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Search resuls for: "Biarritz"


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A French Castle Filled With a Collector’s Treasures
  + stars: | 2024-03-15 | by ( Aimee Farrell | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
When the French gallerist Yves Gastou bought the Ermitage de Douce-amie — or refuge of a sweet friend — a follylike crenelated castle on the outskirts of Biarritz in southwest France, in 1990, it had the air of a place frozen in time. Hidden within a forest of bamboo and pine, bay and oak trees, the 5,380-square-foot house was built in 1900 as a retirement home for a member of the imperial court of Napoleon III, or so Gastou believed. The house had changed hands only a few times since: The woman from whom he purchased it was among the last ladies in Biarritz to travel by horse and cart. The hermitage was his summer hideaway, a place for monthslong vacations with family and friends. And if his Paris home was an expression of his appetite for modernity — it epitomized his eclectic tastes, with Cubist midcentury furniture by the French sculptor Philippe Hiquily and acrylic 1980s-era pieces by the Japanese designer Shiro Kuramata — the castle offered a retreat into the past.
Persons: Yves Gastou, Douce, amie —, , Napoleon III, Gastou, Philippe Hiquily, Shiro Kuramata Locations: Biarritz, France, Carcassonne, Limoux, Paris, French
Sandringham, the private home of the last six British monarchs, sits amid parkland, gardens and working farms about 110 miles (180 kilometers) north of London. This history has made Sandringham a special place for Charles and his entire family. One of the most famous stately homes in Britain, Sandringham sits on an 8,000-hectare (20,000-acre) estate in Norfolk on the eastern coast of England. On the day he died, George reportedly spent the afternoon on the estate with his dogs and a gun. When he was at Cambridge, Charles would often invite friends to spend weekends with him enjoying the shooting at Sandringham.
Persons: Britain's King Charles III, Charles, Michael Cole, , ’ Cole, ’ ’ Charles, Princess Diana, William the Conqueror, Sant, Queen Victoria, Edward, Monte, George V, Queen Elizabeth II’s, ’ ’ George VI, George, Jonathan Dimbleby, Prince of Wales, revel, ″ Cole, ″ Charles, Dimbleby, , Diana’s, Princes William, Harry, ” Dimbleby, Queen Elizabeth II, Cole Organizations: , Sandringham House, Sandringham, BBC, Cambridge University, Biarritz, SANDRINGHAM, Cambridge, PUBLIC Locations: Sandringham, England, London, Balmoral, Britain, Norfolk, Dersingham, Paris, Monte Carlo, Charles, North Norfolk, Cambridge, There’s
How Chanel No. 5 Became a Necklace
  + stars: | 2024-02-07 | by ( Lindsay Talbot | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
In 1920, following the successful launch of her couture house in Biarritz, France, and her subsequent move to Paris’s Rue Cambon, where she opened her flagship boutique, Gabrielle “Coco” Chanel decided to create her first fragrance. She commissioned the French Russian perfumer Ernest Beaux to develop “a woman’s perfume, with a woman’s scent” — which, unlike most single-note options of the era, had a bold floral composition. Months later, he presented Chanel with an array of aromatic vials, and she chose the one labeled five. The bottle was topped with a square glass stopper with two interlocking sans-serif C’s, marking the debut of Chanel’s now-iconic logo. In 1924, the stopper was redesigned as a bevel-cut octagon, but it has otherwise remained largely the same for the past century.
Persons: Gabrielle “ Coco ” Chanel, Ernest Beaux, Chanel, Beaux, , men’s toiletries, , Boy Capel Locations: Biarritz, France, Russian, Grasse, Madagascar, Brazilian, , Chanel’s
NEW YORK (AP) — He was a giant of 20th-century art, but that doesn’t mean Pablo Picasso needed a big canvas. It was 1918 and Picasso, then in his mid-30s, had just married ballet dancer Olga Khokhlova. The exhibit, which opened Friday, is a collaboration with the Madrid foundation run by a grandson of Picasso’s, Bernard Ruiz-Picasso. It comes nearly 40 years after the gallery’s initial 1986 show of Picasso sketchbooks, called “Je Suis le Cahier (I am the Sketchbook)" after a notation Picasso made on one of his pads — which subsequently toured the globe. The Pace Gallery show runs until December 22..
Persons: Pablo Picasso, “ Picasso, Picasso, Olga Khokhlova, Picasso’s, Bernard Ruiz, Marie, Thérèse Walter, , Marc Glimcher, Glimcher, Dora Maar, Ruiz, Paul Picasso, ” Ruiz, Organizations: Pace, Locations: , balmy Biarritz, Madrid, , New York, France, Juan, Mougins
French police stand guard in front of the Chateau de Versailles (Palace of Versailles) as tourists enter again after the Palace was evacuated for security reasons, in Versailles, near Paris, France, October 17, 2023. REUTERS/Clotaire Achi/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsPARIS, Oct 18 (Reuters) - Eight French airports faced security alerts on Wednesday and several were evacuated for checks, the DGAC aviation authority said, and the Palace of Versailles closed again due to its third security scare in five days. Lille airport was evacuated due to a bomb scare, the airport had said earlier in the day on social media platform X. The Palace of Versailles, one of France's main tourist attractions, said it was again evacuating visitors for security reasons. Reporting by Dominique Vidalon, Marine Strauss; editing by Bernadette Baum and Mark HeinrichOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Chateau, Clotaire, Dominique Vidalon, Marine Strauss, Bernadette Baum, Mark Heinrich Our Organizations: REUTERS, Rights, Louvre, Gare de Lyon, Thomson Locations: Versailles, Paris, France, Toulouse, Biarritz, Pau, Nice, Lyon, Lille, Rennes, Nantes
Proekt said the properties are located near Putin's Moscow mansion. The Russian president has long sought to keep secret the vast wealth he and his family own. Russian President Vladimir Putin and his ex-wife Lyudmila enter a Moscow polling station, 02 December 2007, to cast their votes in Russia's parliamentary elections. Katerina Tikhonova, deputy director of the Institute for Mathematical Research of Complex Systems at Moscow State University and daughter of Russian President Vladimir Putin. Russian President Vladimir Putin (left) and his rumored girlfriend and retired rhythmic gymnast Alina Kabaeva (right).
Persons: Proekt, , Vladimir Putin, Putin's, Kiril Shamanov, Putin, Lyudmila Shkrebneva, Maria Vorontsova, Katerina Tikhonova, Tikhonova, Shamalov, Lyudmila, DMITRY ASTAKHOV, Vorontsova's, Alina Kabaeva, Sasha Mordovets, Juliana Kaplan Organizations: Service, Russian, Getty, Institute for Mathematical Research, Systems, Moscow State University, REUTERS, Shkrebneva, Tikhonova, Putin Locations: Russian, Putin's Moscow, Ogaryovo, Moscow, AFP, Biarritz, France, Sibur, Ukraine
Walking away, President Joe Biden wrapped his arm around Zelensky’s shoulders. None of the G7 leaders are particularly popular at home, even as they produce results abroad. After all, it was Trump who had argued over dinner at the 2019 G7 summit in Biarritz, France, that Russia should be allowed back into the group. That level of chaos was nowhere to be found in Hiroshima this past week, when leaders appeared to generally like each other. Even before Biden left for the G7 summit, the stalemate over raising the federal borrowing limit prompted a scramble to rearrange the president’s engagements so he could return to Washington early.
A house in Amsterdam owned by sanctioned Russian oligarch Arkady Volozh was occupied by activists. Despite the Yandex billionaire's best efforts, a judge ruled that the squatters can stay. Volozh is not the first sanctioned oligarch to have his European property overtaken. Squatters moved into the five-story luxury house belonging to billionaire Arkady Volozh on October 27, according to Dutch newspaper De Telegraaf. This is far from the first protest action in the properties of high-profile sanctioned Russian figures.
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