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На фотографиях, опубликованных Катей Улитиной по следам ее визита в роттердамский дом Сонневельда, в компании со стальной мебелью Виллема Хендрика Гиспена в замечено кресло за авторством немецкого дизайнера Эриха Дикманна, который был незаслуженно забыт и не удостоен ни полсловом в прекрасном обзоре истории Баухауса, написанном Фрэнком Уитфордом. Хоть Дикманн, учившийся в Баухаусе в 1921-1924 гг., а после досрочно сдавший экзамены по столярному делу и преподававший эту дисциплину веймарским студентам, известен прежде всего предметами мебели из древесины, в его репертуаре было значительное количество из других материалов, в том числе стальных трубок, которые он гнул под впечатлением от работ своего коллеги Марселя Брейера, но отличным от последнего образом.

К слову, Брейер, в 1926 г. передавший Дикманну руководство факультетом деревообработки, по достоинству оценивал работу своего преемника на поприще проектирования предметов быта: «Его мебель отличается известной легкостью и ненавязчивостью, она словно начерчена в пространстве и не мешает ни движению, ни обзору»…

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If you’ve read Katya’s account of her visit to the Sonneveld house in Rotterdam, you may have noticed a lounger amidst other tubular steel furniture designed by the Dutch Willem Gispen. This lounger is a product of an influential German designer by the name of Erich Dieckmann who was active in the 1920-1940s and has then fallen into oblivion without so much as a tiniest mention in Frank Withford’s comprehensive history of Bauhaus. A student of Bauhaus in 1921-1924, Dieckmann completed his apprenticeship as a carpenter ahead of the curriculum to begin teaching woodworking to Bauhaus students and was so fascinated by wood that it’s difficult to come to terms with his equally stunning tubular steel endeavors. His interest in bent steel furnishings was obviously inspired by one of his much better known colleagues, Marcel Breuer, but manifested itself in highly original twists and turns.

Interestingly, Breuer, whom Dieckmann replaced as head of the woodworking department at Bauhaus in 1926, paid due respects to the German designer’s vision and talent as a furniture-maker in subsequent years. Here’s what he wrote on Dieckmann’s furnishings in 1928, “They are rather light, open, as if sketched into the room; they do not hinder either movement or the view across the room."…



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На фотографиях, опубликованных Катей Улитиной по следам ее визита в роттердамский дом Сонневельда, в компании со стальной мебелью Виллема Хендрика Гиспена в замечено кресло за авторством немецкого дизайнера Эриха Дикманна, который был незаслуженно забыт и не удостоен ни полсловом в прекрасном обзоре истории Баухауса, написанном Фрэнком Уитфордом. Хоть Дикманн, учившийся в Баухаусе в 1921-1924 гг., а после досрочно сдавший экзамены по столярному делу и преподававший эту дисциплину веймарским студентам, известен прежде всего предметами мебели из древесины, в его репертуаре было значительное количество из других материалов, в том числе стальных трубок, которые он гнул под впечатлением от работ своего коллеги Марселя Брейера, но отличным от последнего образом.

К слову, Брейер, в 1926 г. передавший Дикманну руководство факультетом деревообработки, по достоинству оценивал работу своего преемника на поприще проектирования предметов быта: «Его мебель отличается известной легкостью и ненавязчивостью, она словно начерчена в пространстве и не мешает ни движению, ни обзору»…

———

If you’ve read Katya’s account of her visit to the Sonneveld house in Rotterdam, you may have noticed a lounger amidst other tubular steel furniture designed by the Dutch Willem Gispen. This lounger is a product of an influential German designer by the name of Erich Dieckmann who was active in the 1920-1940s and has then fallen into oblivion without so much as a tiniest mention in Frank Withford’s comprehensive history of Bauhaus. A student of Bauhaus in 1921-1924, Dieckmann completed his apprenticeship as a carpenter ahead of the curriculum to begin teaching woodworking to Bauhaus students and was so fascinated by wood that it’s difficult to come to terms with his equally stunning tubular steel endeavors. His interest in bent steel furnishings was obviously inspired by one of his much better known colleagues, Marcel Breuer, but manifested itself in highly original twists and turns.

Interestingly, Breuer, whom Dieckmann replaced as head of the woodworking department at Bauhaus in 1926, paid due respects to the German designer’s vision and talent as a furniture-maker in subsequent years. Here’s what he wrote on Dieckmann’s furnishings in 1928, “They are rather light, open, as if sketched into the room; they do not hinder either movement or the view across the room."…

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In addition, Telegram now supports the use of third-party streaming tools like OBS Studio and XSplit to broadcast live video, allowing users to add overlays and multi-screen layouts for a more professional look. Official government accounts have also spread fake fact checks. An official Twitter account for the Russia diplomatic mission in Geneva shared a fake debunking video claiming without evidence that "Western and Ukrainian media are creating thousands of fake news on Russia every day." The video, which has amassed almost 30,000 views, offered a "how-to" spot misinformation. The War on Fakes channel has repeatedly attempted to push conspiracies that footage from Ukraine is somehow being falsified. One post on the channel from February 24 claimed without evidence that a widely viewed photo of a Ukrainian woman injured in an airstrike in the city of Chuhuiv was doctored and that the woman was seen in a different photo days later without injuries. The post, which has over 600,000 views, also baselessly claimed that the woman's blood was actually makeup or grape juice. After fleeing Russia, the brothers founded Telegram as a way to communicate outside the Kremlin's orbit. They now run it from Dubai, and Pavel Durov says it has more than 500 million monthly active users. The channel appears to be part of the broader information war that has developed following Russia's invasion of Ukraine. The Kremlin has paid Russian TikTok influencers to push propaganda, according to a Vice News investigation, while ProPublica found that fake Russian fact check videos had been viewed over a million times on Telegram.
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