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EL COMEHERMANA BUSCA CALZARSE COMO PROPIA LA VICTORIA DOBLE "K": #KICILLOF - #KIRCHNER PARA TAPAR LA CORRUPTELA DE #ADORNI.

EL MISMO PSIQUIÁTRICO DOMADOR DE PASTILLAS DE CARBÓN QUE LE CHUPA LA PIJA A LOS BUITRES Y QUERÍA PAGARLES, VENDER #YPF Y PONER UNA "TASA KICILLOF".

#FueraMilei
#FueraAdorni

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⚖️ Bullrich llamó “señora presidiaria” a Cristina Kirchner y la acusó de corrupción, mientras la expresidenta denunció “prácticas mafiosas” en la causa Cuadernos.

🔗 Leé la nota 👉🏻 https://mrf.lu/04mC

#Kirchner #Bullrich #CausaCuadernos #Justicia

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A group of women stride toward us along a glowing yellow street that tilts upward like a stage. Their bodies are elongated and angular, with sharp shoulders, tapering coats, and small black shoes that cut into the pavement like points. The central woman wears a deep green cloak and a wide black hat trimmed with pale yellow, her face long and pale, her eyes narrowed and unreadable. To the right, a figure in a lavender-gray coat leans forward with a cool, detached expression. To her left, a woman in saturated blue emerges from shadow, while two darker figures recede behind them in black and blue. Their faces are masklike rather than individualized, built from slashing planes of cream, peach, black, and tan. The street and buildings dissolve into jagged bands of acid yellow, green, and black, so the city feels unstable and rushing rather than fixed. The women appear elegant and highly visible, yet emotionally distant from one another and from us. Fashion, movement, and public display dominate the scene, but so do tension and unease.

This painting belongs to German artist Ernst Ludwig Kirchner’s celebrated Berlin street scenes, made after his move from Dresden to Berlin, where modern city life became one of his most urgent subjects. In these pictures, fashionable women in extravagant hats often stand for more than individual sitters: they become emblems of metropolitan spectacle, commerce, desire, and alienation. Here the women’s beauty is deliberately hard-edged. Their bodies are elegant but tense, their faces alluring yet sealed off, their closeness theatrical rather than intimate. Kirchner’s acidic color, compressed space, and blade-like contours transform the street into a psychological zone where attention itself feels dangerous. Rather than offering a comfortable scene of women in public, Kirchner shows a city built from performance, vigilance, and restless energy.

A group of women stride toward us along a glowing yellow street that tilts upward like a stage. Their bodies are elongated and angular, with sharp shoulders, tapering coats, and small black shoes that cut into the pavement like points. The central woman wears a deep green cloak and a wide black hat trimmed with pale yellow, her face long and pale, her eyes narrowed and unreadable. To the right, a figure in a lavender-gray coat leans forward with a cool, detached expression. To her left, a woman in saturated blue emerges from shadow, while two darker figures recede behind them in black and blue. Their faces are masklike rather than individualized, built from slashing planes of cream, peach, black, and tan. The street and buildings dissolve into jagged bands of acid yellow, green, and black, so the city feels unstable and rushing rather than fixed. The women appear elegant and highly visible, yet emotionally distant from one another and from us. Fashion, movement, and public display dominate the scene, but so do tension and unease. This painting belongs to German artist Ernst Ludwig Kirchner’s celebrated Berlin street scenes, made after his move from Dresden to Berlin, where modern city life became one of his most urgent subjects. In these pictures, fashionable women in extravagant hats often stand for more than individual sitters: they become emblems of metropolitan spectacle, commerce, desire, and alienation. Here the women’s beauty is deliberately hard-edged. Their bodies are elegant but tense, their faces alluring yet sealed off, their closeness theatrical rather than intimate. Kirchner’s acidic color, compressed space, and blade-like contours transform the street into a psychological zone where attention itself feels dangerous. Rather than offering a comfortable scene of women in public, Kirchner shows a city built from performance, vigilance, and restless energy.

"Frauen auf der Straße" (Women on the Street) by Ernst Ludwig Kirchner (German) - Oil on canvas / c. 1915 - Von der Heydt Museum (Wuppertal, Germany) #WomenInArt #ErnstLudwigKirchner #Kirchner #VonDerHeydtMuseum #GermanExpressionism #1910sArt #art #artText #arte #BlueskyArt #GermanArt #GermanArtist

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Sie schuf den ersten «Zauberberg»: «Das Joch» von Vicki Baum

Zwei Jahre vor Thomas Manns «Zauberberg» hat eine Frau denselben Stoff behandelt, das aber präziser, knapper, expressiver #Buchtipp #Literatur #ThomasMann #Kirchner

Text: www.matthiaszehnder.ch/video-buchti...
Video: youtu.be/5e8yjQ0u0KU

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“Ladrones, golpistas, asesinos”: Milei destroza a la oposición argentina en un discurso incendiario

https://youtu.be/FMIHax0vJBc

#ultimahora #milei #javiermilei #argentina #kirchnerismo #kirchner #cristinakirchner #corrupcion #breakimgnews #geopolitica #negociostv

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Nada más que agregar...
#Kirchner #Argentina #Milei

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ARGENTINA 🇦🇷

“Amor con amor se paga. Te abrazamos Cristina, hoy y siempre”

#CFK #CristinaLibre #Cristina #Kirchner

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Ein #Gemälde pro Woche, heute: "Akt auf blauem Grund" von Ernst Ludwig #Kirchner (1911). Buchheim Museum Bernried am Starnberger See

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SEMANTIC NEWS How the ICE shooting in Minneapolis and calls to d…

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better-experience.blogspot.com/2026/01/the-...

#SHEEK #ISLAND
multi-search-tag-explorer.allgraph.ro/advanced-sea...
#PRESIDENCY OF #NÉSTOR #KIRCHNER
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👁️ Berlin looking back to Berlin. #Kirchner 🇩🇪

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A young woman reclines on her stomach diagonally across a riot of painted textiles, her body angled from the lower left toward the upper right. She has light skin and straight, dark hair cut into a short bob with thick bangs. Her head turns to look back at us. A loose white chemise slips off her shoulders, exposing her upper back. Its lace and ruffle details are indicated with quick dark marks. The garment is built from thick whites and cool grays, making the fabric feel rumpled and weighty, with folds rendered as broad planes rather than smooth shading. Her legs extend outward, wearing white stockings, outlined with brisk, angular contours. Beneath and around her is a rug with crimson and magenta oversized flowers and patterns edged with hot orange curls that flicker like flames as green and gray sections press in at the margins. At the right edge, a phonograph record atop a small tan table seems to be playing music. 

Pleasure and pressure share the space as we see a body at rest, an interior that seems to throb with color, and a record of music placed within easy reach. The chemise, half clothing and half exposure, keeps her poised between private ease and being observed, while the reds press in until décor feels almost alive. Her sideways gaze meets us without invitation, suggesting self-possession rather than surrender.

The work’s ownership mirrors its movement from intimacy to public view through many hands on its way to Yale. Her calm expression still withholds closure all these years later. 

Painted in 1914, the work sits in the charged moment when German artist Ernst Ludwig Kirchner’s Expressionism turns interiors into psychological weather. Her body is present, but so is the pressure of looking at a private moment. Kirchner had moved from Dresden to Berlin a few years earlier with the Die Brücke art circle, and this kind of heightened, restless color and jagged contour can be interpreted as modernity entering the room like beauty edged with unease.

A young woman reclines on her stomach diagonally across a riot of painted textiles, her body angled from the lower left toward the upper right. She has light skin and straight, dark hair cut into a short bob with thick bangs. Her head turns to look back at us. A loose white chemise slips off her shoulders, exposing her upper back. Its lace and ruffle details are indicated with quick dark marks. The garment is built from thick whites and cool grays, making the fabric feel rumpled and weighty, with folds rendered as broad planes rather than smooth shading. Her legs extend outward, wearing white stockings, outlined with brisk, angular contours. Beneath and around her is a rug with crimson and magenta oversized flowers and patterns edged with hot orange curls that flicker like flames as green and gray sections press in at the margins. At the right edge, a phonograph record atop a small tan table seems to be playing music. Pleasure and pressure share the space as we see a body at rest, an interior that seems to throb with color, and a record of music placed within easy reach. The chemise, half clothing and half exposure, keeps her poised between private ease and being observed, while the reds press in until décor feels almost alive. Her sideways gaze meets us without invitation, suggesting self-possession rather than surrender. The work’s ownership mirrors its movement from intimacy to public view through many hands on its way to Yale. Her calm expression still withholds closure all these years later. Painted in 1914, the work sits in the charged moment when German artist Ernst Ludwig Kirchner’s Expressionism turns interiors into psychological weather. Her body is present, but so is the pressure of looking at a private moment. Kirchner had moved from Dresden to Berlin a few years earlier with the Die Brücke art circle, and this kind of heightened, restless color and jagged contour can be interpreted as modernity entering the room like beauty edged with unease.

“Mädchen in weißem Hemd (Girl in White Chemise)” by Ernst Ludwig Kirchner (German) - Oil on canvas / 1914 - Yale University Art Gallery (New Haven, Connecticut) #WomenInArt #ErnstLudwigKirchner #Kirchner #YaleArtGallery #PortraitofaGirl #art #artText #artwork #BlueskyArt #Yale #GermanExpressionism

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Eine Katze hat sich im Vordergrund eingerollt; eine junge Frau mit einem gelb-schwarz gestreiften Kleid und roten Pantoffeln schaut, den Kopf auf dem rechten Arm gestützt vor sich ins Leere. Im Hintergrund stehen einige Flaschen; vielleicht Reste eines Festes.

Eine Katze hat sich im Vordergrund eingerollt; eine junge Frau mit einem gelb-schwarz gestreiften Kleid und roten Pantoffeln schaut, den Kopf auf dem rechten Arm gestützt vor sich ins Leere. Im Hintergrund stehen einige Flaschen; vielleicht Reste eines Festes.

Ein #Gemälde pro Woche, heute: "Artistin Marcella" (um 1810) von Ernst Ludwig #Kirchner, Brücke Museum Berlin

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Entre avant-garde et art dégénéré, la #KunsthalleMannheim raconte près de 120 ans d'histoire des collections privées et publiques d'art expressionniste allemand à #Mannheim. L'exposition présente 180 œuvres de #Jawlensky #Kirchner #Kokoschka #Nolde #Münter #Lehmbruck #SchmidtRottluff... A voir !

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Danka #Kirchner (@dankakirchner) •Reflection On The Fjord• #WomensArt #ArtByWomen #WomenArtists #ModernArt #ContemporaryArt

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Danka #Kirchner (@dankakirchner) •Jump Into The North Sea• #WomensArt #ArtByWomen #WomenArtists #ModernArt #ContemporaryArt

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Causa cuadernos: siguen las audiencias con Cristina Kirchner y De Vido en el banquillo El Tribunal Oral Federal N°7 retomará este jueves las audiencias por la mega causa Cuadernos, que tiene a la ex presidenta Cristina Kirchner y al ex ministro de Planificación Federal Julio De Vido entre los principales imputados de una lista de 86 procesados. Según la planificación oficial, la audiencia de este jueves a las 13 […] The post Causa cuadernos: siguen las audiencias con Cristina Kirchner y De Vido en el banquillo appeared first on Comercio y Justicia.
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Danka #Kirchner (@dankakirchner) •Save The Ocean• #WomensArt #ArtByWomen #WomenArtists #ModernArt #ContemporaryArt

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Danka #Kirchner (@dankakirchner) •Summer Happiness• #WomensArt #ArtByWomen #WomenArtists #ModernArt #ContemporaryArt

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Danka #Kirchner (@dankakirchner) •Summer In The City• #WomensArt #ArtByWomen #WomenArtists #ModernArt #ContemporaryArt

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Danka #Kirchner (@dankakirchner) •Spring Dreams• #WomensArt #ArtByWomen #WomenArtists #ModernArt #ContemporaryArt

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Limitan las visitas de Cristina Kirchner en su prisión domiciliaria Deberán ser de dos horas y de no más de tres personas; además, no deberían ser más de dos por semana; se da después de un encuentro con un grupo de nueve economistas; la expresidenta criticó la medida

''Subrayó el juez que la reunión desnaturaliza la condena. “La reunión realizada, en los términos en que fue difundida por la propia involucrada, no solo demuestra falta de prudencia,sino que además, desconoce la naturaleza punitiva de la prisión domiciliaria y desvirtúa los fines [...]'' #Kirchner

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Danka #Kirchner (@dankakirchner) •Fishermen's Huts• #WomensArt #ArtByWomen #WomenArtists #ModernArt #ContemporaryArt

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Danka #Kirchner (@dankakirchner) •Dune Landscape• #WomensArt #ArtByWomen #WomenArtists #ModernArt #ContemporaryArt

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Danka #Kirchner (@dankakirchner) •The Black Swan• #WomensArt #ArtByWomen #WomenArtists #ModernArt #ContemporaryArt

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¡La bruja de la #Kretina #Kirchner es más fea que la palabra "sobaco"!

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Danka #Kirchner (@dankakirchner) •In The Intoxication of the Depths• #WomensArt #ArtByWomen #WomenArtists #ModernArt #ContemporaryArt

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Danka #Kirchner (@dankakirchner) •Water Nixie• #WomensArt #ArtByWomen #WomenArtists #ModernArt #ContemporaryArt

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Danka #Kirchner (@dankakirchner) •Lady In Red• #WomensArt #ArtByWomen #WomenArtists #ModernArt #ContemporaryArt

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Danka #Kirchner (@dankakirchner) •In The Pool• #WomensArt #ArtByWomen #WomenArtists #ModernArt #ContemporaryArt

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