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  • NEWS - Wien: Klimt und Schiele Ausstellung in der Albertina
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    NEWS - Wien: Klimt und Schiele Ausstellung in der Albertina
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Stephen Chung/LNP/REX/Shutterstock (9954180b)
    A staff member views (L to R) "Redemption", 1913, "Self-portrait in Yellow Waistcoat", 1914, and "Self-portrait", 1914, all by Egon Schiele. Preview of "Klimt / Schiele: Drawings from the Albertina Museum,Vienna" exhibition at the Royal Academy. Over 100 works on paper are on display in an exhibition which marks the centenary of the deaths of the two most celebrated and pioneering figures of early twentieth-century art. The show runs 4 November to 3 February 2019.
    Klimt / Schiele: Drawings from the Albertina Museum, Vienna' exhibition, Royal Academy of Arts, London, UK - 31 Oct 2018

    (c) Dukas

     

  • Yoga transforms lives of Kenyans
    DUKAS_31293061_POL
    Yoga transforms lives of Kenyans
    March 28, 2013 - Nairobi, Kenya: Yoga is taught to special needs students at Dagoretti Children's Center. The Africa Yoga Project and volunteer teachers, led by Sharon Moon, a Jois fellow, teach yoga to handicapped, autistic and deaf children as part of the outreach program that seeks to provide free yoga classes across Nairobi to marginalized communities. Each week 70 yoga teachers find their way into prisons, special needs schools, social centers for the disabled and into the shanty towns to offer free yoga classes to Kenya's most marginalized populations. Most of the teachers began lives among the people they now serve. The teachers, most born into the grinding poverty of Nairobi's slums, have been trained and offered teaching jobs with Africa Yoga Project, a charity organization. Africa Yoga Project was founded by American Yoga teacher Paige Elenson after a Safari to Kenya with her parents. She befriended a group of acrobats and offered a few lessons in yoga. The acrobats invited her back for more. She came back to teach and stayed to found the organization.Africa Yoga project continues to train Kenyan and other African yoga teachers. This year they held the first ever international teacher training session where American and Canadian students studied side by side with Students from Congo, Rwanda, Tanzania, Ethiopia, Uganda and South Africa. Elenson predicts that in addition to changing lives a blossoming yoga culture will have an economic impact on East Africa in the years to come. That transformation is already apparent in the lives of the teachers, formerly unemployed youth, who now earn a living teaching yoga across the city. (Brendan Bannon / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    DUKAS/POLARIS

     

  • Yoga transforms lives of Kenyans
    DUKAS_31293057_POL
    Yoga transforms lives of Kenyans
    March 28, 2013 - Nairobi, Kenya: Stanley Wangewa leads a yoga class for special needs students. "They have taught me patience and compassion," Wangewa says, referring to his pupils. Yoga is taught to special needs students at Dagoretti Children's Center. The Africa Yoga Project and volunteer teachers led by Sharon Moon, a Jois fellow, teach yoga to handicapped, autistic and deaf children as part of the outreach program that seeks to provide free yoga classes across Nairobi to marginalized communities. Each week 70 yoga teachers find their way into prisons, special needs schools, social centers for the disabled and into the shanty towns to offer free yoga classes to Kenya's most marginalized populations. Most of the teachers began lives among the people they now serve. The teachers, most born into the grinding poverty of Nairobi's slums, have been trained and offered teaching jobs with Africa Yoga Project, a charity organization. Africa Yoga Project was founded by American Yoga teacher Paige Elenson after a Safari to Kenya with her parents. She befriended a group of acrobats and offered a few lessons in yoga. The acrobats invited her back for more. She came back to teach and stayed to found the organization.Africa Yoga project continues to train Kenyan and other African yoga teachers. This year they held the first ever international teacher training session where American and Canadian students studied side by side with Students from Congo, Rwanda, Tanzania, Ethiopia, Uganda and South Africa. Elenson predicts that in addition to changing lives a blossoming yoga culture will have an economic impact on East Africa in the years to come. That transformation is already apparent in the lives of the teachers, formerly unemployed youth, who now earn a living teaching yoga across the city. (Brendan Bannon / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    DUKAS/POLARIS

     

  • Yoga transforms lives of Kenyans
    DUKAS_31293043_POL
    Yoga transforms lives of Kenyans
    March 28, 2013 - Nairobi, Kenya: Yoga is taught to special needs students at Dagoretti Children's Center. The Africa Yoga Project and volunteer teachers, led by Sharon Moon, a Jois fellow, teach yoga to handicapped, autistic and deaf children as part of the outreach program that seeks to provide free yoga classes across Nairobi to marginalized communities. Each week 70 yoga teachers find their way into prisons, special needs schools, social centers for the disabled and into the shanty towns to offer free yoga classes to Kenya's most marginalized populations. Most of the teachers began lives among the people they now serve. The teachers, most born into the grinding poverty of Nairobi's slums, have been trained and offered teaching jobs with Africa Yoga Project, a charity organization. Africa Yoga Project was founded by American Yoga teacher Paige Elenson after a Safari to Kenya with her parents. She befriended a group of acrobats and offered a few lessons in yoga. The acrobats invited her back for more. She came back to teach and stayed to found the organization.Africa Yoga project continues to train Kenyan and other African yoga teachers. This year they held the first ever international teacher training session where American and Canadian students studied side by side with Students from Congo, Rwanda, Tanzania, Ethiopia, Uganda and South Africa. Elenson predicts that in addition to changing lives a blossoming yoga culture will have an economic impact on East Africa in the years to come. That transformation is already apparent in the lives of the teachers, formerly unemployed youth, who now earn a living teaching yoga across the city. (Brendan Bannon / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    DUKAS/POLARIS

     

  • Yoga transforms lives of Kenyans
    DUKAS_31293039_POL
    Yoga transforms lives of Kenyans
    March 28, 2013 - Nairobi, Kenya: Stanley Wangewa leads a yoga class for special needs students. "They have taught me patience and compassion," Wangewa says, referring to his pupils. Yoga is taught to special needs students at Dagoretti Children's Center. The Africa Yoga Project and volunteer teachers led by Sharon Moon, a Jois fellow, teach yoga to handicapped, autistic and deaf children as part of the outreach program that seeks to provide free yoga classes across Nairobi to marginalized communities. Each week 70 yoga teachers find their way into prisons, special needs schools, social centers for the disabled and into the shanty towns to offer free yoga classes to Kenya's most marginalized populations. Most of the teachers began lives among the people they now serve. The teachers, most born into the grinding poverty of Nairobi's slums, have been trained and offered teaching jobs with Africa Yoga Project, a charity organization. Africa Yoga Project was founded by American Yoga teacher Paige Elenson after a Safari to Kenya with her parents. She befriended a group of acrobats and offered a few lessons in yoga. The acrobats invited her back for more. She came back to teach and stayed to found the organization.Africa Yoga project continues to train Kenyan and other African yoga teachers. This year they held the first ever international teacher training session where American and Canadian students studied side by side with Students from Congo, Rwanda, Tanzania, Ethiopia, Uganda and South Africa. Elenson predicts that in addition to changing lives a blossoming yoga culture will have an economic impact on East Africa in the years to come. That transformation is already apparent in the lives of the teachers, formerly unemployed youth, who now earn a living teaching yoga across the city. (Brendan Bannon / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    DUKAS/POLARIS

     

  • Yoga transforms lives of Kenyans
    DUKAS_31293038_POL
    Yoga transforms lives of Kenyans
    March 28, 2013 - Nairobi, Kenya: Deaf students rest in Savasana or corpse pose after a yoga class led by deaf instructors from Africa Yoga Project.Yoga is taught to special needs students at Dagoretti Children's Center. Africa Yoga Project and volunteer teachers led by Sharon Moon a Jois fellow, teach yoga to handicapped, autistic and deaf children as part of the outreach program that seeks to provide free yoga classes across Nairobi to marginalized communities. Each week 70 yoga teachers find their way into prisons, special needs schools, social centers for the disabled and into the shanty towns to offer free yoga classes to Kenya's most marginalized populations. Most of the teachers began lives among the people they now serve. The teachers, most born into the grinding poverty of Nairobi's slums, have been trained and offered teaching jobs with Africa Yoga Project, a charity organization. Africa Yoga Project was founded by American Yoga teacher Paige Elenson after a Safari to Kenya with her parents. She befriended a group of acrobats and offered a few lessons in yoga. The acrobats invited her back for more. She came back to teach and stayed to found the organization.Africa Yoga project continues to train Kenyan and other African yoga teachers. This year they held the first ever international teacher training session where American and Canadian students studied side by side with Students from Congo, Rwanda, Tanzania, Ethiopia, Uganda and South Africa. Elenson predicts that in addition to changing lives a blossoming yoga culture will have an economic impact on East Africa in the years to come. That transformation is already apparent in the lives of the teachers, formerly unemployed youth, who now earn a living teaching yoga across the city. (Brendan Bannon / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    DUKAS/POLARIS

     

  • Yoga transforms lives of Kenyans
    DUKAS_31293031_POL
    Yoga transforms lives of Kenyans
    March 28, 2013 - Nairobi, Kenya: A young boy demonstrated his strength to the amusement of his peers. Yoga is taught to special needs students at Dagoretti Children's Center. Africa Yoga Project and volunteer teachers led by Sharon Moon a Jois fellow, teach yoga to handicapped, autistic and deaf children as part of the outreach program that seeks to provide free yoga classes across Nairobi to marginalized communities. Each week 70 yoga teachers find their way into prisons, special needs schools, social centers for the disabled and into the shanty towns to offer free yoga classes to Kenya's most marginalized populations. Most of the teachers began lives among the people they now serve. The teachers, most born into the grinding poverty of Nairobi's slums, have been trained and offered teaching jobs with Africa Yoga Project, a charity organization. Africa Yoga Project was founded by American Yoga teacher Paige Elenson after a Safari to Kenya with her parents. She befriended a group of acrobats and offered a few lessons in yoga. The acrobats invited her back for more. She came back to teach and stayed to found the organization.Africa Yoga project continues to train Kenyan and other African yoga teachers. This year they held the first ever international teacher training session where American and Canadian students studied side by side with Students from Congo, Rwanda, Tanzania, Ethiopia, Uganda and South Africa. Elenson predicts that in addition to changing lives a blossoming yoga culture will have an economic impact on East Africa in the years to come. That transformation is already apparent in the lives of the teachers, formerly unemployed youth, who now earn a living teaching yoga across the city. (Brendan Bannon / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    DUKAS/POLARIS

     

  • Yoga transforms lives of Kenyans
    DUKAS_31293030_POL
    Yoga transforms lives of Kenyans
    March 28, 2013 - Nairobi, Kenya: Sharon Moon, an Ashtanga Yoga teacher looked on through the window as Stanley Wangewa, black shirt, led a yoga class for special needs students. "they have taughht me patience and compassion," Wangewa said of his pupils. Yoga is taught to special needs students at Dagoretti Children's Center. Africa Yoga Project and volunteer teachers led by Sharon Moon a Jois fellow, teach yoga to handicapped, autistic and deaf children as part of the outreach program that seeks to provide free yoga classes across Nairobi to marginalized communities. Each week 70 yoga teachers find their way into prisons, special needs schools, social centers for the disabled and into the shanty towns to offer free yoga classes to Kenya's most marginalized populations. Most of the teachers began lives among the people they now serve. The teachers, most born into the grinding poverty of Nairobi's slums, have been trained and offered teaching jobs with Africa Yoga Project, a charity organization. Africa Yoga Project was founded by American Yoga teacher Paige Elenson after a Safari to Kenya with her parents. She befriended a group of acrobats and offered a few lessons in yoga. The acrobats invited her back for more. She came back to teach and stayed to found the organization.Africa Yoga project continues to train Kenyan and other African yoga teachers. This year they held the first ever international teacher training session where American and Canadian students studied side by side with Students from Congo, Rwanda, Tanzania, Ethiopia, Uganda and South Africa. Elenson predicts that in addition to changing lives a blossoming yoga culture will have an economic impact on East Africa in the years to come. That transformation is already apparent in the lives of the teachers, formerly unemployed youth, who now earn a living teaching yoga across the city. (Brendan Bannon / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    DUKAS/POLARIS

     

  • Yoga transforms lives of Kenyans
    DUKAS_31293028_POL
    Yoga transforms lives of Kenyans
    March 28, 2013 - Nairobi, Kenya: A student bangs on the corrugated plastic windows where others are practicing yoga. Yoga is taught to special needs students at Dagoretti Children's Center. Africa Yoga Project and volunteer teachers led by Sharon Moon a Jois fellow, teach yoga to handicapped, autistic and deaf children as part of the outreach program that seeks to provide free yoga classes across Nairobi to marginalized communities. Each week 70 yoga teachers find their way into prisons, special needs schools, social centers for the disabled and into the shanty towns to offer free yoga classes to Kenya's most marginalized populations. Most of the teachers began lives among the people they now serve. The teachers, most born into the grinding poverty of Nairobi's slums, have been trained and offered teaching jobs with Africa Yoga Project, a charity organization. Africa Yoga Project was founded by American Yoga teacher Paige Elenson after a Safari to Kenya with her parents. She befriended a group of acrobats and offered a few lessons in yoga. The acrobats invited her back for more. She came back to teach and stayed to found the organization.Africa Yoga project continues to train Kenyan and other African yoga teachers. This year they held the first ever international teacher training session where American and Canadian students studied side by side with Students from Congo, Rwanda, Tanzania, Ethiopia, Uganda and South Africa. Elenson predicts that in addition to changing lives a blossoming yoga culture will have an economic impact on East Africa in the years to come. That transformation is already apparent in the lives of the teachers, formerly unemployed youth, who now earn a living teaching yoga across the city. (Brendan Bannon / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    DUKAS/POLARIS

     

  • Yoga transforms lives of Kenyans
    DUKAS_31293026_POL
    Yoga transforms lives of Kenyans
    March 28, 2013 - Nairobi, Kenya: Yoga student, Jeff Mueni, is a 13 year old with cerebral palsy. Yoga is taught to special needs students at Dagoretti Children's Center. Africa Yoga Project and volunteer teachers led by Sharon Moon a Jois fellow, teach yoga to handicapped, autistic and deaf children as part of the outreach program that seeks to provide free yoga classes across Nairobi to marginalized communities. Each week 70 yoga teachers find their way into prisons, special needs schools, social centers for the disabled and into the shanty towns to offer free yoga classes to Kenya's most marginalized populations. Most of the teachers began lives among the people they now serve. The teachers, most born into the grinding poverty of Nairobi's slums, have been trained and offered teaching jobs with Africa Yoga Project, a charity organization. Africa Yoga Project was founded by American Yoga teacher Paige Elenson after a Safari to Kenya with her parents. She befriended a group of acrobats and offered a few lessons in yoga. The acrobats invited her back for more. She came back to teach and stayed to found the organization.Africa Yoga project continues to train Kenyan and other African yoga teachers. This year they held the first ever international teacher training session where American and Canadian students studied side by side with Students from Congo, Rwanda, Tanzania, Ethiopia, Uganda and South Africa. Elenson predicts that in addition to changing lives a blossoming yoga culture will have an economic impact on East Africa in the years to come. That transformation is already apparent in the lives of the teachers, formerly unemployed youth, who now earn a living teaching yoga across the city. (Brendan Bannon / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    DUKAS/POLARIS

     

  • Yoga transforms lives of Kenyans
    DUKAS_31293025_POL
    Yoga transforms lives of Kenyans
    March 28, 2013 - Nairobi, Kenya: Students play after a yoga class. Yoga is taught to special needs students at Dagoretti Children's Center. Africa Yoga Project and volunteer teachers led by Sharon Moon a Jois fellow, teach yoga to handicapped, autistic and deaf children as part of the outreach program that seeks to provide free yoga classes across Nairobi to marginalized communities. Each week 70 yoga teachers find their way into prisons, special needs schools, social centers for the disabled and into the shanty towns to offer free yoga classes to Kenya's most marginalized populations. Most of the teachers began lives among the people they now serve. The teachers, most born into the grinding poverty of Nairobi's slums, have been trained and offered teaching jobs with Africa Yoga Project, a charity organization. Africa Yoga Project was founded by American Yoga teacher Paige Elenson after a Safari to Kenya with her parents. She befriended a group of acrobats and offered a few lessons in yoga. The acrobats invited her back for more. She came back to teach and stayed to found the organization.Africa Yoga project continues to train Kenyan and other African yoga teachers. This year they held the first ever international teacher training session where American and Canadian students studied side by side with Students from Congo, Rwanda, Tanzania, Ethiopia, Uganda and South Africa. Elenson predicts that in addition to changing lives a blossoming yoga culture will have an economic impact on East Africa in the years to come. That transformation is already apparent in the lives of the teachers, formerly unemployed youth, who now earn a living teaching yoga across the city. (Brendan Bannon / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    DUKAS/POLARIS

     

  • Six-month-old baby poses with props to recreate classic movie scenes, Britain - Nov 2011
    DUKAS_21163708_REX
    Six-month-old baby poses with props to recreate classic movie scenes, Britain - Nov 2011
    Manadatory Credit: Photo by Tim Stewart News / Rex Features (1491376b)

    Six-Month-Old Arthur Is Real Child Star Thanks To Movie Spoofs
    A cute six-month-old baby who poses with props to recreate classic movie scenes has become an internet sensation.

    Adorable Arthur Hammond has evoked iconic scenes from hit films including 'Jaws', 'The Godfather,', 'Rambo: First Blood' and 'American Beauty'.

    The tot relies on a range of simple props such as stuffed animals, bath toys, food and his own crib - as well as a little help from imaginative mum Emily.

    The youngster's blog 'Arthur Recreates Scenes from Classic Movies' is attracting 50,000 hits a month.

    And fans from all over the world are sending Arthur requests to act out their favourite film moments.

    Arthur's 'acting' debut used a cuddly toy to recreate the scene in 1979 hit 'Alien' where an alien emerges from actor John Hurt's chest.

    Since then he has replayed Mena Suvari's famous rose petal scene from 1999 hit 'American Beauty' - lying on a bed in his nappy.

    His take-off of 1972 crime epic 'The Godfather' sees him lying in bed next to the severed head of a horse, which is actually an artfully arranged cuddly toy.

    For 1975 horror thriller 'Jaws', open-mouthed Arthur comes face to face with a colourful plastic shark in the bath.

    And his crib is made to look like a jail cell for 1994 drama 'The Shawshank Redemption' with Arthur sitting under a Raquel Welch poster.

    Film buff Emily Cleaver, 36, an author from Oxford, said: "Arthur enjoys all the attention when he is doing the scenes and likes it when I take his photo.

    "He is a very happy, smiley baby and he gets lots of messages, especially, from mums, saying he is cute.

    "It is very strange how so many people from the other side of the world are watching my baby online.

    "I think it helps that it is so visual. People know the films and can look at the pictures ...
    For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/VNBXBWKME

    DUKAS/REX