived by Stela Lie and Irina Dobrescu, presents for the first time almost everything the Club has created in seven years, each artist with his/her own books, plus Bookataria 1: fantastic landscapes, out- of-this-world animals, medieval and digital fairytales characters, sumptuous ballrooms, crinolines and harlequins, delicious sweets from grandmother’s cupboard. An impressive harvest of fresh texts and images that you must not miss!

The exhibition continues until 18 May, Mon - Fri 10am - 5pm.

Free entrance.

 

Poet and broadcaster Robert Şerban debuts in London at the British Library (6:30 pm - 8:30 pm)

Chaired by BBC journalist Rosie Goldsmith

We are delighted to present  Romanian poet Robert Şerban at the prestigious European Literature Night – an international reading marathon for all lovers of literature, held simultaneously in 20 capital cities across Europe and Asia.   

Now in its fourth year, the event at the British Library in London will play host to nine groundbreaking writers from Austria, Denmark, France, Germany, Hungary, Montenegro, Poland, Romania and Sweden. Ranging from crime writing to literary explorations of love, from historical novels to horror, from short story mazes to concise contemporary verse, the authors selected are considered extremely relevant for their national literatures and will create a pan-European dialogue on fresh writing.

Robert Şerban is a writer, journalist and tv show host. His poetry has been translated into several languages and appeared in Of Gentle Wolves: An Anthology of Romanian Poetry by Calypso (2011). He will read a selection of poems from his latest volume, Paraphine Death, and will then engage in a dialogue with the public.

Robert Şerban - Let Me Introduce Myself Briefly

I come from a country

where crosses

never

shelter

spiders

under their

armpits

European Literature Night is a UK-based initiative involving 24 European cultural institutions (EUNIC London) as well as the European Comission Representation in the UK. The event promises an astonishing insight into European literature in translation.

When: Wednesday 16 May, 6.30 - 8.30pm

Tickets £7.50 (£5 concessions), available at http://boxoffice.bl.uk or 01937 546546.

Thursday, May 17, 2012

After the New Man: Photographic Exhibition by Dana Popa (6:30 pm)

Opening: Thursday 26 April 6.30pm

Fascinated with her homeland, photographer Dana Popa returns to Romania and looks at the generation born here just before or after the fall of the Communist regime. After the New Man is an intimate portrayal of a society that is slowly healing, of  youth and fleeting memories of a bygone era that still permeates the selves and the landscapes. The exhibition is organised in association with Foto8 Gallery.

Traces of Popa’s own childhood pervade not only through the blocks of flats and through the cars from another era, but in the mindsets of old and young. This legacy of the recent past and the ubiquitous Western-inspired ideals of lifestyle and consumerism construct a portrait of a displaced generation, struggling to reconcile their place in history.

The exhibition brings together Popa’s own socially engaged work with her old family photographs and remnants from the past.

Dana Popa (b. 1977) studied a Masters degree in Documentary Photography at the London College of Communication. Her work focuses on contemporary social issues with a particular emphasis on human rights. ‘Not Natasha’ was Popa’s first major body of work, which looked at the effects of sex trafficking on girls and families in The Republic of Moldova who had firsthand experience of it. The project has been exhibited around the UK, Europe and US and was published as a book (Autograph ABP, 2009). Popa is based in London.

Related Events

Artist’s talk with Dana Popa - Tuesday 1 May, 6.30pm.

The exhibition continues until 26 May 2012. Opening hours: Mon - Fri 10am - 6pm; Sat 11am - 4pm.

Glorious new sound with dazzling Romanian pianist-composer Lucian Ban and legendary violist Mat Maneri (8:30 pm)

Deco Heart, the musical pairing featuring Lucian Ban and Mat Maneri, will perform three exclusive UK shows ahead of the autumn release of their self-titled album. Working at the edge of jazz, contemporary classical and downtown NY improve, the duo present a set of jazz musings and downtown skronk, a joyously upbeat affair.

For their show at London’s Vortex, the first of their three-night UK run, one of the giants of improvised music, special guest saxophonist Evan Parker, will join Deco Heart.  In Derby, the show will feature the ever-inventive vibraphone player Corey Mwamba.

Born in Transylvania, Lucian Ban now resides in New York, and is a fully fledged member of the downtown scene and at the forefront of contemporary modern jazz.  Described as "one of the most gifted pianists to move to New York in the past decade" and cited as “playing with a sensibility and fluency that recalls Vladimir Horowitz as much as McCoy Tyner”, Ban has twice been nominated as Best European Jazz Musician in the prestigious Hans Koller Awards. 

Yet it is through his Enescu Re-Imagined project that Ban made his mark in the UK, and first collaborated with Mat Maneri uncovering a unique musical rapport.  The show was performed at London Jazz Festival, with the support of the Romanian Cultural Institute in London. It was, suggested the Guardian, “a rare combination of uninhibited but coherent solo and collective improv, shrewd arrangement and dazzling thematic writing”.  

Classically trained, Mat Maneri has been charged with the accolade of “changing the way the jazz world listens to violin and viola”.  The freewheeling scope of his musical imagination has led Maneri to become the go-to guy from artists such as paul Bley, Cecil Taylor and Matthew Shipp, John Medeski, Michael Formanek, Tim Berne as well as  leading several of his own critically acclaimed ensembles.

Programme:

Thu May 17, Vortex Jazz Club, 8.30pm
11 Gillett Street, London, N16. 
Tickets:  £12  |  020 7254 4097  |  www.vortexjazz.co.uk | 
Book online 
Photo of Evan Parker by Benjamin Amure

Presented in partnership with Jazz North East

Fri May 18, Literary & Philosophical Library, 8pm
23 Westgate Road, Newcastle NE1 1SE 
Tickets:  £ 10 ( £ 8 concessions)   |  0191 232 0192 | 
Book online

Presented in partnership with Derby Jazz
Sat May 19th, Voicebox Arts Centre, 6:30pm
Forman Street, Derby DE1 1JQ
Tickets: www.voiceboxuk.com

Saturday, May 19, 2012

Hramul parohiei romanesti din Cambridge (5:00 pm)

Dragi prieteni,

Am deosebita bucurie de a va invita sa participati, in zilele de 19 si 20 Mai, la un eveniment special in viata parohiei romanesti din Cambridge.

Pe 20 Mai sarbatorim hramul parohiei romanesti, al carei ocrotitor este Sfantul Apostol si Evanghelist Ioan. Aceasta zi va fi marcata de prezenta Prea Sfintiei Sale, Marc, Episcop Vicar al Arhiepiscopiei Ortodoxe Romane a Europei Occidentale.

Sarbatoarea va incepe de Sambata, 19 Mai, cu slujba Vecerniei Mari (5.00pm), la biserica St Giles, din Cambridge (Castle Street, Cambridge, CB3 0AQ), si va continua a doua zi, Duminica, 20 Mai, cu slujba Utreniei si a Sfintei Liturghii, de la ora 8.30am, respectiv 10am. Slujba va fi urmata de o masa de pranz, la care va asteptam de asemenea, cu drag.

Bucuria zilei este intregita de faptul ca Sfanta Liturghie va include si slujba horotoniei in treapta diaconatului a domnului Dragos Herescu, pe care multi dintre voi il cunoasteti personal, si alaturi de care credem veti dori sa fiti in acea zi.

Suntem adanc recunoscatori multora dintre voi, si acest eveniment este in acelasi timp o ocazie de a recunoaste si afirma ajutorul generos pe care l-am primit in activitatea pastorala, in ultimii doi ani, de la clerici, parohii surori, sau credinciosi din Cambridge si de departe. Prezenta voastra la aceasta sarbatoare ar reprezenta o bucurie extraordinara si o profunda onoare pentru mine, Dragos cat si pentru intreaga comunitate romaneasca din Cambridge. Speram ca veti fi partasi ai bucuriei noastre pe 20 Mai.

Al vostru in slujirea lui Hristos si in dragoste crestina,

pr. Aurel Dumitru Radulet

Monday, May 21, 2012

East Meets East: The Romanian New Wave in the Olympic Boroughs (10:00 am)

Four internationally-acclaimed Romanian filmmakers are part of an exciting project dedicated to young people from London’s East End. It is a unique and special opportunity to learn from some of the best names in recent Romanian cinema, who will bring their contribution to the community’s development in the Olympic boroughs.

The project entitled ‘East Meets East’ is part of the Romanian Cultural Institute’s programme during the Cultural Olympiad 2012. It addresses to teenagers coming from disadvantaged environments and aims to offer them the chance to develop valuable skills in the process of filmmaking.

We are honored to have on board:

·        director Radu Muntean, winner of the Golden Owl Award for Best Film at the Leeds International Film Festival and numerous official selections at international festivals - Un Certain Regard Cannes, New York, Gijón etc.
Selected filmography: Tuesday, After Christmas, The Paper Will Be Blue, Boogie, The Rage, Vorbitor.

·        actress Anamaria Marinca, BAFTA award winner in 2005 for Channel 4's Sex Traffic and Best Actress at Palm Springs and Stockholm International Film Festival.
Selected filmography: 4 Months, 3 Weeks & 2 Days, Holby City, Storm, The Countess, The Last Enemy, Hotel Babylon.

·        screenwriter Alexandru Baciu, Best Screenplay Prize at Hamptons International Films Festival.
Selected filmography: Tuesday, After Christmas, Principles of Life, Gruber's Journey, Boogie, Vorbitor.

·        editor Catalin Cristutiu, Gopo - Romanian National Film Award winner.
Selected filmography: If I Want to Whistle, I Whistle, Medal of Honor, The Happiest Girl in the World, California Dreamin’.

They will all work with and help twenty selected students to learn about scriptwriting, storyboarding, sound, camera, acting, editing and post-production.

There will be three free workshops and masterclasses which will take the participants through the filmmaking process from script to screen and will encourage new skills in different aspects of filmmaking, as well as helping to build confidence, boost creativity and develop teamwork and social skills.

East Meets East is a partnership between the Romanian Cultural Institute and Four Corners Film, with support from East End Film Festival.

The event will take place throughout April, May and June, followed by a screening gala of a short film created by the participants and one making-of documentary at the East End Film festival which takes place between 3 and 8 July 2012.

When: 23 April – 29 June 2012;
Where:  Romanian Cultural Institute London and Four Corners.

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Piano By Candlelight (7:30 pm)

Bogdan Ota
World Class Pianist and Composer


Concert 2012
Wednesday 23rd May
Frinton Parish Church, Fourth Avenue
Frinton-on-sea

Tickets: £6.50
Tickets available at:
- Frinton Road Nurseries,
- Kirby Cross
- Lilley's Bakery
- Caxton Books
All on Cannaught Avenue, Frinton
01255 850072
01255 673116

Thursday, May 24, 2012

After the New Man: Photographic Exhibition by Dana Popa (6:30 pm)

Opening: Thursday 26 April 6.30pm

Fascinated with her homeland, photographer Dana Popa returns to Romania and looks at the generation born here just before or after the fall of the Communist regime. After the New Man is an intimate portrayal of a society that is slowly healing, of  youth and fleeting memories of a bygone era that still permeates the selves and the landscapes. The exhibition is organised in association with Foto8 Gallery.

Traces of Popa’s own childhood pervade not only through the blocks of flats and through the cars from another era, but in the mindsets of old and young. This legacy of the recent past and the ubiquitous Western-inspired ideals of lifestyle and consumerism construct a portrait of a displaced generation, struggling to reconcile their place in history.

The exhibition brings together Popa’s own socially engaged work with her old family photographs and remnants from the past.

Dana Popa (b. 1977) studied a Masters degree in Documentary Photography at the London College of Communication. Her work focuses on contemporary social issues with a particular emphasis on human rights. ‘Not Natasha’ was Popa’s first major body of work, which looked at the effects of sex trafficking on girls and families in The Republic of Moldova who had firsthand experience of it. The project has been exhibited around the UK, Europe and US and was published as a book (Autograph ABP, 2009). Popa is based in London.

Related Events

Artist’s talk with Dana Popa - Tuesday 1 May, 6.30pm.

The exhibition continues until 26 May 2012. Opening hours: Mon - Fri 10am - 6pm; Sat 11am - 4pm.

Friday, May 25, 2012

Enescu presented at the Newbury Festival by the Văcărescu – Tsunakawa Duo (12:30 pm)

Horia Văcărescu and Chiho Tsunakawa will perform an uplifting programme at the Newbury Festival,  which includes masterpieces by Brahms, Debussy, Enescu, Schubert and de Falla.

The violin-piano duo was formed at the beginning of 2010, while the two musicians were studying at the Royal College of Music in London. The duo has already had many successes and built a solid reputation internationally. In the UK, it made appearances at major venues, reaching as far as Wales and Scotland. The two musicians also toured Japan and Romania, and their performance at the Great Hall of the Bucharest Athenaeum was received to standing ovations.

The Romanian violinist Horia Văcărescu brings something new to the musical scene. Combining a high mastery of the instrument that evokes a past era with an intense and emotional approach, his performances are a delight. The distinguished musician Rivka Golani has described him as "a great talent".

A remarkable young pianist, Chiho Tsunakawa was born in Japan and studied piano from the age of 3. Tsunakawa has given solo performances on NHK Radio in Japan and her Schubert's Trout Quintet performance at the Wigmore Hall was broadcast on radio in London. She has been a prizewinner over 25 times in competitions.

When: Friday 25th May, 12.30pm (finishes approx 1.30pm)

Where: Corn Exchange, Newbury

Tickets: £8.00-£32.00 – Book online , venue / map »

Saturday, May 26, 2012

Alexandra Dăriescu premiers Lipatti’s “Concertino” with the Orchestra of St Paul's (7:30 pm)

Alexandra Dăriescu, the exceptionally talented and accomplished young pianist, joins the Orchestra of Saint Paul's at LSO St Luke’s with a programme of classical and Romanian timeless pieces: Beethoven’s Emperor concerto the charming Concertino in the Classical Style by Dinu Lipatti  (UK premiere), Romanian Folk Dances by Bartók and Jupiter Symphony by Mozart 

Under the baton of conductor Ben Palmer, acclaimed for his innovative programming, the Orchestra of Saint Paul's (OSP) resident in Covent Garden has developed a reputation for imaginative and stylish performances. In addition to a thriving concert series in its home venue, OSP makes annual visits to the Southbank Centre's Purcell Room and St John's, Smith Square. OSP is unique among modern instrument chamber orchestras in playing music of the baroque, classical and even romantic periods entirely without vibrato.

Featured as BBC Music Magazine’s Rising Star in June 2011, Alexandra Dariescu has taken London's most exquisite classical music circuit by storm, thanks to her impeccable technique and stunning charisma.  Selected by Young Classical Artists Trust in 2008, Alexandra was a Laureate at the Verbier Festival Academy where she won the CUBS Bank Verbier Festival & Academy Prize. She went on to win the Guildhall Wigmore Hall Prize and the Romanian Ambassador‘s prize for her outstanding contribution to promoting Romania’s image in the UK.

Highlights in Alexandra’s 2011/2012 season include her debut at the Carnegie Hall in New York, performances with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra at the Barbican Centre, Grieg piano concerto at the Corn Exchange in Cambridge, Shostakovich piano concerto No. 1 with the Orchestra of St Paul’s at the Southbank Centre in London and Rachmaninov piano concerto No. 2 with York Symphony Orchestra.

When: 26 May 2012 :19:30

Where: LSO St Luke’s, 161 Old Street, London EC1V 9NG

Tickets: £12 £16 £20 (20% student discount) or on Barbican Centre website

Monday, May 28, 2012

East Meets East: The Romanian New Wave in the Olympic Boroughs (10:00 am)

Four internationally-acclaimed Romanian filmmakers are part of an exciting project dedicated to young people from London’s East End. It is a unique and special opportunity to learn from some of the best names in recent Romanian cinema, who will bring their contribution to the community’s development in the Olympic boroughs.

The project entitled ‘East Meets East’ is part of the Romanian Cultural Institute’s programme during the Cultural Olympiad 2012. It addresses to teenagers coming from disadvantaged environments and aims to offer them the chance to develop valuable skills in the process of filmmaking.

We are honored to have on board:

·        director Radu Muntean, winner of the Golden Owl Award for Best Film at the Leeds International Film Festival and numerous official selections at international festivals - Un Certain Regard Cannes, New York, Gijón etc.
Selected filmography: Tuesday, After Christmas, The Paper Will Be Blue, Boogie, The Rage, Vorbitor.

·        actress Anamaria Marinca, BAFTA award winner in 2005 for Channel 4's Sex Traffic and Best Actress at Palm Springs and Stockholm International Film Festival.
Selected filmography: 4 Months, 3 Weeks & 2 Days, Holby City, Storm, The Countess, The Last Enemy, Hotel Babylon.

·        screenwriter Alexandru Baciu, Best Screenplay Prize at Hamptons International Films Festival.
Selected filmography: Tuesday, After Christmas, Principles of Life, Gruber's Journey, Boogie, Vorbitor.

·        editor Catalin Cristutiu, Gopo - Romanian National Film Award winner.
Selected filmography: If I Want to Whistle, I Whistle, Medal of Honor, The Happiest Girl in the World, California Dreamin’.

They will all work with and help twenty selected students to learn about scriptwriting, storyboarding, sound, camera, acting, editing and post-production.

There will be three free workshops and masterclasses which will take the participants through the filmmaking process from script to screen and will encourage new skills in different aspects of filmmaking, as well as helping to build confidence, boost creativity and develop teamwork and social skills.

East Meets East is a partnership between the Romanian Cultural Institute and Four Corners Film, with support from East End Film Festival.

The event will take place throughout April, May and June, followed by a screening gala of a short film created by the participants and one making-of documentary at the East End Film festival which takes place between 3 and 8 July 2012.

When: 23 April – 29 June 2012;
Where:  Romanian Cultural Institute London and Four Corners.

Thursday, May 31, 2012

Norman Manea: Royal Society of Literature Fellowship Ceremony and Book Launch (7:00 pm - 9:00 pm)

“Norman Manea is a superb writer who gives an extraordinary testimony of a rich and dramatic life under one of the most grotesque and ferocious dictatorships and, later, in a peripatetic exile full of adventures, he writes about all of it without bitterness or resentment, and with great liberty of spirit, fantasy, and even humour.”

Mario Vargas Llosa

The Royal Society of Literature, Yale University Press and the Romanian Cultural Institute are proud to present Norman Manea’s  RSL Fellowship ceremony, hosted by Colin Thubron (President of the RSL) and Anne Chisholm (Chair of the RSL), followed by a book launch and reading by the author from his latest novels The Lair and The Fifth Impossibility: Essays on Exile and Language published by YUP. The books explore the language and psyche of the exiled writer, conveying a profound perspective on our troubled society.

Norman Manea is a major Romanian contemporary novelist and essayist, whose distinguished international reputation has seen him ranked as a potential candidate for the Nobel Prize for Literature. He first published in Communist Romania in the 1960s, producing a string of socially critical works that led to his departure in 1986. He now lives in New York. His works have been translated into more than 20 languages. He is also the recipient of world famous literary prizes, including the MacArthur Award (U.S.), the Nonino Prize (Italy), the Prix Médicis Étranger (France), the Nelly Sachs Prize (Germany). He is a member of the Berlin Academy of Arts and was honoured by the French government with the title Commandeur de l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres.

Admission free but booking essential at: office@icr-london.co.uk | 0207 752 0134.

When: Thursday 31 May, 7 - 9pm

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