Created in Collaboration with Pierre Mattisse (Henri Matisse's Grandson)

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Created in Collaboration with Pierre Mattisse (Henri Matisse's Grandson) ED01eIndex.qxp 2/28/2007 11:13 AM Page 164 The Sky’s Limit Oil on Canvas 60" x 48" Created in collaboration with Pierre Mattisse (Henri Matisse’s grandson) ED01eIndex.qxp 2/28/2007 11:13 AM Page 165 Index Berkshire Museum, Pittsfield, Massachusetts, 51 A Bermuda, 145 Abacoa Town Center, 129 Black Sea, 95 Abstract artists, 147 Blue Ribbon Award for Art, 141 Acropolis, Athens, 81 Blue Trellis Collection, 131, 133 Addison Gallery, Andover, Boni, from Taxco, Mexico, 41 Massachusetts, 51 Boston, Massachusetts, 41, 103, 109, 123 Aesthetic Roots of Edna Hibel, Boston Arts Festival, 55 129 Boston Hibel Gallery, 65 Akha, Thailand, 93 Boston Marathon, 15 Albert Schweitzer Society, 141 Boston Museum of Fine Arts, The, 79 Allegro Ensemble with Hibel on Boston Museum School of Fine Arts, 31, 37, Porcelain, 117 47, 99 Alois Senefelder Museum, 103 Brittany, 115 American Association of Museums, Brookline High School, 29, 31 95 Brookline, Massachusetts, 47, 53 American Federation of Arts, 55 Burg, Fay, 45, 131, 141 ancient Greeks, 73 Burg, Ralph, 61, 131 Andrew Jackson School, 21 Anthony, Susan B., 13 C Appenzell, Switzerland, 109 Cagnes, France, 125 Archaic period, 81 Canada, 127 Michele and Anna Armory, 95 candle screens, 121 Plate Art Institute of Chicago, 51 Cape Cod, Massachusetts, 35 1 8 /2" diameter Arte Ovale, 105 Carozo, Rodrigo, 137 artist’s proof, 113 Cassatt, Mary, 129 Asia, 73, 93 Castle Borluut, Ghent, Belgium, 141 Assumption Cathedral, 95 Castle Mainau, 141 atelier, 105, 109 Celebrating the Year of Mozart, 129 Aynsley, 133 Celtic, 115 Chiang Mai, Thailand, 93 B Chiang Rai, Thailand, 93 Bangkok, Thailand, 85, 93 Chief Red Feather, 81 Barcelona, Spain, 131 China Exhibition Agency, 85, 93 Bavarian hard paste porcelain, 105 China Fine Arts Institute, 89 Bavarian limestone, 103, 105, 109 China National Art Gallery, Beijing, 85 Beijing, China, 89, 93 China’s National History Museum, 93 Beijing Radio, 89 Chinese Literature Magazine, 89 Belgium, 137 Chongqing, China, 93 Berenson, Bernard, 31 Christian Science Church, 123 ED01eIndex.qxp 2/28/2007 11:13 AM Page 166 The Fishermen Watercolor 28" x 38" 166 Edna Hibel ED01eIndex.qxp 2/28/2007 11:13 AM Page 167 Clark Museum, 129 Edna Hibel: The World I Love, 127 Classical period, 81 Edna Hibel: Worlds within Worlds, 129 Classics, 147 Edward Devotion School, 25 Colette and Child, 115, 117 Einstein science prize, 137 collectibles, 121 England, 15, 79 commemorative plate, 127 Epic, The, 113 Connecticut, 123 Eureka College, Illinois, 137 Cordon Bleu Society, 141 Europe, 37, 41, 73, 81 Cornell University, 55 European artists, 147 Council of the University for Peace, 137 Expressionists, 147 Count Bernadotte, 141 Craig, Clayton B., 125, 127 F Craig, Ethelbelle, 129 Fabergé, 95 Craig, Ethelbelle and Clayton B., 59, 65, 123, Finland, 137 125, 127 First Anniversary Flowers, 129 Cub Scout, 53 First National Central Television Station of Cuernavaca, Mexico, 41 China, 85 cultural exchange, 89 Fitzhenry, Miss, 25 Flanders Academy of Art, Science, and D Letters, 137 Daumier, Honoré, 103 Florida, 41, 47 David series, 117 Flower Girl of Provence, 127 David the King, 117 Flutist, 117 da Vinci, Leonardo, 73 France, 81, 125 DeCordova Museum, Lincoln, French Arches paper, 113 Massachusetts, 55 fresco, 35 Degas, Edgar, 129 della Francesca, Pere, 73 G Desmond, Mabel, 51, 55, 65, Germany, 109 79, 123 Gibson, Mrs., 37 de Toulouse-Lautrec, Henri, 103 giclée, 121 Dirksen Senate Office Building, Girl with Water Jug, 89 Washington, D.C., 145 Glacier Bay, Alaska, 85 Doctor of Humane Arts, glasnost, 93 Honoris Causa, 137 Gloucester, Massachusetts, 123 Doll Festival and Tea Party, 121 Goethe, Johann Wolfgang, 75 Hibel working on lithograph in Zurich dolls, 51, 93, 121 gold leaf, 117 Goldberg, Dr. Marshal and Sandra, 131 E Good Housekeeping Magazine, 21 Ecumenical Angel, 135 Goose Rocks Beach, Maine, 35 Edgell, George, 47 Grand Royal Palace, 93 Edna Hibel Society, 59, 61, 79, 89, 129, graphic arts, 101 131, 145 Great Wall Hotel, Beijing, 89 Edna Hibel Way, 129 Greece, 81 Index 167 ED01eIndex.qxp 2/28/2007 11:13 AM Page 168 Cora and Friend Oil and Gold Leaf on Canvas 15" x 13" 168 Edna Hibel ED01eIndex.qxp 2/28/2007 11:13 AM Page 169 Greek sculptures, 31 Italy, 81 greyhounds, 63 Guadalajara, Mexico, 41 J Guatemalan Girl, 141 Jackson, Robert, 141 Guggenheim Gallery, London, 79 Japan, 85, 119 JAR Publishers, Mangonia, Florida, 105, 117 H John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Hall of Art, 53 Arts, Washington, D.C., 145 Harvard University, 31, 37 Johnson, Pres. Lyndon B., 13 Heart and Conscience of America, Juneau, Alaska, 85 The, 145 Hello, Dolly!, 59 K Heublein, Wilhelm, 119, 121 Kahlo, Frieda, 41 Hibel, Abraham Bert, 13, 15, 17, Kaohsiung, Taiwan, 93 19, 45, 63 King Baudouin of Belgium, 141 Hibel Art Tour, 89 King David, 117 Hibel, Billy, 21, 41 Kremlin, 95 Hibel Fan Club, 119 HibelFest, 37, 131 L Hibel Gallery, 65 Lake Constance, Germany, 141 Hibelite, 59 Lake Il’men’, 95 Hibel, Lena, 15, 17, 19, 21, 23, Lake Mashpee, 35 25, 35, 41, 45, 51, 63, 65, 69, 79, 123, Le Havre, 37 Hibel talking on phone 127 Le Marquis Pierre, 81 Photograph by Patti Carr Hibel Museum of Art, 23, 37, 55, 59, 61, 85, Leningrad, Russia, 93, 95 89, 93, 95, 125, 127, 129, 131, 141 Leonardo da Vinci World Award of Arts, 137 Hibel Society, 89, 129 lithography, 103, 105, 113 Hibel, Richard, 53, 55, 57, 79, 123 lithography on porcelain, 121 Hibel’s Russian Palette, 35, 95 Livadia Palace, 95 Highest Arts Medal, 141 Lotus Lake, 93 Hodeidah, Yemen, 81 Louisiana, 41 Holy Family, 141 Lyndon Baines Johnson Library, 13 Hong Kong, China, 85, 93 Hong, Tang, 89 M honorary degrees, 137 MacArthur Campus, Honors College of Florida Human Ecology, a Physician’s Advice for Atlantic University, Jupiter, Florida, 129 Human Life, 141 Magic of Porcelain, The, 129 Hutschenreuther Porcelain, 127 Majesty at the Taj Mahal, 113 Malaysia, 85 I Manakha, 81, 85 Impressionists, 35, 147 Mashpee Indian Boy, 37 Impressionist paintings, 129 Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 55 Israel, 117 master stone lithographer, 109 Index 169 ED01eIndex.qxp 2/28/2007 11:13 AM Page 170 Mother and Four Children Giclée from an Original Painting 40" x 57" 170 Edna Hibel ED01eIndex.qxp 2/28/2007 11:13 AM Page 171 Medal of Honor, 81 Meo, Thailand, 93 O Mexican Beggar, 113 O’Hara, Eliot, 35 Mexican Farmer, 47 Ocean Pearl, 93 Mexico, 41, 45 Okasan to Kodomo, 105 Mexico City, 41 Olympics, 31 Michael, Gregory, 25, 29 Orange Girl, The, 47 Michelangelo, 35 Order of the Green Apron, 141 Michio, 119 Oriental Gold series, 119 modern art, 23 Oriental masters, 73 Monaco, 119 Oxen, 37 Monet, Claude, 35 monochromatic drawing, 105 P Moscow, 95 Palace of the Golden Domes, 93 Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus, 69, 147 Palm Beach Hibel Gallery, 65 Mother and Child, 115 Palm Beach, Florida, 93, 109, 127 Mother Earth, 141 Paris, France, 37 Mount Saint Mary’s College, Maryland, 137 Pátzcuaro, Mexico, 41 Mr. Obata, 119 Pavlova, Anna, 19, 33 Mulvee, Bishop Robert, 137 PBS stations, 95 Muse Award for Cultural Studies, 95 Peace through Wisdom, 93 Museu Nacional de Belas Artes, 125 Peking University, China, 89 Museum of the Soviet Academy of Art, 35 Pennsylvania Academy of Art, 51 Museum of the Soviet Union of Artists, 95 People’s Daily, 89 Museum Suite with Progressions of a Lithograph, People’s Republic of China, 85, 93 105 perestroika, 93 Phaedimos, 81 N Piazza San Marco, 81 National Archives, 13 Picasso Museum, 131 National Museum, 137 Picasso, Pablo, 37, 113, 131 Netherlands, 137 pigeons, 81 New York, 141 Plotkin, Andy, 53, 55, 59, 79, 123 Newbury Street, Boston, 65 Plotkin Brothers department stores, 47, 53 Nine Turn Bridge, 93 Plotkin, Gail, 55 Nobel Peace laureates, 141 Plotkin, Ida, 45 Nobel Prize, 57 Plotkin, Jon, 51, 55, 57, 79, 123 Nobility of Children, 81 poetry, 51, 69, 147 Norman Rockwell Museum, 129 Poinciana Playhouse, 127 Normandy, 37 Polk, Sam, 113 Northwood University in Florida, 137 Pope John Paul II, 81, 141 Norton Museum of Art, West Palm Beach, portrayal of divinity in the human being, 141 Florida, 51 Portugal, 79 Novgorod, Russia, 95 Portuguese Fisherwoman, 113 Index 171 ED01eIndex.qxp 2/28/2007 11:13 AM Page 172 ED01eIndex.qxp 2/28/2007 11:13 AM Page 173 “Positive Humanism,” 101 Simferopol, Ukraine, 95 Project HOPE, 141 Simmons College, Boston, Massachusetts, Proud to Be a Woman, 145 137 Providence College, Rhode Island, 137 Singapore, 85 Sistine Chapel, 35 Q Smith, Jean Kennedy, 145 Queen Elizabeth of England, 79 Solnhofen, West Germany, 103 Queen Sirkit of Thailand, 119 South Bend, Indiana, 133 Soviet Union, 95 R St. Basil’s, 95 Race for the Cure, 145 St. Mark’s Basilica, 81 Rachel (Hibel’s maternal grandmother), 13 St. Mark’s Square, Venice, 81 Rauschenberg, Robert, 137 Statue of Liberty, 11, 13 Reagan, Pres. Ronald, 137 Stockbridge, Massachusetts, 129 Red Square, 95 Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation, Rembrandt, 69, 73, 101, 131 145 Renaissance, 35, 99, 113, 147 “Swallow’s Nest,” 95 Renoir, 25, 73, 125, 129 Switzerland, 109 retrospective exhibition, 55, 113 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 125 T Rivera, Diego, 41 Taiwan, 85 Robb, Lucinda, 13 Taj Mahal, 81 Roberts, Cokie, 13 Tang Dynasty, 89 Rockport Hibel Gallery, 65 Taxco, Mexico, 41 Rockport, Massachusetts, 63, 65, 123 Temple Jar, 131 Rogers, Ginger, 59, 61, 123 Temple of the Dawn, 93 Rome, Italy, 81 tennis, 29, 53, 57 Rosenthal Porcelain, 81, 119 Thai “Spirit House”, 93 Royal Doulton, 115 Thai dancers, 93 Royal Society of Arts, London, 141 Thailand, 93 Rubin, Anne, 15 Tiananmen Square, 93 Russia, 93, 95 transparency, 117 Ruth Sturtevant Traveling Fellowship, 37 U S U.S.
Recommended publications
  • The Ukrainian Weekly 2006, No.31
    www.ukrweekly.com INSIDE:• Film distributors note success of “Cars” in Ukrainian — page 3. • Ukrainian studies at the University of Kansas — page 9. • Tennis and more tennis at Soyuzivka — page 13. Published by the Ukrainian National Association Inc., a fraternal non-profit association Vol. LXXIV No. 31 THE UKRAINIAN WEEKLY SUNDAY, JULY 30, 2006 $1/$2 in Ukraine BillionaireHE PinchukKRAINIAN promotes EEKLY T U As political crisisW continues in Ukraine, Ukraine’s membership in EU by Zenon Zawada from enormous gains as a result of such Yushchenkoby Zenon Zawada conveness akeroundtable of Ukraine by signing meeting a government Kyiv Press Bureau reforms and closer ties to Europe. Kyiv Press Bureau manifesto. Interpipe Corp. is among the world’s “We should unite around ensuring YALTA, Ukraine – To learn that largest pipe producers, having secured 4 KYIV – With his country mired in a national sovereignty, integrity of our bor- Viktor Pinchuk is among Ukraine’s percent of the world’s seamless pipe mar- political crisis, President Viktor ders and territory, embodiment of eco- biggest advocates for European Union ket, 10 percent of the global market in Yushchenko invited the leaders of nomic transformation, guaranteeing all (EU) membership may come as a sur- railway wheels and 11 percent of the Ukraine’s five parliamentary factions to democratic rights and freedoms that were prise, considering he worked against the manganese ferroalloys market, according find a way out during a roundtable meet- achieved,” he stated. Orange Revolution. to company information. ing held on July 27 at the Presidential Verkhovna Rada Chairman and Yet, for the past three years, the bil- While he sells the majority of his Secretariat.
    [Show full text]
  • The Ukrainian Weekly 2001, No.37
    www.ukrweekly.com INSIDE:• Verkhovna Rada finally passes election law — page 3. •A journal from SUM’s World Zlet in Ukraine — pages 10-11. • Soyuzivka’s end-of-summer ritual — centerfold. Published by the Ukrainian National Association Inc., a fraternal non-profit association Vol. LXIX HE No.KRAINIAN 37 THE UKRAINIAN WEEKLY SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2001 EEKLY$1/$2 in Ukraine UKRAINE REACTS TO TERRORIST ATTACKS ON U.S. EU Tand UkraineU W by Roman Woronowycz President Leonid Kuchma, who had and condemned the attacks, according to Kyiv Press Bureau just concluded the Ukraine-European Interfax-Ukraine. meet in Yalta Union summit in Yalta with European “We mourn those who died in this act KYIV – Ukraine led the international Commission President Romano Prodi and response to the unprecedented terrorist of terrorism,” said Mr. Prodi. European Union Secretary of Foreign and Immediately upon his return from for third summit attacks on Washington and New York on Security Policy Javier Solana on by Roman Woronowycz September 11 when its Permanent Yalta, President Kuchma first called a Kyiv Press Bureau September 11, issued a statement express- special meeting of the National Security Mission to the United Nations called a ing shock and offering condolences. and Defense Council for the next day and KYIV – Leaders of the European special meeting of the U.N. Security Messrs. Prodi and Solana, who were at Union and Ukraine met in Yalta, Crimea, Council to coordinate global reaction. Symferopol Airport in Crimea on their then went on national television to call For security reasons, the meeting was on September 10-11 for their third annu- way back to Brussels, expressed shock (Continued on page 23) al summit – the first in Ukraine – which held outside the confines of the United had been advertised as a turning point Nations at the mission headquarters of during which relations would move from the Ukrainian delegation in New York.
    [Show full text]
  • 37 September 16, 2001
    INSIDE:• Verkhovna Rada finally passes election law — page 3. •A journal from SUM’s World Zlet in Ukraine — pages 10-11. • Soyuzivka’s end-of-summer ritual — centerfold. Published by the Ukrainian National Association Inc., a fraternal non-profit association Vol. LXIX HE No.KRAINIAN 37 THE UKRAINIAN WEEKLY SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2001 EEKLY$1/$2 in Ukraine UKRAINE REACTS TO TERRORIST ATTACKS ON U.S. EU Tand UkraineU W by Roman Woronowycz President Leonid Kuchma, who had and condemned the attacks, according to Kyiv Press Bureau just concluded the Ukraine-European Interfax-Ukraine. meet in Yalta Union summit in Yalta with European “We mourn those who died in this act KYIV – Ukraine led the international Commission President Romano Prodi and response to the unprecedented terrorist of terrorism,” said Mr. Prodi. European Union Secretary of Foreign and Immediately upon his return from for third summit attacks on Washington and New York on Security Policy Javier Solana on by Roman Woronowycz September 11 when its Permanent Yalta, President Kuchma first called a Kyiv Press Bureau September 11, issued a statement express- special meeting of the National Security Mission to the United Nations called a ing shock and offering condolences. and Defense Council for the next day and KYIV – Leaders of the European special meeting of the U.N. Security Messrs. Prodi and Solana, who were at Union and Ukraine met in Yalta, Crimea, Council to coordinate global reaction. Symferopol Airport in Crimea on their then went on national television to call For security reasons, the meeting was on September 10-11 for their third annu- way back to Brussels, expressed shock (Continued on page 23) al summit – the first in Ukraine – which held outside the confines of the United had been advertised as a turning point Nations at the mission headquarters of during which relations would move from the Ukrainian delegation in New York.
    [Show full text]
  • The Brown Travelers Presents
    THE BROWN TRAVELERS PRESENTS CRUISING THE NEW EUROPE ALONG UUKRAINEKRAINE’’SS DDNIEPERNIEPER RRIVERIVER K IEV TO O DESSA CRIMEAN PENINSULA ◆ BLACK SEA Aboard the M.S. DNIEPER PRINCESS July 13 to 25, 2006 Featuring Patricia Herlihy, Emerita Professor of History and Research Professor at the Watson Institute for International Studies O Y B OK L IN R Reserve on A or before G E December 15, 2005 SAVE $1000 per couple! S AVIN G S Dear Graduates, Parents and Friends of Brown: Like America’s Mississippi River or Germany’s Rhine, Ukraine’s Dnieper River has defined a nation. Sweeping across the Ukrainian countryside, it has traced a broad course through Ukrainian history. Intrepid Viking warrior-merchants once plied its waters, seeking trade routes to the Black Sea and Constantinople. Along its banks rose the stately city of Kiev, and across the Dnieper’s fertile plains Cossack horsemen once rode. Join us on an 11-night voyage on the Dnieper River and the Black Sea aboard the M.S. DNIEPER PRINCESS, the finest ship cruising Ukrainian waterways. From ancient Kiev, a thriving political, religious, cultural and commercial center when Moscow was little more than a village, sail south along the Dnieper through a landscape of tranquil beauty, passing through wooded hills, endless steppes and lush farmlands. Cross the Black Sea to the Crimean Peninsula, a popular retreat since the days of the czars, and to the cosmopolitan seaport of Odessa, Ukraine’s gateway to Turkey and the lands of the Eastern Mediterranean. This unique itinerary introduces you to the seldom-seen treasures of a nation reasserting its identity and reclaiming its roots as it rises from seven decades of Soviet domination.
    [Show full text]
  • 19 October 2020 Towards Atonement and Reparations for Belgium's
    19 October 2020 Towards Atonement and Reparations for Belgium’s Plunder of the Congo On June 30, 1960, Patrice Emery Lumumba, Congo's first democratically-elected Prime Minister, delivered a scathing account of Belgian colonial rule. In the presence of then-King Baudouin of Belgium, Lumumba evoked the many atrocities of Belgium’s eighty years of colonial rule, including "humiliating slavery imposed by force," land seizure and racist laws. The "wounds are too fresh and too painful still for us to drive them from our memory," Lumumba lamented.1 Lumumba was excoriated and ridiculed by Western governments and media for his bold and lucid account of Congolese suffering under Belgium and the rule of King Leopold II. While the Belgian state offered an apology in 2002 for its role in Lumumba’s assassination, Belgians are still in deep denial about their colonial past. The atrocities committed under King Leopold II’s rule in the Congo (1885 – 1908) are well documented and represent some of the most heinous crimes committed in human history. Congolese were forced into labor to produce rubber, children were held as ransom, villages were razed, hands, feet and genitals were amputated - all in an effort to extract maximum labor, resources and profit from the Congolese people. In 1890, African American human rights activist and Civil War hero George Washington Williams said that what was unfolding in the Congo were crimes against humanity. An estimated 10 million Congolese perished under the King’s reign as he extracted ivory and rubber to enrich his Kingdom. The atrocities committed under the 23-year reign of King Leopold were such an offence to the conscience of humanity that it spurred an international movement that ultimately resulted in the King turning over the Congo to the Belgian state in 1908.
    [Show full text]
  • Figments of a State Called the Democratic Republic of the Congo Aimee M
    Macalester College DigitalCommons@Macalester College International Studies Honors Projects International Studies Department Spring 5-7-2013 The tU ility of Darkness: Figments of a State called the Democratic Republic of the Congo Aimee M. Mackie Macalester College, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.macalester.edu/intlstudies_honors Part of the African Studies Commons, International Relations Commons, and the Other International and Area Studies Commons Recommended Citation Mackie, Aimee M., "The tU ility of Darkness: Figments of a State called the Democratic Republic of the Congo" (2013). International Studies Honors Projects. Paper 17. http://digitalcommons.macalester.edu/intlstudies_honors/17 This Honors Project is brought to you for free and open access by the International Studies Department at DigitalCommons@Macalester College. It has been accepted for inclusion in International Studies Honors Projects by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@Macalester College. For more information, please contact [email protected]. The Utility of Darkness: Figments of a State called the Democratic Republic of the Congo Aimee Mackie Honors Thesis Presented to the Department of International Studies Macalester College Faculty Advisor: Dr. Ahmed I. Samatar 7 May 2013 TABLE OF CONTENTS Acknowledgements………………………………………………………………………..3 Abstract……………………………………………………………………………………4 Chapter One Introduction A. The Problem……………………………………………………………………………6 B. Research Questions ……………………………………………………………………7
    [Show full text]
  • Crimea______9 3.1
    CONTENTS Page Page 1. Introduction _____________________________________ 4 6. Transport complex ______________________________ 35 1.1. Brief description of the region ______________________ 4 1.2. Geographical location ____________________________ 5 7. Communications ________________________________ 38 1.3. Historical background ____________________________ 6 1.4. Natural resource potential _________________________ 7 8. Industry _______________________________________ 41 2. Strategic priorities of development __________________ 8 9. Energy sector ___________________________________ 44 3. Economic review 10. Construction sector _____________________________ 46 of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea ________________ 9 3.1. The main indicators of socio-economic development ____ 9 11. Education and science ___________________________ 48 3.2. Budget _______________________________________ 18 3.3. International cooperation _________________________ 20 12. Culture and cultural heritage protection ___________ 50 3.4. Investment activity _____________________________ 21 3.5. Monetary market _______________________________ 22 13. Public health care ______________________________ 52 3.6. Innovation development __________________________ 23 14. Regions of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea _____ 54 4. Health-resort and tourism complex_________________ 24 5. Agro-industrial complex __________________________ 29 5.1. Agriculture ____________________________________ 29 5.2. Food industry __________________________________ 31 5.3. Land resources _________________________________
    [Show full text]
  • Paul De La Morinerie MGIMO's French Connection He Relationship Between France and Russia Has “Tsomething Unique
    #2/2018 The Trianon Dialogue in Versailles Aleksandar Vučić “Serbia is a genuine friend of the Russian people” MGIMO – Patrick Sciences Po Pouyanné 25 years “We need a renaissance of Excellence of courage in our leaders” Paul de La Morinerie MGIMO's French connection he relationship between France and Russia has “Tsomething unique. It arises from the attraction and mutual recognition of two peoples enamored of absolute, beauty and truth” Jacques Chirac CONTENTS A number of anniversaries 34 26 were celebrated at MGIMO: School of International Relations has turned 75, School of International Economy – 60, Journalism School – 50 101 12 MGIMO’s exchange agreement with Sciences Po 128 and Business School of Konstantin Palace is the state residence of Nancy opened doors for the Russian President just outside St. international students to 210 Petersburg. It is often referred to as Russia and France ‘Russian Versailles’. And it is no coincidence that V. Putin chose this venue for negotiations with his French counterpart 206 Anton Tokovinin (left) is in charge of MGIMO’s Proxenos Chorus. In 1948, a most high-profile Boris Belozerov is a member of diplomatic scandal took place two clubs – of the popular Russian between USSR and USA, which TV game show “What? Where? resulted in the consulates being When?” and of “World Energy 202 closed down 52 Policy” club START History and Modernity of the State Early in 2020, the current MGIMO VIP SERBIA Dialogue, which has emerged from a of Israel. The Ambassador of Israel Development Strategy will expire, meeting
    [Show full text]
  • Romanov News Новости Романовых
    Romanov News Новости Романовых By Paul Kulikovsky №89 August 2015 A procession in memory of Tsarevich Alexei was made for the twelfth time A two-day procession in honor of the birth of the last heir to the Russian throne - St. Tsarevich Alexei, was made for the twelfth time on August 11-12 from Tsarskoye Selo to Peterhof. The tradition of the procession was born in 2004 - says the coordinator of the procession Vladimir Znahur - The icon painter Igor Kalugin gave the church an icon of St. Tsarevich. We decided that this icon should visit the Lower dacha, where the Tsarevich was born. We learned that in "Peterhof" in 1994 was a festival dedicated to the last heir to the imperial throne. We decided to go in procession from the place where they lived in the winter - from Tsarskoye Selo. Procession begins with Divine Liturgy at the Tsar's Feodorovsky Cathedral and then prayer at the beginning of the procession. The cross procession makes stops at churches and other significant sites. We called the route of our procession "From Sadness to Joy." They lived in the Alexander Palace in Tsarskoye Selo, loved it, there was born the Grand Duchess Olga. But this palace became a prison for the last of the Romanovs, where they then went on their way of the cross. It was in this palace the Tsarevich celebrated his last birthday", - says Vladimir. The next morning, after the Liturgy, we go to the birthplace of the Tsarevich - "Peterhof". Part of the procession was led by the clergy of the Cathedral of Saints Peter and Paul in Peterhof, Archpriest Mikhail Teryushov and Vladimir Chornobay.
    [Show full text]
  • Romanov News Новости Романовых
    Romanov News Новости Романовых By Ludmila & Paul Kulikovsky №116 November 2017 Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna - "Akhtyrskaya Mother of God" The centenary of the October Revolution - Plenty of exhibitions, not much else November 7th arrived, the day of the centenary of the October Revolution, and expectations or even fear for some people were high, what would happen? Some even talked in advance about the possibility of a new revolution, but in fact not much happened. Also the official silence on the Revolution speaks volumes. Though a few public exhibitions were on display, the official narrative ignored the centenary of the Revolution in all spheres of the political system. It seems that it was more anticipated, talked about, and commemorated outside Russia and one can wonder why, now when the West is so Russophobic? Maybe many Westerners, who benefited from freedoms denied to Soviet citizens, naively romanticize the revolution, seeing it as being about kicking the rich and helping the poor. Do they really see Lenin as a "Robin Hood"? The truth is much more complicated. Ultimately, the October Revolution was a tremendous catastrophe that resulted in the split of a nation, a bloody civil war, mass murder, millions people forced into exile, the destruction of much of Russia’s creative and scientific establishment and the export of this brutal regime to other countries - where it all was repeated. Maybe the West were hoping for a new revolution in Russia, and they hoped this way they would kindle the revolutionary spirit of Russians today? If so, they failed! The fact is that the Russian elite are far more consolidated around President Putin than they were once around Emperor Nicholas II.
    [Show full text]
  • The Distinction of Peace: a Social Analysis of Peacebuilding Catherine Goetze the Distinction of Peace
    0/-*/&4637&: *ODPMMBCPSBUJPOXJUI6OHMVFJU XFIBWFTFUVQBTVSWFZ POMZUFORVFTUJPOT UP MFBSONPSFBCPVUIPXPQFOBDDFTTFCPPLTBSFEJTDPWFSFEBOEVTFE 8FSFBMMZWBMVFZPVSQBSUJDJQBUJPOQMFBTFUBLFQBSU $-*$,)&3& "OFMFDUSPOJDWFSTJPOPGUIJTCPPLJTGSFFMZBWBJMBCMF UIBOLTUP UIFTVQQPSUPGMJCSBSJFTXPSLJOHXJUI,OPXMFEHF6OMBUDIFE ,6JTBDPMMBCPSBUJWFJOJUJBUJWFEFTJHOFEUPNBLFIJHIRVBMJUZ CPPLT0QFO"DDFTTGPSUIFQVCMJDHPPE The Distinction of Peace “Peacebuilding” serves as a catch- all term to describe efforts by an array of international organizations, nongovernmental organizations, and even agencies of foreign states to restore or construct a peaceful society in the wake—or even in the midst— of conflict. Despite this variety, practitioners consider themselves members of a global profession. In this study, Cath- erine Goetze investigates the genesis of peacebuilding as a pro- fessional field of expertise since the 1960s, its increasing influ- ence, and the ways in which it reflects global power structures. Step- by- step, Goetze describes how the peacebuilding field came into being, how it defines who belongs to it and who does not, and what kind of group culture it has generated. Using an innovative and original methodology, she investigates the motivations of individuals who become peacebuilders, their professional trajectories and networks, and the “good peace- builder” as an ideal. For many, working in peacebuilding in various ways— as an aid worker on the ground, as a lawyer at the United Nations, or as an academic in a think tank—has become not merely a livelihood but also a form of participa- tion in world politics. As a field, peacebuilding has developed its techniques for incorporating and training new members, yet its internal politics also create the conditions of exclusion that often result in practical failures of the peacebuilding enterprise. By providing a critical account of the social mechanisms that make up the peacebuilding field, Goetze offers deep insights into the workings of Western domination and global inequalities.
    [Show full text]
  • World-History-Timeline.Pdf
    HISTORY TIMELINE WORLD HISTORY TIMELINE FROM ANCIENT HISTORY TO 21ST CENTURY COPYRIGHT © 2010 - www.ithappened.info Table of Contents Ancient history .................................................................................................................................... 4 100,000 to 800 BC...........................................................................................................................4 800 BC to 300 BC............................................................................................................................5 300 BC to 1 BC................................................................................................................................6 1 AD to 249 AD............................................................................................................................... 8 249 AD to 476 AD .......................................................................................................................... 9 Middle Ages .......................................................................................................................................11 476 AD to 649 AD......................................................................................................................... 11 650 AD to 849 AD ........................................................................................................................ 12 850 AD to 999 AD........................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]