Royalty-free image thanks to Framepool.
Welcome to Est. 1999, the official blog of Abraham Translations. As is perhaps easy to surmise, the name of this blog reflects the year that Abraham Translations was founded.
It all began with the correction of a few texts that had been translated by another time-pressed translator. Within the year, translating had become my main source of income; now, it has long been the only way I put bacon on the table.
I am rather proud of many of the projects on which I have worked. Est. 1999, basically, is a visual confirmation of past projects, a blowing of my own horn, a presentation of translator-related topics, and an occasional departure into other areas that I deem worthy of presenting. Enjoy.
Thursday, 31 December 2015
Wednesday, 23 December 2015
Johannes Heisig
(ISBN-10: 3925782753 /ISBN-13: 978-3925782756 2012)
Another bilingual (German & English) catalog for Die Galerie, Frankfurt, this time for the 2012 solo exhibition of the German painter Johannes Heisig, which ran at the gallery from 15 November 2012 – 19 January 2013.
Another bilingual (German & English) catalog for Die Galerie, Frankfurt, this time for the 2012 solo exhibition of the German painter Johannes Heisig, which ran at the gallery from 15 November 2012 – 19 January 2013.
Heisig, the son of Bernhard Heisig, one of the principal artists of the "Old Leipzig School" as well as teacher of many artists from the "New Leipzig School", was born in Leipzig. He studied art at the Academy of Visual Arts in Leipzig (1973-77) and the Dresden Academy of Fine Arts (1978-80). Currently, he lives and works in Berlin.
The 88-page catalog to the show at Die Galerie includes texts by Dr. Christiane Ladleif, the current director of the Kunsthalle Jesuitenkirche of the City of Aschaffenburg, and the German author Eva Demski, as well as a foreword by the gallerist Peter Femfert.
The 88-page catalog to the show at Die Galerie includes texts by Dr. Christiane Ladleif, the current director of the Kunsthalle Jesuitenkirche of the City of Aschaffenburg, and the German author Eva Demski, as well as a foreword by the gallerist Peter Femfert.
Thursday, 17 December 2015
Violet Rockweiler and the Monster Botany (2007)
Violet Rockweiler and the Monster Botany, children's book, 40 pages, 20x20 cm
In June, 2015, I mentioned how I did the
translations for the first edition of Felix Pestemer's excellent graphic novel,
Polvo: Day of the Dead, and the later expanded edition, The Dust of the Ancestors.
Pestemer has also produced a variety of extremely unique children's books with
decidedly odd stories, including this one, Violet
Rockweiler and the Monster Botany, which he co-wrote with Maria Guitart
Ferrer.
The German edition of the book was
published privately and can be read (for free) online here.
The English-language translation, I regret
to say, has seemingly fallen into a void: even now, eight years
later, it has yet to see the light of day — a fate that happens rarely, but is
not unknown (I would say that, on average, once every
two years one print or online project seems to simply disappear after the client has paid all invoices).
The plot of Violet
Rockweiler and the Monster Botany, rewritten from the description found on Felix
Pestemer's website:
"Violeta Rockweiler is crazy about stink plum pudding. It's just bad luck
that a plum pit gets stuck in her throat. When she finally manages to swallow
it, it ends up in her third stomach. That's where monsters store a
super-nutritious mixture for meagre times. A little while later, the plum pit
takes root and twigs start growing out of Violeta's ears... Violet finds out that living with a plum tree rooted inside
her isn't easy. However, there is one plus side: she's released from school. Her
previously mocking schoolmates are suddenly pretty envious…"
Thursday, 10 December 2015
The Song of Life / Das Lied des Lebens (2013)
From the Lichtfilm website: "While he was studying at the conservatory, German composer Bernhard König became fascinated with the 'wrinkled and grumbly voices' of the elderly. From that moment on, he decided to dedicate himself to finding an environment in which those voices could be fully appreciated. The Song of Life follows König during two intriguing projects. In the Sonnenberg nursing home in Stuttgart, he gets elderly ladies and gentlemen to the piano or accordion and translates the stories of their past into modern arrangements. In Cologne, he leads a chorus of old men and women — if you're under 70, you need not try out — and together they put themes taken from their own lives to music. At a gradual pace, this stylized documentary captures how various compositions come to fruition, and how König — fascinated by this generation that was defined by the war — lovingly and patiently lets his elderly musicians shine. Poignant memories of youth and flashes of lives past are stirred up, while König and his protégés explore how certain feelings can best be translated into sound, achieving some truly touching results along the way."
For this documentary by director Irene Langemann, for whom I've often translated — particularly under the auspice of Lichtfilm, the firm that coproduced The Song of Life / Das Lied des Lebens with SWR, WDR and in cooperation with Arte — I translated the original director's statement and synopsis way back at the beginning of the production.
Wednesday, 2 December 2015
Myanmar – Leben am Großen Strom / Myanmar's Great River (2013)
Myanmar's Great River —
Episode 1,
From Bhamo to Mandalay; Episode 2, From
Mandalay to the Delta
A co-production with SWR, NDR, and ARTE, Myanmar's
Great River has been broadcast a number of times already and is now available on
DVD. This two-part documentary by Bernd Girrbach & Rolf Lambert is the
first of numerous projects from Along Mekong Productions
on which I have worked as translator; in general, as is the case here, I have translated
the voiceover texts. (Regrettably, the segment below, the only one I could find
online, still has the German voiceover.)
The German explanation of the documentary: "Myanmar,
das einstige Birma, hat sich nach Jahrzehnten Militärdiktatur geöffnet und
demokratische Reformen begonnen. Ein Fluss prägt das Land völlig, der
Ayeyarwady. Über 2170 Kilometer durchfließt er das Land – als Lebensader,
Kulturstifter und zentraler Verkehrsweg. Er verbindet die wichtigsten
historischen Orte Myanmars wie Mandalay, Bagan, Yangon und ist gesäumt von
goldglänzenden Stupas, Tempeln und Pagoden. Zur Kolonialzeit befuhr die größte
Binnenflotte der Welt den Fluss. Am Mittel- und Oberlauf ist er noch heute oft
die einzige Verbindung zur Außenwelt und viel befahren, mit schwer beladenen
Lastkähnen und klapprigen Personenfähren. Einen Monat lang fuhren die Autoren
Rolf Lambert und Bernd Girrbach auf dem Fluss. Vor allem, um Menschen in ihrem
Alltag kennen zu lernen: Kapitäne, Fischer, Mönche, Goldwäscher, ein
Marionetten-Ensemble, eine Architektin, die für den Erhalt der Kolonialbauten
kämpft. Die Filme erzählen vom Alltag Myanmars zu einer Zeit des Aufbruchs und
Umbruchs."
A quick and loose English translation:"Myanmar, formerly Burma, has opened its
borders after decades of dictatorship and begun democratic reforms. Life in the
country has been shaped by a river, the Ayeyarwady: about 2170 km long, it
flows through the country, dominating both the landscape and culture. It passes the nation's major historical sites, including Mandalay, Bagan, and Yangon,
and is lined with golden stupas, temples, and pagodas. During colonial times,
the largest domestic fleet in the world sailed the river, and even today the much-used
and overloaded barges and rickety passenger ferries are the only link between the
middle and upper reaches of the river and the outside world. For a month,
the filmmakers Rolf Lambert and Bernd Girrbach travelled the river and got to know
everyday people living their everyday life, including boat captains, fishermen,
monks, gold panners, a troupe of puppeteers, and an architect fighting for the
preservation of colonial houses. The films offers an insight to the everyday life in Myanmar
in a time of upheaval and change."
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