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#victor meunier
earlypalaeoart · 3 months
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Rhamphorhynchus from L'Animaux d'Autrefois (Animals of the Past) by Victor Meunier, 1869
https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k206510x/f254.item
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mako-neexu · 1 month
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please do give a summary!! and thank you 🥺❤️
i got busy with dream striker asdsjkfh but heres the summary:
basically 80% of the Servants take their leave and return to their home countries- or at least where they're located considering the earth is bleached. And Santa Martha picks Nemo to be 2023 santa this time so he's named Nemo Porter. After taking on the role of santa, Nemo insists on guda and mash to stay and fully relax in the border then after nemo leaves BB helps guda and mash secretly assist santa nemo by making sure his route is safe wherever he goes.
over the week, we get to learn that nemo took on being santa because he wants to give someone a gift. you see how even king hassan himself warned nemo about it then later on merlin stops nemo for a while because of just how risky the operation is and tells them that its practically near-worthless given what they're going to do, then BB with guda and mash not to ask nemo about what hes planning.
nemo's objective all along is to gift guda their chaldean uniform- the very Master from years ago who collapsed right after a battle simulation as soon as they came to Chaldea. its really sweet...
it was a highly risky voyage considering time travel itself is near impossibility and could absolutely destroy Nemo's saint graph into nothing should he even breathe wrong during the Zero Sail or during his time at 2015 chaldea. so "no changing the past" is something that was absolutely integral to the time travel. even telling past-ritsuka about how special the uniform is would cause everything to fall apart. (this is also why the event is named like this btw 7 days of preparation and delivering presents and 8 years of traveling back far into the past)
after going through against the harsh upcurrent (and even seeing guda's nightmares especially Garden of Lostwill), nemo and the crew eventually safely travel back to the past, with nemo wearing meuniere as a disguise. there, he sees cerejeira, some old staff... and finally Romani Ar- "Man in a Lab Coat".... which the Man almost instantly realize its not "Meuniere" beneath but maintains friendliness regardless. they have a chat- a small chat of world fighting for survival to which the Man in a Lab Coat expresses his opnion that there is no right and wrong in a battle for survival. that the victor only gets to have the right to see what happens next.
then the conversation finishes and "Meuniere" asks the Doctor for two pairs of white gloves. to which santa nemo gives to the present guda and mash as his christmas present for both of them, after having delivered past-guda's uniform for them to use later on.
ok cut now for lore stuff
basically the most striking detail albeit small, changes everything.
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"Announcer" - Prologue of the Fuyuki singularity
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"CHALDEAS" - Christmas 2023 event
this basically means that it wasnt an accident that Fujimaru Ritsuka became Humanity's Last Master that day. it means that CHALDEAS itself literally planned for fujimaru to pass out in the simulation to delay their arrival from the bombing, setting the battle simulator to "Senior" or highly difficult on their first day.
CHALDEAS. CHALDEAS itself chose ritsuka that day. it could probably be because no one was highly as compatible with servants as much as Fujimaru Ritsuka themself. and considering its true purpose is to fulfill marisbury's grand order, it must have chosen them for that reason? theres not much info on chaldeas that i remember but if you consider this, then that changes everything from the start.
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metmuseum · 6 months
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Portrait of Constantin Meunier, Belgian painter and sculptor (1831–1905). late 19th century. Credit line: Gift of Victor D. Brenner, 1903 https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/188819
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acsec · 2 years
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Cimetière de Caucade, Carré 36 - 7, Place de Caucade, Nice 🇫🇷 Monument des Victimes du Devoir offert par : - Mme et Mr OSBORN WILLIAM WINTER, et inauguré le 31 mai 1908 par : - Honoré SAUVAN (1860-1922), maire de Nice, sénateur des Alpes-Maritimes, en présence de : - André de JOLY, préfet, - HINRY, secrétaire général, - Victor MEUNIER (1848-1916), général, gouverneur de Nice, - GASSIN, REBAGLIATI, GAUTIER, BONFIGLIO, GRINDA, CLERISSY, adjoints au maire. #amazingadventuresofbeaujethro #ilovenice #cimetiere #caucade #nice #france #monument #hommage #histoire #souvenirfrancais #france #alpesmaritimes #cotedazur #frenchriviera (at Nice, France) https://www.instagram.com/p/CiTAraSrkm8/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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francepittoresque · 4 years
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HISTOIRE/ACTU | Circulation au sein des villes du futur : un ambitieux projet du XIXe siècle ➽ https://bit.ly/Circulation-Villes-Futur En 1864, l’écrivain scientifique Victor Meunier présente un projet de désengorgement des villes amenées à connaître des problèmes de circulation, assignant le sous-sol au transport ferroviaire des marchandises, le sol au déplacement des automobiles et des piétons sans interaction entre eux, enfin l’espace aérien aux aérostats
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ommsims · 5 years
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“Hello. Thank you for attending tonight’s No Sim Left Behind fundraiser...”
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“...NSLB is a cause we can all agree is of utmost importance to our society, and with your help we’ll be able to fund local schools with the necessary materials, tools, and resources they need to ensure that sim children everywhere have access to the same quality education no matter their background...”
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“...Now, before we hear from a few local teachers I invite you to share a meal. First course will be Glacier Infused Iceberg Lettuce, followed by your choice of Glazed Heirloom Bamboo Rolls or a wonderful locally sourced Trout Meuniere, and for dessert Baked Alaskas all cooked up by the talented students of the Windenburg Culinary Institute.”
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(Meanwhile, outside in the Lobby) Summer: “Goddammit Victor’s going to be so pissed. Service here is terrible. I can’t send those emails.”
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previously || next || from the start
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Louis Artan de Saint Martin - The North Sea at Blankenberge - 1871
Louis Victor Antonio Artan de Saint-Martin (20 April 1837, The Hague – 23 May 1890, Nieuwpoort) was a Dutch-Belgian painter and etcher who specialized in seascapes.
He became one of the sixteen co-founders the Société Libre des Beaux-Arts, an association opposed to the stylistic hegemony of the academies and salons.
The Société Libre des Beaux-Arts ("Free Society of Fine Arts") was an organization formed in 1868 by Belgian artists to react against academicism and to advance Realist painting and artistic freedom. Based in Brussels, the society was active until 1876, by which time the aesthetic values it espoused had infiltrated the official Salon. It played a formative role in establishing avant-gardism in Belgium.
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The Members of the Société Libre des Beaux-Arts by Edmond Lambrichs : from left to right, sitting are Huberti, Boudin, Degroux, Van Camp, Bouré, Verwée, C. Meunier, Dubois (holding copies of L'Art libre and L'Art Universel); standing, Lambrichs, Artan, Rops, Raeymaeckers, J.B. Meunier, Smits, Baron, De la Charlerie
Edmond Alphonse Charles Lambrichs - Portrait of members of the Société libre des Beaux-Arts - 1868
The first exhibition of the Free Society was held in 1868 to provide an alternative art space beyond the Salon. Three exhibitions were held in 1872. The society's manifesto was written by Camille van Camp (nl) and published 31 January 1869. It promoted the "free and individual interpretation of nature" characteristic of Realist art, along with avant-garde concepts such as "struggle, change, freedom, progress, originality and tolerance."
The society published the periodicals L'Art Libre, a bi-monthly review (1871–72), and L'Art Universel (1873–76). In the first issue of L'Art Libre, they collectively asserted:
“ Artistic independence must be spawned by force. It is our desire that art be free. The art of our time must return to man and nature. ” The goals of the Free Society were influenced by aesthetic ideals set forth by Gustave Courbet and the Barbizon artists and by the poet Charles Baudelaire. "Modernity" and "sincerity" were keywords. Official cultural critics were at first openly hostile. Two early champions, however, were the critics Camille Lemonnier, a member, who urged that they should "be of their own time," and Théo Hannon (1851-1916), who saw them as rebels against artificiality.
A group portrait by society member Edmond Lambrichs shows the 16 artists of the original organizing committee. The society attracted in particular landscape painters working at the Atelier Saint-Luc of Brussels, also known as the Académie de Saint-Luc (ca. 1846–1864). Louis Dubois, Félicien Rops, Constantin Meunier and Louis Artan de Saint-Martin are considered leading members. Most of the society's members had also belonged to the Artistic and Literary Circle of Brussels and the Royal Belgian Society of Watercolorists.[ After the society dissolved, several members joined groups such as La Chrysalide and Les XX.
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ilovestilettos · 3 years
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{𝗣𝗼𝗿𝘁𝗿𝗮𝗶𝘁𝘀} Il vieillit. C'est lui-même qui le dit, Fabrice Luchini aura 70 ans dans quelques jours. Un trou de mémoire, rattrapé avec élégance et l'aide du public, ici ; l'humour un peu moins pointu et intelligent qu'à une époque, là. "Le drame de notre époque est que la bêtise pense" dit-il reprenant le bon mot de Cocteau, c'est vrai, et malheureusement je me suis dit quelque fois pendant le spectacle que lui aussi tombait dans une facilité pas très jolie. J'ai le droit de pinailler, je déteste la médiocrité chez les gens que je sais cultivés et intelligents. J'attends de Luchini des bons mots à la Cocteau ou Ormesson, le reste est du gâchis. Dieu merci il y a sa sélection de textes, excellente comme toujours, et son art de la lecture et du partage. C'est généreux, gourmand, plein de curiosité, comment ne pas se régaler? Les extraits de "Croquis de mémoire" de Jean Cau sont fabuleux, truculents, finement écrits, il me faut ce livre. Son Jean Cocteau est pétillant et brillant ; son Gaston Gallimard un éditeur-meunier fatigué mais omniprésent ; Jean Genêt un poète exquis au langage parfois drôlement fleuri. J'aurais aimé entendre Luchini lire les portraits d'Ava Gardner ou Gabrielle Chanel, mais de femme il n'y a que Chloé, la chirurgienne de Philippe Lançon dans ce spectacle. C'est pour la présence de Philippe Lançon parmi les auteurs que j'ai pris les billets en janvier 2020, pour le plaisir d'entendre lus à haute voix quelques uns des très beaux portraits de soignants et d'infirmières. Il n'y en a qu'un seul, c'est dommage. C'est un sacré portrait, mais le talent de Lançon en méritait davantage. Il y a du Celine bien sûr. Un jour il arrivera à me le faire lire. Et puis "Les fleurs du mal". Merveille des merveilles, l'un de mes livres de chevet. Pour finir, Victor Hugo et son "Booz endormi". Au terme des 2 heures de spectacle il est plus frais et en forme qu'en le démarrant. C'est bien, il va continuer à nous lire de beaux textes encore longtemps. #theatre #portraits #fabriceluchini #litterature #ipreview via @preview.app (à Bouffes Parisiens) https://www.instagram.com/p/CU5qexzMG8Y/?utm_medium=tumblr
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earlypalaeoart · 3 months
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Mammoth from L'Animaux d'Autrefois (Animals of the Past) by Victor Meunier, 1869
https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k206510x/f165.item
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hzaidan · 3 years
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19 Works, Today, April 12th is artist Ferdinand Victor Léon Roybet's day, his story, illustrated with footnotes #101
Please follow link for full post
Art, Artists, biography, Constantin Meunier, fine art, fineart, footnotes, History, Paintings, Zaidan,
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porcileorg · 3 years
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A conversation about Kunstverein München’s group show ‘Not Working – Artistic production and matters of class’ (2020-09-12 – 2020-11-01)
Conversants: The Bensplainer, Magda Wisniowska, and Victor Sternweiler [talking on Skype, in the evening of Nov 11, 2020.]
Victor: We should start our conversation about Kunstverein München’s show ‘Not Working – Artistic production and matters of class,’ [online through 2020-11-22] curated by Maurin Dietrich and Gloria Hasnay, while making clear that we were not able to attend the parallel program, consisting of tours, lectures, performances, and video screenings, which were partially screened online, and an extensive reader was published too. This will simply be a conversation about the actual show. One could claim that such a review can’t do justice to the whole project, but I claim that nobody was able to attend everything, except for the makers, so one can only have a fragmented take on it, and therefore it is legitimate to, mainly or solely, talk about the work installed in the space. 
Exhibition consisted work by Angharad Williams, Annette Wehrmann, Gili Tal, Guillaume Maraud, Josef Kramhöller, Laura Ziegler and Stephan Janitzky, Lise Soskolne, Matt Hilvers, Stephen Willats.
A film screening series selected by Nadja Abt, showing work by Adrian Paci, Agnès Varda, Ayo Akingbade, Barbara Kopple, Berwick St Collective, Laura Poitras and Linda Goode Bryant, Max Göran.
A single event screening with films selected by Simon Lässig.
Accompanying program consisting of a book presentation (Düşler Ülkesi) by Cana Bilir-Meier (in conversation with Gürsoy Doğtaş), lectures by NewFutures, Ramaya Tegegne, Tirdad Zolghadr and a publication presentation (Phasenweise nicht produktiv) from a collaboration by Carolin Meunier and Maximiliane Baumgartner.
The reader containing contributions by Annette Wehrmann, Dung Tien Thi Phuong, Josef Kramhöller, Laura Ziegler and Stephan Janitzky, Leander Scholz, Lise Soskolne, Mahan Moalemi, Marina Vishmidt and Melanie Gilligan, Steven Warwick.
Exhibition documentation: https://artviewer.org/not-working-artistic-production-and-matters-of-class/
Magda: To help, I was rereading today the booklet accompanying the exhibition, although I don’t see how the text is really going to address what we see in the actual Kunstverein space. For example, I quote, “The works on view are characterized by a consciousness of how background, socialization, education, and artistic practice are inevitably entangled. They hence allow for a consideration of these categories in relation to the actual lived realities of their producers.” Does it mean that the artists somehow reflect their own social background? Autobiographically on their own lived reality? Well, by large, they don’t. We don’t know what social background these artists are coming from.
Victor: How would you know anyhow?
Magda: Instead, the coherency of the exhibition relies on going through all the positions which were outlined in the booklet’s introduction. So, Stephen Willats investigates the historical aspect of class, Annette Wehrmann performs the interrogation of the economic model, Josef Kramhöller’s is a more personal approach to consumerism, Gili Tal tackles gentrification and cosmopolitanism, and Angharad Williams addresses the performative and fashion , and so on. And at least two of the artists are no longer alive.
Victor: In the time of Covid, where you try to make ends meet, how can you say no? What I’m trying to say is that the precariousness of their class is testified also by artists not being able to nowadays refuse to participate in an exhibition in which they potentially don’t think they fit in. They do it, plain and simple.
The Bensplainer: I don’t think it is due to Covid. It’s a general trend. If you're invited by the artistic director of the Venice Biennale, whatever their exhibition idea is, you participate, as an artist. It’s not anymore the time when an Alighiero Boetti could angrily refuse an invitation by Harald Szeemann.
Magda: Is that really the central problem of this exhibition? There are a lot of problematic issues, and I am now again looking at the text, especially at the end, where it states that “today the question of class is not addressed anymore.” That is completely untrue. Much of postmodernism consisted precisely of the critical inquiry into questions of class. I don’t know about you, Bensplainer, but in my time in London we had to read a lot of Bourdieu, especially his idea concerning cultural capital.
The Bensplainer: Jameson was my lighthouse at that time!
Magda: It was a big thing! You can’t say really the topic had been ignored since then.
The Bensplainer: Especially after the last Documenta in 2017. 
Magda: I acknowledge that the question of class is no longer about a white male perspective, defined by simple economics. But really? What does this exhibition add to this conversation? 
The Bensplainer: I think that the main problem here is when you set up a thematic exhibition. If you, as a curator, have some aprioristic ideas about the specific interpretations on cultural work, then you tend to apply them to your own exhibition making. Although, you tend to lose contact with the works themselves. You tend to look more at the anecdotal parts of the work and at its processes. Let’s be honest, there are no great works in the exhibition, the ones being able to question your own vision of forms and of the world in which these forms happen.
Magda: I think the older works displayed here, as Stephen Willats’ ones, from the 1980s, present some problems: they are, in fact, historical, and at that time had a certain currency, whereas they seem today …
The Bensplainer: … nostalgic.
Magda: And dry as well: this kind of class idea, of people living in a housing block – like he documented and interviewed – it doesn’t seem relevant anymore. The other thing is that it seems so British, so entwined in that specific culture. We know this Monty Python sketch, right? This kind of satire, for example, wouldn’t fit German society at that time, I think.
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Magda: The other thing I was thinking of, while walking through the exhibition, was Pulp’s ‘Common People.’ (1995) Did anyone think of that? The song is about a girl from the upper classes, who wants to behave as being from the lower. But she never achieves that, because she always has her rich daddy in the background. I think that a potential problem this exhibition faces is of glamorizing this kind of a working-class cliché.
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Victor: That song is especially ironic, as it was brought to my attention by a friend that Danae Stratou, the artist, industrialist heir and wife of Yannis Varoufakis, is the subject of that song. 
Magda: Yes, that’s why I mention it. 
Victor: I had a chat with The Bensplainer at some point and we had concerns about the installing too. It seemed, we agreed, like an art fair show display. The question is: how do you display all these works like a survey of an idea?
Magda: It is about all the artistic positions that the text referred to. As I said before.
The Bensplainer: If you see such an exhibition, you might consider how it fits a piece of writing, it being a master or a PhD thesis. On the other hand, it really lacks the viewer’s possibility to freely interact with the works. In other terms: how could you translate an idea for an exhibition, if the exhibition itself follows a logocentric and rational process? There is no surprise, indeed: I wanna see something, I don’t wanna learn something. 
Victor: This is a kind of philosophy made clear by the exhibition makers: what can art do and how it can utilize itself, in order to convey politics?
The Bensplainer: Do you mean how art can be utilitarian?
Victor: Let’s say you have a curatorial agenda, or an hypothesis: art-making as a precarious condition. And then you, as an exhibition maker, attempt to visualize that. In this sense, these works witness this very aspect, like art illustrating an intellectual point of view.
Magda: Otherwise said, either it is the work that is convincing, or the hypothesis. Right now, it doesn’t seem to be either. About the works I don’t wanna say much, but the text, its arguments can be easily dismantled. In many places, it is simply not coherent. For example, why do you state in the exhibition text that the coronavirus pandemic is what makes visible the rise of social inequalities the exhibition addresses, and then you show works from the 1980s? It makes no sense.
The Bensplainer: Works from the 1980s which recall works from the 1960s.
Magda: Exactly! If you were really consistent with your method, you would research the topic, then find out who’s working with it now. Not the artists who kind of work with the idea… just a little bit, so that they can fit your curatorial idea.
Victor: On the behalf of the curators: why should you do a show like that? What are their motivations?
Magda: Of course, you can do a show addressing the notion of class. There’s nothing wrong about that. Even if it were an illustration of ideas, it could work. But you need a good thesis first, while here the positions that are supposed to illustrate it, are weak. Who liked Laura Ziegler and Stephan Janitzky’s installations?
Victor: As a person who attended some performances by Ziegler and Janitzky previous to the KM show, but not to the last one actually at KM, I would say I see their sculptures as stage props. These performances enchanted or activated their sculptures. So, I’m quite neutral about their works in the show, but at the same time I’m neutral about all the works featured. It seems to me that the show has an agenda in representing all kinds of mediums. Photography, video … like a checklist.
The Bensplainer: Maybe old-fashioned?
Magda: It is a safe agenda. If you take Mark Fisher’s ‘Capitalist Realism,’ he states that museums and related institutions are safe spaces where we can make criticism of capitalism, while capitalism itself allows it.
Victor: Yeah, Roland Barthes already said that. On my part, I am totally opposed to the idea of ‘making art’ as a profession, in the capitalist sense. When paying your rent depends on the money from selling your art, then soon you’ll be under pressure to produce, and that in return, I think, ultimately leads to overproduction and junk.
Magda: Then we ought to know more about the artists and how they position themselves to the capitalist model. 
The Bensplainer: I think we are derailing the conversation. I mean, after 1989, there is only one religion, which is capitalism, and you hardly can escape this fact (I agree with Giorgio Agamben on this). Insisting on this leftist nostalgia is counterproductive. Art is luxury. Some artists are fighting against this mindset, but we are still in such a system.
Magda: Indeed – and yet the exhibition promotes an anti-capitalist position. For example, The Coop Fund’s aim is to provide an alternative funding, so that is very clear. Guillaume Maraud is also doing a standard institutional critique by creating an alternative fund. 
The Bensplainer: At the same time, these practices are canonized. When KM showed Andrea Fraser in 1993, the questions she raised were novel and on the point. The visuals in this present show are canonized. Stephen Willats repeats a visual language of more established artists, as Hans Haacke for instance. 
Magda: Yes, maybe the only thing Willats adds is a British perspective on the problem.
The Bensplainer: Victor, you said on the occasion of our NS-Dokumentationszentrum conversation [link]: „Preaching to the converted.“ Basically, we find here the same pattern. So, you can argue with a lot of reasoning about a motivation for an exhibition – in this case an anti-capitalist agenda – but what I expect is to see works and practices which change the way I see. Sorry if I repeat myself, but seeing works which repeat, without a difference, canonized visual experiences from the past gives me such a kind of déjà vu effect. What is this exhibition about? What are the politics that motivated it? From the point of view of the exhibition making, it is in itself a sort of repetition. In the last Documenta, the assumptions were similar: a lot of nostalgic Marxism and related leftist theoretical positions, which are good, but at the end of the day, the works become an illustration sketched aprioristically by the curators and the artistic director. Here lays the critical point which we really have to address. Paradoxically, if the works are repeating themselves, aren’t also the politics of exhibition making repeating themselves? 
Magda: Yes and no. My question is: why are you repeating these positions? You can repeat a practice under the change of circumstances: the pandemic has changed the parameters. 
The Bensplainer: I agree: the pandemic has unveiled changes which were not so clear before that. 
Magda: So, does the repetition offered in this exhibition reflect that? Does our present context require repetition? How are the works from the 1980s and 1990s relevant now?
The Bensplainer: Let’s be clear: I don’t consider repetition with a negative value. I remember a wonderful group show at KW, Berlin, in 2007, titled ‘History Will Repeat Itself.’ Precisely, it was interesting because it focused on repetition as a visual device, that’s to say how artists and works dealt with the notion of repetition, be it of other works or of overarching experiences. I remember this great video by Jeremy Deller, ‘The Battle of Orgreave’ (2001), directed by Mike Figgis, in which the artist reenacted the famous 1984 clash between workers and police in Orgreave, South Yorkshire, England, and interviewed some participants from both sides too. By the way, it was a ground breaking show, but if you now repeat because it is fashion, a canon, then repeating loses its critical charge. Moreover, works become simply an illustration of the curator’s idea. It seems to me so frustrating now, especially when Anton Vidokle already addressed the question in his seminal and controversial article ‘Art Without Artists?’ on e-flux already in 2010. [link]
Victor: Yeah, that’s what I find problematic with this show: in this time of existential precariousness, how can an artist be critical or be able to question the politics of an exhibition? You’re invited, you get attention and funds, you simply go along with it. The institutions are creating ideological precariousness by wagging with the money. Nonetheless, I see that an artist needs the money. I think it is an inherent issue of institutional exhibition making, but I can’t see an immediate way out of it. It is a trap. The people in the institutions are also paid to play their role, and if they refuse to, replacement will be found quickly.
The Bensplainer: I don’t think that it is the main point here.
Magda: I recognize that there are many artists that suffer contemporary financial precariousness, but there are equally many who do not. Let’s be honest, how many artists, or student artists, may claim that they are coming from working class families? I mean, many are playing the role, but really?
The Bensplainer: I have to check it again, but there is a statistic in Bavaria that states that families on the edge of or below existential and financial poverty who are able to send their kids to higher education are 6 or 7%. That’s a ridiculous percentage, especially because these underprivileged students or artists have then a structural difficulty in order to enter the so-called art system.
Magda: Mid- or upper-class people study art. They come from that comfortable background. At any given time, they may or may not have money, but they indeed have a safety net. 
Victor: People that I talked to were missing a critical view on the institution itself and how this show sits within its history and why they did the show there, since the Kunstverein was developed specifically to cultivate an image and space for the bourgeoisie, the middle class, by propagating aesthetic values from the upper class. It was the beginning of the ‘public sphere’ separate from the court, but also was the image of upward mobility and how its members today, generally upper middle class, use the space as a form of patronage and charity as an additive to their cultural capital. So, one might interpret this show as cynical, but I personally think that there is also the possibility of freeing yourself up from that tradition and subverting or bastardizing that project of that middle class of 200 years ago. However, I think that the show is too conventional and there is an opportunity missed here. 
The Bensplainer: Sorry if I always bring up my PhD topic about the Russian so-called Avant-Garde. If you analyze it socially, the Avant-Garde cloud was also animated by class and social warfare. Practitioners from the periphery came to the capitals, Moscow and St. Petersburg, and they had to fight with their contemporaries belonging to the urban mid- or upper-class world. For instance, you have Malevich who needs to rent a big apartment for him and his family, in order to sub-let and make a little profit from other people. But he also has to provide meals for them and he can paint only when he has some spare time. You still have today this romantic idea of the Avant-Garde, forgetting that it was also a very hard social situation.
Magda: But, the thing is that the economic or even its symbolic model, doesn’t seem to be really relevant. Class as it was in the 1970s, 1980s or even 1990s doesn’t exist anymore. What about class and technology? You can’t apply for jobs because you don’t have easy access to the Internet, because you don’t own a laptop or a smartphone. You can’t have a flat because you don’t get the notification on time. And flexibility changed the notion of work. There are a lot of structural changes in our societies, which the show’s accompanying text acknowledges clearly, but they are not examined in the work, or at least only in the orthodox leftist way. These positions are repeated nostalgically in the art. To me, the working class today is exemplified by DHL delivery workers.
The Bensplainer: I would add this. Today's working class might also be embodied by wannabe successful TikTok accounts! You may immediately perceive the fakeness in appropriating models from the supposed upper class in order to convey a different idea about yourself.
Magda: Fake it until you make it! TikTok responds to an already established model.
The Bensplainer: The novel level conveyed by TikTok is that it is not about hustling or conning anymore. Everybody knows everything is fake, so everybody accepts the coded rules.
Victor: That’s the classic definition of Žižek’s ‘ideology.’
Magda: Coming back to the show, I was surprised that urgent political issues were not questioned. I mean, the rise of populism is an issue, and it is class oriented. I don’t know much about Berlusconi and his years in power, but he did address the narrative of his politics to a certain class and set up a model for the recent years, didn’t he?
The Bensplainer: We Italians are not recognized in such a way anymore, but we’re still at the verge of the Avant-Garde! If history repeats itself as a farce, after Berlusconi everything is a farce. He had – and to some extent still has – an appeal to the working class, in the sense that he sold a narrative through which you can change your life only by willing it. At his first election run in 1994 he won in working class’ bastions, where traditionally the former Communist Party won with ease, efficiently selling his abstract ideas on liberty through his glittering television sets. So, already then, you might perceive that categories such as the Left and the Right were structurally changing. And this historical and epochal shift, so charged with ideological questions, is totally forgotten in this exhibition. 
Magda: Thus, I could have accepted as legitimate the exhibition’s assumptions, even if illustrational, if they would have addressed the ongoing complexity of the topic of populism, digitalization, 0-hours contracts, and so on, all related to an idea of the working class. Then it would have been fair enough!
The Bensplainer: I would add another topic to this. If you consider the state of satire, especially from the US, comedy is way ahead of visual art. It addresses those topics in a much more effective and creative way than visual art is actually doing. Only because they’re really reaching millions of people.
Magda: Yes, John Oliver, for instance.
The Bensplainer: I became a huge fan of Jimmy Kimmel’s late-night monologues in the last two years, because he and his authors adapted his style of comedy shifting from weird Hollywood absurdities to overall US social and political issues. So, his and his authors’ craft reached a new level of satire, and the audience’s awareness. What can visual art do, as powerful as it might be, in comparison to mainstream satire? Let’s simply think about how Kimmel dealt with the topic Obamacare and how he related to – his personal history.
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Magda: This is important, as access to healthcare in the US especially, is a class issue. But then, yeah, why don’t you simply invite a comedian to KM, then? Ok, you could never afford that, but who knows?
The Bensplainer: It would be so wonderful! But this idea should also be declined in a weirder approach. 
Magda: For sure, a comedian in an art space could have more freedom compared to the one he could have on national television. 
The Bensplainer: Victor, do you remember Olof Olsson’s performance at Lothringer 13’s cafe in Munich in 2017? 
Victor: Yes.
The Bensplainer I found it brilliant, mixing visual and comedy devices, and very generous, because it lasted so long! This kind of transdisciplinary performance says more about social, political and economic issues, than a conventional show, like this one at KM. If I had to make a single critical statement about this show at KM is that it doesn’t move our present cultural perception to a different plane, as satire does.
Magda: My impression is that a student went through their assigned reading list, without going to the library. Everything which was required was read, but no insight was then further researched. 
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wsmith215 · 4 years
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Tottenham transfer news and rumours | Football News
Transfer news, rumours and gossip from Spurs
Last Updated: 02/06/20 7:59am
The latest transfer news and gossip on the players linked with Tottenham – and those who could leave the club.
The latest players linked with a move to Tottenham…
Stefan Savic – Spurs are in contact with Savic’s agent over a summer move (Todofichajes, June 2); The Atletico Madrid defender, 29, would be open to a move to Tottenham if his valuation is met (Todofichajes, June 1)
Willian – Tottenham will only pursue the Chelsea winger if they offload Erik Lamela first (Daily Star, May 31)
Tottenham and Arsenal are both planning for a summer in which they will not be able to spend any money, as they compete over the free transfer signing of Willian (Daily Telegraph, May 27)
Victor Osimhen – Lille striker Osimhen will not consider a move to Tottenham – unless they sell Harry Kane (The Sun, May 30)
Ryan Fraser – Arsenal and Spurs transfer target Ryan Fraser has been linked with a surprise move to Galatasary (Daily Mail, May 29)
The Bournemouth winger has told friends he would be keen on joining Spurs if they make a move for him (Football Insider, May 2); The long-term Arsenal target is believed to be interested in joining Spurs on a free transfer when his contract at Bournemouth expires next month (Daily Mirror, May 18)
Taylor Booth – Tottenham boss Jose Mourinho has reportedly offered a contract to Bayern Munich youngster Booth (Football Insider, May 28)
Pierre-Emile Hojbjerg – Spurs are expected to revive their interest in the Southampton captain when the window re-opens (football.london, May 19)
Guillermo Maripan – Spurs and West Ham both want to sign Monaco centre-back Maripan, with Jan Vertonghen and Juan Foyth potentially leaving the former this summer (AS, May 17)
Ivan Perisic – Bayern Munich will not take up their option on signing Perisic at the end of his loan from Inter Milan, leaving the door open for Tottenham to bring in the Croatia winger (Football.London, May 17)
Arkadiusz Milik – Tottenham are willing to offer a players-plus-cash deal to Napoli to avoid paying around £50m for Poland striker Milik (Tuttosport, May 15)
Sergino Dest – The Ajax defender, who has previously admitted he could be tempted by a move to North London, has again been linked with Spurs (Football.London, May 15)
Other players recently linked with Spurs… Mattia De Sciglio (Tuttomercato, May 14)Alex Sandro (Tuttomercato, May 14)Nicolo Zaniolo (Daily Express, May 12)Thomas Meunier (Sunday Express, May 10)Kalidou Koulibaly (Calciomercato, May 8)Sergio Reguilon (The Sun, May 4)Ivan Rakitic (Daily Mail, May 3)Marash Kumbulla (Gazzetta dello Sport, May 2)Arthur (Mundo Deportivo, April 23)Emerson (Mundo Deportivo, April 23)Issa Diop (Football Insider, April 21; Football365, April 22)Raul Jimenez (Foot Mercato, April 21; Football365, April 22)Pierluigi Gollini (La Gazzetta dello Sport, April 20)Lamare Bogarde (The Sun, April 16)Diego Godin (Daily Express, April 15)Jack Grealish (Daily Express, April 13).Geoffrey Kondogbia (El Desmarque, April 11)Mike Maignan (Daily Express, April 10)The latest players linked with a Tottenham exit…
Danny Rose – Tottenham are willing to extend the full back’s loan at Newcastle for him to complete the campaign at St James’ Park (Daily Telegraph, May 29)
Jan Vertonghen – The Belgian defender has emerged as a target for a host of Italian clubs ahead of a likely departure from Tottenham when his contract expires in June (Daily Mail, May 31)
Tottenham’s attempts to keep hold of the defender appear to be failing as the Belgian looks increasingly likely to leave the club this summer (Daily Mirror, May 23)
Jack Clarke – Celtic are looking to bring Jack Clarke to the club on loan from Spurs next season, after failing with a bid in January (Daily Express, May 15)
Juan Foyth – Barcelona are keen on the Spurs defender who is available for transfer this summer (Daily Mirror, May 13)
Other players recently linked with a move away from Spurs… Tanguy Ndombele (Daily Telegraph, May 4; Sky Sports, April 29; Independent, May 13)Harry Kane (Corriere dello Sport, April 20; Sky Sports, April 13)
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kenwongquebec-blog · 4 years
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En ondes dans 10 minutes !!! LA VOIX DES GUERRIERS SPÉCIAL #UFC246 #mcgregorvcowboy Avec Fernand Lopez, Jonathan Meunier et Kenny Victor Chery Professionnel pour sa chronique boxe !!! LA VOIX DES GUERRIERS sur CJMD 96,9 FM à Lévis à de 18 à 20h (24h à 2am en France ) Pour écouter en direct sur le Web : http://969fm.ca https://www.instagram.com/p/B7enUG6JlmQ/?igshid=1wmqvu2k0o8u1
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Prediksi PSG vs LILLE 23 November 2019 – Pertandingan Ligue 1 Prancis yang Akan mempertemukan PSG vs Lille akan diadakan pada Tanggal 24 November 2019 Pukul 02:45 WIB Di Stadium Parc des Princes.
PSG – Pada tiga pertandingan Terakhirnya menelan Kekalahan sebanyak 1 kali dan memperoleh kemenangan sebanyak 2 kali pertandingan yaitu saat bertanding melawan Dijon dengan skor 2 – 1, bertanding melawan Club Brugge dengan skor 1 – 0, bertanding melawan Brest dengan skor 1 – 2.
Lille – Pada tiga pertandingan Terakhirnya menelan Kekalahan sebanyak 2 dan memperoleh kemenangan sebanyak 1 kali pertandingan yaitu saat melawan Olympique Marseille dengan skor 2 – 1, bertanding melawan Valencia dengan skor 4 – 1, bertanding melawan Metz dengan skor 3 – 0.
Pada kesempatan ini kami akan memberikan prediksi skor akhir untuk pertandingan bola bergengsi antara PSG vs Lille. Berikut ini adalah data statistik dari beberapa laga terakhir head to head yang sudah dilakoni dan hasil dari 5 pertemuan terakhir masing – masing kedua tim sehingga dapat menjadi bahan untuk menganalisa skor pertandingan tersebut.
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Prediksi PSG vs LILLE 23 November 2019
Head to Head PSG vs Lille 15/04/19 LI1 Lille 5 – 1 PSG 03/11/18 LI1 PSG 2 – 1 Lille 03/02/18 LI1 Lille 0 – 3 PSG 09/12/17 LI1 PSG 3 – 1 Lille 08/02/17 LI1 PSG 2 – 1 Lille
5 Pertandingan Terakhir PSG 23/10/19 UCL Club Brugge 0 – 5 PSG 28/10/19 LI1 PSG 4 – 0 Olympique Mars 02/11/19 LI1 Dijon 2 – 1 PSG 07/11/19 UCL PSG 1 – 0 Club Brugge 09/11/19 LI1 Brest 1 – 2 PSG
5 Pertandingan Terakhir Lille 24/10/19 UCl Lille 1 – 1 Valencia 26/10/19 LI1 Lille 3 – 0 Bordeaux 02/11/19 LI1 Olympique Marseille 2 – 1 Lille 06/11/19 UCL Valencia 4 – 1 Lille 10/11/19 LI1 Lille 3 – 0 Metz
Prediksi Susunan Pemain PSG vs Lille PSG : Keylor Navas; Colin Dagba, Marquinhos, Thiago Silva, Juan Bernat, Marco Verratti, Leandro Paredes, Ángel Di María, Pablo Sarabia, Mauro Icardi, Kylian Mbappé. Manager:Thomas Tuchel.
Info pemain PSG : Ander Herrera (Cedera), Loic Mbe Soh (Cedera), Thomas Meunier (Cedera), Neymar (cedera), Thilo Kehrer (meragukan).
Lille : Mike Maignan; Jérémy Pied, Adama Soumaoro, José Fonte, Reinildo Mandava, Thiago Maia, Xeka, Renato Sanches, Yusuf Yazici, Luiz Araújo, Victor Osimhen. Manager:Christophe Galtier.
Info pemain Lille : Timothy Weah (cedera).
Prediksi Skor PSG vs Lille Prediksi Skor : 3 – 1 Handicap : 0:1 3/4 Over / Under : 3 1/4 Tips : PSG / Over
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jeramymobley · 5 years
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Remy Martin celebrates collective success through its new global campaign
Remy Martin unveils “Team Up For Excellence”, a celebration of collaboration, shared values, and the success it generates, created by the Fred & Farid Paris agency
Remy Martin, a producer of cognac, has launched a new platform that reflects its values of authenticity, audacity and generosity. Named “Team up for excellence,” the campaign draws from these to pay homage to personal success through the various people who made it possible.
Remy Martin’s philosophy of expert cognac making is a result many talents working together under the aegis of Baptiste Loiseau, the House’s Cellar Master; just like a conductor, he coordinates the various steps of cognac elaboration: winegrowing, vinification, distillation, blending and ageing.
The House of Remy Martin is a story of family, partners and collective success: André Hériard Dubreuil and André Renaud, Baptiste Loiseau and Pierrette Trichet, to name just a few. Over the years, teamwork has been at the heart of The House of Remy Martin. It is a value close to the ethos of the brand, especially the younger generations: a need to be a part of a group and a desire to collaborate or co-create.
Since 1724, the celebrated cognac House has been rooted in exception, producing cognac from both the Grande and Petite Champagne regions of France. Since 1966, Remy Martin has had a contractual association, a multi-year partnership between the merchant and the winegrower, that formed the Alliance Fine Champagne.
Notable guests included former Victor Cruz, Jermaine Dupri, Tamra Simmons, Murda Beatz, amongst others.
This quest of excellence has been the Remy Martin trademark since 1724, a brand with the constant dedication of creating quality cognac. To continually achieve higher and further as a reflection of the Centaur, the brand’s figurehead for 150 years.
At the core of this new campaign, two films were conceived by the Fred & Farid Paris agency and directed by Vellas, a Brazilian director chosen by the brand for his aesthetic and his ability to tell a well-paced, authentic and emotive story. These works reflect the contemporary idea of creating shared success.
The first film dedicated to Remy Martin’s expertise shows masters of the Remy Martin Estate for the first time: Baptiste Loiseau (Cellar Master), Laura Mornet (Viticulture Consulting Manager), Julien Georget (Estates Manager) and Michael Meunier (Cooperage Manager) all took part. The film delivers a sensory experience through an ingeniously choreographed sequence which connects the various stages of the cognac-making process.
“It is a wonderful project which was made through teamwork. The result is a film which shows the essence of our trades, the passion which bonds us together and drives us, and above all the evidence of working together for the better, the excellence of our cognac”, commented Baptiste Loiseau, The Cellar Master.
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The second film entitled “Start-up” takes place in the vibrant world of young, pioneering companies. It celebrates synergy, collective emulation around an original idea which will gradually come to fruition.
The new campaign draws on the rich, nearly 300-year history of Remy Martin, whilst remaining entirely contemporary. “Team up for excellence” emphasises the superiority of Remy Martin cognac with its greatest asset: Fine Champagne, the foundation stone of the House’s global reach.
“Remy Martin is more than just a brand. It is a constellation of talent-driven by that rarely-found feeling of belonging to a real family”, stresses Augustin Depardon, Global Executive Director of Remy Martin.
The campaign was launched with a celebration in Versailles, France, on October 21, 2019, which brought together one hundred guests who contributed to the success of the brand around the world and share the same uncompromising commitment to achieving excellence through collaboration in their respective arts. Notable guests included former Victor Cruz, Jermaine Dupri, Tamra Simmons, Murda Beatz, amongst others.
The article Remy Martin celebrates collective success through its new global campaign appeared first on World Branding Forum.
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[JEU] 🎭🙎‍ Pour interpréter le groupe passionné d’alpinisme du Mont analogue de René Daumal, mis en scène par Victor Thimonier, nous inaugurons notre nouvelle saison avec de jeunes talents, portraits de Margaux Desailly, Maxime Kerzanet & Jean-Erns Marie Louise
Margaux Desailly intègre en 2014 l’École de la Comédie de Saint-Étienne (promotion 27) dont elle sort avec le diplôme national supérieur professionnel de comédien en juin 2017 et où elle a notamment l’occasion de se former auprès de Guillaume Beguin, Émilie Capliez, Mathieu Cruciani, Marcial Di Fonzo Bo, Alain Françon, Pierre Maillet, Travis Preston, Aristide Tarnagda et Cyril Teste. À sa sortie elle travaille avec Laurent Fréchuret, Mathieu Heyraud, Pauline Laidet, Arnaud Meunier et Victor Thimonier.
Maxime Kerzanet est diplômé du Conservatoire National Supérieur d’Art Dramatique de Paris (promotion 2008). Au théâtre, il travaille sous la direction de différents metteurs en scène tels que Muriel Mayette, Thomas Bouvet, Daniel Jeanneteau, Marie-Christine Soma, Guillaume Dujardin, Raphaël Patout, Rémy Barché, Chloé Brugnon, René Loyon, Gilles Granouillet, Damien Houssier, Charly Marty. Il est membre du groupe de musique Léopoldine HH.
Jean-Erns Marie-Louise se forme auprès de Christopher Barnett en Haïti, puis au Centre Culturel Frantz Fanon en Martinique. Fondateur de la compagnie la Thymélé. Au théâtre, il travaille sous la direction de différents metteurs en scène tels que Antonella Amirante, Pierre- Jean Naud, Nino D’Introna, Alain Timar, Emmanuel Meirieu, Thierry Bedar, Tatiana Stepantchenko, Christian Rullier, Christophe Barnett, Blaudine Hunault, Victor Thimonier. Il est artiste associé aux Soirées d’été en Luberon depuis 2004.
📅 Le Mont Analogue du 04 au 08 septembre à 19h00
🎫 Réservations sur www.reineblanche.com/calendrier/theatre/le-mont-analogue-ecriture-pour-montagnes-et-plateaux
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#théâtre #spectacle #pièce #adaptation #RenéDaumal #roman #aventures #inachevé #montagne #mont #alpinisme #élévation #ascension #inaccessibilité #invisibilité #spiritualité #religion #Bible #mythe #légende #fantasme #imaginaire #imagination #philosophie #théologie #littérature #poésie #écriture #sciences #études #recherches #connaissances #dépassement #surpassement #défi #exploit #accomplissement #symbole #conférence #café #radio #LaConversationScientifique #ÉtienneKlein #JohnZorn #AlejandroJodorowsky #LesParadisperdus #Christophe
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