Diaporama sur l’œuvre du peintre belge René Magritte (1898-1967), à l'occasion de la rétrospective qui lui sera consacré au Centre Pompidou à la rentrée 2016.
Roy Lichtenstein was an American pop artist best known for adapting comic strips and advertisements into large-scale paintings in the 1960s. His work Takka Takka from 1962 was painted in an abstract expressionist style, but from 1961 onward he began incorporating cartoon images and advertising imagery into his paintings. Works like Whaam! from 1963 recreated comic book scenes using techniques like Benday dots to mimic the mechanical printing process. Lichtenstein's pop art works referenced mass media while transforming the source material in colorful, geometric compositions that commented on postwar consumer culture.
Impressionism: Famous Impressionist Painters and Masterpieces Diane Infante
The Impressionist movement began in the 1870s as artists rebelled against rigid academic painting standards. They started independent exhibitions to show their unfinished, spontaneous works which emphasized capturing fleeting moments and effects of light. Art critic Louis Leroy coined the term "Impressionism" after Monet's painting Impression, Sunrise. Key Impressionist techniques included painting outdoors, using loose brushstrokes and bright colors, and focusing on modern life subjects. Famous Impressionists like Monet, Renoir, Degas, Pissarro and Sisley developed these techniques to depict the optical effects of light and convey changing atmospheres. Their work marked a shift to a more modern style of painting.
Edward Hopper was an American realist painter born in 1882. He studied art in New York and Paris and is known for his paintings of mundane scenes depicting solitude and urban alienation. Some of his most famous works include Nighthawks, Automat, and Morning Sun. Hopper often portrayed solitary figures, usually women, in interior scenes with stark lighting coming through windows. His paintings conveyed a sense of psychological unease and examined themes of voyeurism and isolation in modern American life. Hopper was influential on filmmakers like Hitchcock and Scott and continued painting up until his death in 1967.
Amedeo Modigliani was an Italian artist born in 1884 who is known for his elongated portrait paintings. He studied art in Italy before moving to Paris in 1906, where he was influenced by other avant-garde artists and developed his signature portrait style of elongated faces and rounded poses. Modigliani struggled financially and had only one solo exhibition in his lifetime. He died in 1920 at the young age of 35 from tuberculosis. Since his death, Modigliani has become renowned for his unique portrait style and life story.
Diaporama sur l’œuvre du peintre belge René Magritte (1898-1967), à l'occasion de la rétrospective qui lui sera consacré au Centre Pompidou à la rentrée 2016.
Roy Lichtenstein was an American pop artist best known for adapting comic strips and advertisements into large-scale paintings in the 1960s. His work Takka Takka from 1962 was painted in an abstract expressionist style, but from 1961 onward he began incorporating cartoon images and advertising imagery into his paintings. Works like Whaam! from 1963 recreated comic book scenes using techniques like Benday dots to mimic the mechanical printing process. Lichtenstein's pop art works referenced mass media while transforming the source material in colorful, geometric compositions that commented on postwar consumer culture.
Impressionism: Famous Impressionist Painters and Masterpieces Diane Infante
The Impressionist movement began in the 1870s as artists rebelled against rigid academic painting standards. They started independent exhibitions to show their unfinished, spontaneous works which emphasized capturing fleeting moments and effects of light. Art critic Louis Leroy coined the term "Impressionism" after Monet's painting Impression, Sunrise. Key Impressionist techniques included painting outdoors, using loose brushstrokes and bright colors, and focusing on modern life subjects. Famous Impressionists like Monet, Renoir, Degas, Pissarro and Sisley developed these techniques to depict the optical effects of light and convey changing atmospheres. Their work marked a shift to a more modern style of painting.
Edward Hopper was an American realist painter born in 1882. He studied art in New York and Paris and is known for his paintings of mundane scenes depicting solitude and urban alienation. Some of his most famous works include Nighthawks, Automat, and Morning Sun. Hopper often portrayed solitary figures, usually women, in interior scenes with stark lighting coming through windows. His paintings conveyed a sense of psychological unease and examined themes of voyeurism and isolation in modern American life. Hopper was influential on filmmakers like Hitchcock and Scott and continued painting up until his death in 1967.
Amedeo Modigliani was an Italian artist born in 1884 who is known for his elongated portrait paintings. He studied art in Italy before moving to Paris in 1906, where he was influenced by other avant-garde artists and developed his signature portrait style of elongated faces and rounded poses. Modigliani struggled financially and had only one solo exhibition in his lifetime. He died in 1920 at the young age of 35 from tuberculosis. Since his death, Modigliani has become renowned for his unique portrait style and life story.
Vincent Van Gogh was a post-Impressionist painter born in 1853 who created over 2,000 works between 1880-1890. While many of his paintings during this time were dark and realistic like the styles of his contemporaries, Van Gogh was truly an expressionist who painted with feelings and impressions using bright colors and visible brush strokes. Although his works were not appreciated during his lifetime, he is now considered a master painter and his works are famous worldwide, with one painting recently selling for $90 million.
Munch’s The Scream “Iconic Masterpiece of Expressionism in ‘Popular Culture’...Yaryalitsa
Looks at Edvard Munch's THE SCREAM and the impact this piece of art has had and is having on society in all areas as an influence and in terms of POP CULTURE.
Downloading the PowerPoint will show full animation and transition of slides.
Salvador Dalí had a difficult childhood that involved the death of his older brother and mother, which had a profound impact on him. He became close friends with influential artists like Luis Buñuel and Federico García Lorca. Dalí was heavily influenced by Picasso and developed his own surrealist style. He is most famous for works like "The Persistence of Memory" and developing the paranoiac-critical method. In later life, Dalí dedicated himself to creating the Dalí Theater-Museum in Figueres, Spain, which houses many of his works. He is considered a genius and the iconic figure of the surrealist movement.
John Singer Sargent was simply the most successful portraitist of his days at the end of the 19C and the beginning of the 20C. He lived in Italy, Paris and London. He travelled widely From to Venice to the Tyrol. Corfu on the European Mediterranean coast. He visited Morocco, Tangiers and Egypt on the North African coast. He even ventured into Lebanon, Syria and the Holyland. In American he went to Montana, Maine, Florida, Boston, New York, Washington DC etc. He was fluent in French, Italian and some German. He was well read in European literature, an accomplished pianist and a passionately keen musician. Henry James, the American writer who lived in Europe describe Sargent as being ‘civilized to his fingertips’. He knew personally many of the artists, performers and painters of his days, including the giants like Degas, Rodin, Monet and Whistler.
Technically Sargent belong to the same line of portraitists like the Velazquez, Frans Hals and van Dyck, all of them committed their paint quickly onto the canvas. You will be amazed on close inspection of their paintings how spontaneous the paints were applied. Sargent like the Impressionists also a practitioner of painting in the ourdoor. This is particularly true with his watercolours, which were often a record of what he had seen. In his later life Sargent was mainly painting for the enjoyment of himself, as an observer. This was true when he was appointed as the War Artist in World War One.
For comparison with his peers, I think it is interesting to compare him with the works of John Frederick Lewis, the orientalist, who also painted in oil as well as watercolour. Sargent and Van Gogh were born a few years apart and their career were developed in different direction regards to their career, style and technique. But both of them painted in the ‘open air’ (plein-air), as well. Sargent was sympathetic to the called of the Impressionists. He even used some of the technique but was never fully converted. Personally, I think Sargent is one of the finest artists of his time, and he knew it too.
An unidentified flying object, or UFO, refers to unusual objects or phenomena in the sky that are not readily identifiable to the observer. UFO reports date back throughout history but the term UFO became more widely used after World War 2. Government agencies have studied UFO reports but have not been able to scientifically verify any as alien spacecraft. The lack of definitive answers has led independent researchers to continue studying reported sightings and searching for explanations.
This document provides an overview of the pop art movement in America during the 1950s and 1960s. It summarizes key pop art styles and techniques like clear lines, bright colors, and representations of popular culture symbols. Several prominent pop artists are discussed, including Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, Claes Oldenburg, and their works featuring everyday objects depicted at a large scale or in multiple pieces. The document concludes by outlining a ceramics assignment asking students to create a realistic life-sized sculpture of a food container using pop art techniques.
Vincent van Gogh was a post-Impressionist painter known for his unique style and use of bright colors. He developed his style after moving to Paris in the 1880s and discovering Impressionism. Some of his most famous works include The Starry Night, Sunflowers, and Bedroom in Arles. Van Gogh struggled with mental illness throughout his life and died by suicide in 1890 at the age of 37. Though unknown in his lifetime, he is now considered one of the greatest artists in history.
The document provides a biography of Vincent Van Gogh. It describes his childhood in the Netherlands, his early attempts to become an artist while struggling financially, his move to Paris where he was exposed to Impressionism, his move to Arles and establishment of a studio, his productive period producing masterpieces while struggling with mental illness, and his death by suicide at a young age. It concludes by describing the Van Gogh Museum, which houses the largest collection of his works.
Vincent Van Gogh was a post-impressionist Dutch painter born in 1853 who produced over 2000 works in the last 10 years of his life. He had little success during his lifetime but his fame grew after his death. Some of his most famous paintings include The Starry Night, Irises, and Portrait of Doctor Gachet. He struggled with mental illness and cut off part of his ear during a breakdown with Paul Gauguin, and later died by suicide at age 37.
STRUWWELPETER von HEINRICH HOFFMANN
ab Niveau B1
Kurze Einführung zum Leben von Heinrich Hoffmann,
zum Werk "Struwwelpeter" und zur Rezeptionsgeschichte.
Jules Verne was a famous French writer born in 1828 in Nantes, France. He is known for pioneering the science fiction genre and writing adventure novels such as Around the World in 80 Days, in which an English gentleman takes a bet that he can circumnavigate the globe in 80 days, despite 19th century technology limitations. Verne imagined futuristic inventions like submarines and helicopters in his novels. He died in 1905 in Amiens, France, leaving behind an influential body of work that continues to inspire readers today.
Pierre-Auguste Renoir was a famous French artist born in 1841 who was a leading painter in developing the Impressionist style of painting. He came from a working class family and began working in a factory decorating fine china at age 13. He later studied art in Paris where he met other Impressionist painters. Renoir became known for his bright, colorful paintings often depicting happy scenes of everyday life like families, children at the beach, and dancers, usually in bright sunlight. His works remain very popular today and are displayed in art museums worldwide.
Vincent Van Gogh was a post-Impressionist painter born in 1853 who created over 2,000 works between 1880-1890. While many of his paintings during this time were dark and realistic like the styles of his contemporaries, Van Gogh was truly an expressionist who painted with feelings and impressions using bright colors and visible brush strokes. Although his works were not appreciated during his lifetime, he is now considered a master painter and his works are famous worldwide, with one painting recently selling for $90 million.
Munch’s The Scream “Iconic Masterpiece of Expressionism in ‘Popular Culture’...Yaryalitsa
Looks at Edvard Munch's THE SCREAM and the impact this piece of art has had and is having on society in all areas as an influence and in terms of POP CULTURE.
Downloading the PowerPoint will show full animation and transition of slides.
Salvador Dalí had a difficult childhood that involved the death of his older brother and mother, which had a profound impact on him. He became close friends with influential artists like Luis Buñuel and Federico García Lorca. Dalí was heavily influenced by Picasso and developed his own surrealist style. He is most famous for works like "The Persistence of Memory" and developing the paranoiac-critical method. In later life, Dalí dedicated himself to creating the Dalí Theater-Museum in Figueres, Spain, which houses many of his works. He is considered a genius and the iconic figure of the surrealist movement.
John Singer Sargent was simply the most successful portraitist of his days at the end of the 19C and the beginning of the 20C. He lived in Italy, Paris and London. He travelled widely From to Venice to the Tyrol. Corfu on the European Mediterranean coast. He visited Morocco, Tangiers and Egypt on the North African coast. He even ventured into Lebanon, Syria and the Holyland. In American he went to Montana, Maine, Florida, Boston, New York, Washington DC etc. He was fluent in French, Italian and some German. He was well read in European literature, an accomplished pianist and a passionately keen musician. Henry James, the American writer who lived in Europe describe Sargent as being ‘civilized to his fingertips’. He knew personally many of the artists, performers and painters of his days, including the giants like Degas, Rodin, Monet and Whistler.
Technically Sargent belong to the same line of portraitists like the Velazquez, Frans Hals and van Dyck, all of them committed their paint quickly onto the canvas. You will be amazed on close inspection of their paintings how spontaneous the paints were applied. Sargent like the Impressionists also a practitioner of painting in the ourdoor. This is particularly true with his watercolours, which were often a record of what he had seen. In his later life Sargent was mainly painting for the enjoyment of himself, as an observer. This was true when he was appointed as the War Artist in World War One.
For comparison with his peers, I think it is interesting to compare him with the works of John Frederick Lewis, the orientalist, who also painted in oil as well as watercolour. Sargent and Van Gogh were born a few years apart and their career were developed in different direction regards to their career, style and technique. But both of them painted in the ‘open air’ (plein-air), as well. Sargent was sympathetic to the called of the Impressionists. He even used some of the technique but was never fully converted. Personally, I think Sargent is one of the finest artists of his time, and he knew it too.
An unidentified flying object, or UFO, refers to unusual objects or phenomena in the sky that are not readily identifiable to the observer. UFO reports date back throughout history but the term UFO became more widely used after World War 2. Government agencies have studied UFO reports but have not been able to scientifically verify any as alien spacecraft. The lack of definitive answers has led independent researchers to continue studying reported sightings and searching for explanations.
This document provides an overview of the pop art movement in America during the 1950s and 1960s. It summarizes key pop art styles and techniques like clear lines, bright colors, and representations of popular culture symbols. Several prominent pop artists are discussed, including Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, Claes Oldenburg, and their works featuring everyday objects depicted at a large scale or in multiple pieces. The document concludes by outlining a ceramics assignment asking students to create a realistic life-sized sculpture of a food container using pop art techniques.
Vincent van Gogh was a post-Impressionist painter known for his unique style and use of bright colors. He developed his style after moving to Paris in the 1880s and discovering Impressionism. Some of his most famous works include The Starry Night, Sunflowers, and Bedroom in Arles. Van Gogh struggled with mental illness throughout his life and died by suicide in 1890 at the age of 37. Though unknown in his lifetime, he is now considered one of the greatest artists in history.
The document provides a biography of Vincent Van Gogh. It describes his childhood in the Netherlands, his early attempts to become an artist while struggling financially, his move to Paris where he was exposed to Impressionism, his move to Arles and establishment of a studio, his productive period producing masterpieces while struggling with mental illness, and his death by suicide at a young age. It concludes by describing the Van Gogh Museum, which houses the largest collection of his works.
Vincent Van Gogh was a post-impressionist Dutch painter born in 1853 who produced over 2000 works in the last 10 years of his life. He had little success during his lifetime but his fame grew after his death. Some of his most famous paintings include The Starry Night, Irises, and Portrait of Doctor Gachet. He struggled with mental illness and cut off part of his ear during a breakdown with Paul Gauguin, and later died by suicide at age 37.
STRUWWELPETER von HEINRICH HOFFMANN
ab Niveau B1
Kurze Einführung zum Leben von Heinrich Hoffmann,
zum Werk "Struwwelpeter" und zur Rezeptionsgeschichte.
Jules Verne was a famous French writer born in 1828 in Nantes, France. He is known for pioneering the science fiction genre and writing adventure novels such as Around the World in 80 Days, in which an English gentleman takes a bet that he can circumnavigate the globe in 80 days, despite 19th century technology limitations. Verne imagined futuristic inventions like submarines and helicopters in his novels. He died in 1905 in Amiens, France, leaving behind an influential body of work that continues to inspire readers today.
Pierre-Auguste Renoir was a famous French artist born in 1841 who was a leading painter in developing the Impressionist style of painting. He came from a working class family and began working in a factory decorating fine china at age 13. He later studied art in Paris where he met other Impressionist painters. Renoir became known for his bright, colorful paintings often depicting happy scenes of everyday life like families, children at the beach, and dancers, usually in bright sunlight. His works remain very popular today and are displayed in art museums worldwide.
#WarsawDays 2015 - Jak to się robi w BerlinieWarszawa
Część II. Konferencji Warsaw Days - "Warszawa do życia" - Sekretarz stanu ds. budownictwa i mieszkalnictwa miasta Berlina Engelbert Lutke Daldrup - Jak to się robi w Berlinie
zapis wideo z przebiegu całej konferencji:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LRHsS058-1g
La teoría del color de Goethe se opuso a la visión física de Newton sobre el color, argumentando que la percepción del color depende no solo de la luz y la materia sino también de la percepción humana. Goethe desarrolló una rueda y un triángulo del color basados en tres colores primarios -rojo, amarillo y azul- y sus secundarios. Exploró aspectos como los complementarios y sombras coloreadas para formular leyes sobre la armonía cromática.
„Lubię …” sprawia w języku niemieckim pewną trudność. Inaczej mówimy, gdy lubimy coś lub kogoś i nazywamy tę rzecz/osobę rzeczownikiem, a inaczej, gdy lubimy coś robić, co wyrażamy czasownikiem. Poniższa prezentacja wyjaśni zapewne ten problem, a załączone ćwiczenie pomoże utrwalić prawidłowe nazywanie kogo i/lub co lubimy oraz co lubimy robić.
This document lists several influential figures in Happening art and includes YouTube links to videos about their works: John Cage, who incorporated random sounds and noise into music; Allan Kaprow, who staged multimedia Happenings blending art and life; Tadeusz Kantor, a Polish theater director who incorporated elements of Happenings; and Yves Klein, a French artist known for monochrome paintings and anthropic performances involving fire.
Prezentacja wykonana przez Sarę Bagińską z klasy 2b V Liceum Ogólnokształcącego z Oddziałami Dwujęzycznymi im. Kanclerza Jana Zamoyskiego w Dąbrowie Górniczej. Praca zajęła 3 . miejsce w III Zagłębiowskim Konkursie na prezentację multimedialną „Śladami Stefana Żeromskiego”.
Drugiego listopada przypada dwusetna rocznica urodzin matematyka Georga Boole’a, twórcy algebry Boole’a i pierwszego profesora matematyki na Uniwersytecie w Cork w Irlandii.
Z tej okazji Uniwersytet w Cork w Irlandii stworzył program Boole2School, do którego przystąpiło ponad 55 000 uczniów z całego świata, w tym i nasza szkoła.
More from V Liceum Ogólnokształcące im. Kanclerza Jana Zamoyskiego, Dąbrowa Górnicza, Polska (20)
2. SPIS TREŚCI
Wiadomości ogólne o Austrii slajd 3-4
Podział administracyjny slajd 5-6
Pobyt w Austrii slajd 7-8
Koszty pobytu slajd 9
Wynajem mieszkania slajd 10
Wyżywienie slajd 11-13
Kuchnia austriacka slajd 14
Tort Sachera slajd 15
Ogólne porównanie slajd 16
Zakończenie slajd 17
3. Austria( Österreich ) jest
to państwo położone w
Europie Środkowej,
federacja dziewięciu
krajów związkowych
(landów).
Stolicą Austrii jest Wiedeń
znajdujący się na
wschodzie kraju.
Językiem urzędowym
jest język niemiecki.
4.
5. PODZIAŁ ADMINISTRACYJNY
Republika Austrii jest federacją, którą tworzy 9 krajów związkowych (niem.:
Bundesländer) Są to:
Burgenland
Karyntia
Dolna Austria
Górna Austria
Salzburg
Styria
Tyrol
Vorarlberg
Wiedeń
7. POBYT W AUSTRII
Obywatele wszystkich państw członkowskich UE, w tym
również Polski mogą swobodnie osiedlać się na terenie Austrii.
Każdy cudzoziemiec jest zobowiązany do zameldowania się w
ciągu 3 dni od daty przybycia na teren Austrii. Organem
meldunkowym są urzędy dzielnicowe i gminne. W celu zyskania
zameldowania wypełnia się formularz meldunkowy oraz
przedkłada się paszport lub dowód osobisty. Na 3 dni przed
planowanym wyjazdem należy się wymeldować. W przypadku
niedopełnienia lub nieterminowego dopełnienia obowiązku
meldunkowego trzeba liczyć się z grzywną w wysokości 726
euro. 41% mieszkań w Austrii znajduje się w budynkach jedno-
lub dwurodzinnych, a 54% w budynkach wielorodzinnych.
8. POBYT
Do wymaganych dokumentów zaliczają się:
dowód osobisty lub paszport, dowód
zatrudnienia, dowód ubezpieczenia
zdrowotnego i posiadania odpowiednich
środków na utrzymanie.
Anmeldebescheinigung, czyli tzw.
zaświadczenie meldunkowe jest
wydawane przez urzędy magistrackie w
Wiedniu, a w innych krajach związkowych
przez urzędy gminy lub magistraty, jeżeli
warunki osiedlenia zostaną potwierdzone.
Zaświadczenie muszą posiadać osoby
przebywające w Austrii dłużej niż 3
miesiące.
9. KOSZTY
Koszty wynajmu mieszkania są zróżnicowane w zależności od
regionu. Najtaniej jest w Burgenland, gdzie wynajęcie mieszkania
kosztuje przeciętnie 3,52 euro/m2, a najdrożej w Vorarlberg –
5,82euro/m2. Cena wynajmu jest zmienna również w zależności
od dostępu do komunikacji, infrastruktury (np. sklepy, szkoły),
dzielnicy, wyposażenia mieszkania. Za małe mieszkanie o
powierzchni 40 m2 w „średniej klasy” dzielnicy Wiednia trzeba
zapłacić wynajmującemu ok. 300–400 euro miesięcznie, plus
koszty eksploatacji ok. 200 euro miesięcznie. Małe mieszkania są
często droższe (za 1 m2) niż mieszkania większe. Do tego
dochodzą jeszcze koszty prowizji dla pośrednika (ok.25% ceny
wynajmu), koszty ogrzewania, gazu i energii elektrycznej.
10. Sprawy związane z wynajmowaniem
mieszkań są uregulowane w tzw.
WYNAJEM
ustawie czynszowej. Przed podpisaniem
umowy dobrze jest zasięgnąć porady w
celu sprawdzenia treści umowy.
Informacje
o wolnych mieszkaniach do wynajęcia
lub kupienia można znaleźć w gazetach
codziennych (Kurier, Krone, Standard,
Presje), a szczególnie dużo jest ich
w wydaniach sobotnio-niedzielnych.
Poza tym w agencjach nieruchomości i
na stronach internetowych. Wiele miast
i gmin jest właścicielami mieszkań
komunalnych, które można
wynajmować i w których opłaty
czynszowe są relatywnie niższe. Istnieją
też tzw. spółdzielnie mieszkaniowe. Jeśli
zostajemy członkiem takiej spółdzielni,
opłacamy czynsz proporcjonalnie do
wieku i wielkości naszego mieszkania.
11. Najtańszy lokal to stołówka WYŻYWIENIE
uniwersytecka - dostępna dla
każdego. Niestety, wiekszość
stołówek jest zamknięta w czasie
wakacji. Tanio można zjeść na
dworcach: kurczaki w sieci
"Wienerwald"", ryby "Nordsee".
Austriacki fast food - kiełbaski z
chlebem - Wuerstelstand.
Zakupy w hipermarketach wyjdą
drożej niż w Polsce, ale nie są to
ceny przyprawiające o zawrót
głowy. Godny polecenia jest
supermarket na Sudbahnhof w
Wiedniu; mimo, iż jest on na
dworcu, to jest względnie tani (np.
0,5 Coca-Coli to 0,85 Euro).
12. WYŻYWIENIE
Wiele sklepów jest zamkniętych w sobote
już po godzinie 14. Podobnie w dni
powszednie dużo sklepów po godzinie 18-
tej jest nieczynnych, a po 19 to działają już
tylko niektóre. Ogólnie w dni powszednie
sklepy spożywcze otwierane są o 7-7.30, a
zamykane między 18 a 19. W nocy oraz w
weekendy można zaopatrywać się na
dużych stacjach benzynowych - niektóre
są czynne całą dobę. W niedziele pracują
również nieliczne sklepy sieci "Billa", ale i
tam sprzedawane są jedynie produkty
podstawowe - pieczywo, napoje itp.
Generalnie rzecz biorąc, należy przed
weekendem zrobić sobie zapasy.
Najtańsze czekolady zaczynają się już od
50 centów, podobnie jak nieco większe
jogurtów do picia.
13. Przykładowe ceny produktów żywnościowych oraz najprostszych
potraw w schroniskach (w Euro).
1 kg chleba 1,50-3
1 bułka 0,20-0,30
1/4 kg masła od 1,-
1 l mleka 0,65-1,10
1 l wody mineralnej 0,25-0,50
100 g sera żółtego 0,75-2,30
1 opakowanie twarożku ok. 1,-
1 kg owoców (jabłka, pomarańcze, banany) 0,70-2,20 (zależnie od gatunku, sezonu i sklepu)
100 g szynki 0,70-2,20
1 l soku owocowego 0,50-1,40
1 butelka wina (0,70 l) od 2,50
1 butelka lub puszka piwa 0,40-1,20
1 l coli 0,70-1,40
500 g ryżu 0,70-1,40
500 g makaronu 0,70-1,10
1 zupa Knorra ok. 1,10
1 tabliczka czekolady 0,40-1,50
1 kg ziemniaków 0,70-1,40
lody na patyku (1 szt.) 0,60-1,80
1 opakowanie herbaty ekspresowej 0,70-2,20
1 kg kawy 1,80-3,60
1 główka sałaty 0,50-1,20
1 kg mąki ok. 0,40
1/2 l oleju ok. 1,40
14. Kuchnia austriacka
Austriacy słyną z ciast, takich jak
strudel (rodzaj ciasta
makaronowego z nadzieniem
na przykład jabłkowym, zawijanego
w rulon i pieczonego) i kipfle (rodzaj
pączków) oraz słodyczy.
16. PORÓWNANIE
W Polsce podobnie jak w Austrii koszty utrzymania są
bardzo zróżnicowane. Ceny mieszkań zależą od wielkości
miasta. Największe ceny osiągają mieszkania w dużych
aglomeracjach lub metropoliach tj.: Warszawa, Poznań,
Kraków lub Gdańsk w Polsce, czy Salzburg i Wiedeń w
Austrii. Ceny żywności w Polsce są stosunkowo niskie,
czego przykładem jest to, że nasi zachodni i wschodni
sąsiedzi przyjeżdżają do nas na zakupy. W Austrii żywność
jest droższa, natomiast zarobki są większe, co się znacząco
pokrywa. Najpopularniejszymi daniami w Polsce są: bigos,
schabowy, pierogi lub kapusta z grochem. Dla Austriaków
jednymi z najpopularniejszych dań są: sznycel po
wiedeńsku, strudel czy kipfle (rodzaj pączków).