Hints and tips:
...“It’s not easy to buy a vintage Richard Avedon print,” says Conor Masterson, co-owner of Ramsgate-based magazine archive Elegantly Papered....
...A famous Erwin Blumenfeld photograph in the exhibition features her hanging from the Eiffel Tower wrapped in an ermine cape....
...to Zürich from FT Globetrotter “It was like stepping into the future, a living exhibition of avant-garde design, a kaleidoscope of Constructivist billboards and modernist fonts,” recalled the designer Richard...
...Erwin Chemerinsky, law school dean at the public University of California, Berkeley, ranked ninth this year, swiftly followed, calling the rankings “profoundly inconsistent with our values and public mission...
...Solicitor General Erwin Griswold, in attempting to get an injunction preventing further publication, argued that it would cause “great and irreparable harm to the security of the United States”....
...(Cat meowing) It’s 1935, and the renowned physicist Erwin Schrödinger has left Germany to escape the rise of the Nazis, and he’s moved to Oxford in the UK. And he sits down at his desk....
...Erwin Schrott’s larger-than-life lead is well known, brutishly lordly and superior, cavalier also in his treatment of the text (though we know that Mozart’s first Don Giovanni, Luigi Bassi, also improvised...
...The theme of the perfect face, sexily enmeshed, evidently appealed to Erwin Blumenfeld, who, over two decades and two continents, took a number of pictures of women in hats with veils....
...Richard Wilson’s “20:50” oil installation, bought from Charles Saatchi, can be found near here. Not far away is Ai Weiwei’s “White House” (2015)....
...The less fortunate — Pavel Haas, Hans Krása, Erwin Schulhoff — died in concentration camps....
...Erwin Schrott, returning to a role he has sung here before, has a glorious bass-baritone with charisma to burn, but has become decidedly cavalier about the music....
...Whatever bug was going round, Erwin Schrott had caught it as well and he was more subdued than usual, though his Méphistophélès did a nice line in devil-may-care sangfroid and Schrott’s saturnine bass power...
...His 1498 masterpiece of downy ringlets, long features and billowing linen was “the first independent self-portrait ever produced”, the scholar Erwin Panofsky asserted....
...So quipped the late, great physicist Richard Feynman in the 1960s — and his words feel just as fresh today....
...Malin Byström gives all she has as an appealingly lyrical Hélène and Erwin Schrott, having a high old time as ballet-master Procida, sings with impressive strength....
...parallels between Macron and Obama / From Richard Ruda, Chevy Chase, MD, US...
...Senator Richard Blumenthal, the Connecticut Democrat who first disclosed Mr Gorsuch’s comments, said the US “is careening, literally, toward a constitutional crisis”....
...The fair is the place to find familiar images by Henri Cartier-Bresson, Richard Avedon, Bill Brandt and many others: 480 artists are represented....
...Ekaterina Semenchuk’s fiery Amneris is more inclined to deliver the goods and Ludovic Tézier’s Amonasro and Erwin Schrott’s Ramfis offer sturdy support....
...The comments from Richard Erwin, UK general manager for Roche, came as the government reviewed the future of cancer drug provision in England after a series of clashes with manufacturers over cost-effectiveness...
...The biggest personality is Erwin Schrott’s Figaro, powerfully sung when he is not mumbling extempore asides and flaunting a devil-may-care air of insouciant rebelliousness....
...“Only a very small number of countries operate with such a fixed threshold,” says Richard Erwin, UK general manager for Roche, the Swiss pharma group. The fiercest disputes have involved cancer drugs....
...“Dovima With Elephants”, the 1955 shot by Richard Avedon (who died in 2004) , became the most expensive fashion image ever when it sold for $1.1m in 2010....
...The most unfortunate of them, like Pavel Haas and Erwin Schulhoff, died in concentration camps....
...The Books that Shaped Art History: From Gombrich and Greenberg to Alpers and Krauss, edited by Richard Shone and John-Paul Stonard, Thames & Hudson, RRP£24.95, 268 pages Art history is more nervous and...
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