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Lower Silesia houses numerous arts institutions and is home of many outstanding artists.

The cultural capital of the region is Wrocław which, beside Warsaw and Cracow, is among Poland’s most signifi cant cultural centres. Wrocław boasts two theatres, an operetta, a pantomime theatre, a puppet theatre, a philharmonic, 10 museums, numerous galleries, three arts colleges and a large group of artists. Cultural life is also vibrant in other towns of the region that have excellent arts institutions: there are theatres, philharmonics and museums in Legnica, Jelenia Góra and Wałbrzych. The sprouting of numerous informal arts groups is a new phenomenon observed recently in the region’s smaller towns and villages, where what can be termed ‘arts colonies’ (e.g. in the village of Michałowice near Jelenia Góra) and alternative culture centres are being founded. In the 1960s and 70s Wrocław was viewed as Poland’s capital of the theatre and one of the world’s capitals of avantgarde theatre. Wrocław was the home of the Laboratory Theatre led by Jerzy Grotowski, an outstanding producer and reformer of the 20th century theatre. Avant-garde tendencies are also characteristic of the Lower Silesian visual artists, many of whom boast outstanding achievements including works in glass, ceramics, poster and industrial design. Music also plays a signifi cant role in the cultural life of Lower Silesia. Many outstanding composers live in the region, and plenty of music festivals, a Lower Silesian speciality, are organized here. The most signifi cant of those is the 40-year-standing “Wratislavia Cantans” held in the historical churches in Wrocław and in a number of other towns of the region. Each year, the festival hosts a few thousand artists from all over the world.<//font>

Nagroda Marszałka

26.05.2017 08:13

W dniach 12-21 maja 2017 r. w Dolnośląskim Centrum Filmowym odbyła się 14. edycja Millennium Docs Against Gravity Film Festival. Jest to największe święto kina dokumentalnego w Polsce. Hasło przewodnie tegorocznej edycji imprezy - ODERWIJ SIĘ! – zachęcało do tego, aby uwolnić się od przyzwyczajeń i stereotypów oraz otworzyć się na świat pokazywany przez autorów kina dokumentalnego.

 

Wrocławska, szósta edycja Millennium Docs Against Gravity Film Festival zachęcała do wzięcia udziału w niemal 100 pokazach filmowych oraz kilkunastu debatach, spotkaniach, wykładach i warsztatach. W tym roku o Nagrodę Marszałka Województwa Dolnośląskiego - Grand Prix Dolnego Śląska walczyło 14 tytułów. Jury w składzie: Konrad Imiela, Robert Gonera, Agnieszka Wolny-Hamkało doceniło film pt. „Dobry listonosz” w reżyserii Tonislava Hristova. 20 maja br. podczas gali wręczenia, Nagrodę Marszałka Województwa Dolnośląskiego – Grand Prix Dolnego Śląska, laureatowi wręczyła Pani Julita Izabela Zaprucka – Dyrektor Wydziału Kultury.