View allAll Photos Tagged ExperienceDesign
Jones, Peter H. 2013. Design for Care. New York: Rosenfeld Media. rosenfeldmedia.com/books/design-for-care/
Eric Meyer presenting Debug/Reboot in the conference room at the Palace Hotel from the back of the room. This image is a composite of 7 photos automatically aligned and exposure matched using Autopano Pro 1.4.2.
Jones, Peter H. 2013. Design for Care. New York: Rosenfeld Media. rosenfeldmedia.com/books/design-for-care/
A Bloomberg Terminal.
Lombardi, Victor. 2013. Why We Fail. New York: Rosenfeld Media. rosenfeldmedia.com/books/why-we-fail/
Jones, Peter H. 2013. Design for Care. New York: Rosenfeld Media. rosenfeldmedia.com/books/design-for-care/
Divers Day - 13 - NOLA 2018
Living With Hurricanes: Katrina and Beyond
Katrina Exhibit Opens in Louisiana State Museum
Combining eyewitness accounts, historical context, immersive environments and in-depth scientific exploration, 'Katrina and Beyond' enables visitors to understand the 2005 storms, Katrina and Rita, and their impact on Louisiana, the Gulf Coast and the nation. It is a story of how a culture - the rich, varied world of New Orleans and coastal Louisiana - has learned to live with the fragility of its environment and how the storms of 2005 gave rise to a new vision for the region.
When it hit southeastern Louisiana and the Mississippi Gulf Coast on the morning of August 29, 2005, the storm caused fearsome destruction. But the disaster wasn't entirely the result of natural causes. Levees and floodwalls - the man-made barriers built to protect New Orleans from the water surrounding it - failed. Their collapse in a dozen or more locations, plus tidal surges from the the low-lying eastern edge of New Orleans, flooded 80 percent of the city. By the time the waters receded and the survivors regrouped, Katrina, and then Hurricane Rita, had claimed more than 1,400 lives and caused billions of dollars worth of property destruction.
Designed by the Boston-based firm ExperienceDesign that worked with the Museum's historians, curators and exhibit designers, 'Living with Hurricanes' stretches across four galleries, each telling one aspect of the story using artifacts and rich media - sound, video and computer graphics.
Gallery One illustrates Louisiana's history with water, from the Mississippi River's benefits to the threats of coastal storm surges and floods. Visitors will move through the 'Evacuation Corridor,' overhearing residents' voices weighing their options as Katrina approaches. A state of the art 'Storm Theater' shows Katrina's full fury with moving and dramatic footage of the hurricane's onslaught.
Gallery Two takes visitors past a leaking floodwall and into an attic and onto a roof of a house surrounded by rising floodwaters where they can view the inundated city surrounding them. They'll hear a firsthand account of a St. Bernard Parish family's rescue and view artifacts, histories and photographs.
Throughout the galleries are compelling artifacts, including music legend Fats Domino's baby grand piano found in his flooded Ninth Ward house, a Coast Guard rescue basket and seats from the heavily damaged Louisiana Superdome where thousands of people sought refuge and rescue. The objects serve as touchstones in recalling the days after the storm.
The forensics of Katrina unfold in Gallery Three where science and innovative displays come together. A large interactive table map shows the paths of Katrina and Rita and the sequence of floods that overwhelmed the region. Visitors will discover how the levees failed through digital animation. Additional displays illustrate the realities of eroding wetlands, disaster management, engineering and the science of predicting and tracking hurricanes and tropical weather patterns and phenomena.
Gallery Four celebrates recovery and promotes preparedness and showcases the ingenuity of Louisianans in rebuilding their lives and communities. The gallery will be updated regularly to reflect advancements in flood protection and coastal restoration and new strategies for living with hurricanes.
In addition to the running videos throughout the exhibit there will be interviews with a number of key individuals who had a part in the rescue and recovery efforts, including National Guard Commander Gen. Russel Honore whose troops helped restore order after a week of chaos.
Divers Photo of the day 13 in New-Orleans with no particular subject
Diverses photos prisent en Nouvel-Orleans (jour : 13) sans sujet reel.
( Deux semaines a Nola pour la ville et pour WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV
Two weeks Nola for the city and for WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV )
SINOPSE
Moleque Pizindim e seu gato Serafim são inseparáveis. Mas o guloso gato vive roubando os quitutes das festas da família. Certa noite, Pizindim ouve seu pai dizer que o gato novamente surrupiou o assado do jantar e que desta vez não tem escapatória: vai virar tamborim.
Acreditando nas palavras brincalhonas do pai, o moleque decide salvar o gato do seu triste destino e, na calada da noite, às escondidas, ambos saem de casa para procurar um novo lar para o bichano.
Numa aventura surreal o moleque e seu gato "caem na noite” do Rio de Janeiro e vão adentrando efervescentes redutos de artistas e poetas da boemia carioca. Cruzam seu caminho mulheres, músicos, marinheiros, policiais, ciganos que lhe apresentam todo tipo de som e ritmo. Diante da diversidade do ambiente sonoro que se descortina para o menino, ele vai incorporando elementos e descobrindo sua própria identidade musical.
TEXTO
Antonio Karnewale
Patrícia Fontoura
Heloisa Leite
DIREÇÃO ARTÍSTICA
Direção: Antonio Karnewale
Assistente: Patrícia Fontoura
MOVIMENTO
Direção: Antonio Karnewale
Dani Cavanellas
Paulo Mazzoni
Coreografia: Dani Cavanellas
Paulo Mazzoni
ELENCO
Dério Chagas – Moleque Pizindim.
Hugo Germano – Gato Serafim e Bicho de 07 Cabeças.
Dani Cavanellas – Mulher Bundunda, Marinheiro 1, Cigana, Garoto 2, Moça Bonita, Bicho de 7 cabeças e Estátua.
Paulo Mazzoni – Pai, Guarda, Pianista, Marinheiro 2, Garoto 1, Maestro, Bicho de 7 cabeças, Saxofonista.
Ricardo Imperatore – DJ e Bicho de 07 Cabeças.
TRILHA
Direção Musical: Caio Cezar
Músicos: Rafael Velloso – saxofone e flauta
Eduardo Santana - trompete
Wanderson Cunha - trombone
Gabriel Gueszt – piano, acordeon, teclados
Dôdo Ferreira – contra baixo acústico, contra baixo elétrico
Marcos Amorim - guitarras
Murilo O´Reilly - percussão
Marcelo Vianna – canto e coro
Caio Cezar - violão
Alessandro Valente - cavaquinho
Ricardo Imperatore - efeitos e sampler
Sonorização: Fernando Capão
CENOGRAFIA
Cenógrafos: Diogo Rezende e Marieta Spada
Contra-regra e aderecista: Tuta
Cenotécnico: Henrique Campos (Ligeiro) e Tuta
FIGURINOS
Figurinistas: Marieta Spada, Daniella Lima e Fernanda Garcia.
Costura: Terezinha Cardoso e Maria Ignês
Camareira: Marceli Araujo
ILUMINAÇÃO
Fernanda Mantovani
PROJEÇÃO
Coordenador de arte: Diogo Rezende (M´Baraká)
Assistente: Paula Passos
Ilustrações: Bruno Dante
Animação: Fernanda Kassar
Analu Menezes
Felipe Gonçalves
Clarice Laus
Divers Day - 13 - NOLA 2018
Living With Hurricanes: Katrina and Beyond
Katrina Exhibit Opens in Louisiana State Museum
Combining eyewitness accounts, historical context, immersive environments and in-depth scientific exploration, 'Katrina and Beyond' enables visitors to understand the 2005 storms, Katrina and Rita, and their impact on Louisiana, the Gulf Coast and the nation. It is a story of how a culture - the rich, varied world of New Orleans and coastal Louisiana - has learned to live with the fragility of its environment and how the storms of 2005 gave rise to a new vision for the region.
When it hit southeastern Louisiana and the Mississippi Gulf Coast on the morning of August 29, 2005, the storm caused fearsome destruction. But the disaster wasn't entirely the result of natural causes. Levees and floodwalls - the man-made barriers built to protect New Orleans from the water surrounding it - failed. Their collapse in a dozen or more locations, plus tidal surges from the the low-lying eastern edge of New Orleans, flooded 80 percent of the city. By the time the waters receded and the survivors regrouped, Katrina, and then Hurricane Rita, had claimed more than 1,400 lives and caused billions of dollars worth of property destruction.
Designed by the Boston-based firm ExperienceDesign that worked with the Museum's historians, curators and exhibit designers, 'Living with Hurricanes' stretches across four galleries, each telling one aspect of the story using artifacts and rich media - sound, video and computer graphics.
Gallery One illustrates Louisiana's history with water, from the Mississippi River's benefits to the threats of coastal storm surges and floods. Visitors will move through the 'Evacuation Corridor,' overhearing residents' voices weighing their options as Katrina approaches. A state of the art 'Storm Theater' shows Katrina's full fury with moving and dramatic footage of the hurricane's onslaught.
Gallery Two takes visitors past a leaking floodwall and into an attic and onto a roof of a house surrounded by rising floodwaters where they can view the inundated city surrounding them. They'll hear a firsthand account of a St. Bernard Parish family's rescue and view artifacts, histories and photographs.
Throughout the galleries are compelling artifacts, including music legend Fats Domino's baby grand piano found in his flooded Ninth Ward house, a Coast Guard rescue basket and seats from the heavily damaged Louisiana Superdome where thousands of people sought refuge and rescue. The objects serve as touchstones in recalling the days after the storm.
The forensics of Katrina unfold in Gallery Three where science and innovative displays come together. A large interactive table map shows the paths of Katrina and Rita and the sequence of floods that overwhelmed the region. Visitors will discover how the levees failed through digital animation. Additional displays illustrate the realities of eroding wetlands, disaster management, engineering and the science of predicting and tracking hurricanes and tropical weather patterns and phenomena.
Gallery Four celebrates recovery and promotes preparedness and showcases the ingenuity of Louisianans in rebuilding their lives and communities. The gallery will be updated regularly to reflect advancements in flood protection and coastal restoration and new strategies for living with hurricanes.
In addition to the running videos throughout the exhibit there will be interviews with a number of key individuals who had a part in the rescue and recovery efforts, including National Guard Commander Gen. Russel Honore whose troops helped restore order after a week of chaos.
Divers Photo of the day 13 in New-Orleans with no particular subject
Diverses photos prisent en Nouvel-Orleans (jour : 13) sans sujet reel.
( Deux semaines a Nola pour la ville et pour WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV
Two weeks Nola for the city and for WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV )
Divers Day - 13 - NOLA 2018
Living With Hurricanes: Katrina and Beyond
Katrina Exhibit Opens in Louisiana State Museum
Combining eyewitness accounts, historical context, immersive environments and in-depth scientific exploration, 'Katrina and Beyond' enables visitors to understand the 2005 storms, Katrina and Rita, and their impact on Louisiana, the Gulf Coast and the nation. It is a story of how a culture - the rich, varied world of New Orleans and coastal Louisiana - has learned to live with the fragility of its environment and how the storms of 2005 gave rise to a new vision for the region.
When it hit southeastern Louisiana and the Mississippi Gulf Coast on the morning of August 29, 2005, the storm caused fearsome destruction. But the disaster wasn't entirely the result of natural causes. Levees and floodwalls - the man-made barriers built to protect New Orleans from the water surrounding it - failed. Their collapse in a dozen or more locations, plus tidal surges from the the low-lying eastern edge of New Orleans, flooded 80 percent of the city. By the time the waters receded and the survivors regrouped, Katrina, and then Hurricane Rita, had claimed more than 1,400 lives and caused billions of dollars worth of property destruction.
Designed by the Boston-based firm ExperienceDesign that worked with the Museum's historians, curators and exhibit designers, 'Living with Hurricanes' stretches across four galleries, each telling one aspect of the story using artifacts and rich media - sound, video and computer graphics.
Gallery One illustrates Louisiana's history with water, from the Mississippi River's benefits to the threats of coastal storm surges and floods. Visitors will move through the 'Evacuation Corridor,' overhearing residents' voices weighing their options as Katrina approaches. A state of the art 'Storm Theater' shows Katrina's full fury with moving and dramatic footage of the hurricane's onslaught.
Gallery Two takes visitors past a leaking floodwall and into an attic and onto a roof of a house surrounded by rising floodwaters where they can view the inundated city surrounding them. They'll hear a firsthand account of a St. Bernard Parish family's rescue and view artifacts, histories and photographs.
Throughout the galleries are compelling artifacts, including music legend Fats Domino's baby grand piano found in his flooded Ninth Ward house, a Coast Guard rescue basket and seats from the heavily damaged Louisiana Superdome where thousands of people sought refuge and rescue. The objects serve as touchstones in recalling the days after the storm.
The forensics of Katrina unfold in Gallery Three where science and innovative displays come together. A large interactive table map shows the paths of Katrina and Rita and the sequence of floods that overwhelmed the region. Visitors will discover how the levees failed through digital animation. Additional displays illustrate the realities of eroding wetlands, disaster management, engineering and the science of predicting and tracking hurricanes and tropical weather patterns and phenomena.
Gallery Four celebrates recovery and promotes preparedness and showcases the ingenuity of Louisianans in rebuilding their lives and communities. The gallery will be updated regularly to reflect advancements in flood protection and coastal restoration and new strategies for living with hurricanes.
In addition to the running videos throughout the exhibit there will be interviews with a number of key individuals who had a part in the rescue and recovery efforts, including National Guard Commander Gen. Russel Honore whose troops helped restore order after a week of chaos.
Divers Photo of the day 13 in New-Orleans with no particular subject
Diverses photos prisent en Nouvel-Orleans (jour : 13) sans sujet reel.
( Deux semaines a Nola pour la ville et pour WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV
Two weeks Nola for the city and for WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV )
SINOPSE
Moleque Pizindim e seu gato Serafim são inseparáveis. Mas o guloso gato vive roubando os quitutes das festas da família. Certa noite, Pizindim ouve seu pai dizer que o gato novamente surrupiou o assado do jantar e que desta vez não tem escapatória: vai virar tamborim.
Acreditando nas palavras brincalhonas do pai, o moleque decide salvar o gato do seu triste destino e, na calada da noite, às escondidas, ambos saem de casa para procurar um novo lar para o bichano.
Numa aventura surreal o moleque e seu gato "caem na noite” do Rio de Janeiro e vão adentrando efervescentes redutos de artistas e poetas da boemia carioca. Cruzam seu caminho mulheres, músicos, marinheiros, policiais, ciganos que lhe apresentam todo tipo de som e ritmo. Diante da diversidade do ambiente sonoro que se descortina para o menino, ele vai incorporando elementos e descobrindo sua própria identidade musical.
TEXTO
Antonio Karnewale
Patrícia Fontoura
Heloisa Leite
DIREÇÃO ARTÍSTICA
Direção: Antonio Karnewale
Assistente: Patrícia Fontoura
MOVIMENTO
Direção: Antonio Karnewale
Dani Cavanellas
Paulo Mazzoni
Coreografia: Dani Cavanellas
Paulo Mazzoni
ELENCO
Dério Chagas – Moleque Pizindim.
Hugo Germano – Gato Serafim e Bicho de 07 Cabeças.
Dani Cavanellas – Mulher Bundunda, Marinheiro 1, Cigana, Garoto 2, Moça Bonita, Bicho de 7 cabeças e Estátua.
Paulo Mazzoni – Pai, Guarda, Pianista, Marinheiro 2, Garoto 1, Maestro, Bicho de 7 cabeças, Saxofonista.
Ricardo Imperatore – DJ e Bicho de 07 Cabeças.
TRILHA
Direção Musical: Caio Cezar
Músicos: Rafael Velloso – saxofone e flauta
Eduardo Santana - trompete
Wanderson Cunha - trombone
Gabriel Gueszt – piano, acordeon, teclados
Dôdo Ferreira – contra baixo acústico, contra baixo elétrico
Marcos Amorim - guitarras
Murilo O´Reilly - percussão
Marcelo Vianna – canto e coro
Caio Cezar - violão
Alessandro Valente - cavaquinho
Ricardo Imperatore - efeitos e sampler
Sonorização: Fernando Capão
CENOGRAFIA
Cenógrafos: Diogo Rezende e Marieta Spada
Contra-regra e aderecista: Tuta
Cenotécnico: Henrique Campos (Ligeiro) e Tuta
FIGURINOS
Figurinistas: Marieta Spada, Daniella Lima e Fernanda Garcia.
Costura: Terezinha Cardoso e Maria Ignês
Camareira: Marceli Araujo
ILUMINAÇÃO
Fernanda Mantovani
PROJEÇÃO
Coordenador de arte: Diogo Rezende (M´Baraká)
Assistente: Paula Passos
Ilustrações: Bruno Dante
Animação: Fernanda Kassar
Analu Menezes
Felipe Gonçalves
Clarice Laus
Divers Day - 13 - NOLA 2018
Living With Hurricanes: Katrina and Beyond
Katrina Exhibit Opens in Louisiana State Museum
Combining eyewitness accounts, historical context, immersive environments and in-depth scientific exploration, 'Katrina and Beyond' enables visitors to understand the 2005 storms, Katrina and Rita, and their impact on Louisiana, the Gulf Coast and the nation. It is a story of how a culture - the rich, varied world of New Orleans and coastal Louisiana - has learned to live with the fragility of its environment and how the storms of 2005 gave rise to a new vision for the region.
When it hit southeastern Louisiana and the Mississippi Gulf Coast on the morning of August 29, 2005, the storm caused fearsome destruction. But the disaster wasn't entirely the result of natural causes. Levees and floodwalls - the man-made barriers built to protect New Orleans from the water surrounding it - failed. Their collapse in a dozen or more locations, plus tidal surges from the the low-lying eastern edge of New Orleans, flooded 80 percent of the city. By the time the waters receded and the survivors regrouped, Katrina, and then Hurricane Rita, had claimed more than 1,400 lives and caused billions of dollars worth of property destruction.
Designed by the Boston-based firm ExperienceDesign that worked with the Museum's historians, curators and exhibit designers, 'Living with Hurricanes' stretches across four galleries, each telling one aspect of the story using artifacts and rich media - sound, video and computer graphics.
Gallery One illustrates Louisiana's history with water, from the Mississippi River's benefits to the threats of coastal storm surges and floods. Visitors will move through the 'Evacuation Corridor,' overhearing residents' voices weighing their options as Katrina approaches. A state of the art 'Storm Theater' shows Katrina's full fury with moving and dramatic footage of the hurricane's onslaught.
Gallery Two takes visitors past a leaking floodwall and into an attic and onto a roof of a house surrounded by rising floodwaters where they can view the inundated city surrounding them. They'll hear a firsthand account of a St. Bernard Parish family's rescue and view artifacts, histories and photographs.
Throughout the galleries are compelling artifacts, including music legend Fats Domino's baby grand piano found in his flooded Ninth Ward house, a Coast Guard rescue basket and seats from the heavily damaged Louisiana Superdome where thousands of people sought refuge and rescue. The objects serve as touchstones in recalling the days after the storm.
The forensics of Katrina unfold in Gallery Three where science and innovative displays come together. A large interactive table map shows the paths of Katrina and Rita and the sequence of floods that overwhelmed the region. Visitors will discover how the levees failed through digital animation. Additional displays illustrate the realities of eroding wetlands, disaster management, engineering and the science of predicting and tracking hurricanes and tropical weather patterns and phenomena.
Gallery Four celebrates recovery and promotes preparedness and showcases the ingenuity of Louisianans in rebuilding their lives and communities. The gallery will be updated regularly to reflect advancements in flood protection and coastal restoration and new strategies for living with hurricanes.
In addition to the running videos throughout the exhibit there will be interviews with a number of key individuals who had a part in the rescue and recovery efforts, including National Guard Commander Gen. Russel Honore whose troops helped restore order after a week of chaos.
Divers Photo of the day 13 in New-Orleans with no particular subject
Diverses photos prisent en Nouvel-Orleans (jour : 13) sans sujet reel.
( Deux semaines a Nola pour la ville et pour WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV
Two weeks Nola for the city and for WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV )
Divers Day - 13 - NOLA 2018
Living With Hurricanes: Katrina and Beyond
Katrina Exhibit Opens in Louisiana State Museum
Combining eyewitness accounts, historical context, immersive environments and in-depth scientific exploration, 'Katrina and Beyond' enables visitors to understand the 2005 storms, Katrina and Rita, and their impact on Louisiana, the Gulf Coast and the nation. It is a story of how a culture - the rich, varied world of New Orleans and coastal Louisiana - has learned to live with the fragility of its environment and how the storms of 2005 gave rise to a new vision for the region.
When it hit southeastern Louisiana and the Mississippi Gulf Coast on the morning of August 29, 2005, the storm caused fearsome destruction. But the disaster wasn't entirely the result of natural causes. Levees and floodwalls - the man-made barriers built to protect New Orleans from the water surrounding it - failed. Their collapse in a dozen or more locations, plus tidal surges from the the low-lying eastern edge of New Orleans, flooded 80 percent of the city. By the time the waters receded and the survivors regrouped, Katrina, and then Hurricane Rita, had claimed more than 1,400 lives and caused billions of dollars worth of property destruction.
Designed by the Boston-based firm ExperienceDesign that worked with the Museum's historians, curators and exhibit designers, 'Living with Hurricanes' stretches across four galleries, each telling one aspect of the story using artifacts and rich media - sound, video and computer graphics.
Gallery One illustrates Louisiana's history with water, from the Mississippi River's benefits to the threats of coastal storm surges and floods. Visitors will move through the 'Evacuation Corridor,' overhearing residents' voices weighing their options as Katrina approaches. A state of the art 'Storm Theater' shows Katrina's full fury with moving and dramatic footage of the hurricane's onslaught.
Gallery Two takes visitors past a leaking floodwall and into an attic and onto a roof of a house surrounded by rising floodwaters where they can view the inundated city surrounding them. They'll hear a firsthand account of a St. Bernard Parish family's rescue and view artifacts, histories and photographs.
Throughout the galleries are compelling artifacts, including music legend Fats Domino's baby grand piano found in his flooded Ninth Ward house, a Coast Guard rescue basket and seats from the heavily damaged Louisiana Superdome where thousands of people sought refuge and rescue. The objects serve as touchstones in recalling the days after the storm.
The forensics of Katrina unfold in Gallery Three where science and innovative displays come together. A large interactive table map shows the paths of Katrina and Rita and the sequence of floods that overwhelmed the region. Visitors will discover how the levees failed through digital animation. Additional displays illustrate the realities of eroding wetlands, disaster management, engineering and the science of predicting and tracking hurricanes and tropical weather patterns and phenomena.
Gallery Four celebrates recovery and promotes preparedness and showcases the ingenuity of Louisianans in rebuilding their lives and communities. The gallery will be updated regularly to reflect advancements in flood protection and coastal restoration and new strategies for living with hurricanes.
In addition to the running videos throughout the exhibit there will be interviews with a number of key individuals who had a part in the rescue and recovery efforts, including National Guard Commander Gen. Russel Honore whose troops helped restore order after a week of chaos.
Divers Photo of the day 13 in New-Orleans with no particular subject
Diverses photos prisent en Nouvel-Orleans (jour : 13) sans sujet reel.
( Deux semaines a Nola pour la ville et pour WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV
Two weeks Nola for the city and for WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV )
SINOPSE
Moleque Pizindim e seu gato Serafim são inseparáveis. Mas o guloso gato vive roubando os quitutes das festas da família. Certa noite, Pizindim ouve seu pai dizer que o gato novamente surrupiou o assado do jantar e que desta vez não tem escapatória: vai virar tamborim.
Acreditando nas palavras brincalhonas do pai, o moleque decide salvar o gato do seu triste destino e, na calada da noite, às escondidas, ambos saem de casa para procurar um novo lar para o bichano.
Numa aventura surreal o moleque e seu gato "caem na noite” do Rio de Janeiro e vão adentrando efervescentes redutos de artistas e poetas da boemia carioca. Cruzam seu caminho mulheres, músicos, marinheiros, policiais, ciganos que lhe apresentam todo tipo de som e ritmo. Diante da diversidade do ambiente sonoro que se descortina para o menino, ele vai incorporando elementos e descobrindo sua própria identidade musical.
TEXTO
Antonio Karnewale
Patrícia Fontoura
Heloisa Leite
DIREÇÃO ARTÍSTICA
Direção: Antonio Karnewale
Assistente: Patrícia Fontoura
MOVIMENTO
Direção: Antonio Karnewale
Dani Cavanellas
Paulo Mazzoni
Coreografia: Dani Cavanellas
Paulo Mazzoni
ELENCO
Dério Chagas – Moleque Pizindim.
Hugo Germano – Gato Serafim e Bicho de 07 Cabeças.
Dani Cavanellas – Mulher Bundunda, Marinheiro 1, Cigana, Garoto 2, Moça Bonita, Bicho de 7 cabeças e Estátua.
Paulo Mazzoni – Pai, Guarda, Pianista, Marinheiro 2, Garoto 1, Maestro, Bicho de 7 cabeças, Saxofonista.
Ricardo Imperatore – DJ e Bicho de 07 Cabeças.
TRILHA
Direção Musical: Caio Cezar
Músicos: Rafael Velloso – saxofone e flauta
Eduardo Santana - trompete
Wanderson Cunha - trombone
Gabriel Gueszt – piano, acordeon, teclados
Dôdo Ferreira – contra baixo acústico, contra baixo elétrico
Marcos Amorim - guitarras
Murilo O´Reilly - percussão
Marcelo Vianna – canto e coro
Caio Cezar - violão
Alessandro Valente - cavaquinho
Ricardo Imperatore - efeitos e sampler
Sonorização: Fernando Capão
CENOGRAFIA
Cenógrafos: Diogo Rezende e Marieta Spada
Contra-regra e aderecista: Tuta
Cenotécnico: Henrique Campos (Ligeiro) e Tuta
FIGURINOS
Figurinistas: Marieta Spada, Daniella Lima e Fernanda Garcia.
Costura: Terezinha Cardoso e Maria Ignês
Camareira: Marceli Araujo
ILUMINAÇÃO
Fernanda Mantovani
PROJEÇÃO
Coordenador de arte: Diogo Rezende (M´Baraká)
Assistente: Paula Passos
Ilustrações: Bruno Dante
Animação: Fernanda Kassar
Analu Menezes
Felipe Gonçalves
Clarice Laus
SINOPSE
Moleque Pizindim e seu gato Serafim são inseparáveis. Mas o guloso gato vive roubando os quitutes das festas da família. Certa noite, Pizindim ouve seu pai dizer que o gato novamente surrupiou o assado do jantar e que desta vez não tem escapatória: vai virar tamborim.
Acreditando nas palavras brincalhonas do pai, o moleque decide salvar o gato do seu triste destino e, na calada da noite, às escondidas, ambos saem de casa para procurar um novo lar para o bichano.
Numa aventura surreal o moleque e seu gato "caem na noite” do Rio de Janeiro e vão adentrando efervescentes redutos de artistas e poetas da boemia carioca. Cruzam seu caminho mulheres, músicos, marinheiros, policiais, ciganos que lhe apresentam todo tipo de som e ritmo. Diante da diversidade do ambiente sonoro que se descortina para o menino, ele vai incorporando elementos e descobrindo sua própria identidade musical.
TEXTO
Antonio Karnewale
Patrícia Fontoura
Heloisa Leite
DIREÇÃO ARTÍSTICA
Direção: Antonio Karnewale
Assistente: Patrícia Fontoura
MOVIMENTO
Direção: Antonio Karnewale
Dani Cavanellas
Paulo Mazzoni
Coreografia: Dani Cavanellas
Paulo Mazzoni
ELENCO
Dério Chagas – Moleque Pizindim.
Hugo Germano – Gato Serafim e Bicho de 07 Cabeças.
Dani Cavanellas – Mulher Bundunda, Marinheiro 1, Cigana, Garoto 2, Moça Bonita, Bicho de 7 cabeças e Estátua.
Paulo Mazzoni – Pai, Guarda, Pianista, Marinheiro 2, Garoto 1, Maestro, Bicho de 7 cabeças, Saxofonista.
Ricardo Imperatore – DJ e Bicho de 07 Cabeças.
TRILHA
Direção Musical: Caio Cezar
Músicos: Rafael Velloso – saxofone e flauta
Eduardo Santana - trompete
Wanderson Cunha - trombone
Gabriel Gueszt – piano, acordeon, teclados
Dôdo Ferreira – contra baixo acústico, contra baixo elétrico
Marcos Amorim - guitarras
Murilo O´Reilly - percussão
Marcelo Vianna – canto e coro
Caio Cezar - violão
Alessandro Valente - cavaquinho
Ricardo Imperatore - efeitos e sampler
Sonorização: Fernando Capão
CENOGRAFIA
Cenógrafos: Diogo Rezende e Marieta Spada
Contra-regra e aderecista: Tuta
Cenotécnico: Henrique Campos (Ligeiro) e Tuta
FIGURINOS
Figurinistas: Marieta Spada, Daniella Lima e Fernanda Garcia.
Costura: Terezinha Cardoso e Maria Ignês
Camareira: Marceli Araujo
ILUMINAÇÃO
Fernanda Mantovani
PROJEÇÃO
Coordenador de arte: Diogo Rezende (M´Baraká)
Assistente: Paula Passos
Ilustrações: Bruno Dante
Animação: Fernanda Kassar
Analu Menezes
Felipe Gonçalves
Clarice Laus
Divers Day - 13 - NOLA 2018
Living With Hurricanes: Katrina and Beyond
Katrina Exhibit Opens in Louisiana State Museum
Combining eyewitness accounts, historical context, immersive environments and in-depth scientific exploration, 'Katrina and Beyond' enables visitors to understand the 2005 storms, Katrina and Rita, and their impact on Louisiana, the Gulf Coast and the nation. It is a story of how a culture - the rich, varied world of New Orleans and coastal Louisiana - has learned to live with the fragility of its environment and how the storms of 2005 gave rise to a new vision for the region.
When it hit southeastern Louisiana and the Mississippi Gulf Coast on the morning of August 29, 2005, the storm caused fearsome destruction. But the disaster wasn't entirely the result of natural causes. Levees and floodwalls - the man-made barriers built to protect New Orleans from the water surrounding it - failed. Their collapse in a dozen or more locations, plus tidal surges from the the low-lying eastern edge of New Orleans, flooded 80 percent of the city. By the time the waters receded and the survivors regrouped, Katrina, and then Hurricane Rita, had claimed more than 1,400 lives and caused billions of dollars worth of property destruction.
Designed by the Boston-based firm ExperienceDesign that worked with the Museum's historians, curators and exhibit designers, 'Living with Hurricanes' stretches across four galleries, each telling one aspect of the story using artifacts and rich media - sound, video and computer graphics.
Gallery One illustrates Louisiana's history with water, from the Mississippi River's benefits to the threats of coastal storm surges and floods. Visitors will move through the 'Evacuation Corridor,' overhearing residents' voices weighing their options as Katrina approaches. A state of the art 'Storm Theater' shows Katrina's full fury with moving and dramatic footage of the hurricane's onslaught.
Gallery Two takes visitors past a leaking floodwall and into an attic and onto a roof of a house surrounded by rising floodwaters where they can view the inundated city surrounding them. They'll hear a firsthand account of a St. Bernard Parish family's rescue and view artifacts, histories and photographs.
Throughout the galleries are compelling artifacts, including music legend Fats Domino's baby grand piano found in his flooded Ninth Ward house, a Coast Guard rescue basket and seats from the heavily damaged Louisiana Superdome where thousands of people sought refuge and rescue. The objects serve as touchstones in recalling the days after the storm.
The forensics of Katrina unfold in Gallery Three where science and innovative displays come together. A large interactive table map shows the paths of Katrina and Rita and the sequence of floods that overwhelmed the region. Visitors will discover how the levees failed through digital animation. Additional displays illustrate the realities of eroding wetlands, disaster management, engineering and the science of predicting and tracking hurricanes and tropical weather patterns and phenomena.
Gallery Four celebrates recovery and promotes preparedness and showcases the ingenuity of Louisianans in rebuilding their lives and communities. The gallery will be updated regularly to reflect advancements in flood protection and coastal restoration and new strategies for living with hurricanes.
In addition to the running videos throughout the exhibit there will be interviews with a number of key individuals who had a part in the rescue and recovery efforts, including National Guard Commander Gen. Russel Honore whose troops helped restore order after a week of chaos.
Divers Photo of the day 13 in New-Orleans with no particular subject
Diverses photos prisent en Nouvel-Orleans (jour : 13) sans sujet reel.
( Deux semaines a Nola pour la ville et pour WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV
Two weeks Nola for the city and for WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV )
Divers Day - 13 - NOLA 2018
Living With Hurricanes: Katrina and Beyond
Katrina Exhibit Opens in Louisiana State Museum
Combining eyewitness accounts, historical context, immersive environments and in-depth scientific exploration, 'Katrina and Beyond' enables visitors to understand the 2005 storms, Katrina and Rita, and their impact on Louisiana, the Gulf Coast and the nation. It is a story of how a culture - the rich, varied world of New Orleans and coastal Louisiana - has learned to live with the fragility of its environment and how the storms of 2005 gave rise to a new vision for the region.
When it hit southeastern Louisiana and the Mississippi Gulf Coast on the morning of August 29, 2005, the storm caused fearsome destruction. But the disaster wasn't entirely the result of natural causes. Levees and floodwalls - the man-made barriers built to protect New Orleans from the water surrounding it - failed. Their collapse in a dozen or more locations, plus tidal surges from the the low-lying eastern edge of New Orleans, flooded 80 percent of the city. By the time the waters receded and the survivors regrouped, Katrina, and then Hurricane Rita, had claimed more than 1,400 lives and caused billions of dollars worth of property destruction.
Designed by the Boston-based firm ExperienceDesign that worked with the Museum's historians, curators and exhibit designers, 'Living with Hurricanes' stretches across four galleries, each telling one aspect of the story using artifacts and rich media - sound, video and computer graphics.
Gallery One illustrates Louisiana's history with water, from the Mississippi River's benefits to the threats of coastal storm surges and floods. Visitors will move through the 'Evacuation Corridor,' overhearing residents' voices weighing their options as Katrina approaches. A state of the art 'Storm Theater' shows Katrina's full fury with moving and dramatic footage of the hurricane's onslaught.
Gallery Two takes visitors past a leaking floodwall and into an attic and onto a roof of a house surrounded by rising floodwaters where they can view the inundated city surrounding them. They'll hear a firsthand account of a St. Bernard Parish family's rescue and view artifacts, histories and photographs.
Throughout the galleries are compelling artifacts, including music legend Fats Domino's baby grand piano found in his flooded Ninth Ward house, a Coast Guard rescue basket and seats from the heavily damaged Louisiana Superdome where thousands of people sought refuge and rescue. The objects serve as touchstones in recalling the days after the storm.
The forensics of Katrina unfold in Gallery Three where science and innovative displays come together. A large interactive table map shows the paths of Katrina and Rita and the sequence of floods that overwhelmed the region. Visitors will discover how the levees failed through digital animation. Additional displays illustrate the realities of eroding wetlands, disaster management, engineering and the science of predicting and tracking hurricanes and tropical weather patterns and phenomena.
Gallery Four celebrates recovery and promotes preparedness and showcases the ingenuity of Louisianans in rebuilding their lives and communities. The gallery will be updated regularly to reflect advancements in flood protection and coastal restoration and new strategies for living with hurricanes.
In addition to the running videos throughout the exhibit there will be interviews with a number of key individuals who had a part in the rescue and recovery efforts, including National Guard Commander Gen. Russel Honore whose troops helped restore order after a week of chaos.
Divers Photo of the day 13 in New-Orleans with no particular subject
Diverses photos prisent en Nouvel-Orleans (jour : 13) sans sujet reel.
( Deux semaines a Nola pour la ville et pour WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV
Two weeks Nola for the city and for WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV )
Divers Day - 13 - NOLA 2018
Living With Hurricanes: Katrina and Beyond
Katrina Exhibit Opens in Louisiana State Museum
Combining eyewitness accounts, historical context, immersive environments and in-depth scientific exploration, 'Katrina and Beyond' enables visitors to understand the 2005 storms, Katrina and Rita, and their impact on Louisiana, the Gulf Coast and the nation. It is a story of how a culture - the rich, varied world of New Orleans and coastal Louisiana - has learned to live with the fragility of its environment and how the storms of 2005 gave rise to a new vision for the region.
When it hit southeastern Louisiana and the Mississippi Gulf Coast on the morning of August 29, 2005, the storm caused fearsome destruction. But the disaster wasn't entirely the result of natural causes. Levees and floodwalls - the man-made barriers built to protect New Orleans from the water surrounding it - failed. Their collapse in a dozen or more locations, plus tidal surges from the the low-lying eastern edge of New Orleans, flooded 80 percent of the city. By the time the waters receded and the survivors regrouped, Katrina, and then Hurricane Rita, had claimed more than 1,400 lives and caused billions of dollars worth of property destruction.
Designed by the Boston-based firm ExperienceDesign that worked with the Museum's historians, curators and exhibit designers, 'Living with Hurricanes' stretches across four galleries, each telling one aspect of the story using artifacts and rich media - sound, video and computer graphics.
Gallery One illustrates Louisiana's history with water, from the Mississippi River's benefits to the threats of coastal storm surges and floods. Visitors will move through the 'Evacuation Corridor,' overhearing residents' voices weighing their options as Katrina approaches. A state of the art 'Storm Theater' shows Katrina's full fury with moving and dramatic footage of the hurricane's onslaught.
Gallery Two takes visitors past a leaking floodwall and into an attic and onto a roof of a house surrounded by rising floodwaters where they can view the inundated city surrounding them. They'll hear a firsthand account of a St. Bernard Parish family's rescue and view artifacts, histories and photographs.
Throughout the galleries are compelling artifacts, including music legend Fats Domino's baby grand piano found in his flooded Ninth Ward house, a Coast Guard rescue basket and seats from the heavily damaged Louisiana Superdome where thousands of people sought refuge and rescue. The objects serve as touchstones in recalling the days after the storm.
The forensics of Katrina unfold in Gallery Three where science and innovative displays come together. A large interactive table map shows the paths of Katrina and Rita and the sequence of floods that overwhelmed the region. Visitors will discover how the levees failed through digital animation. Additional displays illustrate the realities of eroding wetlands, disaster management, engineering and the science of predicting and tracking hurricanes and tropical weather patterns and phenomena.
Gallery Four celebrates recovery and promotes preparedness and showcases the ingenuity of Louisianans in rebuilding their lives and communities. The gallery will be updated regularly to reflect advancements in flood protection and coastal restoration and new strategies for living with hurricanes.
In addition to the running videos throughout the exhibit there will be interviews with a number of key individuals who had a part in the rescue and recovery efforts, including National Guard Commander Gen. Russel Honore whose troops helped restore order after a week of chaos.
Divers Photo of the day 13 in New-Orleans with no particular subject
Diverses photos prisent en Nouvel-Orleans (jour : 13) sans sujet reel.
( Deux semaines a Nola pour la ville et pour WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV
Two weeks Nola for the city and for WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV )
SINOPSE
Moleque Pizindim e seu gato Serafim são inseparáveis. Mas o guloso gato vive roubando os quitutes das festas da família. Certa noite, Pizindim ouve seu pai dizer que o gato novamente surrupiou o assado do jantar e que desta vez não tem escapatória: vai virar tamborim.
Acreditando nas palavras brincalhonas do pai, o moleque decide salvar o gato do seu triste destino e, na calada da noite, às escondidas, ambos saem de casa para procurar um novo lar para o bichano.
Numa aventura surreal o moleque e seu gato "caem na noite” do Rio de Janeiro e vão adentrando efervescentes redutos de artistas e poetas da boemia carioca. Cruzam seu caminho mulheres, músicos, marinheiros, policiais, ciganos que lhe apresentam todo tipo de som e ritmo. Diante da diversidade do ambiente sonoro que se descortina para o menino, ele vai incorporando elementos e descobrindo sua própria identidade musical.
TEXTO
Antonio Karnewale
Patrícia Fontoura
Heloisa Leite
DIREÇÃO ARTÍSTICA
Direção: Antonio Karnewale
Assistente: Patrícia Fontoura
MOVIMENTO
Direção: Antonio Karnewale
Dani Cavanellas
Paulo Mazzoni
Coreografia: Dani Cavanellas
Paulo Mazzoni
ELENCO
Dério Chagas – Moleque Pizindim.
Hugo Germano – Gato Serafim e Bicho de 07 Cabeças.
Dani Cavanellas – Mulher Bundunda, Marinheiro 1, Cigana, Garoto 2, Moça Bonita, Bicho de 7 cabeças e Estátua.
Paulo Mazzoni – Pai, Guarda, Pianista, Marinheiro 2, Garoto 1, Maestro, Bicho de 7 cabeças, Saxofonista.
Ricardo Imperatore – DJ e Bicho de 07 Cabeças.
TRILHA
Direção Musical: Caio Cezar
Músicos: Rafael Velloso – saxofone e flauta
Eduardo Santana - trompete
Wanderson Cunha - trombone
Gabriel Gueszt – piano, acordeon, teclados
Dôdo Ferreira – contra baixo acústico, contra baixo elétrico
Marcos Amorim - guitarras
Murilo O´Reilly - percussão
Marcelo Vianna – canto e coro
Caio Cezar - violão
Alessandro Valente - cavaquinho
Ricardo Imperatore - efeitos e sampler
Sonorização: Fernando Capão
CENOGRAFIA
Cenógrafos: Diogo Rezende e Marieta Spada
Contra-regra e aderecista: Tuta
Cenotécnico: Henrique Campos (Ligeiro) e Tuta
FIGURINOS
Figurinistas: Marieta Spada, Daniella Lima e Fernanda Garcia.
Costura: Terezinha Cardoso e Maria Ignês
Camareira: Marceli Araujo
ILUMINAÇÃO
Fernanda Mantovani
PROJEÇÃO
Coordenador de arte: Diogo Rezende (M´Baraká)
Assistente: Paula Passos
Ilustrações: Bruno Dante
Animação: Fernanda Kassar
Analu Menezes
Felipe Gonçalves
Clarice Laus
#designvalueawards winners @Adobe #experiencedesign team: 2nd place for moving Adobe from shrink-wrap to subscription service.
Conference photos and videos are sponsored by Nestle Purina Petcare.
Divers Day - 13 - NOLA 2018
Living With Hurricanes: Katrina and Beyond
Katrina Exhibit Opens in Louisiana State Museum
Combining eyewitness accounts, historical context, immersive environments and in-depth scientific exploration, 'Katrina and Beyond' enables visitors to understand the 2005 storms, Katrina and Rita, and their impact on Louisiana, the Gulf Coast and the nation. It is a story of how a culture - the rich, varied world of New Orleans and coastal Louisiana - has learned to live with the fragility of its environment and how the storms of 2005 gave rise to a new vision for the region.
When it hit southeastern Louisiana and the Mississippi Gulf Coast on the morning of August 29, 2005, the storm caused fearsome destruction. But the disaster wasn't entirely the result of natural causes. Levees and floodwalls - the man-made barriers built to protect New Orleans from the water surrounding it - failed. Their collapse in a dozen or more locations, plus tidal surges from the the low-lying eastern edge of New Orleans, flooded 80 percent of the city. By the time the waters receded and the survivors regrouped, Katrina, and then Hurricane Rita, had claimed more than 1,400 lives and caused billions of dollars worth of property destruction.
Designed by the Boston-based firm ExperienceDesign that worked with the Museum's historians, curators and exhibit designers, 'Living with Hurricanes' stretches across four galleries, each telling one aspect of the story using artifacts and rich media - sound, video and computer graphics.
Gallery One illustrates Louisiana's history with water, from the Mississippi River's benefits to the threats of coastal storm surges and floods. Visitors will move through the 'Evacuation Corridor,' overhearing residents' voices weighing their options as Katrina approaches. A state of the art 'Storm Theater' shows Katrina's full fury with moving and dramatic footage of the hurricane's onslaught.
Gallery Two takes visitors past a leaking floodwall and into an attic and onto a roof of a house surrounded by rising floodwaters where they can view the inundated city surrounding them. They'll hear a firsthand account of a St. Bernard Parish family's rescue and view artifacts, histories and photographs.
Throughout the galleries are compelling artifacts, including music legend Fats Domino's baby grand piano found in his flooded Ninth Ward house, a Coast Guard rescue basket and seats from the heavily damaged Louisiana Superdome where thousands of people sought refuge and rescue. The objects serve as touchstones in recalling the days after the storm.
The forensics of Katrina unfold in Gallery Three where science and innovative displays come together. A large interactive table map shows the paths of Katrina and Rita and the sequence of floods that overwhelmed the region. Visitors will discover how the levees failed through digital animation. Additional displays illustrate the realities of eroding wetlands, disaster management, engineering and the science of predicting and tracking hurricanes and tropical weather patterns and phenomena.
Gallery Four celebrates recovery and promotes preparedness and showcases the ingenuity of Louisianans in rebuilding their lives and communities. The gallery will be updated regularly to reflect advancements in flood protection and coastal restoration and new strategies for living with hurricanes.
In addition to the running videos throughout the exhibit there will be interviews with a number of key individuals who had a part in the rescue and recovery efforts, including National Guard Commander Gen. Russel Honore whose troops helped restore order after a week of chaos.
Divers Photo of the day 13 in New-Orleans with no particular subject
Diverses photos prisent en Nouvel-Orleans (jour : 13) sans sujet reel.
( Deux semaines a Nola pour la ville et pour WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV
Two weeks Nola for the city and for WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV )
Atividade de workshop colaborativo com fluxo de processos e stakeholder map, realizado com a equipe da Oficina de Imagens.
Photo Credit: Basil Childers
Rather than being designed from the outside in, like many other architecture-driven pavilions, the Dream Cube was designed from the visitor experience outwards, creating stunning, seamless synergies between the “exhibit” and “architecture” experiences. ESI and architect Yung Ho Chang collaborated from the very beginning of the project, working hand-in-hand to create this innovative integrated experience.
Experience Design: ESI Design
Architect: Yung Ho Chang of Atelier FCJZ
Media Producer: Spinifex
Systems Integrator: PRG
Lighting Design: Full Flood
Exhibit Design: Pico
Divers Day - 13 - NOLA 2018
Living With Hurricanes: Katrina and Beyond
Katrina Exhibit Opens in Louisiana State Museum
Combining eyewitness accounts, historical context, immersive environments and in-depth scientific exploration, 'Katrina and Beyond' enables visitors to understand the 2005 storms, Katrina and Rita, and their impact on Louisiana, the Gulf Coast and the nation. It is a story of how a culture - the rich, varied world of New Orleans and coastal Louisiana - has learned to live with the fragility of its environment and how the storms of 2005 gave rise to a new vision for the region.
When it hit southeastern Louisiana and the Mississippi Gulf Coast on the morning of August 29, 2005, the storm caused fearsome destruction. But the disaster wasn't entirely the result of natural causes. Levees and floodwalls - the man-made barriers built to protect New Orleans from the water surrounding it - failed. Their collapse in a dozen or more locations, plus tidal surges from the the low-lying eastern edge of New Orleans, flooded 80 percent of the city. By the time the waters receded and the survivors regrouped, Katrina, and then Hurricane Rita, had claimed more than 1,400 lives and caused billions of dollars worth of property destruction.
Designed by the Boston-based firm ExperienceDesign that worked with the Museum's historians, curators and exhibit designers, 'Living with Hurricanes' stretches across four galleries, each telling one aspect of the story using artifacts and rich media - sound, video and computer graphics.
Gallery One illustrates Louisiana's history with water, from the Mississippi River's benefits to the threats of coastal storm surges and floods. Visitors will move through the 'Evacuation Corridor,' overhearing residents' voices weighing their options as Katrina approaches. A state of the art 'Storm Theater' shows Katrina's full fury with moving and dramatic footage of the hurricane's onslaught.
Gallery Two takes visitors past a leaking floodwall and into an attic and onto a roof of a house surrounded by rising floodwaters where they can view the inundated city surrounding them. They'll hear a firsthand account of a St. Bernard Parish family's rescue and view artifacts, histories and photographs.
Throughout the galleries are compelling artifacts, including music legend Fats Domino's baby grand piano found in his flooded Ninth Ward house, a Coast Guard rescue basket and seats from the heavily damaged Louisiana Superdome where thousands of people sought refuge and rescue. The objects serve as touchstones in recalling the days after the storm.
The forensics of Katrina unfold in Gallery Three where science and innovative displays come together. A large interactive table map shows the paths of Katrina and Rita and the sequence of floods that overwhelmed the region. Visitors will discover how the levees failed through digital animation. Additional displays illustrate the realities of eroding wetlands, disaster management, engineering and the science of predicting and tracking hurricanes and tropical weather patterns and phenomena.
Gallery Four celebrates recovery and promotes preparedness and showcases the ingenuity of Louisianans in rebuilding their lives and communities. The gallery will be updated regularly to reflect advancements in flood protection and coastal restoration and new strategies for living with hurricanes.
In addition to the running videos throughout the exhibit there will be interviews with a number of key individuals who had a part in the rescue and recovery efforts, including National Guard Commander Gen. Russel Honore whose troops helped restore order after a week of chaos.
Divers Photo of the day 13 in New-Orleans with no particular subject
Diverses photos prisent en Nouvel-Orleans (jour : 13) sans sujet reel.
( Deux semaines a Nola pour la ville et pour WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV
Two weeks Nola for the city and for WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV )
Divers Day - 13 - NOLA 2018
Living With Hurricanes: Katrina and Beyond
Katrina Exhibit Opens in Louisiana State Museum
Combining eyewitness accounts, historical context, immersive environments and in-depth scientific exploration, 'Katrina and Beyond' enables visitors to understand the 2005 storms, Katrina and Rita, and their impact on Louisiana, the Gulf Coast and the nation. It is a story of how a culture - the rich, varied world of New Orleans and coastal Louisiana - has learned to live with the fragility of its environment and how the storms of 2005 gave rise to a new vision for the region.
When it hit southeastern Louisiana and the Mississippi Gulf Coast on the morning of August 29, 2005, the storm caused fearsome destruction. But the disaster wasn't entirely the result of natural causes. Levees and floodwalls - the man-made barriers built to protect New Orleans from the water surrounding it - failed. Their collapse in a dozen or more locations, plus tidal surges from the the low-lying eastern edge of New Orleans, flooded 80 percent of the city. By the time the waters receded and the survivors regrouped, Katrina, and then Hurricane Rita, had claimed more than 1,400 lives and caused billions of dollars worth of property destruction.
Designed by the Boston-based firm ExperienceDesign that worked with the Museum's historians, curators and exhibit designers, 'Living with Hurricanes' stretches across four galleries, each telling one aspect of the story using artifacts and rich media - sound, video and computer graphics.
Gallery One illustrates Louisiana's history with water, from the Mississippi River's benefits to the threats of coastal storm surges and floods. Visitors will move through the 'Evacuation Corridor,' overhearing residents' voices weighing their options as Katrina approaches. A state of the art 'Storm Theater' shows Katrina's full fury with moving and dramatic footage of the hurricane's onslaught.
Gallery Two takes visitors past a leaking floodwall and into an attic and onto a roof of a house surrounded by rising floodwaters where they can view the inundated city surrounding them. They'll hear a firsthand account of a St. Bernard Parish family's rescue and view artifacts, histories and photographs.
Throughout the galleries are compelling artifacts, including music legend Fats Domino's baby grand piano found in his flooded Ninth Ward house, a Coast Guard rescue basket and seats from the heavily damaged Louisiana Superdome where thousands of people sought refuge and rescue. The objects serve as touchstones in recalling the days after the storm.
The forensics of Katrina unfold in Gallery Three where science and innovative displays come together. A large interactive table map shows the paths of Katrina and Rita and the sequence of floods that overwhelmed the region. Visitors will discover how the levees failed through digital animation. Additional displays illustrate the realities of eroding wetlands, disaster management, engineering and the science of predicting and tracking hurricanes and tropical weather patterns and phenomena.
Gallery Four celebrates recovery and promotes preparedness and showcases the ingenuity of Louisianans in rebuilding their lives and communities. The gallery will be updated regularly to reflect advancements in flood protection and coastal restoration and new strategies for living with hurricanes.
In addition to the running videos throughout the exhibit there will be interviews with a number of key individuals who had a part in the rescue and recovery efforts, including National Guard Commander Gen. Russel Honore whose troops helped restore order after a week of chaos.
Divers Photo of the day 13 in New-Orleans with no particular subject
Diverses photos prisent en Nouvel-Orleans (jour : 13) sans sujet reel.
( Deux semaines a Nola pour la ville et pour WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV
Two weeks Nola for the city and for WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV )
Divers Day - 13 - NOLA 2018
Living With Hurricanes: Katrina and Beyond
Katrina Exhibit Opens in Louisiana State Museum
Combining eyewitness accounts, historical context, immersive environments and in-depth scientific exploration, 'Katrina and Beyond' enables visitors to understand the 2005 storms, Katrina and Rita, and their impact on Louisiana, the Gulf Coast and the nation. It is a story of how a culture - the rich, varied world of New Orleans and coastal Louisiana - has learned to live with the fragility of its environment and how the storms of 2005 gave rise to a new vision for the region.
When it hit southeastern Louisiana and the Mississippi Gulf Coast on the morning of August 29, 2005, the storm caused fearsome destruction. But the disaster wasn't entirely the result of natural causes. Levees and floodwalls - the man-made barriers built to protect New Orleans from the water surrounding it - failed. Their collapse in a dozen or more locations, plus tidal surges from the the low-lying eastern edge of New Orleans, flooded 80 percent of the city. By the time the waters receded and the survivors regrouped, Katrina, and then Hurricane Rita, had claimed more than 1,400 lives and caused billions of dollars worth of property destruction.
Designed by the Boston-based firm ExperienceDesign that worked with the Museum's historians, curators and exhibit designers, 'Living with Hurricanes' stretches across four galleries, each telling one aspect of the story using artifacts and rich media - sound, video and computer graphics.
Gallery One illustrates Louisiana's history with water, from the Mississippi River's benefits to the threats of coastal storm surges and floods. Visitors will move through the 'Evacuation Corridor,' overhearing residents' voices weighing their options as Katrina approaches. A state of the art 'Storm Theater' shows Katrina's full fury with moving and dramatic footage of the hurricane's onslaught.
Gallery Two takes visitors past a leaking floodwall and into an attic and onto a roof of a house surrounded by rising floodwaters where they can view the inundated city surrounding them. They'll hear a firsthand account of a St. Bernard Parish family's rescue and view artifacts, histories and photographs.
Throughout the galleries are compelling artifacts, including music legend Fats Domino's baby grand piano found in his flooded Ninth Ward house, a Coast Guard rescue basket and seats from the heavily damaged Louisiana Superdome where thousands of people sought refuge and rescue. The objects serve as touchstones in recalling the days after the storm.
The forensics of Katrina unfold in Gallery Three where science and innovative displays come together. A large interactive table map shows the paths of Katrina and Rita and the sequence of floods that overwhelmed the region. Visitors will discover how the levees failed through digital animation. Additional displays illustrate the realities of eroding wetlands, disaster management, engineering and the science of predicting and tracking hurricanes and tropical weather patterns and phenomena.
Gallery Four celebrates recovery and promotes preparedness and showcases the ingenuity of Louisianans in rebuilding their lives and communities. The gallery will be updated regularly to reflect advancements in flood protection and coastal restoration and new strategies for living with hurricanes.
In addition to the running videos throughout the exhibit there will be interviews with a number of key individuals who had a part in the rescue and recovery efforts, including National Guard Commander Gen. Russel Honore whose troops helped restore order after a week of chaos.
Divers Photo of the day 13 in New-Orleans with no particular subject
Diverses photos prisent en Nouvel-Orleans (jour : 13) sans sujet reel.
( Deux semaines a Nola pour la ville et pour WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV
Two weeks Nola for the city and for WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV )
Divers Day - 13 - NOLA 2018
Living With Hurricanes: Katrina and Beyond
Katrina Exhibit Opens in Louisiana State Museum
Combining eyewitness accounts, historical context, immersive environments and in-depth scientific exploration, 'Katrina and Beyond' enables visitors to understand the 2005 storms, Katrina and Rita, and their impact on Louisiana, the Gulf Coast and the nation. It is a story of how a culture - the rich, varied world of New Orleans and coastal Louisiana - has learned to live with the fragility of its environment and how the storms of 2005 gave rise to a new vision for the region.
When it hit southeastern Louisiana and the Mississippi Gulf Coast on the morning of August 29, 2005, the storm caused fearsome destruction. But the disaster wasn't entirely the result of natural causes. Levees and floodwalls - the man-made barriers built to protect New Orleans from the water surrounding it - failed. Their collapse in a dozen or more locations, plus tidal surges from the the low-lying eastern edge of New Orleans, flooded 80 percent of the city. By the time the waters receded and the survivors regrouped, Katrina, and then Hurricane Rita, had claimed more than 1,400 lives and caused billions of dollars worth of property destruction.
Designed by the Boston-based firm ExperienceDesign that worked with the Museum's historians, curators and exhibit designers, 'Living with Hurricanes' stretches across four galleries, each telling one aspect of the story using artifacts and rich media - sound, video and computer graphics.
Gallery One illustrates Louisiana's history with water, from the Mississippi River's benefits to the threats of coastal storm surges and floods. Visitors will move through the 'Evacuation Corridor,' overhearing residents' voices weighing their options as Katrina approaches. A state of the art 'Storm Theater' shows Katrina's full fury with moving and dramatic footage of the hurricane's onslaught.
Gallery Two takes visitors past a leaking floodwall and into an attic and onto a roof of a house surrounded by rising floodwaters where they can view the inundated city surrounding them. They'll hear a firsthand account of a St. Bernard Parish family's rescue and view artifacts, histories and photographs.
Throughout the galleries are compelling artifacts, including music legend Fats Domino's baby grand piano found in his flooded Ninth Ward house, a Coast Guard rescue basket and seats from the heavily damaged Louisiana Superdome where thousands of people sought refuge and rescue. The objects serve as touchstones in recalling the days after the storm.
The forensics of Katrina unfold in Gallery Three where science and innovative displays come together. A large interactive table map shows the paths of Katrina and Rita and the sequence of floods that overwhelmed the region. Visitors will discover how the levees failed through digital animation. Additional displays illustrate the realities of eroding wetlands, disaster management, engineering and the science of predicting and tracking hurricanes and tropical weather patterns and phenomena.
Gallery Four celebrates recovery and promotes preparedness and showcases the ingenuity of Louisianans in rebuilding their lives and communities. The gallery will be updated regularly to reflect advancements in flood protection and coastal restoration and new strategies for living with hurricanes.
In addition to the running videos throughout the exhibit there will be interviews with a number of key individuals who had a part in the rescue and recovery efforts, including National Guard Commander Gen. Russel Honore whose troops helped restore order after a week of chaos.
Divers Photo of the day 13 in New-Orleans with no particular subject
Diverses photos prisent en Nouvel-Orleans (jour : 13) sans sujet reel.
( Deux semaines a Nola pour la ville et pour WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV
Two weeks Nola for the city and for WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV )
Divers Day - 13 - NOLA 2018
Living With Hurricanes: Katrina and Beyond
Katrina Exhibit Opens in Louisiana State Museum
Combining eyewitness accounts, historical context, immersive environments and in-depth scientific exploration, 'Katrina and Beyond' enables visitors to understand the 2005 storms, Katrina and Rita, and their impact on Louisiana, the Gulf Coast and the nation. It is a story of how a culture - the rich, varied world of New Orleans and coastal Louisiana - has learned to live with the fragility of its environment and how the storms of 2005 gave rise to a new vision for the region.
When it hit southeastern Louisiana and the Mississippi Gulf Coast on the morning of August 29, 2005, the storm caused fearsome destruction. But the disaster wasn't entirely the result of natural causes. Levees and floodwalls - the man-made barriers built to protect New Orleans from the water surrounding it - failed. Their collapse in a dozen or more locations, plus tidal surges from the the low-lying eastern edge of New Orleans, flooded 80 percent of the city. By the time the waters receded and the survivors regrouped, Katrina, and then Hurricane Rita, had claimed more than 1,400 lives and caused billions of dollars worth of property destruction.
Designed by the Boston-based firm ExperienceDesign that worked with the Museum's historians, curators and exhibit designers, 'Living with Hurricanes' stretches across four galleries, each telling one aspect of the story using artifacts and rich media - sound, video and computer graphics.
Gallery One illustrates Louisiana's history with water, from the Mississippi River's benefits to the threats of coastal storm surges and floods. Visitors will move through the 'Evacuation Corridor,' overhearing residents' voices weighing their options as Katrina approaches. A state of the art 'Storm Theater' shows Katrina's full fury with moving and dramatic footage of the hurricane's onslaught.
Gallery Two takes visitors past a leaking floodwall and into an attic and onto a roof of a house surrounded by rising floodwaters where they can view the inundated city surrounding them. They'll hear a firsthand account of a St. Bernard Parish family's rescue and view artifacts, histories and photographs.
Throughout the galleries are compelling artifacts, including music legend Fats Domino's baby grand piano found in his flooded Ninth Ward house, a Coast Guard rescue basket and seats from the heavily damaged Louisiana Superdome where thousands of people sought refuge and rescue. The objects serve as touchstones in recalling the days after the storm.
The forensics of Katrina unfold in Gallery Three where science and innovative displays come together. A large interactive table map shows the paths of Katrina and Rita and the sequence of floods that overwhelmed the region. Visitors will discover how the levees failed through digital animation. Additional displays illustrate the realities of eroding wetlands, disaster management, engineering and the science of predicting and tracking hurricanes and tropical weather patterns and phenomena.
Gallery Four celebrates recovery and promotes preparedness and showcases the ingenuity of Louisianans in rebuilding their lives and communities. The gallery will be updated regularly to reflect advancements in flood protection and coastal restoration and new strategies for living with hurricanes.
In addition to the running videos throughout the exhibit there will be interviews with a number of key individuals who had a part in the rescue and recovery efforts, including National Guard Commander Gen. Russel Honore whose troops helped restore order after a week of chaos.
Divers Photo of the day 13 in New-Orleans with no particular subject
Diverses photos prisent en Nouvel-Orleans (jour : 13) sans sujet reel.
( Deux semaines a Nola pour la ville et pour WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV
Two weeks Nola for the city and for WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV )
Divers Day - 13 - NOLA 2018
Living With Hurricanes: Katrina and Beyond
Katrina Exhibit Opens in Louisiana State Museum
Combining eyewitness accounts, historical context, immersive environments and in-depth scientific exploration, 'Katrina and Beyond' enables visitors to understand the 2005 storms, Katrina and Rita, and their impact on Louisiana, the Gulf Coast and the nation. It is a story of how a culture - the rich, varied world of New Orleans and coastal Louisiana - has learned to live with the fragility of its environment and how the storms of 2005 gave rise to a new vision for the region.
When it hit southeastern Louisiana and the Mississippi Gulf Coast on the morning of August 29, 2005, the storm caused fearsome destruction. But the disaster wasn't entirely the result of natural causes. Levees and floodwalls - the man-made barriers built to protect New Orleans from the water surrounding it - failed. Their collapse in a dozen or more locations, plus tidal surges from the the low-lying eastern edge of New Orleans, flooded 80 percent of the city. By the time the waters receded and the survivors regrouped, Katrina, and then Hurricane Rita, had claimed more than 1,400 lives and caused billions of dollars worth of property destruction.
Designed by the Boston-based firm ExperienceDesign that worked with the Museum's historians, curators and exhibit designers, 'Living with Hurricanes' stretches across four galleries, each telling one aspect of the story using artifacts and rich media - sound, video and computer graphics.
Gallery One illustrates Louisiana's history with water, from the Mississippi River's benefits to the threats of coastal storm surges and floods. Visitors will move through the 'Evacuation Corridor,' overhearing residents' voices weighing their options as Katrina approaches. A state of the art 'Storm Theater' shows Katrina's full fury with moving and dramatic footage of the hurricane's onslaught.
Gallery Two takes visitors past a leaking floodwall and into an attic and onto a roof of a house surrounded by rising floodwaters where they can view the inundated city surrounding them. They'll hear a firsthand account of a St. Bernard Parish family's rescue and view artifacts, histories and photographs.
Throughout the galleries are compelling artifacts, including music legend Fats Domino's baby grand piano found in his flooded Ninth Ward house, a Coast Guard rescue basket and seats from the heavily damaged Louisiana Superdome where thousands of people sought refuge and rescue. The objects serve as touchstones in recalling the days after the storm.
The forensics of Katrina unfold in Gallery Three where science and innovative displays come together. A large interactive table map shows the paths of Katrina and Rita and the sequence of floods that overwhelmed the region. Visitors will discover how the levees failed through digital animation. Additional displays illustrate the realities of eroding wetlands, disaster management, engineering and the science of predicting and tracking hurricanes and tropical weather patterns and phenomena.
Gallery Four celebrates recovery and promotes preparedness and showcases the ingenuity of Louisianans in rebuilding their lives and communities. The gallery will be updated regularly to reflect advancements in flood protection and coastal restoration and new strategies for living with hurricanes.
In addition to the running videos throughout the exhibit there will be interviews with a number of key individuals who had a part in the rescue and recovery efforts, including National Guard Commander Gen. Russel Honore whose troops helped restore order after a week of chaos.
Divers Photo of the day 13 in New-Orleans with no particular subject
Diverses photos prisent en Nouvel-Orleans (jour : 13) sans sujet reel.
( Deux semaines a Nola pour la ville et pour WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV
Two weeks Nola for the city and for WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV )
Divers Day - 13 - NOLA 2018
Living With Hurricanes: Katrina and Beyond
Katrina Exhibit Opens in Louisiana State Museum
Combining eyewitness accounts, historical context, immersive environments and in-depth scientific exploration, 'Katrina and Beyond' enables visitors to understand the 2005 storms, Katrina and Rita, and their impact on Louisiana, the Gulf Coast and the nation. It is a story of how a culture - the rich, varied world of New Orleans and coastal Louisiana - has learned to live with the fragility of its environment and how the storms of 2005 gave rise to a new vision for the region.
When it hit southeastern Louisiana and the Mississippi Gulf Coast on the morning of August 29, 2005, the storm caused fearsome destruction. But the disaster wasn't entirely the result of natural causes. Levees and floodwalls - the man-made barriers built to protect New Orleans from the water surrounding it - failed. Their collapse in a dozen or more locations, plus tidal surges from the the low-lying eastern edge of New Orleans, flooded 80 percent of the city. By the time the waters receded and the survivors regrouped, Katrina, and then Hurricane Rita, had claimed more than 1,400 lives and caused billions of dollars worth of property destruction.
Designed by the Boston-based firm ExperienceDesign that worked with the Museum's historians, curators and exhibit designers, 'Living with Hurricanes' stretches across four galleries, each telling one aspect of the story using artifacts and rich media - sound, video and computer graphics.
Gallery One illustrates Louisiana's history with water, from the Mississippi River's benefits to the threats of coastal storm surges and floods. Visitors will move through the 'Evacuation Corridor,' overhearing residents' voices weighing their options as Katrina approaches. A state of the art 'Storm Theater' shows Katrina's full fury with moving and dramatic footage of the hurricane's onslaught.
Gallery Two takes visitors past a leaking floodwall and into an attic and onto a roof of a house surrounded by rising floodwaters where they can view the inundated city surrounding them. They'll hear a firsthand account of a St. Bernard Parish family's rescue and view artifacts, histories and photographs.
Throughout the galleries are compelling artifacts, including music legend Fats Domino's baby grand piano found in his flooded Ninth Ward house, a Coast Guard rescue basket and seats from the heavily damaged Louisiana Superdome where thousands of people sought refuge and rescue. The objects serve as touchstones in recalling the days after the storm.
The forensics of Katrina unfold in Gallery Three where science and innovative displays come together. A large interactive table map shows the paths of Katrina and Rita and the sequence of floods that overwhelmed the region. Visitors will discover how the levees failed through digital animation. Additional displays illustrate the realities of eroding wetlands, disaster management, engineering and the science of predicting and tracking hurricanes and tropical weather patterns and phenomena.
Gallery Four celebrates recovery and promotes preparedness and showcases the ingenuity of Louisianans in rebuilding their lives and communities. The gallery will be updated regularly to reflect advancements in flood protection and coastal restoration and new strategies for living with hurricanes.
In addition to the running videos throughout the exhibit there will be interviews with a number of key individuals who had a part in the rescue and recovery efforts, including National Guard Commander Gen. Russel Honore whose troops helped restore order after a week of chaos.
Divers Photo of the day 13 in New-Orleans with no particular subject
Diverses photos prisent en Nouvel-Orleans (jour : 13) sans sujet reel.
( Deux semaines a Nola pour la ville et pour WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV
Two weeks Nola for the city and for WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV )
Divers Day - 13 - NOLA 2018
Living With Hurricanes: Katrina and Beyond
Katrina Exhibit Opens in Louisiana State Museum
Combining eyewitness accounts, historical context, immersive environments and in-depth scientific exploration, 'Katrina and Beyond' enables visitors to understand the 2005 storms, Katrina and Rita, and their impact on Louisiana, the Gulf Coast and the nation. It is a story of how a culture - the rich, varied world of New Orleans and coastal Louisiana - has learned to live with the fragility of its environment and how the storms of 2005 gave rise to a new vision for the region.
When it hit southeastern Louisiana and the Mississippi Gulf Coast on the morning of August 29, 2005, the storm caused fearsome destruction. But the disaster wasn't entirely the result of natural causes. Levees and floodwalls - the man-made barriers built to protect New Orleans from the water surrounding it - failed. Their collapse in a dozen or more locations, plus tidal surges from the the low-lying eastern edge of New Orleans, flooded 80 percent of the city. By the time the waters receded and the survivors regrouped, Katrina, and then Hurricane Rita, had claimed more than 1,400 lives and caused billions of dollars worth of property destruction.
Designed by the Boston-based firm ExperienceDesign that worked with the Museum's historians, curators and exhibit designers, 'Living with Hurricanes' stretches across four galleries, each telling one aspect of the story using artifacts and rich media - sound, video and computer graphics.
Gallery One illustrates Louisiana's history with water, from the Mississippi River's benefits to the threats of coastal storm surges and floods. Visitors will move through the 'Evacuation Corridor,' overhearing residents' voices weighing their options as Katrina approaches. A state of the art 'Storm Theater' shows Katrina's full fury with moving and dramatic footage of the hurricane's onslaught.
Gallery Two takes visitors past a leaking floodwall and into an attic and onto a roof of a house surrounded by rising floodwaters where they can view the inundated city surrounding them. They'll hear a firsthand account of a St. Bernard Parish family's rescue and view artifacts, histories and photographs.
Throughout the galleries are compelling artifacts, including music legend Fats Domino's baby grand piano found in his flooded Ninth Ward house, a Coast Guard rescue basket and seats from the heavily damaged Louisiana Superdome where thousands of people sought refuge and rescue. The objects serve as touchstones in recalling the days after the storm.
The forensics of Katrina unfold in Gallery Three where science and innovative displays come together. A large interactive table map shows the paths of Katrina and Rita and the sequence of floods that overwhelmed the region. Visitors will discover how the levees failed through digital animation. Additional displays illustrate the realities of eroding wetlands, disaster management, engineering and the science of predicting and tracking hurricanes and tropical weather patterns and phenomena.
Gallery Four celebrates recovery and promotes preparedness and showcases the ingenuity of Louisianans in rebuilding their lives and communities. The gallery will be updated regularly to reflect advancements in flood protection and coastal restoration and new strategies for living with hurricanes.
In addition to the running videos throughout the exhibit there will be interviews with a number of key individuals who had a part in the rescue and recovery efforts, including National Guard Commander Gen. Russel Honore whose troops helped restore order after a week of chaos.
Divers Photo of the day 13 in New-Orleans with no particular subject
Diverses photos prisent en Nouvel-Orleans (jour : 13) sans sujet reel.
( Deux semaines a Nola pour la ville et pour WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV
Two weeks Nola for the city and for WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV )
SINOPSE
Moleque Pizindim e seu gato Serafim são inseparáveis. Mas o guloso gato vive roubando os quitutes das festas da família. Certa noite, Pizindim ouve seu pai dizer que o gato novamente surrupiou o assado do jantar e que desta vez não tem escapatória: vai virar tamborim.
Acreditando nas palavras brincalhonas do pai, o moleque decide salvar o gato do seu triste destino e, na calada da noite, às escondidas, ambos saem de casa para procurar um novo lar para o bichano.
Numa aventura surreal o moleque e seu gato "caem na noite” do Rio de Janeiro e vão adentrando efervescentes redutos de artistas e poetas da boemia carioca. Cruzam seu caminho mulheres, músicos, marinheiros, policiais, ciganos que lhe apresentam todo tipo de som e ritmo. Diante da diversidade do ambiente sonoro que se descortina para o menino, ele vai incorporando elementos e descobrindo sua própria identidade musical.
TEXTO
Antonio Karnewale
Patrícia Fontoura
Heloisa Leite
DIREÇÃO ARTÍSTICA
Direção: Antonio Karnewale
Assistente: Patrícia Fontoura
MOVIMENTO
Direção: Antonio Karnewale
Dani Cavanellas
Paulo Mazzoni
Coreografia: Dani Cavanellas
Paulo Mazzoni
ELENCO
Dério Chagas – Moleque Pizindim.
Hugo Germano – Gato Serafim e Bicho de 07 Cabeças.
Dani Cavanellas – Mulher Bundunda, Marinheiro 1, Cigana, Garoto 2, Moça Bonita, Bicho de 7 cabeças e Estátua.
Paulo Mazzoni – Pai, Guarda, Pianista, Marinheiro 2, Garoto 1, Maestro, Bicho de 7 cabeças, Saxofonista.
Ricardo Imperatore – DJ e Bicho de 07 Cabeças.
TRILHA
Direção Musical: Caio Cezar
Músicos: Rafael Velloso – saxofone e flauta
Eduardo Santana - trompete
Wanderson Cunha - trombone
Gabriel Gueszt – piano, acordeon, teclados
Dôdo Ferreira – contra baixo acústico, contra baixo elétrico
Marcos Amorim - guitarras
Murilo O´Reilly - percussão
Marcelo Vianna – canto e coro
Caio Cezar - violão
Alessandro Valente - cavaquinho
Ricardo Imperatore - efeitos e sampler
Sonorização: Fernando Capão
CENOGRAFIA
Cenógrafos: Diogo Rezende e Marieta Spada
Contra-regra e aderecista: Tuta
Cenotécnico: Henrique Campos (Ligeiro) e Tuta
FIGURINOS
Figurinistas: Marieta Spada, Daniella Lima e Fernanda Garcia.
Costura: Terezinha Cardoso e Maria Ignês
Camareira: Marceli Araujo
ILUMINAÇÃO
Fernanda Mantovani
PROJEÇÃO
Coordenador de arte: Diogo Rezende (M´Baraká)
Assistente: Paula Passos
Ilustrações: Bruno Dante
Animação: Fernanda Kassar
Analu Menezes
Felipe Gonçalves
Clarice Laus
Divers Day - 13 - NOLA 2018
Living With Hurricanes: Katrina and Beyond
Katrina Exhibit Opens in Louisiana State Museum
Combining eyewitness accounts, historical context, immersive environments and in-depth scientific exploration, 'Katrina and Beyond' enables visitors to understand the 2005 storms, Katrina and Rita, and their impact on Louisiana, the Gulf Coast and the nation. It is a story of how a culture - the rich, varied world of New Orleans and coastal Louisiana - has learned to live with the fragility of its environment and how the storms of 2005 gave rise to a new vision for the region.
When it hit southeastern Louisiana and the Mississippi Gulf Coast on the morning of August 29, 2005, the storm caused fearsome destruction. But the disaster wasn't entirely the result of natural causes. Levees and floodwalls - the man-made barriers built to protect New Orleans from the water surrounding it - failed. Their collapse in a dozen or more locations, plus tidal surges from the the low-lying eastern edge of New Orleans, flooded 80 percent of the city. By the time the waters receded and the survivors regrouped, Katrina, and then Hurricane Rita, had claimed more than 1,400 lives and caused billions of dollars worth of property destruction.
Designed by the Boston-based firm ExperienceDesign that worked with the Museum's historians, curators and exhibit designers, 'Living with Hurricanes' stretches across four galleries, each telling one aspect of the story using artifacts and rich media - sound, video and computer graphics.
Gallery One illustrates Louisiana's history with water, from the Mississippi River's benefits to the threats of coastal storm surges and floods. Visitors will move through the 'Evacuation Corridor,' overhearing residents' voices weighing their options as Katrina approaches. A state of the art 'Storm Theater' shows Katrina's full fury with moving and dramatic footage of the hurricane's onslaught.
Gallery Two takes visitors past a leaking floodwall and into an attic and onto a roof of a house surrounded by rising floodwaters where they can view the inundated city surrounding them. They'll hear a firsthand account of a St. Bernard Parish family's rescue and view artifacts, histories and photographs.
Throughout the galleries are compelling artifacts, including music legend Fats Domino's baby grand piano found in his flooded Ninth Ward house, a Coast Guard rescue basket and seats from the heavily damaged Louisiana Superdome where thousands of people sought refuge and rescue. The objects serve as touchstones in recalling the days after the storm.
The forensics of Katrina unfold in Gallery Three where science and innovative displays come together. A large interactive table map shows the paths of Katrina and Rita and the sequence of floods that overwhelmed the region. Visitors will discover how the levees failed through digital animation. Additional displays illustrate the realities of eroding wetlands, disaster management, engineering and the science of predicting and tracking hurricanes and tropical weather patterns and phenomena.
Gallery Four celebrates recovery and promotes preparedness and showcases the ingenuity of Louisianans in rebuilding their lives and communities. The gallery will be updated regularly to reflect advancements in flood protection and coastal restoration and new strategies for living with hurricanes.
In addition to the running videos throughout the exhibit there will be interviews with a number of key individuals who had a part in the rescue and recovery efforts, including National Guard Commander Gen. Russel Honore whose troops helped restore order after a week of chaos.
Divers Photo of the day 13 in New-Orleans with no particular subject
Diverses photos prisent en Nouvel-Orleans (jour : 13) sans sujet reel.
( Deux semaines a Nola pour la ville et pour WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV
Two weeks Nola for the city and for WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV )
Divers Day - 13 - NOLA 2018
Living With Hurricanes: Katrina and Beyond
Katrina Exhibit Opens in Louisiana State Museum
Combining eyewitness accounts, historical context, immersive environments and in-depth scientific exploration, 'Katrina and Beyond' enables visitors to understand the 2005 storms, Katrina and Rita, and their impact on Louisiana, the Gulf Coast and the nation. It is a story of how a culture - the rich, varied world of New Orleans and coastal Louisiana - has learned to live with the fragility of its environment and how the storms of 2005 gave rise to a new vision for the region.
When it hit southeastern Louisiana and the Mississippi Gulf Coast on the morning of August 29, 2005, the storm caused fearsome destruction. But the disaster wasn't entirely the result of natural causes. Levees and floodwalls - the man-made barriers built to protect New Orleans from the water surrounding it - failed. Their collapse in a dozen or more locations, plus tidal surges from the the low-lying eastern edge of New Orleans, flooded 80 percent of the city. By the time the waters receded and the survivors regrouped, Katrina, and then Hurricane Rita, had claimed more than 1,400 lives and caused billions of dollars worth of property destruction.
Designed by the Boston-based firm ExperienceDesign that worked with the Museum's historians, curators and exhibit designers, 'Living with Hurricanes' stretches across four galleries, each telling one aspect of the story using artifacts and rich media - sound, video and computer graphics.
Gallery One illustrates Louisiana's history with water, from the Mississippi River's benefits to the threats of coastal storm surges and floods. Visitors will move through the 'Evacuation Corridor,' overhearing residents' voices weighing their options as Katrina approaches. A state of the art 'Storm Theater' shows Katrina's full fury with moving and dramatic footage of the hurricane's onslaught.
Gallery Two takes visitors past a leaking floodwall and into an attic and onto a roof of a house surrounded by rising floodwaters where they can view the inundated city surrounding them. They'll hear a firsthand account of a St. Bernard Parish family's rescue and view artifacts, histories and photographs.
Throughout the galleries are compelling artifacts, including music legend Fats Domino's baby grand piano found in his flooded Ninth Ward house, a Coast Guard rescue basket and seats from the heavily damaged Louisiana Superdome where thousands of people sought refuge and rescue. The objects serve as touchstones in recalling the days after the storm.
The forensics of Katrina unfold in Gallery Three where science and innovative displays come together. A large interactive table map shows the paths of Katrina and Rita and the sequence of floods that overwhelmed the region. Visitors will discover how the levees failed through digital animation. Additional displays illustrate the realities of eroding wetlands, disaster management, engineering and the science of predicting and tracking hurricanes and tropical weather patterns and phenomena.
Gallery Four celebrates recovery and promotes preparedness and showcases the ingenuity of Louisianans in rebuilding their lives and communities. The gallery will be updated regularly to reflect advancements in flood protection and coastal restoration and new strategies for living with hurricanes.
In addition to the running videos throughout the exhibit there will be interviews with a number of key individuals who had a part in the rescue and recovery efforts, including National Guard Commander Gen. Russel Honore whose troops helped restore order after a week of chaos.
Divers Photo of the day 13 in New-Orleans with no particular subject
Diverses photos prisent en Nouvel-Orleans (jour : 13) sans sujet reel.
( Deux semaines a Nola pour la ville et pour WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV
Two weeks Nola for the city and for WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV )
Divers Day - 13 - NOLA 2018
Living With Hurricanes: Katrina and Beyond
Katrina Exhibit Opens in Louisiana State Museum
Combining eyewitness accounts, historical context, immersive environments and in-depth scientific exploration, 'Katrina and Beyond' enables visitors to understand the 2005 storms, Katrina and Rita, and their impact on Louisiana, the Gulf Coast and the nation. It is a story of how a culture - the rich, varied world of New Orleans and coastal Louisiana - has learned to live with the fragility of its environment and how the storms of 2005 gave rise to a new vision for the region.
When it hit southeastern Louisiana and the Mississippi Gulf Coast on the morning of August 29, 2005, the storm caused fearsome destruction. But the disaster wasn't entirely the result of natural causes. Levees and floodwalls - the man-made barriers built to protect New Orleans from the water surrounding it - failed. Their collapse in a dozen or more locations, plus tidal surges from the the low-lying eastern edge of New Orleans, flooded 80 percent of the city. By the time the waters receded and the survivors regrouped, Katrina, and then Hurricane Rita, had claimed more than 1,400 lives and caused billions of dollars worth of property destruction.
Designed by the Boston-based firm ExperienceDesign that worked with the Museum's historians, curators and exhibit designers, 'Living with Hurricanes' stretches across four galleries, each telling one aspect of the story using artifacts and rich media - sound, video and computer graphics.
Gallery One illustrates Louisiana's history with water, from the Mississippi River's benefits to the threats of coastal storm surges and floods. Visitors will move through the 'Evacuation Corridor,' overhearing residents' voices weighing their options as Katrina approaches. A state of the art 'Storm Theater' shows Katrina's full fury with moving and dramatic footage of the hurricane's onslaught.
Gallery Two takes visitors past a leaking floodwall and into an attic and onto a roof of a house surrounded by rising floodwaters where they can view the inundated city surrounding them. They'll hear a firsthand account of a St. Bernard Parish family's rescue and view artifacts, histories and photographs.
Throughout the galleries are compelling artifacts, including music legend Fats Domino's baby grand piano found in his flooded Ninth Ward house, a Coast Guard rescue basket and seats from the heavily damaged Louisiana Superdome where thousands of people sought refuge and rescue. The objects serve as touchstones in recalling the days after the storm.
The forensics of Katrina unfold in Gallery Three where science and innovative displays come together. A large interactive table map shows the paths of Katrina and Rita and the sequence of floods that overwhelmed the region. Visitors will discover how the levees failed through digital animation. Additional displays illustrate the realities of eroding wetlands, disaster management, engineering and the science of predicting and tracking hurricanes and tropical weather patterns and phenomena.
Gallery Four celebrates recovery and promotes preparedness and showcases the ingenuity of Louisianans in rebuilding their lives and communities. The gallery will be updated regularly to reflect advancements in flood protection and coastal restoration and new strategies for living with hurricanes.
In addition to the running videos throughout the exhibit there will be interviews with a number of key individuals who had a part in the rescue and recovery efforts, including National Guard Commander Gen. Russel Honore whose troops helped restore order after a week of chaos.
Divers Photo of the day 13 in New-Orleans with no particular subject
Diverses photos prisent en Nouvel-Orleans (jour : 13) sans sujet reel.
( Deux semaines a Nola pour la ville et pour WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV
Two weeks Nola for the city and for WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV )
Divers Day - 13 - NOLA 2018
Living With Hurricanes: Katrina and Beyond
Katrina Exhibit Opens in Louisiana State Museum
Combining eyewitness accounts, historical context, immersive environments and in-depth scientific exploration, 'Katrina and Beyond' enables visitors to understand the 2005 storms, Katrina and Rita, and their impact on Louisiana, the Gulf Coast and the nation. It is a story of how a culture - the rich, varied world of New Orleans and coastal Louisiana - has learned to live with the fragility of its environment and how the storms of 2005 gave rise to a new vision for the region.
When it hit southeastern Louisiana and the Mississippi Gulf Coast on the morning of August 29, 2005, the storm caused fearsome destruction. But the disaster wasn't entirely the result of natural causes. Levees and floodwalls - the man-made barriers built to protect New Orleans from the water surrounding it - failed. Their collapse in a dozen or more locations, plus tidal surges from the the low-lying eastern edge of New Orleans, flooded 80 percent of the city. By the time the waters receded and the survivors regrouped, Katrina, and then Hurricane Rita, had claimed more than 1,400 lives and caused billions of dollars worth of property destruction.
Designed by the Boston-based firm ExperienceDesign that worked with the Museum's historians, curators and exhibit designers, 'Living with Hurricanes' stretches across four galleries, each telling one aspect of the story using artifacts and rich media - sound, video and computer graphics.
Gallery One illustrates Louisiana's history with water, from the Mississippi River's benefits to the threats of coastal storm surges and floods. Visitors will move through the 'Evacuation Corridor,' overhearing residents' voices weighing their options as Katrina approaches. A state of the art 'Storm Theater' shows Katrina's full fury with moving and dramatic footage of the hurricane's onslaught.
Gallery Two takes visitors past a leaking floodwall and into an attic and onto a roof of a house surrounded by rising floodwaters where they can view the inundated city surrounding them. They'll hear a firsthand account of a St. Bernard Parish family's rescue and view artifacts, histories and photographs.
Throughout the galleries are compelling artifacts, including music legend Fats Domino's baby grand piano found in his flooded Ninth Ward house, a Coast Guard rescue basket and seats from the heavily damaged Louisiana Superdome where thousands of people sought refuge and rescue. The objects serve as touchstones in recalling the days after the storm.
The forensics of Katrina unfold in Gallery Three where science and innovative displays come together. A large interactive table map shows the paths of Katrina and Rita and the sequence of floods that overwhelmed the region. Visitors will discover how the levees failed through digital animation. Additional displays illustrate the realities of eroding wetlands, disaster management, engineering and the science of predicting and tracking hurricanes and tropical weather patterns and phenomena.
Gallery Four celebrates recovery and promotes preparedness and showcases the ingenuity of Louisianans in rebuilding their lives and communities. The gallery will be updated regularly to reflect advancements in flood protection and coastal restoration and new strategies for living with hurricanes.
In addition to the running videos throughout the exhibit there will be interviews with a number of key individuals who had a part in the rescue and recovery efforts, including National Guard Commander Gen. Russel Honore whose troops helped restore order after a week of chaos.
Divers Photo of the day 13 in New-Orleans with no particular subject
Diverses photos prisent en Nouvel-Orleans (jour : 13) sans sujet reel.
( Deux semaines a Nola pour la ville et pour WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV
Two weeks Nola for the city and for WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV )
Divers Day - 13 - NOLA 2018
Living With Hurricanes: Katrina and Beyond
Katrina Exhibit Opens in Louisiana State Museum
Combining eyewitness accounts, historical context, immersive environments and in-depth scientific exploration, 'Katrina and Beyond' enables visitors to understand the 2005 storms, Katrina and Rita, and their impact on Louisiana, the Gulf Coast and the nation. It is a story of how a culture - the rich, varied world of New Orleans and coastal Louisiana - has learned to live with the fragility of its environment and how the storms of 2005 gave rise to a new vision for the region.
When it hit southeastern Louisiana and the Mississippi Gulf Coast on the morning of August 29, 2005, the storm caused fearsome destruction. But the disaster wasn't entirely the result of natural causes. Levees and floodwalls - the man-made barriers built to protect New Orleans from the water surrounding it - failed. Their collapse in a dozen or more locations, plus tidal surges from the the low-lying eastern edge of New Orleans, flooded 80 percent of the city. By the time the waters receded and the survivors regrouped, Katrina, and then Hurricane Rita, had claimed more than 1,400 lives and caused billions of dollars worth of property destruction.
Designed by the Boston-based firm ExperienceDesign that worked with the Museum's historians, curators and exhibit designers, 'Living with Hurricanes' stretches across four galleries, each telling one aspect of the story using artifacts and rich media - sound, video and computer graphics.
Gallery One illustrates Louisiana's history with water, from the Mississippi River's benefits to the threats of coastal storm surges and floods. Visitors will move through the 'Evacuation Corridor,' overhearing residents' voices weighing their options as Katrina approaches. A state of the art 'Storm Theater' shows Katrina's full fury with moving and dramatic footage of the hurricane's onslaught.
Gallery Two takes visitors past a leaking floodwall and into an attic and onto a roof of a house surrounded by rising floodwaters where they can view the inundated city surrounding them. They'll hear a firsthand account of a St. Bernard Parish family's rescue and view artifacts, histories and photographs.
Throughout the galleries are compelling artifacts, including music legend Fats Domino's baby grand piano found in his flooded Ninth Ward house, a Coast Guard rescue basket and seats from the heavily damaged Louisiana Superdome where thousands of people sought refuge and rescue. The objects serve as touchstones in recalling the days after the storm.
The forensics of Katrina unfold in Gallery Three where science and innovative displays come together. A large interactive table map shows the paths of Katrina and Rita and the sequence of floods that overwhelmed the region. Visitors will discover how the levees failed through digital animation. Additional displays illustrate the realities of eroding wetlands, disaster management, engineering and the science of predicting and tracking hurricanes and tropical weather patterns and phenomena.
Gallery Four celebrates recovery and promotes preparedness and showcases the ingenuity of Louisianans in rebuilding their lives and communities. The gallery will be updated regularly to reflect advancements in flood protection and coastal restoration and new strategies for living with hurricanes.
In addition to the running videos throughout the exhibit there will be interviews with a number of key individuals who had a part in the rescue and recovery efforts, including National Guard Commander Gen. Russel Honore whose troops helped restore order after a week of chaos.
Divers Photo of the day 13 in New-Orleans with no particular subject
Diverses photos prisent en Nouvel-Orleans (jour : 13) sans sujet reel.
( Deux semaines a Nola pour la ville et pour WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV
Two weeks Nola for the city and for WWE Wrestlemania XXXIV )
SMASHfestUK 2018 - Living in Space
"If the world really was devastated by natural disaster, we might have no option except to look to space for a new home for civilisation - could it be the Moon? Could we live on Mars? What would it take to build a world in outer space? How could we resource ourselves out is space?" This was the question that drove our big Living in Space collaborative project through 2017, into 2018. Working with over 6000 members of the public across the UK, during 6 different events; bringing together 5 universities, 4 schools, 2 museums, a software company, Astrocymru and the Royal Astronomical Society, we created a multi-part, semi-immersive experience which debuted at SMASHfestUK FLOOD! 2018 in Deptford.
SMASHfestUK joined with Middlesex University, Deptford Green School, Llangatwg Community School, Haberdashers’ Aske’s Hatcham College, Christ The King Sixth Form School, Monster Paw Games, Kerbal Space Program, Swansea University, Cardiff University, The National Museum of Wales, The Royal Observatory, Greenwich, Queen Mary University London, AstroCymru, and Dr. Sheila Kanani and Dr Lucinda Offer of the Royal Astronomical Society, in a project ‘Living in Space’ funded by the Science and Technology Facilities Council. Building on projects funded by the UK Space Agency ‘Space for All’ and the Royal Academy of Engineering ‘INGENIOUS’, exploring ideas and creating experiences with a diverse group of public visitors, young people, and engineering, design, mathematics and science professional experts.