Word: guggenheim
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...often experimental cuisine: places like Arzak, a three-star Michelin legend, and in the countryside, Etxebarri, where chef Victor Arguinzoniz takes such pride in his grilled meats and fishes that he bakes his own charcoal out of different tree branches every morning in an oxygen-controlled oven. At the Guggenheim in Bilbao, a prodigy named Josean Martínez Alija, 27, is winning accolades for dishes like roasted tomatoes stuffed with baby squid and candied cod in garlic oil. Most famously, there is Ferrán Adriŕ of El Bulli, two hours north of Barcelona in the seaside town of Roses...
...extreme poverty in downtown New York in the ’90s, and “Is This What You Were Born For?” (1981-89), a witty yet deeply affecting series of experimental shorts. Her works have won her countless honors over the years, including Guggenheim Foundation and Fulbright Fellowships. Many of her films are in the permanent collection of the Centre Pompidou in Paris, one of the world’s premier modern art museums. This year, she was appointed to a fellowship at the Radcliffe Institute. She hopes to finish a planned trilogy on suburbia...
...also named a street in her honor. “I think she’ll be remembered in many ways, perhaps most profoundly as an ordinary citizen who helped the nation take an extraordinary step to greater justice,” said Christopher Stone ’78, Guggenheim Professor of the Practice of Criminal Justice at the Kennedy School of Government. Yesterday, President Bush recognized Roses’ contribution to American history and the 20th century. Although the Harvard Black Students Association (BSA) said that they have not yet had an opportunity to discuss how they will commemorate...
...moving into constitutional culture.” Schauer came to the Kennedy School in 1990, and is affiliated with the Shorenstein Center of the Press, Politics and Public Policy. Apart from being a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, Schauer has also been awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship. Though the Eastman Professors are required to give 24 student lectures at Oxford, Schauer’s tenure will not be limited to the classroom. “In addition to teaching, I expect to do a fair amount of work on common law theory, and the university where [Jeremy...
...business. "History without chronology can become volatile," warned Le Monde's Harry Bellet in an otherwise favorable review of the Pompidou show, "and the 'Big Bang' strongly risks staying in a gaseous state." But volatility can be good, according to Robert Rosenblum, a New York University art historian and Guggenheim curator. "There has been such exposure, in fact, overexposure to 20th century art," he says, "that museums have to shuffle the deck around from time to time for people to see things...