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"émigré" Definitions
  1. a person who has left their own country, usually for political reasons

210 Sentences With "émigré"

How to use émigré in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "émigré" and check conjugation/comparative form for "émigré". Mastering all the usages of "émigré" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Mr Djurekovic was an émigré active in Croatian nationalist circles.
There were reasons for this northern influx of émigré talent.
His mother, Leah (Blecher) Brenner, was an émigré from Latvia.
Nabokov and his father both published actively in the city's émigré
The fellow Czech émigré Tom Stoppard is the Wilma's signature playwright.
So did Lisette Model, a Viennese émigré with whom Arbus studied briefly.
Ukrainian émigré publications coined a new word to describe its barbarity: "Holodomor," a
Born in 1912, Kati Horna was a photographer, a Hungarian Jew, and an émigré.
His Scottish émigré grandfather was a professional sculptor, as was his father, Stirling Calder.
Mr. Gascon, a Cuban émigré, moved to Los Angeles with his family as a boy.
On DVD Douglas Sirk was one of the 20th century's more drastically displaced émigré artists.
Nikolai Sergeyev, an émigré ballet master, took out the notations for stagings in the West.
In 1984, a Russian émigré named David Bogatin went shopping for apartments in New York City.
Radziwill became a princess when she married a Polish émigré nobleman, Prince Stanislas Radziwill in 1959.
She was the wife of a Polish émigré nobleman, Prince Stanislas Radziwill, from 1959 to 1974.
Bloomingdale, born Betty Lee Newling in Los Angeles to Australian émigré parents, may have relished the comparison.
She also choreographed short ballets with stage designs by her husband, the Russian émigré artist Constantin Nepo.
An elderly Cuban émigré told me he wanted Mr Trump to win but had voted for Ted Cruz.
Most of the Lemercier illustrators were on vacation, so the task fell to Alphonse Mucha, a Czech émigré.
The audience sees Gregory Solomon, a Russian-Jewish émigré, blessing his meagre lunch—a hard-boiled egg—in Hebrew.
There is a particularly wonderful expression in the invented émigré genre of mixed-up Czech and English: lotofánek , i.e.
Mr. Attal was born in Israel to Algerian-émigré parents who moved to France when he was an infant.
Most end up paying inflated prices on the black market, or depend on émigré relatives to send them supplies.
Alex Cohen made new music as her sci-fi alter-ego, pop star, and Galaxy M64 émigré, Dominic Sen.
Back in its classical era, American movies built their glamour with the labor of émigré artists from fascist Europe.
Another Russian émigré, George Balanchine, would create one of our most cherished Christmas traditions, The Nutcracker ballet, in 1954.
The first Nazi broadcasts to the United States targeted émigré communities with cultural programming designed to foster nostalgia and pride.
Matthew Nowicki, a Polish émigré architect, hoped to encircle the vexing roundabout with an elevated linear accelerator-cum-shopping center.
He married Sophie Dobzhansky, a Radcliffe anthropology student and the daughter of the Russian émigré geneticist Theodosius Dobzhansky, in 1955.
"I don't think very long," said Lev Parnas, the Soviet émigré who worked for Rudolph W. Giuliani in pressuring Ukraine.
The university says it takes pride in attracting émigré Hungarian scholars back to their native land to teach and research.
By refusing comparison to his American and European counterparts, Araeen acknowledges how his Pakistan émigré identity has shaped his aesthetic world.
The family fortune can be traced to Morris Milstein, a canny Russian émigré who founded the Circle Floor Company in 1919.
And a Cuban émigré working to send money to his family back home, who fell prey to dementia before dying incommunicado.
To make these fonts available for purchase, Adobe has partnered with the likes of Frere-Jones Type, Type Network, Émigré and others.
In 1960, after nine difficult years as an émigré in Paris, Milosz returned to the United States at the age of 50.
Clearly, the vision of émigré publishers like my father, Jacques and André Schiffrin, Kurt Enoch and George Weidenfeld is an essential legacy.
He received a Ph.D. in comparative literature in 1953 from Yale, where his teachers included the distinguished Czech émigré critic Rene Wellek.
My grade-school friends included an Armenian kid, an Eastern European émigré and a guy from Arkansas, all of whom were white.
During the Cold War, Tamir Sapir, an émigré from the Soviet Union, sold electronics to KGB agents from a storefront in Manhattan.
These people included the Hungarian Harvard professor Janos Kornai, the Czech émigré Ota Sik and the Polish-born Oxford don Wlodzimierz Brus.
In 1969, The Times declared that exercise studios, particularly those run by a certain Russian émigré, had become as modish as restaurants.
Unless Mr Bezos obtains the state-like power to order masses of people around, his plans will require émigré Earthlings to leave voluntarily.
Skobstova was a talented poet and well-trained intellectual who could certainly have enjoyed the secular side of life as a Russian émigré.
Meanwhile, Brown was having conversations with the Condé Nast chairman, S. I. Newhouse, Jr., and his editorial director, the émigré artist Alexander Liberman.
Another European émigré, artist John Graham, launched Krasner's public career by including her in his midtown exhibition American and French Paintings in 1942.
He is a U.S. émigré to Israel and was involved there in setting up the Arava solar power fields before co-founding Energiya.
Our most vulnerable faction — our first responders — would seem to be the writers in the thriving subgenre of the Russian-Jewish émigré novel.
In a clever reversal of the familiar émigré plot, Krasikov sends three consecutive generations of a family from the United States to Russia.
Caught between distance and intimacy, his images revealed with affection and longing a Hungarian émigré who was an outsider in his adopted land.
In 1958 the marriage broke up, and the next year Lee married Polish émigré nobleman Prince Stanislas ("Stash") Radziwill, a London real estate investor.
For much of that time he holed up in the storied Chelsea Hotel in Manhattan, sleeping through the days and communicating with émigré friends.
A curious museum established by a French émigré 180 years ago has become a repository of the hopes and dreams of a modern India.
Her best friend in New York was John White, an Austrian Jewish émigré who directed the City Opera and was a mentor to Florian.
In 1976, he tied for first in the United States Open, one of the country's most prestigious tournaments, with Leonid Shamkovich, another recent émigré.
Luyt Pipeño Carrizal Chile País Familia Ernesto Soto 2019 $18.99/1 Liter Louis-Antoine Luyt is a French émigré who makes wine in Chile.
In 2007, an American group named S.E.A.R.C.H, founded by émigré heirs to the Sokolov investigation, discovered two bodies in another pit at Pig's Meadow.
For more than 30 years, the Soviet émigré Boris V. Shekhtman taught Russian to budding Moscow correspondents on assignment for The New York Times.
It was Kirstein who discovered, persuaded and largely paid for Balanchine — a Russian émigré based in Paris — to come to New York in 1933.
The child of a Catalan émigré merchant and a Uruguayan mother, Torres-García moved with his family to Barcelona in 1892, when he was 18.
Graham, Davis, and Gorky became so inseparable that another émigré, Willem de Kooning, dubbed them the Three Musketeers, and soon joined them as the Fourth.
At the same time, Zurich-based art dealer Irmgard Burchard was arranging a show of many of the émigré German artists persecuted by the Nazis.
Ms. Hicks, a reluctant émigré to insular Washington, kept a tiny circle of confidants, complaining that she could not trust anyone in a company town.
I was consulting with a Nebraska-born neurologist, the son of a grain elevator operator, while a Mayo-trained Kenyan émigré expertly drew my blood.
In Nanni Balestrini's 1971 novel "We Want Everything," the life of a southern émigré turned Fiat worker reflects bitterly on the conditions of the factories.
Toussaint's relevance is a bit fuzzier: A Haitian émigré and society hairdresser in pre-Civil War New York, he was a benefactor of the parish.
The situation grew grimmer in the fall of 1936, when the man who had murdered Nabokov's father was named to Hitler's Department of Émigré Affairs.
The émigré abstract painter Piet Mondrian had the greatest impact on Krasner, and the svelte Dutchman became her preferred dance partner in the city's jazz clubs.
The family eventually returned to America and settled in an émigré enclave in Los Angeles where Judy's mother, a classical musician, played in film studio orchestras.
The other leadership candidates were quick to condemn Ms. Leitch, including Deepak Obhrai, a Tanzanian émigré who has been a member of Parliament for 20 years.
Those within the Russian émigré community, however, contend that Abramovich's priorities were focused more on his new home than on the country he had left behind.
Some of the most startling interviews took place then, as émigré Jews listened to Waffen SS officers boast of the number of Jews they had killed.
"Kennedy is still the No. 22011 most hated man in Miami," the Cuban émigré Raul Masvidal said, in 22020, while running for mayor of the city.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads PARIS — Reliable histories about postwar abstraction in New York always include the pivotal role played by Dutch émigré Piet Mondrian.
A Russian-born émigré by way of Israel, he made a gambler's living taking on challengers, and often hustling them, in becoming the world's ranking player.
An émigré from the former Yugoslavia to the United States, Dizdarevic broke into the market by arranging hospitality for Americans at the 23 winter Games in Sarajevo.
In 1782, a French émigré, J. Hector St. John de Crevecoeur, wrote an essay aimed at a Revolutionary War generation caught up in political and social upheaval.
Prominent recent examples include unfounded conspiracy theories about George Soros, a wealthy donor to Democratic Party causes and a Jewish émigré from Hungary who survived the Nazis.
Nymans was founded in the late 223th century, when Ludwig Messel, a German émigré, purchased the 255-acre estate to help secure his position in British society.
It is 1935, and Sepp Trautwein (the riveting Samouil Stoyanov), a former music professor, takes over as political columnist at an anti-fascist émigré newspaper in Paris.
His lively Still-Life Studio Exercise (circa 1950) is dedicated to the generous patrons of émigré artists Charles and Regina Aukin, themselves immigrants, from Belarus and from Germany.
One of the reasons why this Jewish émigré from Poland liked Britain so much is that it was more honest than other countries about the scramble for preferment.
But it also reflects a long trend tied to improving economic conditions in Mexico, demographic shifts in émigré nations, and pre-Trump improvements in border security and deterrence.
The ranks of sports journalists were joined by the philosopher A. J. Ayer, the Viennese émigré musician Hans Keller, and John Sparrow, the warden of All Souls College, Oxford.
On the first floor of a Brooklyn brownstone, Sofreh has a hospitable, dinner-party atmosphere and Persian cooking of the sort that an Iranian émigré might make for friends.
After considerable urging from his staff, Sanders now tells audiences that he is the son of a Polish émigré who arrived in Brooklyn penniless and unable to speak English.
Rand was one of the first, and not because she had lost her faith, but because she was an émigré who had witnessed the Russian Revolution from the inside.
Not only did Russia seemingly poison an ex-Russian spy, his daughter and 21 other British citizens, his forces might have murdered another émigré opponent, Nikolai Glushkov in London.
In Brighton Beach, a Soviet émigré enclave in South Brooklyn, Trump earned 84 percent of the Republican vote in the 2016 primaries—one of the highest percentages in the city.
An independent film produced by Sirk's fellow European émigré Arnold Pressburger, "A Scandal in Paris" features an uncharacteristically light score by the Marxist modernist Hans Eisler, Bertolt Brecht's sometime collaborator.
Parisian textile designer Annie Barbaret and fellow French émigré Pascale Morel source them from small designers all over Europe, as well as from fair-trade enterprises in Rwanda and Bangladesh.
It is the fate of Tyler's Kate not to be tamed, certainly, but to be socialized—in this case, by a still more socially awkward Russian-émigré biologist named Pyotr.
The team included Rinat Akhmetshin, an émigré to the United States who once served as a Soviet military officer and who has been called a Russian political gun for hire.
Trautwein's newspaper is howling into the void, compared with the megaphone of Nazi propaganda, yet the uncomfortable facts he sends to his émigré readers still annoy party officials in Berlin.
Radziwill, the wife of a Polish émigré nobleman, Prince Stanislas Radziwill, was an international socialite and fashion icon who for years was on lists of the world's best-dressed women.
His father was a Hungarian émigré who was very much affected by the First World War, in which he served as an infantry officer and was awarded the Military Cross.
Blanka Zizka, a Czech émigré who co-founded the Wilma Theater in Philadelphia in the 1980s, has received this year's Vilcek Prize for immigrant artists — an honor that comes with $100,000.
Rafael Edward Cruz was born on December 22, 1970, in Calgary, Alberta, to an American mother and a Cuban émigré father (making him, by scholarly consensus, an American citizen by birth).
Echoing Alexander Herzen, a 19th-century émigré who declared Russia to be suffering from "patriotic syphilis", Mr Kovalev diagnoses in his country "manic-depressive psychosis…acute megalomania, persecution complex and kleptomania".
Yet while Tati and Keaton privileged unbroken takes that showcased their athletic brilliance, Iosseliani's preference for misdirection and insinuation place him more in the lineage of German-Jewish émigré Ernst Lubitsch.
Mr Clover grapples gamely with the madness of the past, but sometimes lapses into banality, writing lamely of an émigré scholar's "incredibly creative" period at university in Vienna in the 1920s.
His feelings of guilt in the face of his relatives' suffering, as well as his rapt rediscovery of the native landscape, are characteristic attitudes of the émigré, as he well knows.
It's these couples that are most disturbing: The émigré men are presented as clear predators, with wives who are so broken that they can't fathom the depravity of the island's rules.
Morgenthau, a German Jewish émigré professor at the University of Chicago, had already written "Politics Among Nations," a work that would help define the study of international relations for a generation.
Fukuyama was working from the idiosyncratic reading of Hegel supplied by Alexandre Kojève, a Russian émigré who conducted a series of legendary seminars on the subject in Paris in the 1930s.
One of the earliest films in the series, Ernst Lubitsch's silent comedy "So This Is Paris," from 1926 (screening March 12), showed what a German émigré could teach Hollywood about sex.
Ragbir has been living in the U.S. for nearly 3 decades — a Trinidadian émigré who arrived here on a visitor's visa in 1991 and became a lawful permanent resident 3 years later.
On March 22nd that observation found a pointed form of expression at an EU summit in Brussels, following the recent nerve-agent attack on a Russian émigré and his daughter in Salisbury.
Alexander Etkind, an émigré historian, has argued that the root of Russia's misfortunes is its natural wealth, which encourages its rulers to plunder the country, like colonial masters, rather than develop it.
There are undoubtedly myriad intellectual, psychological, and political sources for our inaction, but I cannot help thinking that the influence of Ayn Rand, the Russian émigré novelist, may have played a role.
As he built his life in London, Mr. Ashurkov learned to look for Russian agents reflexively — men in dark suits sitting alone at émigré gatherings, dinner-party acquaintances rumored to be informants.
Last year, he struck up a conversation with a Russian émigré couple at a grocery store in London, and startled them by entreating them — perfect strangers — to come visit him in Salisbury.
The open-air festival, featuring Venezuela's top émigré bands, $12 hamburgers and artisanal beer, was one of the myriad entertainment events that have blossomed around the once gloomy capital in recent months.
When I had my turn on the phone with an émigré who spoke no English, the object of the exercise was for me to find out the ingredients in a particular recipe.
In St. Catharines, Burtynsky and his siblings—two sisters and a younger brother—grew up in the nationalist atmosphere of an émigré community whose homeland was unreachable, trapped behind the Iron Curtain.
He left the army with a letter from Georges F. Doriot, himself a French émigré who had served in the United States Army, promising him a place at the Harvard Business School.
It covers the battiest fringes of émigré life in the 1920s, the nationalist subculture of the chaotic Boris Yeltsin years and Eurasianism under Vladimir Putin as a central feature of the Kremlin's playbook.
Officials, inviting Mr. Smith to attend an Independence Day celebration, were surprised to discover that the designer of their flag was not a Guyanese émigré, as they had thought, but a white American.
In exile Keun began a torrid affair with the Austrian Jewish novelist Joseph Roth, who died in 1939 after hearing that a fellow émigré writer had hanged himself in a New York hotel.
The show was run by a 30-something Australian émigré named Tim Hewat, a former editor of the northern Daily Express and an instrumental figure in the expansion of broadsheet vigor to television.
His father, Isidore, a Jewish émigré from Poland, owned a clothing business that allowed the family a certain level of luxury: three bathrooms, a chauffeur-driven car and a summer place in Far Rockaway.
His resistance activities, under the direction of the émigré leadership in London, led to his arrest and torture—which was so bad, he told his family, that Auschwitz was "just a game" in comparison.
Budweiser tried to have it both ways; they produced a controversial ad featuring an immigrant, yet played it safe by setting it in the past, with an émigré who was both "legal" and European.
Mr. Passer, an émigré from Czechoslovakia who came to America in the aftermath of the 1968 Soviet invasion, treats Jeffrey Alan Fiskin's script with a mixture of humanist warmth, caustic humor and detached fatalism.
There's not much need in Flushing, one of the epicenters of a thriving Chinese émigré community that is making New York what Paris was to White Russians in the 1920s, with all the intrigue.
On February 1st, he slipped out of the Polish Embassy and headed for the offices of Kultura, an émigré publishing house, where he remained in hiding for the next three and a half months.
This month, a coroner in Woking, England, postponed an inquest into the death of another Russian émigré, Alexander Perepilichnyy, after the British authorities sought to prevent the disclosure of material deemed to be sensitive.
The current surge is just the latest in decades of Nicaraguan immigration to Costa Rica, whose Nicaraguan émigré population numbers roughly 500,000, or about a tenth of the country's overall population, government officials said.
Lambert, along with Philip Johnson, then-curator of architecture at MoMA, and Lou R. Crandell, head of construction, appointed émigré Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, choosing him over Frank Lloyd Wright and Le Corbusier.
He might have lived out his days there, but in 1956 a German-Jewish émigré grew concerned about a boy his daughter was dating, and determined that the boy's father was a wanted man.
One of its principals was a Russian émigré, Felix Sater, linked to organized crime who served time for felony assault and who later pleaded guilty to racketeering involving a $40 million stock fraud scheme.
Another Venezuelan émigré, Maru Vasquez, 37, who works behind the counter in the Pan Pa' Ya bakery, said she supported the ban in general terms but was bothered by its inclusion of officials' relatives.
That was the conceit behind Dr. Strangelove, the film that offered characters like Strangelove, the German-émigré nuclear "mad scientist," and Jack D. Ripper, the insane general with a killer's name, as models of madness.
The head of the art program was the German Bauhaus émigré Josef Albers, whose rigorous lessons in the aesthetic effects of combined materials and juxtaposed colors were imprinted on Rauschenberg, though to ends hardly orthodox.
Bayrock — whose top executives included Tevfik Arif, a Soviet-era commerce official originally from Kazakhstan, and Felix Sater, a Russian émigré and felon — scouted potential deals in Russia for Mr. Trump, but none panned out.
It was Harvard in the 21970s that he met Mr. Pei, who was nine years his senior and who was teaching at Harvard's architecture school at the behest of its German émigré dean, Walter Gropius.
One of those vendors, Izzy Guss — a Russian émigré who established his pickle business there (first on Hester Street, then on Essex Street) in the early 20th century — is the name behind the famous Guss's Pickles.
"The Olympic Village gets boring and the food is somewhat, well, monotonous," said Carlos Vizcaino Sánchez, 48, a Cuban émigré who coaches track and field athletes in the Seychelles, the 115-island country in the Indian Ocean.
He said he was introduced to Mr. Trump there by his "dear friend" Elena Baronoff, a Soviet émigré who worked as Mr. Trump's exclusive sales agent, helping sell at least $100 million worth of apartments to Russians.
One was Leo Kanner, an Austrian émigré at Johns Hopkins; the other was Hans Asperger, who was working in Nazi-occupied Vienna and whose findings were little known in the Anglophone world until the early nineteen-eighties.
Within view of a photograph of the Spirit of St. Louis approaching Paris in 1927, a bed with built-in cabinets in honey-colored wood by the Austrian émigré Frederick Kiesler suggests an airliner's first-class cabin.
They include the nineteenth-century Japanese philosopher and government official Nishi Amane; the brilliant academic rivals Hans Kelsen, an Austrian Jew, and Carl Schmitt, a book-burning Nazi; the American lawyer Salmon Levinson, who began the outlawry movement in the nineteen-twenties and then got written out of its history by men with bigger egos; and the Czech émigré Bohuslav Ečer and the Galician émigré Hersch Lauterpacht, who helped formulate the arguments that made possible the prosecution of Nazi leaders at Nuremberg and laid the groundwork for the United Nations.
Permitted to resettle in West Germany in 1985, he began attracting attention for his evocations of the East's apocalyptic postwar landscape and the dislocations of a Cold War-era émigré who felt like an outsider in both societies.
An émigré from Poland, she had been a literature professor who had managed to hang on at Moscow State despite the anti-Jewish campaign; long since retired, she still had a dacha at Peredelkino, the old writers' colony.
THE STORY Set in an indeterminate time when soldiers are invading Paris, a German émigré (Franz Rogowski) there flees to Marseille, where he meets other refugees as he awaits the papers that will let him leave the country.
It details secret Anglo-American plans to train "émigré-fascists" from Albania in Malta and the Greek island of Corfu and send them back to Albania to start a "partisan movement" against the Communist government of Enver Hoxha.
Janusz Glowacki, a Polish playwright, novelist and screenwriter who mined the ferment of Communism and its collapse in his country to create darkly humorous works about totalitarianism and the émigré experience, died on Saturday while vacationing in Egypt.
Highly regarded by fellow European émigré artists and American peers in the Coenties Slip neighborhood, Sekula found her momentum interrupted by a mental illness that led to frequent institutionalization; this lifelong struggle culminated in her suicide in 1963.
It may have seemed like a good idea at the time and probably in the immediate aftermath; the Russian government viewed it as a success that deterred others in the rich Russian émigré community of "Londongrad" from opposition activities.
The show is drawn entirely from the museum's permanent collection, and its greatest surprise comes from Jan Müller, a German émigré in New York, whose ghoulish "Faust I" (2267) depicts the witches of Goethe's epic as starved, traumatized wraiths.
The show is drawn entirely from the museum's permanent collection, and its greatest surprise comes from Jan Müller, a German émigré in New York, whose ghoulish "Faust I" (210) depicts the witches of Goethe's epic as starved, traumatized wraiths.
The current exhibition, "Czech Routes"—the fourth in a series, following shows of émigré artists from Germany, Poland, and Austria—contains works by twenty-one painters, printmakers, and sculptors who left Czechoslovakia at different times in the past century.
The show is drawn entirely from the museum's permanent collection, and its greatest surprise comes from Jan Müller, a German émigré in New York, whose ghoulish "Faust I" (22254) depicts the witches of Goethe's epic as starved, traumatized wraiths.
The show is drawn entirely from the museum's permanent collection, and its greatest surprise comes from Jan Müller, a German émigré in New York, whose ghoulish "Faust I" (229500) depicts the witches of Goethe's epic as starved, traumatized wraiths.
The show is drawn entirely from the museum's permanent collection, and its greatest surprise comes from Jan Müller, a German émigré in New York, whose ghoulish "Faust I" (2212) depicts the witches of Goethe's epic as starved, traumatized wraiths.
Those familiar with Cole, an English émigré who is considered to be a founder of the Hudson River School, America's first indigenous art movement, know of his passion for capturing the identity of the newborn nation in his paintings.
The show is drawn entirely from the museum's permanent collection, and its greatest surprise comes from Jan Müller, a German émigré in New York, whose ghoulish "Faust I" (228) depicts the witches of Goethe's epic as starved, traumatized wraiths.
The show is drawn entirely from the museum's permanent collection, and its greatest surprise comes from Jan Müller, a German émigré in New York, whose ghoulish "Faust I" (2396) depicts the witches of Goethe's epic as starved, traumatized wraiths.
In time for the festival, the museum's newly opened "Resonance of Exile," the second in a series of exhibitions about émigré artists, focuses on Jewish artists who, escaping Hitler's Europe, found refuge in New York, London, Mexico and Cuba.
So the theory goes that "cultural Marxism" was the master plan of a group of émigré Jewish German academics—widely known today as the Frankfurt School of Critical Theory—who fled Nazi Germany in 1936, decamping to New York.
"What I like here is the minimal, nearly Japanese structure," Mr. Wurm said on Tuesday during installation, inside the famed 1922 Los Angeles house that the Austrian émigré Rudolph Schindler designed to live in with his wife and one other couple.
They are, I think, part of what Gabriel fears is a plan to sabotage the USSR's food supply, carried out in part by Soviet émigré Alexei Morozov — and to me, the agriculture plot was the weakest link in the episode.
Nor has he joined forces with Kremlin foes, as did Alexander Perepilichnyy, an émigré Russian banker, who, after providing information about Russian corruption to the London-based financier Bill Browder, unexpectedly dropped dead while jogging near his English mansion in 2012.
Andrei Eliseev, the Nice cathedral's Moscow-educated and multilingual senior priest, denied accusations by his foes in the émigré community that he works for Russia's security agency and blamed hostility against him and Moscow on the feuds of old aristocratic families.
This has been amplified by a vigorous, well-funded effort by Russia to woo the French political elite and Russian émigré groups, as described in a recent book, "The Kremlin's Networks in France," by Cécile Vaissié, a French university professor.
Under the tutelage of the émigré Bauhaus painter Josef Albers and the weaver Anni Albers, she learned that art, craft and design were inseparable; that all materials were potentially art materials; and that natural and abstract forms could be comparably organic.
Besides the private investigator whose firm produced the Trump dossier, the lobbying team included Rinat Akhmetshin, an émigré to the United States who once served as a Soviet military officer and who has been called a Russian political gun for hire.
Marina Ratner, an influential mathematician and Russian-Jewish émigré who defied the notion that the best and the brightest in her field do their finest work when they are young, died on July 7 at her home in El Cerrito, Calif.
Two Eritreans to whom I had been introduced the day before — Lydia, my taxi driver Zaki's sister, and her boyfriend, Berhane, a Massawa-born émigré living in Norway who returns home several times a year — joined me for the adventure.
As the story goes, the journey began at age 33, when Resika was taken by his mother to studio art classes at a nearby orphanage in Harlem and, soon afterwards, downtown, to study with the Polish émigré painter Sol Wilson.
The firm will led by Russian émigré Masha Drokova, who, since arriving in the US a few years ago, has been variously a PR and angel investor, but who has famously dumped her former life in Russia as a politician and TV reporter.
Rockburne often attributes her interest in set theory and topology to Max Dehn, a brilliant German émigré mathematician; Dehn was known for important contributions to topological theory and was the sole math teacher at Black Mountain from 1945 until his death in 603.
It was Lifar who encouraged Ms. Chauviré to retrain herself with two Russian émigré teachers, Victor Gsovsky and especially Boris Kniaseff, who softened the academic side of her schooling, gave her an elongated line and developed the lyricism that distinguished her style.
A towering "Skyscraper Bookcase" of California redwood with black lacquer, all designed by Austrian émigré Paul Frankl, incorporates the zoning-enforced architectural setbacks of the new skyscrapers, something which Erik Magnussen's Cubic coffee service with its silver angles does on a smaller scale.
László Moholy-Nagy, born in 18393, was an émigré too, but he landed in Chicago and was associated with the Bauhaus School, making him a much more familiar figure, even if he and Horna shared a home country and a visionary imagination.
But opposition to the reconciliation was fierce among parts of the Cuban émigré community in Florida, and Mr. Trump's promise to undo the policy may have contributed to his victory over Hillary Clinton in Florida, a crucial part of his electoral win.
Amanda Davis, a historian for the NYC L.G.B.T. Historic Sites Project, offered a history lesson in front of the former Eve Addams' Tearoom (129 MacDougal Street), a lesbian hot spot from the mid-1920s run by a Polish-Jewish émigré named Eva Kotchever.
She was known for her ecumenical taste and progressive politics, which drew her to other émigré artists, as well as artists of color, and she gave Jacob Lawrence his first show — the famed "Migration" series snapped up by MoMA and the Phillips Collection.
Traditionally popular among Israel's Russian émigré community, Liberman has sought this time to portray himself as a champion of all secular Israelis, saying he wants to see a national unity government which does not include parties representing the ultra-Orthodox religious communities.
The group's rising market value was by no small measure a product of the Met's then head of the Department of 20073th-Century Art, 22007-year-old Belgian émigré Henry Geldzahler — "the most powerful and controversial art curator alive," according to one journalist.
Mr Ashurkov is a close ally of Alexei Navalny, a Russian anti-corruption campaigner and opposition politician, and the event was one of a series of "kleptocracy tours" organised by émigré activists to publicise how corrupt regimes launder their fortunes in London's property market.
In email exchanges with Mr. Trump's personal lawyer, Michael D. Cohen, Felix Sater, a Russian émigré who had previously helped develop Trump SoHo in New York, talked about securing financing for the Moscow project from VTB, a major state-owned Russian bank under American sanctions.
The villain here was another Austrian émigré, Bruno Bettelheim, who, on the strength of a doctorate in art history and supersized intellectual chutzpah, had wangled Ford Foundation funding for his research and a prominent position as a child psychologist at the University of Chicago.
Boris V. Shekhtman, a Soviet émigré who taught conversational Russian to a generation of American journalists, diplomats and entrepreneurs — from the grim lingo of Cold War aggression to the beguiling argot of capitalist negotiation — died on March 18 in Silver Spring, Md. He was 77.
Some of these portraits may remind you of the troubled humanoids of Alberto Giacometti, though other colleagues in Paris were also using rough surfaces and repetitive mark-making to evoke postwar trauma, among them Jean Fautrier (1898–1964) and the German émigré known as Wols (1913-1951).
Richard Miller, the first F.B.I. agent to be prosecuted for espionage against the United States, was arrested in Los Angeles on October 3, 1984, along with a Russian émigré couple named Svetlana and Nikolai Ogorodnikov, who were, it emerged, sleeper K.G.B. agents assigned to the United States.
What shocked her, however, was not Ms. Foti's discovery that her grandfather was complicit in the Holocaust — that was not really news to locals — but that a member of a patriotic émigré family had gone public and turned a private family matter into a public national shame.
Art Review The work of the Danish-Vietnamese artist Danh Vo operates at the intersection of art, global history and personal diary, that is, his own life as a gay man and as an émigré whose family's existence was radically disrupted by the war in Vietnam.
"I was fascinated by some of the elderly characters I knew on the street and how an extraordinarily talented émigré from Paris or Berlin could be sitting on the bench next to a 280-year-old apprentice from the East End," Ms. Lichtenstein said in an interview.
The legalization of MMA in France has been held hostage by the country's judo federation, even though fighters are obviously embracing mixed-style fighting—UFC heavyweight upstart Francis Ngannou, a Cameroonian émigré who lived in France before relocating to Las Vegas this month, is just the latest.
He enjoyed blaming the fact that he had to support himself with hackwork on the Americanization of postwar European culture; but then he always had a sly sadist's understanding of the American intellectual's appetite for masochism (perhaps because it was appropriated from the émigré Jewish intellectual's appetite for masochism).
Published less than a week after the Sputnik launch, "Atlas Shrugged" was the crowning work of Ayn Rand, a Jewish émigré from St. Petersburg (born Alissa Rosenbaum) who had gone to Hollywood in the 21947s, taking with her scenarios even Cecil B. DeMille's story department deemed far-fetched.
Spurred, in large part, by the writings of the émigré Japanese scholar D. T. Suzuki, it was, in the first instance, aesthetic: Suzuki's work, though rich in tea ceremonies and haiku, makes no mention of Zazen, the hyper-disciplined, often painful, meditation practice that is at the heart of Zen practice.
On display at the Ukrainian Institute of Modern Art (in Chicago's Ukrainian Village, of course) in celebration of the 25th anniversary of Ukrainian independence, the works, including sculptures, paintings, and installations, demonstrate the dramatic impact of the nation's sovereignty on the work of both its native born and émigré artist communities.
Ms. Silverman, who grew up "in a bunch of different countries" and says in a program note that she has "a complicated relationship with the United States," handles that material beautifully, not only with Noxolo but with another South African émigré, a London bar owner named Marcel (Phillip James Brannon).
Willem de Kooning called Davis one of the Three Musketeers of the New York art scene in the thirties, along with the Ukrainian émigré John Graham and the mercurial Armenian Arshile Gorky—men who glamorized the lives of a tiny, impecunious avant-garde that was besieged by philistinism and reaction.
PAUL REPPUN IS a kama'aina (literally, "child of the land," a term generally used for long-term residents whether or not they are of Hawaiian blood), raised in the 1950s on Molokai and rural Oahu, where his father, a Russian émigré doctor, was sometimes paid for his services in chickens or fish.
" Stephanie J. Urdang, an author and another South African émigré to the United States, said that Ms. Davis had "understood that in order to influence Congress and bring about change at the policy level, it was critical to mobilize average, regular folk" who, she said, "could pressure change at the higher levels of government.
The newest addition, however, is an unexpected meditation on modern city life: a modest closet from a studio apartment in the West Village, filled with the curious, lovely and very particular personal effects of Sara Berman, a Belarussian and Israeli émigré who was the mother of Maira Kalman, the irreverent artist, book author and illustrator.
On a Wednesday evening in mid-June, a crowd comprised predominantly of Soviet-born immigrants to the U.S. gathered at Encore Restaurant, a gaudy supper club in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, for a fundraiser honoring Malka Shahar, a 52-year-old Russian émigré running as a Republican candidate to represent South Brooklyn's District 47 in the New York State Assembly.
Soldevilla's advocacy of Concrete art — that is, art with no basis in the natural world and no symbolic content, following van Doesburg's definition — galvanized the Cuban vanguardia, giving new visibility to the movement that had first arrived in Havana at the start of the decade, led by the Romanian émigré Sandú Darié, Mario Carreño, and Luis Martínez Pedro.
The novelist Olga Grjasnowa — whose "Der Russe ist einer, der Birken liebt" (, ("All Russians Love Birch Trees") about a soul-searching Russian-Jewish émigré, was adapted for stage by the theater in 2013 and remains in repertoire — said that the house has had an effect on cultural politics by sheer force of its diverse ensemble and topics.
That's because this elegant institution, founded by the French-émigré oil tycoons John and Dominique de Menil and housed in a simple Renzo Piano building plunked down in a quiet neighborhood of cozy bungalows, is now presenting As Essential as Dreams: Self-taught Art from the Collection of Stephanie and John Smither (on view through October 16).
Or consider his "My Life as a Russian Novel," from 2007, which tells, in part, the story of Carrère's mother's father, a brilliant but depressive Georgian émigré who, failing to integrate into French life after the Russian Revolution, ended up interpreting for the Germans during World War II. One day, he disappeared, not to be seen or heard from again.
The exhibition "In a Cloud, in a Wall, in a Chair: Six Modernists in Mexico at Midcentury," simply but beautifully presented at the Art Institute of Chicago's Modern Wing, highlights the work of six women: the Cuban-born Clara Porset, the Mexican Lola Álvarez Bravo, the German émigré Anni Albers, and the Americans Ruth Asawa, Cynthia Sargent and Sheila Hicks (who at 85 is still actively working with fibers).
Simenon's cleverly structured detective story is rejiggered to emphasize the mental chess match between the imperturbable Maigret (Baur) and a grandiose medical student (played with appropriate intensity by the Russian émigré Valéry Inkijinoff, a leading player in "Storm Over Asia," Vsevolod Pudovkin's 1928 silent.) The early films are lean; "Un Carnet de Bal," which requires 19763 minutes to detail the quest of a young and most unmerry widow to regain her past, is not.
Ros-Lehtinen, a Cuban émigré who won reelection in 2016 by 10 points despite President TrumpDonald John TrumpFacebook releases audit on conservative bias claims Harry Reid: 'Decriminalizing border crossings is not something that should be at the top of the list' Recessions happen when presidents overlook key problems MORE's loss in her district, has endorsed Salazar as her successor, and the candidate also has an ally in another Cuban-American lawmaker, Rep.
The most influential of American musicians, Louis Armstrong, suffered from bigotry in New Orleans, but there was the Colored Waif's home to teach him the cornet, a sympathetic Jewish émigré family with a thriving tailor shop to help him buy one, a talent contest at the Iroquois Theatre that a poor black boy could win, and even a saloon where he could go to hear, and later be hired by, the great King Oliver.
But if you squint at the particulars of the stories, Trump's private financial interest starts to look like a sideshow that is being shoved into the center of the drama to distract us from the grander political scheming of two figures who have been friends from childhood, and in bed with Trump for years: Michael Cohen, his personal lawyer and surrogate, and Felix Sater, a mob-connected Russian émigré who has helped finance Trump real estate deals.
He was in all the houses but, precisely because he was no longer bound to a discrete body, he could also float above them; it was like looking at the miniature train set that his dad's friend Klaus—one of the Foundation's older, émigré analysts—had given him as a child; he didn't care about the trains, could barely make them run, but he loved the scenery, the green static flocking spread over the board, the tiny yet towering pines and hardwoods.

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