Villa Kamogawa
Villa Kamogawa, short for Goethe-Institut Villa Kamogawa (Japanese: ゲーテ・インスティトゥート・ヴィラ鴨川), is a German artist in residence institution in Kyoto, Japan. Established in 2011 with an opening ceremony conducted by Christian Wulff, President of Germany,[1][2][3] it is located on the banks of the Kamo River in close vicinity to Kyoto Imperial Palace. Villa Kamogawa is the site one of the three major German arts residency programs abroad, together with Rome's Villa Massimo and Villa Aurora in Los Angeles.[4][5] It hosts three groups of four artists a year. Former fellows include Doris Dörrie,[6][7] Jörg Koopmann[8] and Stefan Goldmann.[9]
References[edit]
- ↑ "Die mit dem Wulff tanzen – Nun hat auch Asien eine Künstlerresidenz" (in Deutsch).
- ↑ "Wullf eröffnet deutsche Künstlerresidenz in Japan" (in Deutsch).
- ↑ "Villa Kamogawa opening" (in Deutsch).
- ↑ ""Kyoto ist ja die Stadt der Kunst und der Bildung"" (in Deutsch).
- ↑ ""Deutsche Künstlerresidenzen im Ausland"" (in Deutsch).
- ↑ ""Deutsche Künstlerresidenzen im Ausland"" (in Deutsch).
- ↑ "Kunst@Kamogawa ~ヴィラ鴨川で、ドイツのアートに親しもう!~" (in 日本語).
- ↑ "ドイツアート Bar Creators@Kamogawa" (PDF) (in 日本語).
- ↑ "Alexander Krex: Das Berghain in Kyoto, Zeit Online" (in Deutsch).
External links[edit]
Coordinates: 35°1′22.2″N 135°46′20.9″E / 35.022833°N 135.772472°E
This article about a Japanese building– or structure–related topic is a stub. You can help EverybodyWiki by expanding it. |
This article "Villa Kamogawa" is from Wikipedia. The list of its authors can be seen in its historical and/or the page Edithistory:Villa Kamogawa. Articles copied from Draft Namespace on Wikipedia could be seen on the Draft Namespace of Wikipedia and not main one.