We know that Budapest is beautiful in all four seasons, but there is definitely something magical about winter. A beautiful city, when covered all in sparkling white, can look like a magical place. Check out these amazing photos of the Hungarian capital in all its winter glory.
Some might have been looking forward to this, some were probably praying it would never come, but one thing is for sure: if it is winter in Hungary, snow will sooner or later fall, and it will turn everything into sparkly white.
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Hungary had its first heavy snowfall last Saturday, on 15 December. It was a working Saturday, so many people got to see and experience the fall and all of its inevitable effects. Luckily, many eager photographers were there to capture Budapest while it was all covered in fresh sparkly wonder.
The first photos were created by popular Hungarian photographer Krisztián Bódis, who created Budapest Images, a Facebook page filled with his breathtaking pictures of the capital.
The second set of photos were taken by photographer Ilidkó Kardos. You can check out her amazing photos on her Facebook page; Kardos Ildikó Photography.
The next photos were taken by Tamás Rizsavi. He captures everyday objects such as trams or trains as these majestic machines rushing through the world.
Photos in the last gallery were taken by MTI photographers: Tamás Sóki, Szilárd Koszticsák, Péter Komka, and Balázs Mohai.
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The latest exhibition in the ‘BUD gallery’ series was opened at Ferenc Liszt International Airport, featuring pictures of the airport by Emese Mándi, a young Hungarian photographer. The 24 photos (arranged in pairs) – an artistic presentation of life at the airport – are on display on the arrival level at Budapest Airport.
The very best of no less than five years of airport photography can be viewed for three months in the BUD Gallery of Ferenc Liszt International Airport, where 24 photos by Mándi Emese are on display now.
Emese Mándi started to compile her set of airport art photos in 2013, for which technical support was provided by Budapest Airport. It is partly due to these pictures that the young photographer was admitted as a full member of the artistic photography section of the National Association of Hungarian Creative Artists. After getting two university degrees, Emese Mándi entered the world of photography initially as an event- and wedding photographer.
She won a prize with her pictures for the first time in 2008 at the photo competition of Panasonic Lumix (in the category of rendering people’s images), and in 2009 she won the first prize in the National Geographic competition in the category of “Travel and cultures”. Subsequently, she worked for the rock band Omega as a stage photographer, and she is the official photographer of the folk band Csík since 2013.
Her very first public exhibition has just been opened at Ferenc Liszt International Airport.
“Budapest Airport is happy and proud to offer publicity to talented young artists like Emese Mándi. After an initial interest, the smell of kerosene got to her too – she discovered the exciting, always changing world of aviation intuitively, and now presents her artistic impressions playfully, with humor,” said Mihály Hardy, communications director of Budapest Airport.
In the past years, Hungary has seen a growing interest in wedding tourism, which is very joyful, considering the traditional roots of the celebration. In addition, more and more people choose Budapest as the venue for magical proposals. This is the story behind a Russian man’s awesome sunrise engagement over the city 🙂
But he never dreamt of capturing this kind of beautiful moments.
“So Artem from Russia found me, and he had a special plan. He wanted to propose to his beloved above the city just when the sun got out from behind the horizon. Of course, I was helping him, because it seemed to be a nice idea, but I was a bit worried about the weather. Here in Budapest in December we have a lot of overcast days, and without the shining sun, the proposal would not be that nice.
On the day before, the weather forecast said 50% chance for rain, so we agreed that I would check the weather
cameras in the morning and decide if it was a go or a no go.
When I woke up at 5:30 on Sunday, the forecast and the cameras showed some chance for a nice sunrise, so
I decided to go. I went to pick them up at the hotel and we drove up to the edge of the forest. From there we had a 15-minute walk to the tower.
As we were walking I noticed that we had some nice reflections on the clouds, but I did not see much from the trees.
At the top, an awsome dawn was awaiting us, and just in a few minutes, the sun started to rise. This was the
time for me to go down and set my drone up. The wind was blowing hard and it was cold, but Artem kneeled down.
The timing was just perfect. Anna said yes.
They seemed very happy and for a couple of minutes, they were just hugging on the top of the tower. To make it
fancier, they had a glass of champagne and a piece of cheese in this lovely December sunrise.
Everyone has an aching desire for exploring the whole world, but many times, it is impossible to support our dreams with enough money and time. There are so many attractive destinations that we are unable to choose one. In many cases, instead of travelling, we like to observe beautiful holiday destinations through magnificent pictures. But where do we find these posts, pictures, and videos?
UtazóBázis collected 15+1 Hungarian Instagram profiles you need to follow if you are addicted to travelling. These profiles are mostly influencers’ or just people who consider travelling as a hobby, but some of them need to travel all the time because of their work.
Let us have a look at these Instagram profiles as maps: where do Hungarians like to travel?
Petersplanet.travel
Péter Szűcs is a Hungarian journalist and blogger. Among his beautiful pictures, we can find several recommendations and some guidance about destinations abroad.
Andi is not only a classic traveller but works on a cruise ship. She posts pictures from magical places and shares her experiences about working on a ship.
Tristana and Damian, a Hungarian-French couple. Besides beautiful pictures, they also share important information about how to start planning your journey.
This couple just got married in the upper countryside. They explore rare places and have a unique goal in life: travel with the lowest budget you can ever imagine, including places which are not considered to be cheap.
András Csapó mostly travels to South-East Asia. He also introduces those parts of this area which are not common tourist destinations. He also shares a lot of funny stories about his experiences.
Melinda Egyed is a hobby photographer whose passion is, of course, travelling. Her favourite destinations are shores and mountains. Her pictures are out of the ordinary because they always have something special which grabs our attention immediately.
She has travelled almost everywhere in the world and shares a lot of interesting facts about what it is like to travel around the world alone as a young woman.
Ivett Hegedűs’s aim is to travel to destinations she has not been to just yet. She also travels to destinations which are not popular among tourists, like Central Asia.
László Simon has been to 29 countries so far. His vlogs and Instagram profile are like an online travelling catalogue. It is definitely worth checking out.
This Hungarian site also has an Instagram profile where you can see amazing pictures. They also share other travellers’ pictures. If you would like to see a magnificent collection of different photographs, follow this profile.
We can try and look the other way, but winter has come. Many parts of the country experienced the first snow of the season on Monday, 19 November. It did not come as a surprise, weather forecasts have been anticipating it for quite some time.
As the temperature started to decrease 2 weeks ago, it became more and more inevitable that it will eventually reach 0 degrees Celsius. Due to the drop in temperature paired with some nimbuses in the sky, the white blessing started pouring down on us on Monday. It does not matter if you love or if you hate it, winter is here, and it is snowy.
As one might suspect, people living near the mountain ranges, especially in
the Western and Northern-Western parts of Hungary, can expect the highest amount of snow,
Helló Vidék reports. These places include for example; Alpokalja and the Kőszegi Mountains (5 cm).
According to the current weather forecasts, it is likely to continue snowing in the Western parts of the country. 10 cm of snow is expected in the Kőszeg Mountains within the next couple of days.
Winter has come a little bit closer to Budapest as well. The forest around Normafa is now dressed all in white too.
Unfortunately, the amount of snow that has fallen is not enough to enjoy any of our favourite winter sports like skiing, sleighing or snowball fighting, but it is pretty nice.
This is the ideal weather for covering ourselves with a warm blanket, holding a cup of hot cocoa in our hands, and getting ourselves excited about the new season and all the wonderful things it brings.
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Pest county is not the only one that looks beautiful in white. Look at these photos that were taken in Zala county:
Take a peek at Kékestető, it looks like a postcard:
Helló Vidék collected a bunch of beautiful photos from Instagram about the snow-covered-Hungary. Check out how our small but beloved country looks like in all of its winter glory.
In the 1930s and 1940s Weegee’s name was closely associated with New York and life in the city. In a society distressed by economic and mental depression, Weegee confronted his viewers with loneliness, poverty and crime. At the same time, he also showed moments of beauty and happiness, which were also parts of life in the Lower East Side, Harlem or Bowery. The subjects, however, were not solely responsible for his renown: the artistic force, dramatic effect, raw realism and sharp contrasts of his pictures made him a pioneer for generations of photographers to follow him.
This exhibition at Mai Manó House features 104 of Weegee’s best photos, which draw an intimate portray of New York.
“I had got the famous pictures of a violent era, the pictures that all the great papers with all their resources couldn’t get, and hat to buy from me. And in shooting these pictures, I also had photographed the soul of the city I knew and loved.”
In the 1930s and 1940s Weegee’s name was closely associated with New York and life in the city. As a press photographer, he was always after a real story, and was always out on the streets to catch the perfect moment. In a society distressed by economic and mental depression, Weegee confronted his viewers with loneliness, poverty and crime. At the same time, he also showed moments of beauty and happiness, which were also parts of life in the Lower East Side, Harlem or Bowery. WEEGEE THE FAMOUS, 1935–1960, the exhibition at Mai Manó House features 104 of Weegee’s best photos, which draw intimate portrays of New York City, beautiful “even in her most drunken and disorderly and pathetic moments.” (William McCleery)
Weegee’s photos were published in such periodicals as the PM Daily, The Herald Tribune, The Sun and the Daily Mirror.
In addition to documenting life in the modern city, the photos also reveal much of Weegee himself, whose character and life pervade every image.
Weegee was born as Arthur Fellig, into a family of Jews who lived near Lemberg (now Ukraine), and who emigrated to New York in 1910. He grew up in poverty, in the Lower East Side, an overcrowded neighbourhood in Manhattan. He soon dropped out of school to support his family with various odd jobs. He left his parents’ home at the age of 18, and slept at railway stations and homeless shelters, living on the meagre income he made during the day. One of these odd jobs introduced him to photography, when he worked as an assistant with a travelling photographer. In 1918 he took a job at a photographer’s studio, and then he set himself up as an itinerant lensman. “Armed” with a pony, he charmed and photographed children in the Lower East Side, and sold the photos he developed on location to their parents.
In 1924 he started to work at ACME Newspictures, a news agency, as an assistant lab technician, only to quit his job in 1935 to start a freelancing press photographer career.
To beat the competition and to make his profile distinctive, he specialized in night-time photography, recording human drama and sensational moments.
In 1938 he was the first press photographer who was permitted to monitor police radio traffic. He maintained a darkroom in the trunk of his car, so he could instantly develop his photos. No other photographer could beat him to the scene of some sensation or crime, and no one had been able to submit the photos to the newspapers the same night, so they could make it to the front page the next morning.
The subjects, however, were not solely responsible for Weegee’s renown: the artistic force, dramatic effect, raw realism and sharp contrasts of his pictures made him a pioneer for generations of photographers after him.
In 1943 and 1944 he was featured at exhibitions of New York’s Museum of Modern Art, and in 1945, at the height of his career, he released Naked City, a runaway success of a book.
As Weegee the Famous, Arthur Fellig earned an indelible place in the international history of photography.
After moving to Hollywood in 1947, he devoted most of his energy to making 16-millimeter films. From this period the film Weegee’s New York (1948) is presented as part of the exhibition, a loan from the International Center of Photography in New York. Weegee returned to New York in 1952 and lectured and wrote about photography until his death on December 26, 1968.
Weegee, The Famous, 1935 – 1960 is organised in the framework of the Hungarian Photomonth 2018. The exhibition has been realised in collaboration with the Institute for Cultural Exchange, Tübingen and the International Center for Photography, New York.
Open to the public: October 18, 2018 – January 20, 2019. Tuesday – Sunday 12:00 – 19:00. Closed on Mondays and public holidays. Curator: Péter Baki
Hungarian nature photographer Bence Máté’s photography won the category of birds at the ‘Nature Photographer of the Year’ competition. More than 10,000 photographs took part in the competition from 55 different countries.
According to sokszinuvidek.24.hu, the winners of the competition were announced on the 10th and 11th of November at the Nature Photographers’ Festival in the Netherlands. More than 10,000 pictures took part in the competition in nine different categories. This contest is held every year, and the aim of it is to celebrate the artistry of nature photography.
The winners can win several prizes including 3000 dollars and professional photo equipment.
By entering this competition, participants also help to emphasise the fact that protecting the environment and animals is a serious matter. The pictures will be used for different kind of campaigns and in education as well. The winners will also have a photo exhibition at the festival before it travels through the Benelux Union.
This year, the category of birds was won by Bence Máté, who is a professional Hungarian nature photographer. Besides ‘Nature Photographer of the Year’, he has several other international prizes. For instance, in 2017, he got an award from National Geographic for his work. Also in the same year, he won 3rd prize with his series in the ‘Nature’ category at the 2017 World Press Photo Contest.
One thing we adore about Budapest is how its atmosphere transforms as the seasons change. This autumn has been surprisingly mild, but it seems like the cold has finally arrived. We would like to commemorate the season with Tamás Rizsavi’s photos featuring the foggy side of Budapest 🙂
Tamás Rizsavi is one of the most popular Hungarian photographers, who has innovative ideas when it comes to unexpected angles and locations. He is actually a train driver, whose favourite topics include transport, urban life, landscapes and the secret world of the night.
He always aims to share precious moments from new aspects, perspectives thus highlighting the beauty of everyday life.
Everyone has a story about Budapest. It can be funny, shocking, sad or heart-warming. The ELTE BTK Department of Media and Communication Studies and Open Society Foundations are looking for all the hidden gems on a verbal and visual storytelling contest called Lost and Found in Budapest. The entry is open for young people from abroad between the ages of 18-35, studying or living in Budapest. The most exciting essays and photos are going to be exhibited in December.
Did you plan to stay for only a semester, but yellow trams stole your heart? Were you looking for new challenges, but public transportation is more adventurous than you thought? Were you born outside the boarders of Hungary, but you found your home among the centuries-old buildings of Budapest? Or do you know someone who feels this way?
We welcome every experience, memory and story that tells us something real and special about this dazzling city.
Lost and Found in Budapest is a verbal and visual storytelling contest for young people from abroad between the ages of 18-35, studying or living in Budapest. To participate you only have to fill out the application form and submit your essay or photo about this breath-taking and diverse capital by November 28th, 2018.
Budapest is one city with a thousand personalities and millions of tales, and in their unique way we love all of them.
The jury is composed of professionals, true admirers of Budapest, who know what happiness, beauty and life is: Éva Szombat photographer, Kata Oltai art historian and Péter Szűcs journalist, photographer.
The most fascinating works will be awarded a special Polaroid camera and products by the coolest Hungarian designers at the award ceremony, party and exhibition in December.
Deadline: November 28th, 2018
More details: https://www.lostandfoundinbudapest.com/
The official photographer of the French President posted a photo of the president’s office on Instagram, and Kálmán Makláry immediately noticed the Hungarian painting hanging above his desk, 444.hu reports. The painting titled Écriture rose was painted by Hungarian-born artist Simon Hantai.
Emmanuel Jean-Michel Frédéric Macron has been serving as President of France since 14 May 2017. He was previously Minister of the Economy, Industry and Digital Affairs from 2014 to 2016. The president’s photographer posted a photo of the president’s office on Instagram, and there it was, hanging above his desk, a beautiful painting. That painting, Écriture rose, is the work of Hungarian-born painter Simon Hantai.
Simon Hantai was a French-Hungarian conceptual artist and painter, and he is one of the most well-known Hungarian artists abroad.
Hantai was born in Bia, Hungary, in 1922. He attended the Budapest School of Fine arts. Later, he moved to France, then became a French citizen in 1966. He lived and worked in France until his death in 2008.
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“During the 1960s, he developed a signature method of folding canvas and covering it in paint, which when opened revealed a distinctive pattern of color and negative space: a technique he called “pliage,” or folding.”
The painting belongs to the Simon Hantai Exhibition of the Pompidou Center, which houses the largest museum for modern art in Europe. The Élysée Palace (the official residence of the President of France) most likely borrowed the painting from the Pompidou Center, and that is how it ended up decorating the president’s office.
444.hu writes that one of Hantai’s paintings was sold for over 4 million Euros two years ago, which is the highest amount of money ever paid for a Hungarian or Hungarian-born artist’s piece of work.
Today, Hantai’s works can be found in the collections of The Museum of Modern Art in New York, the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., and the Ludwig Museum of Contemporary Art in Budapest.
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The World Press Photo exhibition opens today in the Hungarian National Museum in Budapest.
View the entire collection of winning images from the 61st World Press Photo Contest. The winners were selected from 73,044 images taken by 4,548 photographers from 125 different countries.
Venue:
Hungarian National Museum/Magyar Nemzeti Múzeum 1088 Budapest, Múzeum krt. 14-16.
Visiting hours
Monday: Closed
Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Sunday: 10.00 – 18.00
Friday and Saturday: 10.00 – 20.00
Tuesday 23 October (last day of exhibition): 10.00 – 20.00
Tickets
Reduced ticket: 1 000 HUF
Full Price ticket: 2 100 HUF
Family ticket: 4 400 HUF
The World Press Photo Exhibition
In 1955 a group of Dutch photographers organized an international contest (“World Press Photo”) to expose their work to a global audience. Since then the contest has grown into the world’s most prestigious photography competition, and through our successful worldwide exhibition program, presents the winning stories to millions of people.
For six decades, the World Press Photo Foundation has been working from its home in Amsterdam as a creative, independent, nonprofit organization. In that time, the world has changed continuously, and new developments in the media and technology have transformed journalism and storytelling. Their mission has expanded, and they draw on our experience to guide visual journalists, storytellers, and audiences around the world through this challenging and exciting landscape.
Into the future
The 21st century has seen further restructuring of the World Press Photo Foundation as it adapts to a changing world. The foundation now finds itself in the position where it not only runs the world’s most prestigious international contest for photojournalism and digital storytelling productions, and administers the world’s largest annual photo exhibition, it also offers a wide-ranging portfolio of educational, research, and communications activities designed to develop and support visual journalism and storytelling.
Between 1969 and 1972, KONDOR László (Hungarian born American) served in the US Army as a combat photographer in Vietnam. The exhibition includes work throughout the country assigned to Army Divisions and DASPO, the Department of Army Special Photographic Office.
Kondor wore a uniform and carried a gun as he travelled through this unfamiliar landscape taking his camera into the life of the American soldier and the consequences of the war. This embedded access was integral to the photographer’s viewpoint. Kondor’s photographs offer us a look at the impact of the war on the young soldiers and rarely seen photographs of the Vietnamese people caught up in the conflict. They are compassionate and piercing. The images reflect the time – or the lack of it – in the field. Kondor focused on essential moments though he might have been in the field for months. He did not work under the daily pressure for breaking news, such as Associated Press, and Reuter’s in and out photographers. These are stories that unfold slowly, painfully or humorously, including his most celebrated photograph, taken in 1970 called “Old Man in Quang Ngai Market, 1969,” a quintessential portrait of the era.
This exhibition was created in 1995, twenty years after the fall of Saigon; Kondor selected and printed three master-sets of black and white silver-gelatin photographs of the Vietnam War for exhibition in Chicago.
László explains,
“It was an act of healing – watching the full-frame prints emerge in my darkroom, I experienced a wave of visual and emotional excitement, which from the safe perspective of time was slowly becoming understandable.”
The American public reaction was overwhelming positive and in 1996, a master-set was acquired for the National Veterans Art Museum, NVAM, in Chicago. The work is finding its place in the history of Photography.
The work of this photographer of the 20th century is a document to the events that have shaken a super power and continue to resonate in America and Vietnam today. 2017, March 29th of each year was designated as National Vietnam War Veterans Day and 2018 is the 50th Year Commemoration of the Vietnam War. The American President has officially declared, “We honour the Vietnam veterans who fought against the spread of communism and vow that personal disapproval of the war is never again to be reflected against those that honourably wore a uniform.”
TÓTH Balázs Zoltán, Curator Hungarian Museum of Photography, said:
„Kondor László’s self-developed fine art prints are very important to the Hungarian Museum of Photography. A rare opportunity for our visitors. These photographs within an artistic space can easily be connected to the worldwide known legacy of Hungarian photographers. Photographers who were in the field and made visible the suffering and the everyday life of the citizens and soldiers in combat zones.
Kondor’s works, especially the ones which were made as a trained infantry-combat photographer in Vietnam, are the true realization of the famous quote of Robert Capa.
„If your pictures aren’t good enough, you aren’t close enough.” Kondor’s images could not be better, because he was close – as one of the soldiers who fought in this war, a conflict which changed the world.”
A refugee from the 1956 Hungarian revolution, Kondor ultimately made his way to Chicago in 1961.
Educated as a political scientist at the University of Chicago, Kondor turned to photojournalism in the mid 1960’s. He was a witness to a time of great civil unrest in America and the biggest photographic opportunity of the decade … the Vietnam War. Returning after the war in 1972, Kondor became the official photographer to the iconic Chicago Mayor, Richard J. Daley and opened his own fine art studio in 1978.
He returned in 1996 to Hungary and currently lives in Kapolcs Village in Western Hungary with his American wife.
Exhibition Venue: Hungarian Museum of Photography /Magyar Fotográfiai Múzeum, Kecskemét, Hungary
24.hu reported on the talented photographer, Dóra Gráf, who chose to introduce the small details of Hungarian everyday life through her works. Sometimes a fence made out of skis, a bucket turned into a holy-water basin, or a supermarket still life tells more about our country than any data or number.
Dóra Gráf got bitten by the travel bug and has visited more than a hundred towns and villages in the countryside over the course of the last few years. Luckily for us, the young artist documented her experience.
Looking for a new place
She did not start with the intention of an art project, Dóra was actually looking for a liveable new home, after she had realised that the noisy and hectic capital is not the right place for her.
“I did not understand how I had I ever been able to live in Budapest, but I thought I would find a better place somewhere in Hungary”
Dóra explained. So she started wandering around in the country and was soon impressed by the variety of small towns. It made her wonder:
what is this whole thing then, what we call Hungary?
As she was visiting place after place, Dóra found the elements that defined the identity of a place and started taking pictures. These images made up the material of her exhibition Mindenhol jó, de. (“It’s good everywhere, but…” The title plays on the Hungarian proverb: Mindenhol jó, de legjobb otthon, meaning it is good everywhere, but it is best at home, similar to Home, sweet home.)
Hungarian reality
The Hungarian reality is not always the most flattering, but it is part of our country and identity. Dóra’s photos are not really eventful; they rather capture the little details we would skip over otherwise. But it is exactly in these small details where we can find our essence. Such us these isler cakes shaped like Hungary or the most successful bucket which got promoted to the holy-water basin, and so on… Check out the gallery for more pictures!
A bit of creativity everywhere
Dóra said that she is impressed by people’s creativity, how “they always try to shape their surroundings according to their own taste, aiming at beauty”. She also made a point of visiting every place by bus or train. For one thing, she likes to use the public transport, and on the other hand, she felt it is a part of getting to know a place.
Her photos usually capture the ritual yet everyday settings of our lives.
Because these small elements tell so much more about a place than the famous sights, Dóra created alternative postcards from her photos – like the ones you can see in our featured image.
So far her exhibition was visible at the Ördögkatlan festival but she wishes to present it at Budapest as well. The idea of a moving-exhibition also occurred to her, which she would organise at train stations.
And to describe what these pictures are really about, let us quote from the introduction of the exhibition:
“When I meet you, people, I like to start with the “Where are you from?” question. My reaction to the answer is usually “I would like to see that” to which people regularly say something along the lines of “Why would you go there? There is nothing there”. With this exhibition, I am trying to go into the details of that nothing.”
Featured image: Alternative postcards by Dóra Gráf
Peter Kallo (@kallopeter) által megosztott bejegyzés,
People all over the Chain Bridge
Following the hardly responsible example of the Hollywood star many people tried to climb the Chain Bridge in the last couple of days until the authorities got fed up with the trend, as none of them had any permission to do so.
But there is a man, who not only climbed much higher and executed more dangerous movements, but also did it way before Will Smith set foot on Hungarian ground.
He is the truly mysterious Umbrella Man (Esernyős Ember), who has showed up on the top of Budapest buildings or the Budapest Eye at Deak Square. During the FINA championship he also jumped from the trampoline on Batthyány Square. Contrary to the latest self-designated acrobats, he does have permission to climb these famous sights.
The Umbrella Man
Péter Kálló, photographer, explained that they have a longer art project, the Balance project. “Nobody really knows, who he really is, but he certainly climbs the buildings of Budapest”.
Kálló’s first photo series about the Umbrella Man won him first prize at the Hungarian Press Photo Award in 2016, in the Art category. Together they also gained international fame when the popular Bored Panda page shared the pictures. And due to a collaboration with the Hungarian band, Brains, Umbrella Man now has his own music video as well.
On the latest pictures you can see him balancing on top of the dome of Budavár Palace and performing striking acrobatic stunts, for example the so-called flag move, which poses a difficulty even on the ground.
Let us hope that neither Will Smith nor anyone else tries to copy these moves. And as far as the Umbrella Man is concerned, well, nobody knows where he shows up next, so keep your eyes open and you might just spot him live in the heights.
Szeretlek Magyarország shared the astonishing works of Hungarian photographers who took pictures of the Namibian sky. The light of the stars and the Milky Way is so strong there that you do not even need a flashlight to navigate the desert. The team of astrophotographers had to transport very delicate equipment and travel several hundred kilometres in the savannah nights, but one look at their work will convince you that it was every bit worth it.
The expedition organised by the MAFE (Hungarian Astrophotographer Association) was two weeks long, during which time they wandered the Namibian savannah to take wonderful shots of the endless sky.
The six members of the team travelled 12 thousand kilometres for the breath-taking photos,
in Namibia, the paradise of astrophotography.
One member of the expedition was Rafael Schmall, founder of the MAFE, who also works at the Star Park of Zselice, near Kaposvár. He specialised in Astro-landscapes that show both the sky and the land. One of his images from Namibia was selected to be the astrophoto of the month by National Geographic. It was not the first time that they selected one of his works.
A different sky
Namibia attracts those infatuated with astrophotography for two reasons. The first would be its location: as it is in the Southern hemisphere, you can observe an almost completely different sky.
Even the familiar constellations appear differently. For example, the Plough (or the Big Dipper) is barely above the horizon. The Milky Way, on the other hand, is much further up, above the observer’s head. From Namibia, you can see the Magellanic Clouds and smaller galaxies orbiting around the Milky Way.
The most convincing argument, however, is the exceptionally clean sky.
Namibia is about nine times larger than Hungary, but its population is only two million people. Therefore vast lands are basically uninhabited, and the light of the settlements cannot outshine the sky. The 1800 metres elevation above sea level and the low humidity also contribute to Namibia’s appeal.
The light of the Milky Way and the stars is so strong that they can cast a shade, and you can orientate without flashlights.
“From a photographer’s view if the quality of the Namibian sky is 100% then what we can experience in a larger Hungarian city is 10-20%, and maybe 50-60% in smaller villages” explained Rafael Schmall.
Did you get in the mood to stargaze?
The Star Park of Zselice is outstanding both in Hungary and on a world scale for the observation or photography of the night sky. Due to its low light pollution, the fainter stars are also visible, and in ideal conditions when there are no clouds or moonshine, even the smaller details of the Milky Way are perceivable.
Chile is the longest country on Earth with its 4,300-kilometer-long coastline. It has the Atacama Desert in the north, and Tierra del Fuego in the south. We are landing in the middle of the country, in Santiago de Chile, and start our journey to the southernmost point of the continent from here, on land.
The northern and central parts of Chile used to be a part of the Inca Empire, and Magellan was the first European to set foot on the land that is now Chile, in 1520. The Europeans arrived between 1536–41, and were especially drawn to the central valley, where they established the capital in 1541.
The city still resembles a Mediterranean European city: its most atmospheric place is the market hall, where we are welcomed by authentic Latin musicians, seafood specialties, and a great atmosphere.
People are playing chess in the square next to the market, the nightlife is buzzing, and its modern pedestrian streets offer everything that you would find in Europe. Santiago is an ideal starting point for heading west to the Mediterranean Valparaíso, or Viña del Mar, known for its wines, or north to the Atacama Desert, or even south to Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego, via the Chiloé Islands. And with a 5-hour flight, we can even reach the most distant and mystical island in the world, the Easter Island, which is famous for its huge stone statues, and belongs to Chile.
Then, we travel to Puerto Montt by plane, the curiosity of which is that the Pan-American Highway – crossing the entire American continent – ends here, and from here on we can only travel on minor roads, asphalt roads or in bumpy stream beds. While the Chiloé Island is a World Heritage Site: the wooden churches that the Jesuits started to build here are particularly interesting and valuable. Over a hundred one had been built by the end of the 19th century, and they are unique because only wood was used for their construction (especially cypress), and even the nails were made from wood.
We continue our journey on the board of an enormous tanker ship, among the fjords of the Andes, and volcanos of over 5000 meters and the endless Pacific Ocean come into sight. In the middle of the night, we moor in a small town called Puerto Aysén, and by travelling all day on the next day, we reach Lake Argentino to take a trip among its fascinating karst formations by motorboat.
From here, the wooden town of El Chaltén, where the world-famous steep rocks of Fitz Roy await us, is really just a stone’s throw away.
Monte Fitz Roy – meaning “smoking mountain” owing to the clouds surrounding it – is the rock climbers’ paradise: sometimes you have to wait for weeks for the weather to clear up, and to be able to climb its highly difficult walls all the way up to the peak at 3375 meters. The French alpinists – Lionel Terray and Guido Magnone – were the first to succeed it, in 1952. At that night, while we were marvelling at the peaks of Fitz Roy, and having dinner in a small local restaurant, a short, petite little Slovenian girl stumbled through the door, exhausted to the bone. Then her companions jumped up from their seats, lifted her up, and started throwing her in the air. She managed to climb up to the peak, as well.
On the next day, we continue our journey to El Calafate, Argentina, to admire a natural World Heritage Site – the Perito Moreno Glacier which considered to be the most beautiful one in the world.
El Calafate even has its own airport. Years ago, when we last visited, there was nothing here; but today, we are welcomed by numerous hotels, a town center with full infrastructure, cafes, and excellent restaurants.
The Moreno Glacier is 5-kilometer wide and 60-meter tall, and is one of the 48 glaciers found in the Los Glaciares National Park.
This ice field is, by the way, the third largest reserve of fresh water in the world. The Perito Moreno is famous because it keeps advancing and rupturing continuously, which means that large sheets of ice keep breaking off and collapsing into the water with a loud rumbling noise. If you feel like it, you can take a trip in small boats among these huge sheets of ice – the white ice glistens in all shades of blue, meanwhile its activity is continuous beside us as well.
From the glaciers we continue towards south, and get back to Chile, to reach another natural wonder: the Horns, that is, the Torres del Paine National Park. It is comprised of turquoise mountain lakes, high mountains, and glaciers, while its towers truly look like enormous horns. It has an incredibly rich wildlife – its native animals range from vicuñas and flamingos to pumas –, so it is a true wildlife paradise.
The national park was elected as the Eighth Wonder of the World in 2013.
Puerto Natales and Punta Arenas are parts of Tierra del Fuego, which is an archipelago that comprises the southernmost region of South America. And it is separated from the South American mainland by the Strait of Magellan. It received its name, meaning “Land of Fire,” because the native Indians used to make bonfires all across the area. They used to wear large snowshoes, hence the naming of Patagonia, which means „big footed.” Ushuaia – the southernmost city in the world – can be found here, although on the Argentinian side.
Even though it is located at the end of the world, it is an incredibly vibrant and youthful city, full of amazing live music bars and clubs. Many Argentinian young people move here from Buenos Aires. There is an emblematic sign in its harbor: Fin del Mundo meaning “the end of the world.” Giant tanker ships leave from here to the Antarctic, as well as tourist ships, which also start from here to the continent of ice. Sailing the Beagle Channel, we see seals and penguins, and in the evening, we chill out in the southernmost Hard Rock Cafe in the world.
On the next day we get on an airplane: via Buenos Aires, we return to Madrid, and with a change there – after the three-week-trip at the “end of the world” with full of incredible sights – we arrive back in Budapest.
It is a unique trip for those who love nature, who would like to get as far from big cities as possible, who like walking a lot and enjoy natural living spaces, who like to see unique animals in their habitats, who enjoy having drinks in small bars and talking to the locals while Manu Chao’s Clandestino plays in the background, who like cold but sunny places, and who really want to go to the end of the world to experience how good it feels to come back home.
Besides being the lover of world-famous Mexican painter Frida Kahlo, Miklós Muray was a Hungarian-born American photographer and Olympic sabre fencer. He was also considered to be the master of the three-colour carbro process.
Történelmi Őrültek posted an interesting post about Miklós Muray on their Facebook page. He certainly lived a fascinating life.
Miklós Muray [born Miklós Mandl] was born in Szeged, Hungary in 1892.
Photo: Commons.wikimedia.org By Carl Van Vechten
He attended a graphic arts school in Budapest, where he studied lithography, photoengraving, and photography. He also studies in Munich, then he took a three-year course in colour photoengraving in Berlin, where he learned to make colour filters. At the end of his course, he went to work for the publishing company Ullstein.
In 1913, with 25$ in his pocket, he travelled to the United States. He was 21 years old when he arrived on Ellis Island.
Even though he knew very little English, he got a job as a colour printer at a print shop in Brooklyn. He spent his evening learning English.
Art career
By 1920, Muray opened a portrait studio at his 2-room-apartment in Greenwich Village, while still working at his union job as an engraver. He worked in one room and lived in the other. In 1921, he received a commission from Harper’s Bazaar to do a portrait of Broadway actress Florence Reed. These photos and his unique style made him famous quite quickly.
Soon after, he was having photographs published each month in Harper’s Bazaar, but his photos also appeared in Vogue, Ladies’ Home Journal, and The New York Times.
He took photos of almost all of the biggest celebrities of New York City at that time. He also did fashion and advertising work.
His affair with Frida Kahlo
He met Mexican painter Miguel Covarrubias in 1923. He visited Covarrubias in Mexico in 1931, and this is when he met famous painter Frida Kahlo.
Miklós Muray and Frida Kahlo had an affair that lasted for almost 10 years. During this period, Muray divorced twice, and Frida Kahlo divorced then remarried Diego Rivera. Their affair ended in 1941. Muray wanted to ask Frida to marry her, but she only looked at him as a lover, so Muray took his leave for good. They remained friends until Frida’s death in 1954.
His best-known and most beloved portrait was of Frida Kahlo in 1938. Muray and Kahlo were at the height of a ten-year love affair in 1939 when the portrait was made.
[button link=”https://dailynewshungary.com/mexican-artist-frida-kahlo-exhibition-opens-in-budapest/” type=”big” newwindow=”yes”] Mexican artist Frida Kahlo exhibition opens in Budapest[/button]
Muray turned away from celebrity and theatrical portraiture, and become a pioneering commercial photographer, working for the biggest companies such as Lucky Strike or Coca-Cola. He became famous for his creation of many of the conventions of colour advertising.
Girl in Red, 1936 advertising photo for Lucky Strike cigarettes
Photo: Commons.wikimedia.org
His last important public portraits were of Dwight David Eisenhower in the 1950s. During World War II, he taught photography at New York University.
Fencing career
Muray was not only a brilliant artist, but he was quite the sportsman too. He competed for the United States at the 1928 and 1932 Summer Olympics in the sabre fencing events. Besides competing in the Olympics, he won several U.S. fencing championships and competitions. He won more than 60 medals in his lifetime. Muray represented the New York Athletic Club and was a lifelong fencer for the club.
Hungary has contributed to the global art scene on many occasions. Aside from a couple of dozens of film directors and actors from Hungary who have made a lasting impression on the world, visual artists must be highlighted too.
Margit Anna (born 1913) is easily one of the most important women figures in the Hungarian visual art scene, who was faced with severe difficulties during her career not only because of being a woman but also because of her Jewish origins. Anna was married to a fellow artist, Imre Ámos, who sadly died in a Nazi concentration camp in 1944. Her work was melancholic already before this, but her husband’s death further enhanced life’s dark side in the characteristics of her work. The Culture Trip argues that Chagall, whom she even met influenced her work most.
Brassaï
Gyula Halász was born at the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries in Hungary, but he rose to success in Paris. His initial interest was in painting in sculpture while studying at the most prestigious fine arts academies in Hungary and Berlin. Eventually, he became Brassaï, when he took a liking to photography in Paris.
He is mostly known for his peculiar and refined street photography, emphasising the beauties of the slightly shady night-time Paris.
Tivadar Csontváry Kosztka
The Culture Trip writes that Csontváry was disappointingly underappreciated while he was still alive and active. He is one of the most important figures of the Hungarian 20th-century avant-garde movement, experimenting both with post-impressionism and expressionism. Sadly, he was not appreciated, understood and welcomed in Hungary because of his eccentric views, but Western Europe liked him all the more. Today, however, he is viewed as a pioneer and daredevil of Hungarian art, and the Csontváry Museum in Pécs is a fine example of appreciation.
Ervin Marton
Marton was initially known for his work in the fields of portrait- and street photography but established himself as a visual artist with a unique perception during the Second World War. He also moved to Paris from Budapest, Hungary, and played a significant part in the French Resistance against the Nazi occupation. Being of Jewish origins himself, he aided their escape, on top of boosting morale with his creative and touching flyers. Marton was appreciated among the Parisian artists already in his time and still is up to this day.
Pablo Picasso photographed by Ervin Marton source: http://www.stephencohengallery.com
Mihály Munkácsy
Munkácsy is easily the most important painter in Hungarian artistic history. His focus was on everyday life and Hungarian peasantry, and even though he is today best known for his famous trilogy, he skyrocketed into fame with a painting featuring a young man waiting for execution (The Last Day of a Condemned Man, 1869).
There were year-long trials around the ownership of the Christ trilogy (Christ in front of Pilate, Golgotha, Ecce Homo),
which are currently on display at the Déry Museum in Debrecen. Munkácsy trained in Vienna, in Germany and also in Paris, which shaped his painting style, and thanks to which he is now associated with one of the recognized German painting associations, the Düsseldorf school of painting.
Victor Vasarely
It seems that moving to Paris from Hungary was a custom for Hungarian visual artists, as Victor Vasarely did too in 1930. The Hungarian genius of the optical art movement of the 50s and 60s was already working hard during the early Paris years, as his most famous piece, Zebra, was finished in 1937. He was respected and recognised all over France and was even awarded the Guggenheim Prize in 1964.
Outdoors sculpture by Vasarely at Pécs source: WikiCommons – Váradi Zsolt
featured image: Golgotha by Mihály Munkácsy, source: vitezirend.com