Sentences with phrase «de guerre»

So is Fuenchem just a nom de guerre for Greenspan?
I stand by my nom de guerre — it is all nonsense from the typically vicious little monster that is the real subject of this post.
You should live up to your nom de guerre and look for the numbers.
Dr Don Keiller has posted once here before, under the nom de guerre of Archskeptic (# 58).
Royal Academy... 25Jan > Jours de guerre et de paix.
Tate Britain... 25Jan ’15 > Jours de guerre et de paix.
Behind this nom de guerre the artist has written a lot of illegal graffiti and shared a lot of subversive computer work; this is his second exhibition with us under the name.
I'm always glad to see it, and I'm even gladder to encounter things I've never seen, like the sculpture called «Bateau de Guerre» by the apocalypse - minded Chris Burden, who died in May.
This is concrete poetry, and myth - making: The name by which the world would know him — Robert Indiana — is a nom de guerre that asserts his place in the bittersweet American Dream.
Best Ever is the collective nom de guerre of Neil Edwards and Hadley Newman.
He commanded a section of fighting troops during the war and was awarded the Legion of Honor and La Croix de Guerre.
Ephemera installed throughout the exhibition by Allison Rudnick, the department's assistant curator, supplied a sense of material culture on the home front: a group of nine chromolithographic postcards from several nations shows zeppelins looming cartoonishly over iconic landmarks, and two examples of printed cotton toiles de guerre from 1916, combining French patriotic and military motifs with a classical ornamental vocabulary.
Three of the dogs received the Croix de Guerre, one of Frances» highest military honours, for their actions in combat and all were awarded a life of leisure at the end of the war for their service to their adopted country.
On a vicious revenge spree, he takes the nom de guerre of Alabaster and is joined by Ami, the granddaughter of the scientist who experimented on his pregnant daughter and left Ami fully invisible.
The Islamic State, whose radical Islamic warriors have inflicted their brutality across the globe from the Middle East to Paris, was founded as al - Qaeda in Iraq in 2004 by a Jordanian thug known by his nom de guerre, Abu Musab al - Zarqawi.
In exploring the international terrorist who took the title's nom de guerre, Olivier Assayas, in Carlos, focused more on the vast disconnect between the man himself and the rock - star image he cultivated than in necessarily painting a detailed psychological portrait.
Both Dave and Big Daddy wear makeshift costumes (Dave wears a diving suit; Damon looks a lot like Batman, hence Cage's Adam West impression), assume noms de guerre (Dave's is the titular Kick - Ass), and search for wrong - doing.
The name Ilich Ramírez Sánchez may not inspire instant recognition amongst the majority of the populace, however his nom de guerre certainly will.
In a Q&A, Fidel Castro Díaz - Balart reveals the truth behind his nom de guerre in Russia and his efforts to launch a nanotechnology R&D center in Havana.
(Otto Skorzeny was acquitted based on the argument that this is a legitimate ruse de guerre.)
He joined the Army immediately after graduation, earned a battlefield promotion to lieutenant colonel at 28 and received many medals — including the DSC and two Croix de Guerre — mainly for his exploits as a commander of tanks in General George Patton's Third Army, where his feats earned him the nickname «Risky.»
Tirso de Molina (the nom de guerre of Gabriel Téllez, a monk in his day job) wrote most of his plays between 1605 and 1625; but he did not include El Burlador de Sevilla in any collection of his works, so we do not know when — or perhaps even if — he wrote it.
• Victor Segalen, Stèles: Segalen — physician, poet, novelist, Sinologist, aesthetic theorist, among other things — was admired by Borges and Simon Leys (who took his nom de guerre, I believe, from Segalen's novel René Leys), and has long had a small but unflagging following.

Not exact matches

I have never been able to understand why, after having unleashed this guerre de plume against the death - of - godders, some critics persisted in including me among them.
Equally, our narrative should include 1993, with the large - scale pogroms against Banyarwanda across the region (dubbed la Guerre de Masisi).
Maïwenn brings up the dirty and dark side of Paris with the help of an excellent team of child actors - Malonn Lévana, the lovely little girl of «Tomboy» (where she plays the sister of the leading character) is someone to keep an eye on - and the best known actors of the French cinema of today: Marina Foïs, Sandrine Kiberlain, Nicolas Duvauchelle, Frédéric Pierrot, Karin Viard, Louis - Do de Lencquesaing, Alice de Lencquesaing (L'heure d'été, Le père de mes enfants), Jérémie Elkaïm (La guerre est déclarée), Karole Rocher, and others.
The Dent (Basim Magdy, 2014) Xi you (Journey to the West, Tsai Ming - liang, 2014) Mula sa kung ano ang noon (From What is Before, Lav Diaz, 2014) Mueda, Memória e Massacre (Mueda, Memory and Massacre, Ruy Guerra, 1972) On the way to India Consciousness, I Reached China (Henry Francia, 1968) Instants (Hannes Schüpbach, 2012) Maidan (Sergei Loznitsa, 2014) Hotel (Benjamin Nuel, 2013) Citizenfour (Laura Poitras, 2014) Des hommes et de la guerre (Of Men and War, Laurent Bécue - Renard, 2014)
This year's winner was Alexis Jenni L'Art Français de la Guerre.
5 artistes sous la pression de la guerre, Centre national d'art et de culture Georges Pompidou, Paris (2008).
In 2013, Cvejić curated the exhibition Danse - Guerre at Musée de la danse, Rennes (in collaboration with C. Costinas) in the frame of which she made videos two videos ``... in a non-wimpy way» (with Steve Paxton) and «Yvonne Rainer's WAR» (co-authored with L. Laberenz).
He has been developing the narrative of the Frenglish Empire since 2006, with exhibitions Last Night, After the Lights Went Out, We Fell, In the Court of the Crimson King and La Guerre de Machettes Danseuses (The War of the Dancing Machetes) Crocodile Company Part 1 at Taylor De Cordoba in Los Angeles, and The Wolf and Hawk War 1782 - 1790 for Morgan Lehman Gallery (New York) at Pulse, Miami.
According to estimates, the highlights of this auction will be Claude Monet's Matinée sur la Seine (1897) that could fetch between $ 15M and $ 25M, and Pablo Picasso's Figure (de femme inspirée par la guerre d'Espagne)(1937) that could go for anywhere between $ 15M and $ 20M.
The contemporary pieces are augmented with works by old masters: the important Apocalypse series of woodcuts by Albrecht Dürer (1471 — 1528) and Les Grandes Misères de la guerre by Jacques Callot (1592 — 1635), which reveal an impressive panorama of social rejection and human abysses in dialogue with contemporary works across centuries.
Works includes are Jacques Callot's Les Grandes Misères de la guerre of 1633, a set of 18 etchings that presents the tragic fate of civilians during Europe's Thirty Years War (1618 — 49) and Goya's Los desastres de la guerra, 1810 to 1820.
Richard Deacon & Bill Woodrow, Bloomberg SPACE, London XXème Biennale Internationale de Céramique Contemporaine, Musée National Picasso La Guerre et la Paix, Vallauris, France
This is due to the deep singularity of his oeuvre but also to his own life and its traumas: a German expelled by the Nazis, he fought on the Allied side and lost a leg in battle while carrying a wounded man; he was then awarded the Croix de la Guerre and naturalied as a Frenchman.
The World in the Stedelijk,» Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam «In Context: The Portrait in Contemporary Photographic Practice,» Ruth and Elmer Wellin Museum of Art, Hamilton College «In Plain Sight,» Smack Mellon Gallery, New York «In the Aftermath of Trauma,» Kemper Museum, St Louis «L'ange de l'histoire,» Centre d'Art Contemporain Walter Benjamin, Perpignan «Les désastres de la guerre, 1800 - 2014,» Louvre - Lens, Lens «Literary Devices,» Fisher Landau Center for Art, New York «Manifesto!
Widely regarded as one of the most pioneering artists of his generation, British artist Liam Gillick presents A Game of War Structure, 2011, a newly - designed version of The Game of War (Le Jeu de la Guerre) created originally by the French Situationist Guy Debord in 1977, while the internationally - celebrated Spanish artist Susana Solano's work, Carmen, 2011, is a large stainless steel sculptural work which encourages the viewer to experience the emotion that the form engenders as it transforms the surrounding environment.
This is due to the deep singularity of his oeuvre but also to his own life and its traumas: a German expelled by the Nazis, he fought on the Allied side and lost a leg in battle while carrying a wounded man; he was then awarded the Croix de la Guerre and naturalised as a Frenchman.
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