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EMILIO GRECO - Sarajevo 1984 - PLAKAT


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OVO JE ORIGINALNI PLAKAT ZIMSKE OLIMPIJADE u SARAJEVU 1984
62 x 85 cm
urolan
samo srbija
ovaj plakat ne saljem u inostranstvo

XIV Zimske olimpijske igre su održane 1984. godine u Sarajevu, tadašnjoj Socijalističkoj Federativnoj Republici Jugoslaviji. Ostali gradovi kandidati za Olimpijske igre su bili Saporo, Japan i Falun/Geteborg, Švedska.

Ovo su bile prve zimske i druge zaredom igre generalno održane u Istočnoj Evropi, na govornom području slovenskih jezika i u socijalističkoj zemlji, kao i prve i za sada jedine Olimpijske igre održane u državi iz Pokreta nesvrstanih i u većinski muslimanskom gradu. Takođe, ovo je bilo prvi put da se Olimpijske igre organizuju na Balkanskom poluostrvu nakon prvih u modernom dobu u Atini.

Sarajevo je organizaciju zimskih olimpijskih medalja dobilo u konkurenciji s japanskim Saporom i zajedničkom kandidaturom švedskih gradova Falun i Geteborg. MOK se pri tome delimično vodio političkim razlozima - kao nesvrstana zemlja, tadašnja Jugoslavija je davala manje prilike za hladnoratovske bojkote - ali glavni je motiv ipak bila želja da se Igre, kao simbol svjetskog mira i bratstva među ljudima - održe u gradu koji je dotada obično bio vezivan za izbijanje Prvog svjetskog rata.

Za vlasti Jugoslavije sarajevske Olimpijske igre su bile sjajna prilika da državu svetu predstave u najboljem mogućem svetlu, i u tom nastojanju ih nije omela ni velika ekonomska kriza koja je SFRJ bila pogodila početkom 1980-ih. U Igre su utrošena velika sredstva, te sagrađen veliki broj impozantnih građevina i ostale infrastrukture. U tome su vlasti imale podršku Sarajlija, a već pre samog održavanja su Igre dovele do povećanja interesa za zimske sportove, dotada gotovo nepoznate u tom delu Jugoslavije.

------------------------------------------------

this is an original poster by EMILIO GRECO
print - offset lithography
62 x 85 cm, 24,4 x 33,5 in
serbia only
I do not send this poster abroad

The poster has the official Yugoslavian Olympic logo in the lower left corner along with the 1984 official logo and is an official Olympics poster.

The 1984 Winter Olympics, officially known as the XIV Olympic Winter Games (French: XIVes Jeux olympiques d`hiver; Serbo-Croatian: XIV. zimske olimpijske igre / XIV Зимске олимпијске игре; Macedonian: XIV Зимски олимписки игри; Slovene: XIV olimpijske zimske igre), was a winter multi-sport event which took place from 8–19 February 1984 in Sarajevo, Yugoslavia, in what is now Bosnia and Herzegovina. Other candidate cities were Sapporo, Japan; and Gothenburg, Sweden.

It was the first Winter Olympic Games held in a socialist state and in a Slavic language-speaking country. It was also the second Olympics overall, as well as the second consecutive Olympics, to be held in a socialist and in a Slavic language-speaking country after the 1980 Summer Olympics were held in Moscow, Soviet Union. Furthermore, it was the first Olympics held in the Balkans after the first modern Games in Athens. The Sarajevo games have also been the only Olympics so far to be hosted by a Non-Aligned Movement member.

The host city for the XIV Winter Olympics was announced on 18 May 1978 during an 80th session of the International Olympic Committee in Athens, Greece. Sarajevo was selected over Sapporo, Japan (which hosted the games 12 years earlier) by a margin of three votes. Gothenburg was the first city in Sweden to lose a Winter Olympics bid, as other Swedish cities such as Falun and Östersund would later lose their consecutive bids to Calgary, Albertville, Lillehammer, Nagano, and Salt Lake City respectively. Sarajevo, capital of present-day Bosnia and Herzegovina, was part of the united Yugoslavia at the time.

The torch relay for the 1984 Winter Olympics started in Olympia and then proceeded by airplane to Dubrovnik. The total distance of the torch relay through Yugoslavia was 5,289 kilometres (3,286 mi) (plus 2,879 kilometres (1,789 mi) of local routes). There were two main routes – one in the west (Split – Ljubljana – Zagreb – Sarajevo with 2,602 kilometres (1,617 mi) of length) and the other in the east (Skopje – Novi Sad – Belgrade – Sarajevo with 2,687 kilometres (1,670 mi) of length). The final torchbearer, from a total of 1600, was figure skater Sanda Dubravčić, who received the torch from skier runner Ivo Čarman. Today one of the two original torches is in Slovenia in a private collection in Žalec, Slovenia. Also 20 more torches are in Greece owned by individual athletes, who were the torchbearers from Ancient Olympia to the nearby military airport and from Athens Domestic Airport to the Panathinaikon Stadium where the Ceremony of handing over the Olympic Flame to the Sarajevo Olympic Games Committee occurred.

----------------------------------------

Emilio Greco (11 October 1913 in Catania, Sicily – 5 April 1995) was an Italian sculptor, engraver and medallist.[1] He is best known for his monumental bronze sculptures which are located around the world in Museums - Tate Modern (London), Hermitage (Saint Petersburg), Puskin Museum (Moscow), GNAM (Rome), Hirshhorn Museum (Washington D.C.), Hakone Open-Air Museum (Japan), Museu Coleção Berardo (Lisbon), Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium (Bruxelles), Kröller-Müller-Museum (Otterlo), Storm King Art Center (New Windsor, NY), Hawke`s Bay Museum (New Zealand), Museo Novecento (Florence) - and public works of art in London, Rome, Tokyo, Osaka, Orvieto, Sendai, Tarquinia, Vatican, Antwerp and Marl/Germany.

He moved to Rome. He was drafted and served in Albania. Beginning in 1947, he had a studio in Villa Massimo. In 1958, he had a solo show at the Palazzo Barberini, and in 1959 a solo show at the Stadtische Galerie, Munich.[2] His most important exhibitions: in 1961 the Musée Rodin in Paris, and a one-man show at the Shirokjia Foundation in Tokyo; 1962 Musée d`Art Moderne, Paris; 1963 Fondaçao Calouste Goubelkian, Lisbon, and Palazzo delle Esposizioni, Rome; 1965 `XXIV Biennale Nazionale d`Arte` Milan; 1966 National Gallery of Victoria Melbourne and National Gallery of South Australia; 1970 Palazzo dei Diamanti, Ferrara; 1971 a one-man show at the `Italienische Kulterinstitut` in Vienna, repeated at the Musée Rodin in Paris; 1972 Gendai Chokokusenta in Osaka, then to the Modern Art Museums of Kobe, to Yamaguchi, Hiroshima, Kyoto and Mitsukoshi. In 1991 the Museo Emilio Greco was inaugurated in Orvieto at the Palazzo Soliano. It contains his principal works. Since July 1992 the Museo Nazionale d`Abruzzo of L`Aquila has a room dedicated to Greco. In 2013 the Estorick Collection in London, Palazzo Braschi Museum in Rome and Fondazione Carichieti in Chieti, at Palazzo de’ Mayo, organised a solo exhibition to mark the centenary of Emilio Greco`s birth.

Emilio Greco died in Rome, Italy.

Establishing an international reputation, Greco went on to exhibit extensively and also received very important commissions during his career. His notable works include Monument to Pinocchio, 1953, at Collodi, the monumental doors for Orvieto Cathedral, 1962-64, and Nereid (Crouching Figure No.4), 1973. The drawings for his Pinocchio are in the collection of the Tate Gallery. Throughout his career, his sculptures tended to be refined, with elongated forms in the Italian Mannerist tradition. La grande bagnante (`Large Bather`, 1956) won the sculpture prize at the 18th Venice Biennale. Laura, 1973, is a typical example of his mature sculpture. A major work, “Nereid”, is also on permanent public display in Carlos Place, Mayfair, London

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Predmet: 60760769
OVO JE ORIGINALNI PLAKAT ZIMSKE OLIMPIJADE u SARAJEVU 1984
62 x 85 cm
urolan
samo srbija
ovaj plakat ne saljem u inostranstvo

XIV Zimske olimpijske igre su održane 1984. godine u Sarajevu, tadašnjoj Socijalističkoj Federativnoj Republici Jugoslaviji. Ostali gradovi kandidati za Olimpijske igre su bili Saporo, Japan i Falun/Geteborg, Švedska.

Ovo su bile prve zimske i druge zaredom igre generalno održane u Istočnoj Evropi, na govornom području slovenskih jezika i u socijalističkoj zemlji, kao i prve i za sada jedine Olimpijske igre održane u državi iz Pokreta nesvrstanih i u većinski muslimanskom gradu. Takođe, ovo je bilo prvi put da se Olimpijske igre organizuju na Balkanskom poluostrvu nakon prvih u modernom dobu u Atini.

Sarajevo je organizaciju zimskih olimpijskih medalja dobilo u konkurenciji s japanskim Saporom i zajedničkom kandidaturom švedskih gradova Falun i Geteborg. MOK se pri tome delimično vodio političkim razlozima - kao nesvrstana zemlja, tadašnja Jugoslavija je davala manje prilike za hladnoratovske bojkote - ali glavni je motiv ipak bila želja da se Igre, kao simbol svjetskog mira i bratstva među ljudima - održe u gradu koji je dotada obično bio vezivan za izbijanje Prvog svjetskog rata.

Za vlasti Jugoslavije sarajevske Olimpijske igre su bile sjajna prilika da državu svetu predstave u najboljem mogućem svetlu, i u tom nastojanju ih nije omela ni velika ekonomska kriza koja je SFRJ bila pogodila početkom 1980-ih. U Igre su utrošena velika sredstva, te sagrađen veliki broj impozantnih građevina i ostale infrastrukture. U tome su vlasti imale podršku Sarajlija, a već pre samog održavanja su Igre dovele do povećanja interesa za zimske sportove, dotada gotovo nepoznate u tom delu Jugoslavije.

------------------------------------------------

this is an original poster by EMILIO GRECO
print - offset lithography
62 x 85 cm, 24,4 x 33,5 in
serbia only
I do not send this poster abroad

The poster has the official Yugoslavian Olympic logo in the lower left corner along with the 1984 official logo and is an official Olympics poster.

The 1984 Winter Olympics, officially known as the XIV Olympic Winter Games (French: XIVes Jeux olympiques d`hiver; Serbo-Croatian: XIV. zimske olimpijske igre / XIV Зимске олимпијске игре; Macedonian: XIV Зимски олимписки игри; Slovene: XIV olimpijske zimske igre), was a winter multi-sport event which took place from 8–19 February 1984 in Sarajevo, Yugoslavia, in what is now Bosnia and Herzegovina. Other candidate cities were Sapporo, Japan; and Gothenburg, Sweden.

It was the first Winter Olympic Games held in a socialist state and in a Slavic language-speaking country. It was also the second Olympics overall, as well as the second consecutive Olympics, to be held in a socialist and in a Slavic language-speaking country after the 1980 Summer Olympics were held in Moscow, Soviet Union. Furthermore, it was the first Olympics held in the Balkans after the first modern Games in Athens. The Sarajevo games have also been the only Olympics so far to be hosted by a Non-Aligned Movement member.

The host city for the XIV Winter Olympics was announced on 18 May 1978 during an 80th session of the International Olympic Committee in Athens, Greece. Sarajevo was selected over Sapporo, Japan (which hosted the games 12 years earlier) by a margin of three votes. Gothenburg was the first city in Sweden to lose a Winter Olympics bid, as other Swedish cities such as Falun and Östersund would later lose their consecutive bids to Calgary, Albertville, Lillehammer, Nagano, and Salt Lake City respectively. Sarajevo, capital of present-day Bosnia and Herzegovina, was part of the united Yugoslavia at the time.

The torch relay for the 1984 Winter Olympics started in Olympia and then proceeded by airplane to Dubrovnik. The total distance of the torch relay through Yugoslavia was 5,289 kilometres (3,286 mi) (plus 2,879 kilometres (1,789 mi) of local routes). There were two main routes – one in the west (Split – Ljubljana – Zagreb – Sarajevo with 2,602 kilometres (1,617 mi) of length) and the other in the east (Skopje – Novi Sad – Belgrade – Sarajevo with 2,687 kilometres (1,670 mi) of length). The final torchbearer, from a total of 1600, was figure skater Sanda Dubravčić, who received the torch from skier runner Ivo Čarman. Today one of the two original torches is in Slovenia in a private collection in Žalec, Slovenia. Also 20 more torches are in Greece owned by individual athletes, who were the torchbearers from Ancient Olympia to the nearby military airport and from Athens Domestic Airport to the Panathinaikon Stadium where the Ceremony of handing over the Olympic Flame to the Sarajevo Olympic Games Committee occurred.

----------------------------------------

Emilio Greco (11 October 1913 in Catania, Sicily – 5 April 1995) was an Italian sculptor, engraver and medallist.[1] He is best known for his monumental bronze sculptures which are located around the world in Museums - Tate Modern (London), Hermitage (Saint Petersburg), Puskin Museum (Moscow), GNAM (Rome), Hirshhorn Museum (Washington D.C.), Hakone Open-Air Museum (Japan), Museu Coleção Berardo (Lisbon), Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium (Bruxelles), Kröller-Müller-Museum (Otterlo), Storm King Art Center (New Windsor, NY), Hawke`s Bay Museum (New Zealand), Museo Novecento (Florence) - and public works of art in London, Rome, Tokyo, Osaka, Orvieto, Sendai, Tarquinia, Vatican, Antwerp and Marl/Germany.

He moved to Rome. He was drafted and served in Albania. Beginning in 1947, he had a studio in Villa Massimo. In 1958, he had a solo show at the Palazzo Barberini, and in 1959 a solo show at the Stadtische Galerie, Munich.[2] His most important exhibitions: in 1961 the Musée Rodin in Paris, and a one-man show at the Shirokjia Foundation in Tokyo; 1962 Musée d`Art Moderne, Paris; 1963 Fondaçao Calouste Goubelkian, Lisbon, and Palazzo delle Esposizioni, Rome; 1965 `XXIV Biennale Nazionale d`Arte` Milan; 1966 National Gallery of Victoria Melbourne and National Gallery of South Australia; 1970 Palazzo dei Diamanti, Ferrara; 1971 a one-man show at the `Italienische Kulterinstitut` in Vienna, repeated at the Musée Rodin in Paris; 1972 Gendai Chokokusenta in Osaka, then to the Modern Art Museums of Kobe, to Yamaguchi, Hiroshima, Kyoto and Mitsukoshi. In 1991 the Museo Emilio Greco was inaugurated in Orvieto at the Palazzo Soliano. It contains his principal works. Since July 1992 the Museo Nazionale d`Abruzzo of L`Aquila has a room dedicated to Greco. In 2013 the Estorick Collection in London, Palazzo Braschi Museum in Rome and Fondazione Carichieti in Chieti, at Palazzo de’ Mayo, organised a solo exhibition to mark the centenary of Emilio Greco`s birth.

Emilio Greco died in Rome, Italy.

Establishing an international reputation, Greco went on to exhibit extensively and also received very important commissions during his career. His notable works include Monument to Pinocchio, 1953, at Collodi, the monumental doors for Orvieto Cathedral, 1962-64, and Nereid (Crouching Figure No.4), 1973. The drawings for his Pinocchio are in the collection of the Tate Gallery. Throughout his career, his sculptures tended to be refined, with elongated forms in the Italian Mannerist tradition. La grande bagnante (`Large Bather`, 1956) won the sculpture prize at the 18th Venice Biennale. Laura, 1973, is a typical example of his mature sculpture. A major work, “Nereid”, is also on permanent public display in Carlos Place, Mayfair, London
60760769 EMILIO GRECO - Sarajevo 1984 - PLAKAT

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