George Chaloupka

http://dbpedia.org/resource/George_Chaloupka an entity of type: Thing

Jiří (George) Chaloupka (6. září 1932 Týniště nad Orlicí – 18. října 2011 Darwin) byl česko-australský vědec, průkopník v oblasti studia a dokumentace skalních maleb původního austrálského obyvatelstva kontinentu. rdf:langString
George Chaloupka (* 6. September 1932 in Týniště nad Orlicí, Tschechoslowakei; † 18. Oktober 2011 in Darwin, Australien) war ein tschechisch-australischer der Felsmalereien der Aborigines. rdf:langString
George Jiří Chaloupka OAM, FAHA (6 September 1932 – 18 October 2011) was an expert on Indigenous Australian rock art. He identified and documented thousands of rock art sites, and was a passionate advocate for Aboriginal Australian art, as longest continuing art tradition in the world. He is especially known for the much-debated assignation of a four-phase style sequence to rock art in Arnhem Land, and the term "Dynamic Figures", which he assigned to rock art described by him in Mirrar country of western Arnhem Land. rdf:langString
rdf:langString George Chaloupka
rdf:langString George Chaloupka
rdf:langString George Chaloupka
xsd:integer 33480123
xsd:integer 1106114497
rdf:langString Jiří (George) Chaloupka (6. září 1932 Týniště nad Orlicí – 18. října 2011 Darwin) byl česko-australský vědec, průkopník v oblasti studia a dokumentace skalních maleb původního austrálského obyvatelstva kontinentu.
rdf:langString George Chaloupka (* 6. September 1932 in Týniště nad Orlicí, Tschechoslowakei; † 18. Oktober 2011 in Darwin, Australien) war ein tschechisch-australischer der Felsmalereien der Aborigines.
rdf:langString George Jiří Chaloupka OAM, FAHA (6 September 1932 – 18 October 2011) was an expert on Indigenous Australian rock art. He identified and documented thousands of rock art sites, and was a passionate advocate for Aboriginal Australian art, as longest continuing art tradition in the world. He is especially known for the much-debated assignation of a four-phase style sequence to rock art in Arnhem Land, and the term "Dynamic Figures", which he assigned to rock art described by him in Mirrar country of western Arnhem Land.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 11843

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