RMPATFY7–Box with chi dragons amid clouds. Culture: China. Dimensions: H. 3 in (7.6 cm); Diam. 9 5/8 in. (24.4 cm). Date: 13th century. Known as chi, the feline dragons that curve along the surface of this box were inspired by comparable creatures found on Bronze Age vessels, which were rediscovered during the Song dynasty and often reinterpreted in the arts of that period. Although they lack the large horns, prominent snouts, and scaled body of the typical Chinese depiction of the dragon, chi dragons are also regarded as auspicious and protective. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
RMG9BJ80–Roy Lichenstein's 'Wham', a 1963 acrylic and olion canvas, now exhibiting at the Tate Modern in London, which has rehung and reinterpreted its 'Tate Modern Collection'.
RM2M41NGT–The Ampulla and Coronation Spoon. When a monarch is anointed, the Dean of Westminster first pours holy anointing oil from an ampulla into a spoon. The original ampulla was a small stone phial, sometimes worn around the neck as a pendant by kings, and otherwise kept inside an eagle-shaped golden reliquary. It is unclear why, after the Restoration, the vessel itself came to be reinterpreted as an eagle standing on a domed base. The Coronation Spoon, dates from the late 12th century and is silver-gilt and set with four pearls, which were added in the 17th century.
RMHHG9JY–Title page from 'Prognostications', 1536 by Paracelsus (1493 – 1541). The Prognostications (Prophecies) of Paracelsus, are exceedingly cryptic, filled with allegorical symbols and capable of being reinterpreted for any purpose. born Philippus Aureolus Theophrastus Bombastus von Hohenheim, was a Swiss German philosopher, physician, botanist, astrologer.
RM2G8DX2A–Hong Kong, Hong Kong. 19th July, 2021. A woman reads Animal Farm written by George Orwell, the book was reinterpreted by a Hong Kong writer using Cantonese to suit current social situation in Hong Kong.Amid COVID-19 pandemic and censorship due to National Security Law established last year, The Hong Kong Book Fair 2021 opened from 14-20 July however unlike previous book fairs, this year has less books about local politics. Credit: SOPA Images Limited/Alamy Live News
RF2HTWWA7–Art inspired by Terracotta stand, Archaic, ca. 520 B.C., Greek, Attic, Terracotta; red-figure, H. 10 in. (25.4 cm), Vases, A significant amount of Attic pottery was produced for the export to Etruria. Indigenous Etruscan shapes were reinterpreted in Athenian workshops; the Hellenized, Classic works modernized by Artotop with a splash of modernity. Shapes, color and value, eye-catching visual impact on art. Emotions through freedom of artworks in a contemporary way. A timeless message pursuing a wildly creative new direction. Artists turning to the digital medium and creating the Artotop NFT
RM2G8DX6N–Hong Kong, Hong Kong. 19th July, 2021. A woman reads Animal Farm written by George Orwell, the book was reinterpreted by a Hong Kong writer using Cantonese to suit current social situation in Hong Kong.Amid COVID-19 pandemic and censorship due to National Security Law established last year, The Hong Kong Book Fair 2021 opened from 14-20 July however unlike previous book fairs, this year has less books about local politics. (Photo by Alex Chan Tsz Yuk/SOPA Images/Sipa USA) Credit: Sipa USA/Alamy Live News
RF2HTWWGM–Art inspired by Terracotta stand, Archaic, ca. 520 B.C., Greek, Attic, Terracotta; red-figure, H. 10 1/4 in. (26 cm), Vases, A significant amount of Attic pottery was produced for the export to Etruria. Indigenous Etruscan shapes were reinterpreted in Athenian workshops; the Hellenized, Classic works modernized by Artotop with a splash of modernity. Shapes, color and value, eye-catching visual impact on art. Emotions through freedom of artworks in a contemporary way. A timeless message pursuing a wildly creative new direction. Artists turning to the digital medium and creating the Artotop NFT
RMKWBRDW–The human pedigree back to amoeba shown as a reinterpreted chain of being with living and fossil animals. From a critique of Ernst Haeckel's theories, 1873.
RM2AHPRRE–Canaletto. The Portico with the Lantern, from Vedute. 1735–1744. Italy. Etching in black on ivory laid paper Employing a wide variety of tones and marks, Canaletto expertly depicted this imagined scene with its smattering of actual ancient ruins. A follower of the artist later copied this important etching to produce the nearly identical painting on the right. The painted version, however, omitted or reinterpreted most of the foreground figures. A new scene of a man standing next to an architectural fragment near the building to the right has also been added, emphasizing the visitor’s interest
RME2FYKY–Argentina Buenos Aires La Boca district the David of Michelangelo reinterpreted by drinking the traditional infusion called
RM2D58KN6–A protester speaks in front of a banner at the entrance to Hong Kong's Court of Final Appeal June 25, on the eve of the 1st anniversary of the re-interpretation of the territory's Basic Law. About 800 Chinese immigrants and their relatives participated in the demonstration. The Standing Committee of the National People's Congress, China's parliament, reinterpreted crucial Hong Kong immigration laws on June 26, 1999, which reversed a ruling by the territory's highest court. That reinterpretation effectively slammed the door on what would have been hundreds of thousands of eligible mainland Chin
RF2HXG1A1–Franklin Roosevelt’s Four Freedoms, including freedom from Fear, are reinterpreted using parts of the Berlin Wall
RMWRKAJG–22 August 2019, Berlin: Jim Avignon, artist, stands in front of his work at the East Side Gallery. Almost 30 years ago, artists immortalized themselves here and reinterpreted the longest remaining section of the Berlin Wall with their works of art. Photo: Arne Immanuel Bänsch/dpa
RF2AC0N77–Christian nativity reinterpreted in Tuvalu islands, postage stamp
RMWRKAJE–19 August 2019, Berlin: A woman walks along the west side of the East Side Gallery at sunset. Almost 30 years ago, artists immortalized themselves here and reinterpreted the longest remaining section of the Berlin Wall with their works of art. Photo: Arne Immanuel Bänsch/dpa
RM2HHR5TM–Evening cloak 1885–89 French The chinoiserie print covered in the vermiculate gold chainstitch alongside the contrasting embroidered net trim encompasses the wearer in lavish exoticism. It was fashionable in the period to seek such exoticism in home furnishings as well as fashion. The design vocabulary of the world was often reinterpreted in embroidery styles throughout the period.. Evening cloak 157442
RM2KBNBKR–Laura Silvagni, ceramist and decorator, in her workshop, La Vecchia Faenza. Her production is characterized by fidelity to the decorative tradition of Faenza, in its broad lines unchanged since the fifteenth century, although revised and reinterpreted. The shop is closed because of the coronavirus and only the owner and her daughter Elisa Suzzi work at a reduced pace. Faenza, 18th April 2020. (Photo by Andrea Savorani Neri/NurPhoto)
RM2A5440K–London, UK. 17th Oct 2019. Performance of “Cion - A Requiem to Ravel's Bolero” by Gregory Maqoma at Barbican Theatre, part of Dance Umbrella 2019. Joined by performers from Vuyani Dance Theatre, Maqoma embodies a professional mourner ‘Toloki’ - a character inspired by the protagonist of Zakes Mda’s novels Ways of Dying and Cion – which stands for hope against the darkness. The performance unfolds to Ravel’s Bolero, reinterpreted through percussion and voice by a South African Isicathamiya (a cappella) choir. Maqoma’s third Dance Umbrella appearance since 2015. Credit: Guy Corbishley
RMPB6055–Terracotta deep bowl. Culture: Greek, South Italian, Campanian, Calenian. Dimensions: H. 2 15/16 in. (7.5 cm); diameter 6 3/8 in. (16.2 cm). Date: late 3rd-early 2nd century B.C.. The deep bowl originated in metal during the Hellenistic period and was reinterpreted in clay quickly and widely. The bust represents Dionysos, god of wine, an appropriately frequent subject for a drinking vessel. Pottery of this type is conventionally known as Calenian, after Cales, a site in Campania. Recent studies indicate that there were numerous centers of production in Italy and wide distribution to both the
RMG9BJ18–Katie Dance enjoys a work by Los Angeles artist Pae White entitled 'Morceau Arrochant' now exhibiting at the Tate Modern in London, which has rehung and reinterpreted its 'Tate Modern Collection'.
RM2A523X4–Seated Buddha, 200s. Artists in the north Indian city of Mathura reinterpreted the appearance of the Greco-Roman style of drapery, which was popular in the region of Gandhara, in present-day Pakistan. They preferred a more otherworldly, abstracted rendition of the folds, giving the Buddha a powerful, superhuman energy.
RMHHG9K0–The Prognostications (Prophecies) of Paracelsus, are exceedingly cryptic, filled with allegorical symbols and capable of being reinterpreted for any purpose. born Philippus Aureolus Theophrastus Bombastus von Hohenheim, was a Swiss German philosopher, physician, botanist, astrologer. 'A flower growth to the destined height. He that causeth her to grow also causeth her to fade. This happens to thee, for Magic hath therewith adorned thee, that thy coming up should be known, and also how thou has come to nought
RM2G8DX22–Hong Kong, Hong Kong. 19th July, 2021. People read Animal Farm written by George Orwell, the book was reinterpreted by a Hong Kong writer using Cantonese to suit current social situation in Hong Kong.Amid COVID-19 pandemic and censorship due to National Security Law established last year, The Hong Kong Book Fair 2021 opened from 14-20 July however unlike previous book fairs, this year has less books about local politics. Credit: SOPA Images Limited/Alamy Live News
RM2G8DX5P–Hong Kong, Hong Kong. 19th July, 2021. People read Animal Farm written by George Orwell, the book was reinterpreted by a Hong Kong writer using Cantonese to suit current social situation in Hong Kong.Amid COVID-19 pandemic and censorship due to National Security Law established last year, The Hong Kong Book Fair 2021 opened from 14-20 July however unlike previous book fairs, this year has less books about local politics. (Photo by Alex Chan Tsz Yuk/SOPA Images/Sipa USA) Credit: Sipa USA/Alamy Live News
RF2HW4EMJ–Art inspired by Terracotta deep bowl, Hellenistic, late 3rd–early 2nd century B.C., Greek, South Italian, Campanian, Calenian, Terracotta, H. 2 15/16 in. (7.5 cm); diameter 6 3/8 in. (16.2 cm), Vases, The deep bowl originated in metal during the Hellenistic period and was reinterpreted, Classic works modernized by Artotop with a splash of modernity. Shapes, color and value, eye-catching visual impact on art. Emotions through freedom of artworks in a contemporary way. A timeless message pursuing a wildly creative new direction. Artists turning to the digital medium and creating the Artotop NFT
RMM1M0HF–Eboli, Italy. 31st Jan, 2018. He arrives at the PalaSele di Eboli 'MAX NEK RENGA, the tour'. Three big names of Italian and international music, Max Pezzali, Nek and Francesco Renga, protagonists in the sports halls of the main Italian cities, with their repertoire, soundtrack of entire generations, reinterpreted in unreleased versions with three voices, and more. (Italy, Eboli (SA), 31 January 2018) Credit: Independent Photo Agency/Alamy Live News
RM2JC2HYM–Racine, Wisconsin, USA. 17th July, 2015. The streamlined desks and desk chairs that Frank Lloyd Wright designed in 1936 for the SC Johnson Administration Building in Racine, Wisconsin will be reinterpreted by the Steelcase company in partnership with the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation, it was announced June 1, 2022. The lines of the desk evoke the streamlined building itself. A press release said that Steelcase will 'revisit, reinterpret, and reintroduce Wright's designs, as well as co-create novel concepts rooted in his principles to provide products that enhance how we live and work today.â
RF2K41G7P–Reinterpreted pizza
RM2D5DE7G–Chinese migrants protest outside Hong Kong's Court of Final Appeal June 25, on the eve of the 1st anniversary of the re-interpretation of the territory's Basic Law. About 800 Chinese immigrants and their relatives participated in the demonstration. The Standing Committee of the National People's Congress, China's parliament, reinterpreted crucial Hong Kong immigration laws on June 26, 1999, which reversed a ruling by the territory's highest court. That reinterpretation effectively slammed the door on what would have been hundreds of thousands of eligible mainland Chinese immigrants to Hong Kon
RM2JC2HYK–Racine, Wisconsin, USA. 21st June, 2012. The streamlined desks and desk chairs that Frank Lloyd Wright designed in 1936 for the SC Johnson Administration Building in Racine, Wisconsin will be reinterpreted by the Steelcase company in partnership with the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation, it was announced June 1, 2022. The lines of the desk evoke the streamlined building itself. A press release said that Steelcase will 'revisit, reinterpret, and reintroduce Wright's designs, as well as co-create novel concepts rooted in his principles to provide products that enhance how we live and work today.â
RF2M5NF9M–Swabian cuisine, preparing courgettes for mini dinettes, slicing vegetables, vegetable slicer, healthy, vegetarian, typical Swabian reinterpreted
RF2JCWP6C–Happy plush bear having fun with colorful balloons. Plush bear character reinterpreted with photo manipulation. Cute plush bear. Valentine's Day.
RMWRKAJX–19 August 2019, Berlin: Tourists and visitors stand in front of the so-called 'Brother Kiss Painting' at the East Side Gallery. Almost 30 years ago, artists immortalized themselves here and reinterpreted the longest remaining section of the Berlin Wall with their works of art. Photo: Arne Immanuel Bänsch/dpa
RM2HHTTYM–Terracotta stamnos (jar) early 5th century B.C. Greek, Attic On the shoulder, obverse, lionWhile a wide variety of vase shapes were imported from Attica into Etruria, some seem to have been made specifically for the Etruscan market. The kyathos (ladle), for example, is an Etruscan shape that was reinterpreted in Attic workshops and exported. The stamnos is found so much more frequently in northern Italy than on the Greek mainland that it too may have been produced for a specific clientel.. Terracotta stamnos (jar) 248300
RM2KBNBK4–Elisa Suzzi, ceramic decorator, inside her workshop, La Vecchia Faenza. Her production is characterized by fidelity to the decorative tradition of Faenza, in its broad lines unchanged since the fifteenth century, although revised and reinterpreted. The workshop is closed because of the coronavirus and only Elisa and her mother, Laura Silvagni, work at a reduced pace. Faenza, 18th April 2020. (Photo by Andrea Savorani Neri/NurPhoto)
RM2HJ3BK7–Cape ca. 1895 Emile Pingat French Emile Pingat had a proclivity for designing carefully finished dresses and outerwear which made him one of the top three French fashion designers during the second half of the 19th century. Active between 1860 and 1896, Pingat was adroit at manipulating multiple textiles and trimmings into a cohesive and elevated garment. He was inspired by design elements of other cultures and often reinterpreted them into his own work, making them unique and intriguing. His elaborately decorated and impeccably tailored outwear was particularly sought after.This beautifully c
RMPAJ90T–Evening cloak. Culture: French. Date: 1885-89. The chinoiserie print covered in the vermiculate gold chainstitch alongside the contrasting embroidered net trim encompasses the wearer in lavish exoticism. It was fashionable in the period to seek such exoticism in home furnishings as well as fashion. The design vocabulary of the world was often reinterpreted in embroidery styles throughout the period. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
RMG9BJ86–Eberhard Havekost's Ghost 1 and Ghost 2 paintings based on a photograph of the rap musician Eminem now exhibiting at the Tate Modern in London, which has rehung and reinterpreted its 'Tate Modern Collection'.
RM2A544MH–London, UK. 17th Oct 2019. Performance of “Cion - A Requiem to Ravel's Bolero” by Gregory Maqoma at Barbican Theatre, part of Dance Umbrella 2019. Joined by performers from Vuyani Dance Theatre, Maqoma embodies a professional mourner ‘Toloki’ - a character inspired by the protagonist of Zakes Mda’s novels Ways of Dying and Cion – which stands for hope against the darkness. The performance unfolds to Ravel’s Bolero, reinterpreted through percussion and voice by a South African Isicathamiya (a cappella) choir. Maqoma’s third Dance Umbrella appearance since 2015. Credit: Guy Corbishley
RMC479EA–road sign reinterpreted by a street artist as a crucifixion, Milan Italy
RM2H5JFF1–The Courtauld Gallery, Somerset House, London, UK. 10 November 2021. The Courtauld Gallery in London reopens to the public on Friday 19 November following the most significant modernisation project in its history, providing a transformed home for the UK’s greatest collection of Impressionist art. The Courtauld’s much-loved collection, which belongs to the Samuel Courtauld Trust , has been completely redisplayed and reinterpreted. Credit: Malcolm Park/Alamy Live News
RM2E091G2–Actor Francesco Scianna and actress Margareth Made arriving for the opening of the first Louis Vuitton Maison in Rome, Italy on January 27, 2012. The store is called 'L'Etoile' after the name of the historic cinema in downtown Rome at Piazza San Lorenzo in Lucina. The 1,200-square-meter exhibition space has been reinterpreted by architect Peter Marino to offer the most sophisticated pieces, as well as a screening room for short films, documentaries and original creations. The screening room is a nod to Louis Vuitton’s program to support new generations of the Italian film industry. Partnering
RF2D74B3E–Four Shakespeare play reinterpreted for BBC television
RMM1M0GW–Eboli, Italy. 31st Jan, 2018. He arrives at the PalaSele di Eboli 'MAX NEK RENGA, the tour'. Three big names of Italian and international music, Max Pezzali, Nek and Francesco Renga, protagonists in the sports halls of the main Italian cities, with their repertoire, soundtrack of entire generations, reinterpreted in unreleased versions with three voices, and more. (Italy, Eboli (SA), 31 January 2018) Credit: Independent Photo Agency/Alamy Live News
RM2AH4KX8–Roma, Italy. 23rd Dec, 2019. Famous paintings reinterpreted with 'lego men' made by Stefano Bolcato 'I Love Lego', an exhibition dedicated to Lego, the most famous bricks in the world, at Palazzo Bonaparte in Rome (Photo by Matteo Nardone/Pacific Press) Credit: Pacific Press Agency/Alamy Live News
RMMKMT44–Building Facade
RM2CP9KFX–A passerby looks at a poster at a rally mocking Hong Kong leader Tung Chee-hwa and Chief Justice Elsie Leung June 26, the day marking the 1st anniversary of the re-interpretation of the territory's Basic Law. China reinterpreted crucial Hong Kong immigration laws on June 26, 1999, which reversed a ruling by the territory's highest court. Tung had encouraged Beijing to curb the right of entry of immigrants because he claimed it would have led to over 1.5 million mainland Chinese migrants crossing into the already crowded territory. BY/CC
RM2JC2HX0–Racine, Wisconsin, USA. 21st June, 2012. The streamlined desks and desk chairs that Frank Lloyd Wright designed in 1936 for the SC Johnson Administration Building in Racine, Wisconsin will be reinterpreted by the Steelcase company in partnership with the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation, it was announced June 1, 2022. The lines of the desk evoke the streamlined building itself. A press release said that Steelcase will 'revisit, reinterpret, and reintroduce Wright's designs, as well as co-create novel concepts rooted in his principles to provide products that enhance how we live and work today.â
RM2CPM1BM–Bolivian Aymara Indian woman dance as they take part in the 'El Senor del Gran Poder' (Feast of the Great Power of Jesus) festival in La Paz, Bolivia May 21, 2005. The feast, which is one of the most important and expressive manifestations of La Paz' cultural identity, had its origins in the arrival in the Ch'ijini area of a canvas showing a three-faced figure. The image was reinterpreted according to the Aymara tradition to mean that one asked the face on the right for good things, the left for negative things, while one prayed to the center face. The Catholic Church had the canvas repainted
RF2M5NF6E–Swabian cuisine, preparing pumpkin for mini dinettes, slicing vegetables, vegetable slicer, healthy, vegetarian, typical Swabian reinterpreted, man's
RMWRKAJM–19 August 2019, Berlin: Tourists and visitors stand in front of the so-called 'Brother Kiss Painting' at the East Side Gallery. Almost 30 years ago, artists immortalized themselves here and reinterpreted the longest remaining section of the Berlin Wall with their works of art. Photo: Arne Immanuel Bänsch/dpa
RM2KBNBK9–Elisa Suzzi, ceramic decorator, inside her workshop, La Vecchia Faenza, and her mother, Laura Silvagni. Her production is characterized by fidelity to the decorative tradition of Faenza, in its broad lines unchanged since the fifteenth century, although revised and reinterpreted. The workshop is closed because of the coronavirus and only Elisa and her mother, Laura Silvagni, work at a reduced rate. Faenza, 18th April 2020. (Photo by Andrea Savorani Neri/NurPhoto)
RM2HJ1N0K–Evening jacket ca. 1893 Emile Pingat French Emile Pingat had a proclivity for designing carefully finished dresses and outerwear which made him one of the top three French fashion designers during the second half of the 19th century. Active between 1860 and 1896, Pingat was adroit at manipulating multiple textiles and trimmings into a cohesive and elevated garment. He was inspired by design elements of other cultures and often reinterpreted them into his own work, making them unique and intriguing. His elaborately decorated and impeccably tailored outwear was particularly sought after.This fin
RMPAC20F–Dress. Culture: French. Designer: Emile Pingat (French, active 1860-96). Date: ca. 1885. Emile Pingat had a proclivity for designing carefully finished dresses and outerwear which made him one of the top three French fashion designers during the second half of the 19th century. Active between 1860 and 1896, Pingat was adroit at manipulating multiple textiles and trimmings into a cohesive and elevated garment. He was inspired by design elements of other cultures and often reinterpreted them into his own work, making them unique and intriguing. His elaborately decorated and impeccably tailor
RMG9BJ7G–A 1969 work by Alexandre Da Cunha of two fans, titled Skateboarderistismatrnics (L) and Erik Ellington (R) is viewed by visitors at the Tate Modern in London, which has rehung and reinterpreted its 'Tate Modern Collection'.
RM2HH86Y3–Afternoon jacket 1885–90 Emile Pingat French Emile Pingat had a proclivity for designing carefully finished dresses and outerwear which made him one of the top three French fashion designers during the second half of the 19th century. Active between 1860 and 1896, Pingat was adroit at manipulating multiple textiles and trimmings into a cohesive and elevated garment. He was inspired by design elements of other cultures and often reinterpreted them into his own work, making them unique and intriguing. His elaborately decorated and impeccably tailored outwear was particularly sought after.Pingat'
RMG70JT1–Dancers from the Rambert Dance Company perform Ian Spink's reinterpretation of Sir Frederick Ashton's 'A Tragedy of Fashion' during a full dress run at Sadler's Wells in London. Sir Frederick, Rambert's founding choreographer, choreographed this, his first ballet in 1926, encouraged by his teacher, Dame Marie Rambert. The piece has been reinterpreted to mark the anniversary of Sir Frederick's birth and opens this evening, and runs until Saturday.
RM2HHR4NG–Mantle ca. 1891 Emile Pingat French Emile Pingat had a proclivity for designing carefully finished dresses and outerwear which made him one of the top three French fashion designers during the second half of the 19th century. Active between 1860 and 1896, Pingat was adroit at manipulating multiple textiles and trimmings into a cohesive and elevated garment. He was inspired by design elements of other cultures and often reinterpreted them into his own work, making them unique and intriguing. His elaborately decorated and impeccably tailored outwear was particularly sought after.The Islamic icon
RM2A544K3–London, UK. 17th Oct 2019. Performance of “Cion - A Requiem to Ravel's Bolero” by Gregory Maqoma(pictured) at Barbican Theatre, part of Dance Umbrella 2019. Joined by performers from Vuyani Dance Theatre, Maqoma embodies a professional mourner ‘Toloki’ - a character inspired by the protagonist of Zakes Mda’s novels Ways of Dying and Cion – which stands for hope against the darkness. The performance unfolds to Ravel’s Bolero, reinterpreted through percussion and voice by a South African Isicathamiya (a cappella) choir. Maqoma’s third Dance Umbrella appearance since 2015. Credit: Guy Corbishley
RF2JCWP6J–The plush bear salutes. Plush bear character reinterpreted with photo manipulation. Cute plush bear. Valentine's Day. Plush bear character design.
RM2H5JK80–The Courtauld Gallery in London reopens to the public on Friday 19 November following the most significant modernisation project in its history, providing a transformed home for the UK’s greatest collection of Impressionist art. The Courtauld’s much-loved collection, which belongs to the Samuel Courtauld Trust and ranges from the Middle Ages to the 20th Century, has been completely redisplayed and reinterpreted. Image: Paul Cézanne, The Card Players, Around 1892-96. The Courtauld Gallery, Somerset House, London, UK. 10 November 2021.
RMM1M0GX–Eboli, Italy. 31st Jan, 2018. He arrives at the PalaSele di Eboli 'MAX NEK RENGA, the tour'. Three big names of Italian and international music, Max Pezzali, Nek and Francesco Renga, protagonists in the sports halls of the main Italian cities, with their repertoire, soundtrack of entire generations, reinterpreted in unreleased versions with three voices, and more. (Italy, Eboli (SA), 31 January 2018) Credit: Independent Photo Agency/Alamy Live News
RM2E091G6–Italian actress Laura Morante arriving for the opening of the first Louis Vuitton Maison in Rome, Italy on January 27, 2012. The store is called 'L'Etoile' after the name of the historic cinema in downtown Rome at Piazza San Lorenzo in Lucina. The 1,200-square-meter exhibition space has been reinterpreted by architect Peter Marino to offer the most sophisticated pieces, as well as a screening room for short films, documentaries and original creations. The screening room is a nod to Louis Vuitton’s program to support new generations of the Italian film industry. Partnering with Scuola Nazionale
RF2D74B36–Four Shakespeare play reinterpreted for BBC television
RM2JC2HX8–Racine, Wisconsin, USA. 21st June, 2012. The streamlined desks and desk chairs that Frank Lloyd Wright designed in 1936 for the SC Johnson Administration Building in Racine, Wisconsin will be reinterpreted by the Steelcase company in partnership with the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation, it was announced June 1, 2022. The lines of the desk evoke the streamlined building itself. A press release said that Steelcase will 'revisit, reinterpret, and reintroduce Wright's designs, as well as co-create novel concepts rooted in his principles to provide products that enhance how we live and work today.â
RM2D4HW20–Bolivian women dance in front of the San Francisco church as they take part in the 'El Senor del Gran Poder' (Feast of the Great Power of Jesus) festival in La Paz, Bolivia May 21, 2005. The feast, which is one of the most important and expressive manifestations of La Paz's cultural identity, had its origins in the arrival in the Ch'ijini area of a canvas showing a three-faced figure. The image was reinterpreted according to the Aymara tradition to mean that one asked the face on the right for good things, the left for negative things, while one prayed to the center face. The Catholic Church h
RM2AH4KXH–Roma, Italy. 23rd Dec, 2019. Famous paintings reinterpreted with 'lego men' made by Stefano Bolcato 'I Love Lego', an exhibition dedicated to Lego, the most famous bricks in the world, at Palazzo Bonaparte in Rome (Photo by Matteo Nardone/Pacific Press) Credit: Pacific Press Agency/Alamy Live News
RMWRKAJY–19 August 2019, Berlin: Visitors and tourists stand in front of the Trabi picture of the artist Birgit Kinder at the East Side Gallery. Almost 30 years ago, artists immortalized themselves here and reinterpreted the longest remaining section of the Berlin Wall with their works of art. Photo: Arne Immanuel Bänsch/dpa
RMWJYFT8–Berlin, Germany. 22nd Aug, 2019. The sun sets behind the East Side Gallery on the Spree. Almost 30 years ago, artists immortalized themselves here and reinterpreted the longest remaining section of the Berlin Wall with their works of art. (for 'Wall Artist Avignon: East Side Gallery awarded anew each year') Credit: Arne Immanuel Bänsch/dpa/Alamy Live News
RM2AG5E2X–. Space, time and gravitation : an outline of the general relativity theory. ther law of physics which was formerty regardedas fundamental—the conservation of mass. Modern progresshas somewhat altered our position with regard to it; not thatits validity is denied, but it has been reinterpreted, and hasfinally become merged in the conservation of energy. It will bedesirable to consider this in detail. * Appendix, Note 13. 142 MOMENTUM AND ENERGY [CH. It was formerly supposed that the mass of a particle was anumber attached to the particle, expressing an intrinsic property,which remained unalter
RMPAMAF6–Evening jacket. Culture: French. Designer: Emile Pingat (French, active 1860-96). Date: ca. 1893. Emile Pingat had a proclivity for designing carefully finished dresses and outerwear which made him one of the top three French fashion designers during the second half of the 19th century. Active between 1860 and 1896, Pingat was adroit at manipulating multiple textiles and trimmings into a cohesive and elevated garment. He was inspired by design elements of other cultures and often reinterpreted them into his own work, making them unique and intriguing. His elaborately decorated and impeccab
RM2G4YH3P–London UK 24 June 2021 Six works by British artist Daniel Crews-Chubb, reinterpret Rubens' original painting, which allegorically depicted Europe in the aftermath of the Thirty Years War (1618-1648). Holding up a mirror in today's testing times, Crews-Chubb has turned the themes in Ruben's masterwork on their head and reinterpreted them within today's context and through his own artistic vision. Daniel is the first contemporary artist to exhibit in this historical monument. The exhibition is a partnership between Vigo Gallery and English Heritage.Paul Quezada-Neiman/Alamy Live News
RMKCC78R–Terracotta stand, Archaic, ca. 520 B.C., Greek, Attic, Terracotta; red-figure, H. 10 in. (25.4 cm), Vases, A significant amount
RMG70JT0–Dancers from the Rambert Dance Company perform Ian Spink's reinterpretation of Sir Frederick Ashton's 'A Tragedy of Fashion' during a full dress run at Sadler's Wells in London. Sir Frederick, Rambert's founding choreographer, choreographed this, his first ballet in 1926, encouraged by his teacher, Dame Marie Rambert. The piece has been reinterpreted to mark the anniversary of Sir Frederick's birth and opens this evening, and runs until Saturday.
RM2HHR4N4–Evening cloak 1885–89 Emile Pingat French Emile Pingat had a proclivity for designing carefully finished dresses and outerwear which made him one of the top three French fashion designers during the second half of the 19th century. Active between 1860 and 1896, Pingat was adroit at manipulating multiple textiles and trimmings into a cohesive and elevated garment. He was inspired by design elements of other cultures and often reinterpreted them into his own work, making them unique and intriguing. His elaborately decorated and impeccably tailored outwear was particularly sought after.The influe
RMG70J2K–Dancers from the Rambert Dance Company perform Ian Spink's reinterpretation of Sir Frederick Ashton's 'A Tragedy of Fashion' during a full dress run at Sadler's Wells in London. Sir Frederick, Rambert's founding choreographer, choreographed this, his first ballet, in 1926, encouraged by his teacher, Dame Marie Rambert. The piece, which has been reinterpreted to mark the anniversary of Sir Frederick's birth, opens Tuesday May 25, 2004, and runs until Saturday.
RM2A545N6–London, UK. 17th Oct 2019. Performance of “Cion - A Requiem to Ravel's Bolero” by Gregory Maqoma at Barbican Theatre, part of Dance Umbrella 2019. Joined by performers from Vuyani Dance Theatre, Maqoma embodies a professional mourner ‘Toloki’ - a character inspired by the protagonist of Zakes Mda’s novels Ways of Dying and Cion – which stands for hope against the darkness. The performance unfolds to Ravel’s Bolero, reinterpreted through percussion and voice by a South African Isicathamiya (a cappella) choir. Maqoma’s third Dance Umbrella appearance since 2015. Credit: Guy Corbishley
RM2H5JH59–The Courtauld Gallery in London reopens to the public on Friday 19 November following the most significant modernisation project in its history, providing a transformed home for the UK’s greatest collection of Impressionist art. The Courtauld’s much-loved collection, which belongs to the Samuel Courtauld Trust and ranges from the Middle Ages to the 20th Century, has been completely redisplayed and reinterpreted. Image: Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Spring, Chatou, Around 1873. The Courtauld Gallery, Somerset House, London, UK. 10 November 2021.
RMM1M0GN–Eboli, Italy. 31st Jan, 2018. He arrives at the PalaSele di Eboli 'MAX NEK RENGA, the tour'. Three big names of Italian and international music, Max Pezzali, Nek and Francesco Renga, protagonists in the sports halls of the main Italian cities, with their repertoire, soundtrack of entire generations, reinterpreted in unreleased versions with three voices, and more. (Italy, Eboli (SA), 31 January 2018) Credit: Independent Photo Agency/Alamy Live News