210 research outputs found
Dr Brigita Ozolins (Art forum)
The first twenty minutes of this video are an artwork by Dr Ozolins titled 'Home', 2010, Single channel Video, 20 min loop.
The Journey Home, Part II
Brigita Ozolins is an artist, writer, curator and a lecturer at the Tasmanian School of Art. Last year, she presented an art forum called The Journey Home, a project based on her mother’s escape from Latvia to Australia at the end of WWII made possible with the support of the 2008 Inaugural Qantas Contemporary Art Award. She discussed the 2 month residency she had in Riga, the capital of Latvia, and her subsequent attempt to follow her mother’s journey through a series of displaced persons’ camps in Poland, Germany and Italy. In this forum, Brigita will talk about the work that resulted from her research, which was featured as a solo exhibition in the National Library of Latvia in June this year, and the major disaster that happened in the Library one week after her show opened
The advanced application of the wood-originated wastewater sludge
The wood hydrothermal treatment is one of the plywood production’s stages, which
resulting in the production of wastewater containing such components as hemicelluloses, lignin
and wood extractive substances (HLES). It is necessary to improve the wastewater treatment
technology with the aim to enhance the yield of sludge from plywood wastewater for its effective
and rational recycling. In the present study, the optimal coagulation conditions for the HLES
removal have been found using the developed aluminium salt-based coagulant. The developed
composite coagulant is characterized by lower doses, a wide range of the work pH values, the
insensitivity against temperature changes and a higher coagulation efficacy compared with
traditional aluminium salts. The proposed treatment technology generates many tons of woodoriginated sludge – a biomass coagulate. It was found that the formed coagulate produced in the
process of wastewater treatment can increase the sorption ability of clay. The optimal content of
the dry coagulate in a clay sorbent does not exceed 0.11%. The sorption capacity of the developed
sorbent for water, rapeseed and silicone oil increases by 35%, 31% and 21%, respectively, relative
to the unmodified clay sorbent. The sorption efficiency of heavy metals from water solutions is
also increased by 10–12%. The thermal treatment of the modified clay sorbent at the high
temperature leads to an increase in its sorption capacity for oil products
Coordinating government and community support for community language teaching in Australia: Overview with special attention to New South Wales
An overview of formal government language-in-education planning for community languages (CLs) that has been undertaken in Australia and New South Wales is provided, moving from the more informal programmes provided in the 1980s to school-oriented programmes and training at the turn of the century. These programmes depend on community support; for many of the teachers from the communities, methodological training is needed to complement their language and cultural skills. At the same time, Commonwealth (Federal) and State support for CL programmes has improved their quality and provides students with opportunities to study CLs at the senior secondary matriculation level. The paper concludes with specific recommendations for greater recognition of CL schools and for greater attention to CL teacher preparation
Figure it : recent works by Julie Rrap, Sally Smart, Brigita Ozolins, Mary Scott, Justine Cooper
Figure it : recent works by Julie Rrap, Sally Smart, Brigita Ozolins, Mary Scott, Justine Cooper. Catalogue of exhibition held at Plimsoll Gallery, Centre for the Arts, Victoria Dock, Hobart 10 Aug.-2 Sept. 200
Temperature dependence of the diffuse scattering fine structure in equiatomic CuAu
The temperature dependence of the diffuse scattering fine structure from
disordered equiatomic CuAu was studied using {\it in situ} x-ray scattering. In
contrast to CuAu the diffuse peak splitting in CuAu was found to be
relatively insensitive to temperature. Consequently, no evidence for a
divergence of the antiphase length-scale at the transition temperature was
found. At all temperatures studied the peak splitting is smaller than the value
corresponding to the CuAuII modulated phase. An extended Ginzburg-Landau
approach is used to explain the temperature dependence of the diffuse peak
profiles in the ordering and modulation directions. The estimated mean-field
instability point is considerably lower than is the case for CuAu.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
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