Afghan President Hamid Karzai, who for years pushed for reconciliation with the Taliban, now says attempts to negotiate with the insurgent movement are futile. (Oct. 1)
Continue reading …With a verdict expected soon in the appeals trial of Amanda Knox, the American woman convicted of murdering her British roommate, the media have descended on Perugia, Italy.(Oct. 1)
Continue reading …With a verdict expected soon in the appeals trial of Amanda Knox, the American woman convicted of murdering her British roommate, the media have descended on Perugia, Italy.(Oct. 1)
Continue reading …With a verdict expected soon in the appeals trial of Amanda Knox, the American woman convicted of murdering her British roommate, the media have descended on Perugia, Italy.(Oct. 1)
Continue reading …With a verdict expected soon in the appeals trial of Amanda Knox, the American woman convicted of murdering her British roommate, the media have descended on Perugia, Italy.(Oct. 1)
Continue reading …It really has been amazing watching dovish media members who were perpetually complaining about the terrorist detention center at Guantanamo Bay and the enhanced interrogation of its residents when George W. Bush was president now cheering the assassination of United States citizen turned terrorist Anwar al-Awlaki. A fine example of this hypocrisy occurred on HBO's “Real Time” Friday when the host who just last year supported a civilian trial for 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed applauded Awlaki's murder while encouraging his audience to join in the merriment (video follows with transcript and commentary, vulgarity warning): BILL MAHER, HOST: No, I know why you're happy tonight. President bad ass has done it again. A predator drone killed Anwar al-Awlaki. You can applaud that if you like. [Applause] He is Al-Awlaki, is the, well United States citizen is what he is. He was living in Yemen, became the world's most wanted terrorist. And it just shows once again do not f–k with Obama. This was how Friday's show began: a liberal Hollywoodan cheered what many would consider an unConstitutional assassination of a U.S. citizen and encouraged his liberal audience to celebrate with him. It almost defies the imagination. A few minutes later, while discussing national security issues with the Washington Post's Dana Priest, Awlaki came up again: DANA PRIEST, WASHINGTON POST: Bin Laden's dead. Al Qaeda's almost dead. And the guys who really know what they're doing and women they have a bead on the organizations that are coming up. That's al-Awlaki. That's why he got whacked. MAHER: That’s why he got whacked, and I’m glad he did. “That’s why he got whacked, and I’m glad he did.” After dismissing Priest, Maher brought Awlaki up with his exclusively liberal panelists: MAHER: And Chris Christie the other night, the new flavor of the month as they call him, the new man crush of the Republican Party, was at the Reagan library, and he said in his big speech that the president was just a bystander in the Oval Office. And then the next day Obama killed al-Awlaki, which I love. So I just want to say: maybe Obama’s bad at class warfare, but warfare warfare, he's pretty good. FORMER MICHIGAN GOVERNOR JENNIFER GRANHOLM (D): I would say so. [Applause] A few minutes later: MAHER: So were we right to kill al-Awlaki. I mean, look, Ron Paul, who I don’t agree with on a lot of things, but he has the balls the size of a Smart Car. He really does. He came out… SALMAN RUSHDIE, AUTHOR: Not necessarily helpful. MAHER: Maybe not. But, you know, he said we shouldn't do it. He said, his points were this is an American citizen Awlaki, never killed anybody personally. We're not at war with Yemen and he never had a trial. I don't agree with that, but you know… “He never had a trial. I don't agree with that.” Readers are advised to remember this. SETH MACFARLANE, CREATOR “FAMILY GUY: It's a weird gray area because my first instinct when I read this was, “Well, yeah, that makes perfect sense.” There was no feasible way that we could arrest this guy. So what else do you do? If Osama bin Laden would had been an American citizen we still would have had to go in and deal with him as we did. GRANHOLM: Take him out. Take him out.
Continue reading …The French museum’s renovation has brought the grandeur of its 19th-century masterpieces back to life The grandeur hits you as soon as you walk in. On the austere, slate-grey wall of the Musée d’Orsay’s newly renovated impressionist gallery, Manet’s Déjeuner sur l’Herbe stops visitors in their tracks. The plump female nude at the heart of the canvas, who so scandalised 19th-century opinion in the Paris Salon, is recognisable, but there is something splendidly different about its new presentation. After Manet, there are the other crown jewels of impressionism: the Degas ballerinas, Monet’s poppies, Renoir’s Moulin Rouge dancers, Cézanne’s card players, and dozens more of the world’s best-known 19th-century French masterpieces. The colours leap out from the long, sombre walls. The museum’s president, Guy Cogéval, had spoken before its reopening of a “renaissance” of the Musée d’Orsay and its world-renowned collection, and promised to show the impressionists as we had never seen them before. The expert judgment, ahead of the public opening of the new-look museum on 20 October, is that he has been true to his word. It has taken almost €8m (£7m) to create this new gallery – part of a two-year renovation of the museum costing €20m – in which clever use of colour and illumination shows the works in an entirely new light. Gone are the cramped corridors, the dead ends, the white stone walls and floors and the glaring light from the massive glass canopy that forms a central avenue over the top-floor gallery in the Pavillon Amont, the west wing of the building. The new, subdued walls and floors, along with artificial lighting, have created what Cogéval describes as an “intimate”, almost homely, atmosphere in a gallery that he says is the “beating heart of the museum”. “These paintings were, after all, intended to be hung on walls in homes, not in a museum,” he says. With his gelled hair, slightly rumpled suit and unbridled enthusiasm, Cogéval, 55, an art historian who took over as president of the Musée d’Orsay in January 2008, has the appearance and air of an over-excited schoolboy. “Everyone said I couldn’t touch the museum when I arrived because it is a historic building and all that. But I have proved them wrong. I said we would do this, and we did,” he says, with undisguised glee. “The whole space has been transformed. It’s magnifique!” The 19th-century painters, working in an era before the electric light bulb became widespread, would doubtless have appreciated the modern tricks of artificial light employed to show their work to extraordinary effect. Developing artistic and scientific techniques to capture on canvas the way that light transformed landscapes and objects became an obsession among the impressionists. The focus was crucial to creating what they termed “optical realism”. Claude Monet said of impressionism, the movement he founded and led: “Light is the principal person in the picture.” To that end, he strove over and over again to encapsulate the way that light danced over the Thames at Westminster, the cathedral at Rouen, the water lilies on the pond at his home in Giverny, and the nearby haystacks – all at different times and in different weathers. Curator Xavier Rey, one of the team hanging the impressionist works in the new fifth-floor gallery, said that before the renovations the paintings had been lit solely by sunlight. “The new system of lighting has transformed everything. Now we have a combination of halogen and new-generation diode lights that reproduce the richness of sunlight, but directly light the paintings and reflect the colours and details. It really does mean the works are being seen in a new light, which was our intention.” He added: “Hanging the works on coloured walls is also closer to the way the impressionist paintings would have been displayed in their time.” As for the impressionists, the devil was in the detail and colour; Parisian architect Jean-Michel Wilmotte said his team had experimented with various shades of grey before coming up with the right one. “It took three or four goes,” said Wilmotte. “The grey paint, which is a specially made mix, changes colour depending on the light – sometimes it is green-grey, sometimes red-grey. It is a very special grey. It doesn’t have a name, but if pushed to give it one I would say gris vivant [living grey] because it changes with the light. The light gives a kind of visual comfort and the painting stands out against this grey. “We also tried to make the best use of the natural light by filtering it and using fractured glass that captures and diffuses the sunlight.” Cogéval admits that he was not convinced at first that profound grey was the right colour for the gallery, having expressed an initial preference for green. “It was this I hesitated over most. We tried it out in a small space like an apartment to see how it looked with different shades and different lighting. Now I see it is warm and elegant,” he said. “The deep colour means the impressionists’ palette can be seen like never before.” Since 2008 the Musée d’Orsay has been gradually abandoning the concept, popularised by the Museum of Modern Art in New York, of hanging paintings on white walls. “Outside 20th-century and contemporary art, white kills all paintings,” said Cogéval. “When you place an academic or impressionist painting on a white background, the light from the white creates an indeterminate halo around the work, preventing the sometimes subtle contrasts and details being revealed.” The opening of the new galleries – including a chain of renovated rooms housing post-impressionist works by Van Gogh, Gauguin, Cross, Seurat, the Douanier Rousseau and a stunning new café designed by Brazilian brothers Humberto and Fernando Campana – will mark the Musée d’Orsay’s 25th birthday. Built on the left bank of the Seine, opposite the Tuileries Gardens, the museum was originally a railway station built by Victor Laloux for the Orléans line and was inaugurated at the World’s Fair of 1900. At the station’s opening, painter Edouard Detaille said presciently: “The station is superb and looks like the Palais des Beaux Arts.” By 1939 it was already obsolete, its platforms too short for the new modern trains that appeared with the electrification of the railways. Today its impressionist and post-impressionist collection boasts 34 Manets, 86 Monets, 43 by Degas, 56 Cézannes, 46 Sisleys, 81 Renoirs, 24 Van Goghs and 24 Gauguins, among others, that help to pull in around three million visitors a year. Architect Dominique Brard, who also worked on the renovation, said it had taken months of long and hard negotiations to be allowed to change parts of the historic building. “It was complicated, very complicated. At times we were negotiating over small points. It took six to eight months of negotiations with the historic monuments people, but we got there in the end,” he told the Observer . “In the end, our role is to show the works of art at their very best, and this is what I believe we have done.” On the way out, one of the museum’s team of curators described how re-hanging the masterpieces had been “extremely exciting and emotional. It was as if we were seeing these paintings for the first time,” she said. “It was extraordinarily moving. We were all blown away.” Art Museums France Paris Europe Kim Willsher guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Evelyn Grace Academy wins the 16th RIBA Stirling prize, giving Hadid top award for second year running Architect Zaha Hadid’s Z-shaped school in Brixton, south London, has beaten the hot favourite, the Olympic velodrome, to win the 16th annual RIBA Stirling prize for architecture. Victory for Evelyn Grace academy gives Hadid’s practice a Stirling prize for the second year running, although it is the architect’s first major building project in Britain. Last year her practice won for the Maxxi Museum of 21st Century Arts in Rome. “Schools are among the first examples of architecture that everyone experiences and have a profound impact on all children as they grow up,” said Hadid. “I am delighted that the Evelyn Grace Academy has been so well received by all its students and staff.” The prestigious £20,000 award, handed over by the Royal Institute of British Architects, the Architects’ Journal and construction products manufacturer Benchmark at a ceremony in Rotherham, is intended to celebrate the best new European building “built or designed in Britain”. It was expected to go to Michael Hopkins’s eye-catching east London Olympic venue, popularly known as “the Pringle”. But Hadid’s school triumphed with its bold approach to solving a difficult problem: how to bring four schools together on a small site under one “academy” umbrella. Evelyn Grace had to be squeezed into 1.4 hectares, while the average secondary school takes up more like 8ha. The school is also situated in the area of the capital with the highest crime rate in western Europe. Rather than building the sort of glass atrium that has been adopted by many new schools, Hadid’s team opted to spend the money on better-lit classrooms and corridors with more space. But her design does have one remarkable, central feature: a bright-red 100m sprint track running right through the site. There is also a multiuse Astroturf pitch, while another quiet corner is home to a wildflower garden. RIBA president Angela Brady, who chaired the judges, said: “The Evelyn Grace academy is an exceptional example of what can be achieved when we invest carefully in a well-designed new school building. The result – a highly imaginative, exciting academy that shows the students, staff and local residents that they are valued – is what every school should and could be.” The school is run by the Ark (Absolute Return for Kids) Academy organisation, a charity set up by Arpad “Arki” Busson, the hedge-fund multimillionaire. The final shortlist of the six rival structures competing for this year’s award included not just Hopkins’s velodrome, but Rab Bennetts’s careful remodelling of the Royal Shakespeare and Swan Theatres in Stratford-on-Avon, an innovative cultural centre in Derry, the re-facing and transforming of a 1980s office building in north London, and the extension of the Folkwang Museum in Essen, Germany, by David Chipperfield Architects, who have also won the Stirling prize before. This was the first year previous entrants were eligible for consideration and all six shortlisted practices had been shortlisted before. Full coverage of the prizegiving ceremony will be broadcast in a special edition of BBC2′s Culture Show on Sunday. Stirling prize Zaha Hadid Architecture Art Awards and prizes David Chipperfield Olympic Games 2012 Vanessa Thorpe guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Foreign secretary says ‘our place is in the European Union’ and describes coalition government as ‘wonderfully refreshing’ William Hague has cast off his reputation as the darling of the Tory right by describing governing with the Liberal Democrats as “wonderfully refreshing”. He also rules out a referendum on UK membership of the EU. The comments by the foreign secretary, in an interview with the Observer , will dismay the many Conservative MPs who resent the Lib Dems’ moderating influence on government policy, particularly on relations with Europe, and want their party to champion a more rightwing agenda. As the Tories gather for their annual conference in Manchester, amid calls from rightwingers for David Cameron to give less ground to their coalition partners, Hague says this administration is working better than the last Tory government in which he served. “When you sit with David Cameron and Nick Clegg and other senior colleagues examining an issue, it is a wonderfully refreshing, rational discussion, actually, in which you know your party identity is not the first consideration,” he says. “The government has a more united spirit than the last government I served in at the end of 18 years of Conservative
Continue reading …Woman kidnapped early on Saturday from private house on island of Manda on Kenya’s north coast Kidnappers escaped into Somalia with a French hostage on Saturday after a gun battle with Kenyan security forces. Kenya’s tourism minister, Najib Balala, said several of the gang had been wounded and they were holed up on the Somali coast about 15 miles from the border with Kenya. “Now that it is dark it is next to impossible to continue to follow. The moment is lost,” said Colonel John Steed, in charge of the UN’s counter-piracy unit in Nairobi. “Now it reverts to normal kidnapping negotiations.” The 66-year-old disabled woman – named in reports as 66-year-old Marie Dedieu – was grabbed in the early hours of Saturday from a private house on the island of Manda on Kenya’s northern coast. The victim’s Kenyan boyfriend, John Lepapa, said six masked men brandishing assault rifles had stormed their beach house. The wheelchair-bound woman was then carried to a waiting boat in the second abduction of a foreign visitor in three weeks. “They’ve crossed the border into Ras Kamboni,” Balala said, referring to the southernmost tip of Somalia that is under the control of militia fighters. “There are two aircraft on top of them monitoring their position.” The wounded members of the gang appear to be hampering its ability to move deeper inland, he said. Earlier, Kenyan coastguards surrounded the kidnappers near the border with Somalia and the bandits fired into the air in an attempt to scare off the two boats and a circling aircraft. Analysts and diplomats in the region had warned that Somali pirates were likely to turn to softer targets, such as tourists in Kenya, in response to much more robust defence of merchant vessels by private security guards. Kenya Somalia Africa Piracy at sea France Europe guardian.co.uk
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