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    lichtenstein

    Explore "lichtenstein" with insightful episodes like "Episode 69: Where and why property law is not tailored to the blockchain?", "Mark Andrew Allen - Complex Mixed Media Artist", "Der Mann, der weiß, was Frauen wollen", "Nationalelf: Wird der DFB zum zweiten FC Bayern?" and "Herz • Seele • Ball - Folge 747" from podcasts like ""2Tokens Podcast", "Art Dimensions: Beyond the Palette", "DUMMY – Der Podcast", "Und nun zum Sport" and "Herz Seele Ball - Ulli Potofski's täglicher Fußballpodcast"" and more!

    Episodes (15)

    Episode 69: Where and why property law is not tailored to the blockchain?

    Episode 69: Where and why property law is not tailored to the blockchain?

    In this podcast, we explore the complexities of property law as it pertains to tokenization and how they did it in Lichtenstein. The focus will be on examining how property law interacts with tokenization and analysing the potential impact on various use cases.  Our podcast guests will give an introduction to the role tokenisation has to play in our economy and how this relates to property law. Tokens will be explained, dutch property law will be closely analyzed, and & we talk about how Lichtenstein did it.

    Podcast Guests:
    Frank Verstijlen Professor Property Law at University of Groningen

    Olivier Rikken Blockchain, Smart Contract, DAO & Governance Expert, Founder at Emerging Horizons

    Thomas Dünser: Director Office for Financial Market Innovation and Digitization, Government of Liechtenstein

    Podcast Host:
    Alex Bausch, Chairman 2Tokens 



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    Mark Andrew Allen - Complex Mixed Media Artist

    Mark Andrew Allen - Complex Mixed Media Artist

    Mark Andrew Allen is a creative mixed media artist. He blends urban street art with his background of typography, mixed media collage, and abstract expressionism into each of his urban pop expressionist works. Hear how to incorporate emotions into your paintings, keep that self-discipline, and Mark’s encounters with famous painters such as Warhol, Lichtenstein, and Rauschenberg. Check out Mark’s art at ArtDimensionsOnline.com

    Der Mann, der weiß, was Frauen wollen

    Der Mann, der weiß, was Frauen wollen
    Liechtenstein ist ein sehr kleines, sehr reiches Land. Regiert von einem Monarchen, der nicht möchte, dass seine Untertaninnen abtreiben. Weil er trotz Demokratie immer ein Vetorecht besitzt, bleibt es bei einem rigorosen Verbot. Eine Liechtensteinerin wundert sich, dass sich niemand in Europa für die Politik des Landesvaters interessiert. +++ Dieser Text ist aus DUMMY N° 73 zum Thema: Väter. Das unabhängige Gesellschaftsmagazin erscheint alle drei Monate mit neuem Thema und neuem Design. Zu bestellen auf www.dummy-magazin.de +++

    Ep. 4 Dennis Hopper - Part 1

    Ep. 4  Dennis Hopper - Part 1

    The Hollywood landscape is littered with tragedies, broken promise and self-destruction. Many promising artists stumble once and never recover from that initial fall. In the history of American film, there has never been a phoenix-like story of survival and rebirth quite like that of Dennis Hopper.

    Surrounded by some of the film, art and political world’s most significant players: James Dean, Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, Martin Luther King, Marlon Brando, John Wayne, Miles Davis, and dozens of other legendary names; Hopper discusses his impressions and interactions with them all in Part 1 of this expose of Hollywood history.

    Dennis Hopper was played by Vernon Scott.  He can be found on Facebook.

    Artwork by Michelle Ingram-DeLong INGRAM DESIGN STUDIO www.ingramdesignstudio.com

    Produced by No One Else Media and Wanderer Productions.

     

    Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank – Natalie Lichtenstein

    Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank – Natalie Lichtenstein

    Launched by China in June 2015, the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank ("AIIB") currently has eighty-six members and, with $100 billion in capital, has lent around $4 billion to infrastructure projects throughout Asia. The AIIB's very creation is an important marker in China's economic and strategic rise over the past forty years, from a poor country that was entirely outside of the Bretton Woods financial system, to the largest borrower from the World Bank, and now, to the creator of a competitor institution designed to address some of the World Bank's deficiencies. In this episode, the inaugural general counsel of the AIIB, Natalie Lichtenstein, discusses with Neysun Mahboubi the background and early history of the Bank, informed by her distinguished thirty-year career in the legal department of the World Bank, where she advised on lending operations in China from their inception. The episode was recorded on January 23, 2018.

    Natalie Lichtenstein was chief counsel for the establishment of the AIIB, and the principal drafter for its Charter, before serving as the Bank's inaugural general counsel. She has just published a new book with Oxford University Press, A Comparative Guide to the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, which is the most comprehensive account of the AIIB thus far. Earlier in her career, she served in the legal department of the World Bank for thirty years, including as Chief Counsel for East Asia. Before that, as a junior attorney in the U.S. Treasury Department, she worked on legal issues related to normalization of relations between the U.S. and China. She has taught Chinese law as an adjunct professor since the 1980s, most recently at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies.

    Music credit: "Salt" by Poppy Ackroyd, follow her at http://poppyackroyd.com 

    Special thanks to Kaiser Kuo and Nick Marziani

    19- Why Study Lichtenstein?

    19- Why Study Lichtenstein?

     

    Get the Full Highlights Here:  http://ridgelightranch.com/podcast-19-roy-lichtenstein/

     

    Lichtenstein’s Paintings we discuss:

    The best place to see Roy Lichtenstein's work is at his own website. The art work images are in the "image duplicator" portion of his website.

    Things we mention

    Roy Lichtenstein's Kyoto Prize Lecture of 1995

    Roy Lichtenstein's Kyoto Prize Lecture of 1995
    January 2013 - Harry Cooper, curator and head, department of modern art, National Gallery of Art, with original slides courtesy of the Roy Lichtenstein Foundation © Estate of Roy Lichtenstein. On November 11, 1995, Roy Lichtenstein was in Japan to receive the Kyoto Prize from the Inamori Foundation. In accepting the award, he delivered a lecture on the evolution of his work since his Pop breakthrough of 1961. Thanks to the generosity of the artist's estate and foundation, Harry Cooper, the National Gallery of Art's curator of modern art, presented this lecture at the Gallery, with the original slides, on January 9, 2013—in honor of Roy Lichtenstein: A Retrospective, the first major exhibition of the artist's work since his death in 1997. The exhibition was on view at the Gallery from October 14, 2012, to January 13, 2013.

    Roy Lichtenstein: Reading between the Dots

    Roy Lichtenstein: Reading between the Dots
    October 2012 - Harry Cooper, curator and head, department of modern and contemporary art, National Gallery of Art. Harry Cooper, the Gallery's consulting curator for Roy Lichtenstein: A Retrospective—on view from October 14, 2012 to January 13, 2013—presents an overview of the first major exhibition of the artist's work since his death in 1997. In this opening-day lecture recorded on October 14, 2012, at the National Gallery of Art, Cooper reviews some of the 136 works in the exhibition, including Lichtenstein's greatest paintings from all periods of his career, as well as drawings and sculptures. The retrospective presents Lichtenstein's expansive legacy—the classic early pop paintings based on advertisements, comic-book treatments of war and romance, versions of paintings by the modern masters, and series including Brushstrokes, Mirrors, Artist's Studios, Nudes, and Chinese Landscapes.

    Elson Lecture 1994: Roy Lichtenstein and Robert Rosenblum

    Elson Lecture 1994: Roy Lichtenstein and Robert Rosenblum
    March 2011 - Roy Lichtenstein, artist, in conversation with Robert Rosenblum, professor of art history, Institute of Fine Arts, New York University, and the Stephen and Nan Swid Curator of 20th-Century Art, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York American artist Roy Lichtenstein (1923�1997) appears in conversation with art historian and curator Robert Rosenblum in this podcast recorded on October 26, 1994, at the National Gallery of Art. Lichtenstein discusses his career and life as an artist, and the impact that his art has had on popular culture. Rosenblum notes that Lichtenstein turned the popular into the elite and that the popular, in turn, turned Lichtenstein into the popular. This program coincided with the traveling exhibition The Prints of Roy Lichtenstein, the first comprehensive survey of the artist's prints in more than two decades, which was on view at the Gallery from October 30, 1994, to January 8, 1995.

    MN.21.06.1995 Lichtenstein & Isle of Man Plans

    MN.21.06.1995 Lichtenstein & Isle of Man Plans
    In this edition: Chris Greenway of BBC Monitoring reports on RFE-RL moves from Munich to Prague. Paul Rusling has an idea for a longwave radio station from the Isle of Man (Atlantic 252 for grown-ups) and Wolf Harranth reports on plans to revive a radio station in Lichtenstein. In other news here in Holland the PTT, quote media and the De Telegraaf newspaper have launched internet access for the general public. You pay 20 dollars a month for 6 hrs access. Meanwhile in London the BBC is in talks with Compuserve with the view to providing news and information to customers of this American online news provider. And in Israel, English programmes on shortwave are being cutback again as from July 1st. But the 19 hrs UTC transmission is being restored to a full half hour. However the feature programmes will not come back because Israel radio is closing its English features department at the end of June 1995. This week European Digital Radio changed its name to Radio E, ready for a test DAB launch in late August. Thats a group of stations including the BBC, RFI, Deutsche Welle and Radio Netherlands. Does this mean there’s a trend away from individual international broadcasters. You see smaller stations clubbing together and larger ones starting to talk more and more about their own region. There is always a danger than when public money is tight policy makers simply want to broadcast news about their own country, saying that regional news from other parts of the world is too costly to collect. It was a point that our correspondent Victor Goonetilleke raised at the EDXC conference a few weeks back.