JR once tagged trains with graffiti. Now he’s responsible for one of the most luxurious carriages in the world

Kraig Pakulski 0 69 Article rating: No rating

By Tom Page and Gisella Deputato, CNN

(CNN) — Once upon a time, artist JR was just another teenage rebel with a spray can, tagging trains in his native Paris. Not big, not clever, but nevertheless a confluence of interests at the start of an illustrious career.

The street artist, photographer and Oscar-nominated filmmaker says he has always been a fan of trains. Commuting from the deprived outskirts of Paris into the city as a youngster, he realized he was aboard a moving canvas that could take artworks to places an artist had never been. That’s his explanation for the graffiti, anyway. It’s the same reason why he’s still putting his stamp on trains today.

In 2024, JR debuted “L’Observatoire,” a radical renovation of an early 1900s train carriage, at the Venice Art Biennale. The carriage, a private suite commissioned by travel company Belmond, is now the jewel in the crown of the Venice Simplon-Orient-Express, which runs routes across Europe (the longest of which is between Paris and Istanbul).

Already well-established as one of the most luxurious rides in the world, the addition has pushed the train to new levels of opulence. Stays in the carriage start at $80,000 for a one-night journey, but for that, guests are booking “an apartment on wheels,” said JR in a recent interview.

Featuring a bedroom, lounge and private dining area, bathroom, library and tea room, JR was given carte blanche on the redesign of the 23-meter (75-foot) long former sleeping car. In one room, a high-sided bathtub takes pride of place; an electric fireplace is the focal point of the circular library; and in the bedroom a round skylight opens like the aperture blades of a camera lens.

“(I was) allowed to do things that you’re not allowed in other carriages,” the artist said with some understatement.

For an artist known for his ephemeral work — pasting supersized photographs on the Louvre’s glass pyramid, or Rio de Janeiro’s favelas — the carriage offered a rare chance of permanence.

“I wanted to create an artwork in itself. That’s what this carriage is,” he said.

JR explained that most of his large-scale artworks involve teams of volunteers, but for “L’Observatoire,” the novice carriage designer turned to specialists from across Europe to realize his sumptuous ideas: hand-painted stained glass by a 500-year-old German company, Carrara marble from Italy, and walls lined with wooden marquetry inlay. “Everything was done with the most attention and care, because it’s there forever,” he said.

“The whole carriage took, I would say, a hundred and something people,” JR said. “Really, at some point we stopped counting.”

“So many artists and artisans came together to build this, to create something that will still be there (for) generations,” he added. “It gives us a kind of hope into the value of beauty.”

Many touches indulge both guest and creator. JR’s initials are etched into the library floor, and a mosaic of the artist’s hand lines the floor of the shower cubicle. JR also filled the carriage with vestiges of his career, from wood panels detailing scenes from previous projects to zinc ceilings nodding to Parisian rooftops (“I spend my life on rooftops,” he explained). Photographs from JR’s travels cover the walls, while scattered among its library are books on his projects, like one on Ellis Island, New York, or a copy of a movie he made with Robert De Niro, about the actor’s artist father.

But perhaps the most intriguing elements are those not on show.

“I’ve hidden many, many things in this carriage that you won’t find on day one,” he said.

JR has laid out an Easter Egg hunt for guests, concealed within secret c

JR once tagged trains with graffiti. Now he’s responsible for one of the most luxurious carriages in the world

Kraig Pakulski 0 72 Article rating: No rating


CNN

By Tom Page and Gisella Deputato, CNN

(CNN) — Once upon a time, artist JR was just another teenage rebel with a spray can, tagging trains in his native Paris. Not big, not clever, but nevertheless a confluence of interests at the start of an illustrious career.

The street artist, photographer and Oscar-nominated filmmaker says he has always been a fan of trains. Commuting from the deprived outskirts of Paris into the city as a youngster, he realized he was aboard a moving canvas that could take artworks to places an artist had never been. That’s his explanation for the graffiti, anyway. It’s the same reason why he’s still putting his stamp on trains today.

In 2024, JR debuted “L’Observatoire,” a radical renovation of an early 1900s train carriage, at the Venice Art Biennale. The carriage, a private suite commissioned by travel company Belmond, is now the jewel in the crown of the Venice Simplon-Orient-Express, which runs routes across Europe (the longest of which is between Paris and Istanbul).

Already well-established as one of the most luxurious rides in the world, the addition has pushed the train to new levels of opulence. Stays in the carriage start at $80,000 for a one-night journey, but for that, guests are booking “an apartment on wheels,” said JR in a recent interview.

Featuring a bedroom, lounge and private dining area, bathroom, library and tea room, JR was given carte blanche on the redesign of the 23-meter (75-foot) long former sleeping car. In one room, a high-sided bathtub takes pride of place; an electric fireplace is the focal point of the circular library; and in the bedroom a round skylight opens like the aperture blades of a camera lens.

“(I was) allowed to do things that you’re not allowed in other carriages,” the artist said with some understatement.

For an artist known for his ephemeral work — pasting supersized photographs on the Louvre’s glass pyramid, or Rio de Janeiro’s favelas — the carriage offered a rare chance of permanence.

“I wanted to create an artwork in itself. That’s what this carriage is,” he said.

JR explained that most of his large-scale artworks involve teams of volunteers, but for “L’Observatoire,” the novice carriage designer turned to specialists from across Europe to realize his sumptuous ideas: hand-painted stained glass by a 500-year-old German company, Carrara marble from Italy, and walls lined with wooden marquetry inlay. “Everything was done with the most attention and care, because it’s there forever,” he said.

“The whole carriage took, I would say, a hundred and something people,” JR said. “Really, at some point we stopped counting.”

“So many artists and artisans came together to build this, to create something that will still be there (for) generations,” he added. “It gives us a kind of hope into the value of beauty.”

Many touches indulge both guest and creator. JR’s initials are etched into the library floor, and a mosaic of the artist’s hand lines the floor of the shower cubicle. JR also filled the carriage with vestiges of his career, from wood panels detailing scenes from previous projects to zinc ceilings nodding to Parisian rooftops (“I spend my life on rooftops,” he explained). Photographs from JR’s travels cover the walls, while scattered among its library are books on his projects, like one on Ellis Island, New York, or a copy of a movie he made

Malaysia court finds jailed former leader Najib Razak guilty of abuse of power in biggest 1MDB trial

Kraig Pakulski 0 68 Article rating: No rating

By Reuters

(Reuters) — Jailed former Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak was found guilty of abuse of power on Friday in the biggest trial yet in the multibillion-dollar 1MDB scandal, a ruling that could have significant political repercussions.

The judge had yet to deliver the full verdict and sentencing.

Malaysia and US investigators say at least $4.5 billion was stolen from 1Malaysia Development Berhad, a state fund Najib co-founded in 2009 while in office. More than $1 billion allegedly made its way into accounts linked to Najib, who has consistently denied wrongdoing.

Najib has been charged with four counts of corruption and 21 counts of money laundering for receiving illegal transfers of more than 2.3 billion ringgit ($569.45 million) from 1MDB.

“The contention by the accused that the charges against him were a witch hunt and politically motivated were debunked by the cold, hard and incontrovertible evidence against him that pointed towards the accused having abused his own powerful position in 1MDB, coupled with the extensive powers conferred upon him,” Judge Collin Lawrence Sequerah said in an ongoing reading of the verdict.

Najib could face maximum jail terms of between 15 and 20 years on each charge, as well as a fine of up to five times the value of the alleged misappropriations.

Najib, 72, has been in prison since August 2022, when Malaysia’s top court upheld a verdict convicting him of corruption for illegally receiving funds from a 1MDB unit. His 12-year jail sentence in that case was halved last year by a pardons board.

‘Unmistakable bond’ with fugitive financier

Najib last year apologized for mishandling the scandal while in office but had consistently denied wrongdoing, saying repeatedly that he was misled by 1MDB officials and the fugitive financier, Jho Low, about the source of the funds.

Judge Sequerah in reading the verdict had earlier said evidence had revealed Najib had an “unmistakable bond and connection” with Low, who acted as the then prime minister’s “proxy and intermediary” in 1MDB affairs.

Low, who has been charged in the United States for his central role in the case, denies all wrongdoing and his whereabouts are unknown.

Najib has maintained he was misled by Low and other 1MDB officials into believing that funds deposited into his account were donations from the Saudi royal family.

But Sequerah said Najib’s argument was “implausible” and dismissed letters on the donations produced by Najib that allegedly originated from the Saudi royal family, saying they were not corroborated by evidence and were probably forgeries.

“The irresistible conclusion is that the Arab donation narrative is not meritorious … the evidence pointed unmistakably to the fact that the monies were, in fact derived from 1MDB funds,” Sequerah said.

Test of government stability

The verdict came just days after another court denied a bid by Najib to serve his jail sentence under house arrest – a decision that reignited tensions within current Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim’s administration.

Najib’s party, the United Malays National Organisation, campaigned against Anwar in a 2022 election but joined his coalition to form a government after the poll ended in a hung parliament.

Some UMNO leaders expressed disappointment with the decision to deny Najib house arrest and others were angered by social media posts by some members of Anwar’s coalition celebrating the earlier ruling.

Anwar on Tuesday called for calm, urging all parties to accept the court verdict with “full patience and wisdom.”

The-CNN-Wire
™ & © 2025 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

The post

Pronto se podrá escribir un nuevo carácter chino: el pronombre de género neutro

Kraig Pakulski 0 93 Article rating: No rating

Por Jessie Yeung, CNN

Cada vez que la activista no binaria de alto perfil Siufung Law concedía entrevistas a los medios, los periodistas siempre preguntaban: ¿qué pronombre les gustaría utilizar?

Durante mucho tiempo, la nativa de Hong Kong, que usa los pronombres “they”/”them” en inglés, no tuvo una respuesta fácil porque los pronombres chinos se dividen en gran medida en dos cuando se refieren a personas (una forma masculina y una femenina) y ninguna de las dos le parecía correcta.

Finalmente, en 2017, Law encontró una posible solución: un pronombre no oficial inventado por la comunidad intersexual y no binaria. El carácter se parecía a los pronombres chinos existentes, pero se modificó con una especie de X al lado, lo que le recordó al género X, el “tercer pronombre” que a veces se usa en documentos de identidad y pasaportes en otros países.

A pesar de haber existido durante casi una década, este pronombre chino inventado ha permanecido al margen por una razón: como carácter no oficial, no existe en nuestros teclados, y aunque a menudo se le estiliza como X也, es complicado escribirlo y confunde a las personas que no están familiarizadas con él.

Sin embargo, esto podría cambiar pronto. En septiembre, el pronombre se añadió a Unicode, un estándar global de símbolos y caracteres utilizado por desarrolladores web y gigantes tecnológicos de todo el mundo.

Esto significa que los usuarios podrían eventualmente escribir el carácter en teléfonos y portátiles, y buscarlo y visualizarlo en línea. El proceso podría tardar varios años más, pero aun así se ha celebrado como un gran paso hacia un reconocimiento más amplio, especialmente en China, donde las actitudes conservadoras y la represión gubernamental han dificultado cada vez más la vida de la comunidad LGBTQ+.

“Tener un pronombre dirigido más específicamente a las personas que no quieren ser etiquetadas o encasilladas dentro de los pronombres masculinos y femeninos… podría ser una muy buena alternativa”, dijo Law, también candidata a doctorado en estudios de género y sexualidad.

Es “el reconocimiento de que personas como yo existimos y que no estamos borrados dentro de… esos sistemas binarios, ya sea el idioma, la cultura o la historia misma”.

Los pronombres chinos no siempre fueron tan binarios. De hecho, el idioma no tenía pronombres de género desde un principio: lo que ahora se considera el pronombre masculino, 他, se usaba antiguamente para todas las personas.

Esto también se evidencia en su escritura. Los caracteres chinos se componen de bloques que a menudo ofrecen pistas sobre su significado u origen. En el caso del pronombre, antes universal, sus bloques simplemente significan “persona”, sin ninguna indicación de género.

“Durante miles de años, parece que nadie sintió la necesidad de hacer esta distinción”, escribió el erudito chino Huang Xingtao en su libro de 2009 sobre el tema. Pero a principios del siglo XX, China entró en mayor contacto con las naciones occidentales, lo que impulsó al país a “crear vigorosamente nuevos caracteres… para expresar ciertos términos en las lenguas occidentales”.

Fue también entonces cuando el primer movimiento feminista de China cobró impulso, con activistas que exigían la independencia, la educación y la representación de las mujeres, incluso en la palabra escrita.

Estos movimientos simultáneos dieron origen al nuevo pronombre femenino, 她. Se pronuncia “ta”, igual que el 他 original, la nueva X也 y otros pronombres chinos utilizados para animales y objetos inanimados.

Es por eso que algunas personas ahora argumentan que la creación de un nuevo pronombre de género neutro

Trump afirma que la violencia en Nigeria se dirige contra los cristianos. Estos son los hechos

Kraig Pakulski 0 46 Article rating: No rating

Por Nimi Princewill, Jessie Yeung, CNN

Después de meses de advertir que Estados Unidos podría tomar medidas militares para detener la violencia contra los cristianos en Nigeria, el presidente Donald Trump anunció el día de Navidad que había hecho precisamente eso: lanzar un ataque contra los terroristas de ISIS en el noroeste de la nación africana.

El Ministerio de Asuntos Exteriores de Nigeria confirmó que los dos países habían coordinado el ataque, y un asesor presidencial indicó que Estados Unidos y Nigeria estaban “en la misma página en la lucha contra el terrorismo”.

Todavía están surgiendo detalles sobre el ataque, que se produjo después de que Trump amenazara con suspender la ayuda a Nigeria por la violencia contra los cristianos, e incluso pidió a su secretario de Defensa que se “preparara para una posible acción” contra la nación más poblada de África en noviembre.

Pero la realidad sobre el terreno es más matizada de lo que sugiere la caracterización de Trump, según declararon expertos y analistas a CNN este año.

Tanto cristianos como musulmanes —los dos principales grupos religiosos del país de más de 230 millones de habitantes— han sido víctimas de ataques de islamistas radicales, afirman.

Esto es lo que necesitas saber.

Nigeria ha enfrentado durante años problemas de seguridad profundamente arraigados debido a diversos factores, incluidos ataques con motivaciones religiosas.

El país tiene aproximadamente el mismo número de cristianos, que se encuentran predominantemente en el sur, y de musulmanes, que se concentran principalmente en el norte.

En 2012, el grupo islamista Boko Haram emitió un ultimátum, ordenando a los cristianos de la región norte que se marcharan, mientras que instaba a los musulmanes del sur a “regresar” al norte. La mayoría de los asesinatos selectivos de los últimos años han ocurrido en el norte.

Además de Boko Haram, también existe el grupo Lakurawa menos conocido, prominente en los estados del noroeste, que, según analistas de seguridad, podría haber sido el objetivo de los ataques del jueves.

El grupo Lakurawa se ha vuelto cada vez más letal este año, en el que ha atacado a menudo comunidades remotas y a las fuerzas de seguridad, mientras se ocultan en los bosques entre los estados, según informó Reuters.

Los observadores dicen que otros conflictos violentos surgen por tensiones comunales y étnicas, así como por disputas entre agricultores y pastores por el acceso limitado a la tierra y al agua.

Sí, aunque eso es solo una parte del panorama.

John Joseph Hayab, pastor que dirige la Asociación Cristiana de Nigeria (CAN, por sus siglas en inglés) en la región norte del país, está de acuerdo con la afirmación de Trump sobre “asesinatos sistemáticos de cristianos” en esa zona.

La magnitud de las matanzas se ha reducido en los últimos dos años, afirmó. Sin embargo, este año se ha producido una oleada de ataques de gran repercusión en zonas predominantemente cristianas del norte, lo que ha atraído la atención y la condena internacionales.

En abril, hombres armados, presuntos pastores musulmanes, Read more

RSS
First40864087408840894091409340944095Last