Charlotte Hanmann | |
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Born | Copenhagen, Denmark | 20 July 1950
Occupation(s) | Photography, painting and graphic art |
Years active | 1979–present |
Charlotte Hanmann (born 20 July 1950) is a Danish photographer, painter and graphic artist, [1] capturing the urban environment with processed photographs. [2]
Charlotte Hanmann was born on 20 July 1950 in Copenhagen. Her parents were Poul Frederik Hanmann, a painter, and Inger Hanmann who attained fame with her enamel art work, on display for example in Copenhagen Airport and at the former Landesbank. [2] [3] In 1973 she studied initially at the School of Architecture and obtained a degree in civil engineering. As her interest was in art, she continued her studies at the School of Applied Arts and received a degree in art in 1985. She also trained at AKAD college in 1988 and continued with courses in the fields of stamping, screen printing, and lithography. [4] She honed her technique in mixed media and in new techniques such as transposition of photographs over sandblasted woodcuts at the University of Alaska Fairbanks during 1994. She also benefited from training under a grant from the Danish Arts Foundation during 2002. [2] She has held exhibitions at: Filosofgangen, Odense in 2009; Lyngby Kunstforening, Copenhagen in 2010; at Stege Bibliotek, Bispegarden Kalundborg, Pakhuset, and Nykøbing Sjælland in 2011; at the Norske Kirke, Copenhagen, in 2012, 2013 and 2014. [5]
As a professional photographer, her works have been exhibited in group exhibitions in the House of the Holy Ghost, Copenhagen, Odense's Art Gallery Filosoffen and in Silkeborg. [4] In 2010 and 2015, the Lyngby Cultural Society (Lyngby Kunstforening) presented her works in solo exhibitions. [6]
Hanmann has exhibited her art work at a large number of exhibitions such as in: [4]
Sergei Sviatchenko is a Danish - Ukrainian architect, artist, photographer and curator. He is a representative of the Ukrainian New Wave, that arose in Ukraine up through the 1980s. Initiator and creative director of the Less Festival of Collage, Viborg and Just A Few Works. He has lived in Denmark since the 1990s. Sviatchenko graduated from Kharkov National University of Construction and Architecture in 1975, and in 1986 he studied a Ph.D. at the National Academy of Visual Arts and Architecture. Sviatchenko is the son of architect Evgenij Sviatchenko (1924-2004), who was professor of architecture and a member of the National Ukrainian Academy of Fine Arts and Architecture, and engineer Ninel Sviatchenko (1926-2000). In 1975 Sergei Sviatchenko completed his architectural studies at Kharkov National University of Construction and Architecture. Sergei Sviatchenko is especially oriented towards architecture's modern expressions, among these are Constructivism and the contemporary European Bauhaus movement. From his teacher, Professor Viktor Antonov, Sviatchenko was introduced to the film director Andrei Tarkovsky, and particularly his film Mirror from 1975 has left a thematic footprint in Sviatchenko's more recent collage art. After having worked as an architect for a number of architectural firms in Kharkov until 1983, Sviatchenko moved to Kyiv, where he successfully graduated the master's program at Kyiv National University of Construction and Architecture|Kiev National University of Construction and Architecture, having completed his Ph.D. dissertation "Means to Visual Information in Architecture". In the 1980s he was one of the founders of the Soviart Center for Contemporary Art (Soviart) in Kiev and co-organizer and curator of the first Ukrainian exhibitions of contemporary art ”Kiev-Tallinn” at Igor Sikorsky Kyiv Polytechnic Institute|Kiev Polytechnic Institute(1987), ”Kiev-Kaunas” (1988), the first joint exhibition by Soviet and American artists (1988) and curated the first Ukrainian exhibitions in Denmark: ”21 perceptions. Young Contemporary Ukrainian Artists” (1989), ”Ukrainian Art 1960-80” (1990), ”7 + 7” which was the first joint exhibition by Soviet and Danish artists (1990) and ”Flash. A New Generation of Ukrainian Art” (1990). At the end of 1990 Sviatchenko moved to Denmark with his wife Helena Sviatchenko having been awarded an art scholarship. In the same year he began to participate in solo and group exhibitions.
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