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Olympic Membership - Free Live Stream Sports & Original Series - join now! đŸ„‡ the Olympic Torch Relay returns to the Parisian region this Friday During these few days of celebration around the capital One thing's for sure: there'll be something for everyone View this post on Instagram A post shared by Paris2024 (@paris2024) The Relay will pass through 12 towns across the department where the festivities will be in full swing Throughout the 15 towns and cities it will pass through the Relay will travel through an atmosphere that promises to be one to remember with a departure from Orly airport at 8am and a finale in CrĂ©teil as the highlight of the day Please enable JS and disable any ad blocker The investment will create more than 500 jobs and enhance medicine production capabilities in the region Sanofi has announced an investment exceeding €1bn ($1.07bn) to expand biomanufacturing capacities at its sites in France The company will enhance capacity at its sites in Vitry-sur-Seine (Val de Marne) Le Trait (Seine-Maritime) and Lyon Gerland (RhĂŽne) The strategic move aims to bolster the country’s capacity to produce essential medicines from inception to completion The latest investment will create 500 new jobs and is part of Sanofi’s broader commitment of €3.5bn in France for medicine and vaccine production since the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic Sanofi plans to invest €1bn in Vitry-sur-Seine to construct a new unit in a bid to double the monoclonal antibody production capacity at the site The expansion could cater to the manufacturing of several biologics currently in development targeting diseases such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder (COPD) multiple sclerosis and type 1 diabetes (T1D) Don’t let policy changes catch you off guard Stay proactive with real-time data and expert analysis These products have the potential to address the needs of millions of patients both in France and globally the company will make a €100m investment into developing additional capabilities for biologics formulation This will support future biologics and vaccine launches and accommodate the growth of Dupixent – on track to become the first biologic indicated for COPD Sanofi will also invest €10m in Lyon Gerland to establish the manufacturing of TZield TZield was acquired by Sanofi in April 2023 and has previously been manufactured outside Europe Sanofi France president Audrey Derveloy stated: “Throughout its history Sanofi has always sought to equip France with the strategic platforms needed to produce the essential medicines and vaccines of today and tomorrow “This is why we chose our Vitry site to double its monoclonal antibody production capacity after having already invested heavily in Neuville-sur-SaĂŽne to produce our future vaccines “We have also strengthened our API [active pharmaceutical ingredients] production sites in the south of France Our contribution to health sovereignty in Europe Before this development, Sanofi entered a $1bn licensing agreement with Fulcrum Therapeutics The new partnership is set to develop and commercialise losmapimod an investigational drug for facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy Give your business an edge with our leading industry insights View all newsletters from across the GlobalData Media network Like a bubble of nature in the heart of the city, the Parc des Lilas is a genuine space for relaxation and leisure in Vitry, in the Val-de-Marne dĂ©partement Classified as a sensitive natural area since 1990 the park is a delight for young and old alike bringing a touch of greenery to a very urban environment: what's more the park is one of the largest natural parks in the dĂ©partement In the 20th century, the site of today's Parc des Lilas was home to a horticultural plateau where flowers were grown using the Lilac forcing technique which involves growing plants outside their normal flowering season As a legacy of this major horticultural past the Parc des Lilas is home to numerous collections of lilacs totalling over 700 botanical varieties in the park's departmental nursery you can stroll through 96 hectares of countryside in an urban setting a bike ride or a family outing in one of the on-site children's play areas the park'spicnic area is the perfect spot for an outdoor lunch the park's staff offer a range of activities to help young and old alike discover nature: discovery walks The rich program changes with the seasons and life in the park take metro line 7 (Villejuif Louis Aragon stop) line 14 (BibliothĂšque François Mitterrand stop) or RER C (Choisy-le-Roi stop) Refer your establishment, click herePromote your event, click here Look out for your first newsletter in your inbox soon We help you navigate a myriad of possibilities Sign up for our newsletter for the best of the city By entering your email address you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy and consent to receive emails from Time Out about news Sign up for our email to enjoy your city 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Paris 1992 / © DR / Collection IFPExploring Vitry-sur-SeineA suburban hub of contemporary art and modern theatre including Dubuffet's giant 'Chaufferie avec Chiminée' (Carrefour de la Libération) an exciting arts space that aims to challenge your perception of contemporary art; and for the Jean Vilar theatre which consistently offers cutting-edge music serves tasty fusion cuisine from 12-3pm (all day noon to 11pm on Friday) either opt for an early dinner (we recommend Arzée à smart Lebanese restaurant – 76 rue de la Concorde) or head to the theatre where a small bar selling snacks and refreshments opens before performances Thanks for subscribing! Look out for your first newsletter in your inbox soon! twitterpinterestinstagramAbout us Contact us Taysir BatnijiQuelques bribes arrachĂ©es au vide qui se creuseMusĂ©e d’Art Contemporain du Val-de-MarneVitry-sur-Seine When Palestinian artist Taysir Batniji’s first museum retrospective in France opened in June at the MusĂ©e d’Art Contemporain du Val-de-Marne his native Gaza was being bombarded by the Israel Defense Forces while residents of the East Jerusalem neighborhood Sheikh Jarrah faced forced expulsions This context is crucial for grasping Batniji’s practice which centers Palestinian identity in its individual and collective forms his practice has oscillated between the recording of his own experience as an artist moving around Europe before settling in Paris and the evocation of situations all too familiar to Palestinians— from survival under siege to the wait at checkpoints and borders Eschewing a purely documentary approach and questioning representation both in its political and aesthetic senses and installations evoke his subjects through the subtle but indelible traces—material The condition of displacement and representational concern of mark-making were at the heart of the survey “Quelques bribes arrachĂ©es au vide qui se creuse” (A few scraps wrested from the void that grows) was taken from French author Georges Perec’s book Species of Spaces (1974) or the “wresting” of meaning from one’s foggy thought Applying the quote to Batniji’s work played on its resonance with the feeling of uprootedness and longing that defines exile Perec’s quote also evokes gestures—the tearing of a page or erasure of a layer—that punctuate Batniji’s work ocher smudges are painted on the corners of white sheets Replicating the traces left by adhesive tape watercolors from the series Untitled (Delayed Reality) (2015– ) depicting a variety of scenes—a hand brandishing a shoe a man spreading his arms—likely copied from news footage Each illustrates a close-up or truncated view implying a partial and decontextualized record of its subject Although Batniji is best known for his documentary work these series suggest that he is more interested in the failures of representation To My Brother (2012–20) addresses the trouble of representing the disappeared Dedicated to the artist’s brother Mayssara who was killed in 1987 during the first Intifada but a closer look reveals a constellation of dots delineating the contours of various figures: each work replicates a photo from Mayssara’s wedding album yet doesn’t render the image fully visible This juxtaposition anchored Batniji’s work in what art historian Rosalind Krauss named “the photographic,” the physical imprint—of light his photographs and videos remain the most widely exhibited videos occupied the center of the exhibition including the exhilarating and succinct Me 2 (2003) in which the artist films himself spinning to Gloria Gaynor’s “I Will Survive” (1978) this artwork took on its full meaning once the visitor encountered Background Noise in the parallel room the video frames the artist’s face as he keeps himself from blinking to the sound of aerial bombings by Israeli forces on Gaza Background Noise played while the sound from Me 2 bled into the room as if the song were a response to the violence endured by Gazans Throughout his plastic experimentations and geographical displacements Batniji has continually investigated representation and its impossibility not surprising that the referential aspect of his work extends from Perec to Mona Hatoum in the wooden beam Posture (GH0809) (2011) the top of which is jabbed with crooked nails; or to Joseph Kosuth in the juxtaposition of a damaged Formica table-top and its nebulous photographic reproduction in Tabula Ghaza (2005–14) Batniji confronts the thing with its simulacra remained the most prominent: the exhibition ended with No Condition is Permanent (2014–21) a stack of soaps inscribed with the work’s title The visitor was invited to take a soap—perhaps to wrest something from the void info@aapmag.com Sanofi will build a €1 billion ($1.1 billion) mAb production facility in Vitry-sur-Seine while it invests €100 million to bolster capacity at its Le Trait site in Normandy and invests €10 million at Lyon Gerland The strategy focuses on cutting-edge science T1D and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) “Throughout its history, Sanofi has always sought to equip France with the strategic platforms needed to produce the essential medicines and vaccines of today and tomorrow,” said Audrey Derveloy We have also strengthened our API production sites in the south of France.” The France-based firm anticipated 150 jobs at its Le Trait site The site will support biologics and vaccines production and manufacture inflammatory disease and COPD treatment Dupixent The investment in Lyon will support the production of type 1 diabetes drug TZield (teplizumab), added through Sanofi's acquisition of Provention Bio in April 2023 France has always been at the “heart of Sanofi’s strategy,” said CEO Paul Hudson “With these unprecedented industrial investments we remain true to our history by once again choosing France to produce these future medicines and make them available to patients around the world.” the firm is looking to invest an additional €700 million per year in R&D over the next two years across its French network The Choose France Summit is France’s flagship forum to increase funding and strengthen economic cohesion 180 international business executives participated in the summit this year Journalist covering the manufacturing and processing sectors for biopharmaceuticals globally Feel free to reach out to me at: [email protected] Matica Bio partners with Texas A&M to support CGT development CSL Seqirus signs pandemic preparedness plan with European Commission Ins & Outs: Biopharma players shuffle c-suite ranks American made: Companies continue to emphasize US manufacturing Registered in England & Wales with number 01835199 This photo provided by the Collectif Acces au Droit shows riot police officers outside a squat Wednesday With the Paris Olympic Games 100 days away police carried out a large-scale eviction at France’s biggest squat in the south of the capital cleared out the makeshift camp at an abandoned bus company headquarters in Vitry-sur-Seine (@CAD_asso Collectif Acces au Droit via AP) FILE - A person sleeps just next to the Eiffel Tower Wednesday French police carried out a large-scale eviction at an abandoned factory located on the southern outskirts of Paris in Vitry-sur-Sein on Wednesday FILE - Migrants stand in front of the Paris City Hall The migrants packed belongings and boarded a bus to temporary government housing in the town of Besançon in eastern France The camp had become home to about 450 migrants with images of the eviction spreading rapidly across social media It doubled in size in one year because of the Olympics authorities cleared out migrants from nearby the Olympic Village and many displaced people came here,” said Paul Alauzy of the humanitarian organization MĂ©decins du Monde who has been closely following the steady pace of evictions over two years The conditions inside the warehouse were cramped The clearance operation will continue over several days The site is empty: 150 people left the night before the police arrived Among the 450 were 20 children and 50 women This action is part of a broader push by local authorities to dismantle makeshift camps as the city prepares to host the Olympics from July 26 to Aug observers said some five buses were at the site intended to transport migrants to specially allocated sites in cities such as Orleans or Bordeaux Other migrants will be bused to temporary filtering sites Alauzy said he fears that “it will just be a matter of days or weeks for many of the migrants to be sleeping rough on the street again.” Umbrella association Revers de la Medaille which underscores the harmful effects of the Games on the most precarious populations said it did “not know where families with school-going children were sent to.” The fate of these displaced individuals remains a pressing issue as the city gears up for its time in the global spotlight highlighting the tension between urban beautification efforts and support for marginalized communities The migrants packed their belongings and boarded a bus to temporary government housing in the town of Besançon in eastern France Responding to a question about Wednesday’s evacuation French Sports Minister Amelie Oudea-Castera said she wanted “to emphasize is that it has nothing to do with the Olympics.” they will be implemented after the Games,” she said “And we want to handle those difficult situations with the best possible humanity We really want to make things as fair as they can be.” Associated Press writers Angela Charlton and Jerome Pugmire contributed to this report You don't have permission to access the page you requested What is this page?The website you are visiting is protected.For security reasons this page cannot be displayed Join us for a stimulating experience: you’ll find a world of learning and development opportunities where inventiveness is at the heart of what we do from a technological innovation: the industrialization of oxygen production from air Air Liquide's head office is historically based in Paris. Today the Group is present throughout France and serves almost all sectors of the economy through its various entities Air Liquide France Industrie supplies gases equipment and services to a wide variety of customers from craftsmen to multinationals (Large Industries Industrial Merchant and Electronics activities) This entity also supports the deployment of hydrogen energy in the country both for the mobility of individuals and professionals A pharmaceutical laboratory specializing in gases for medical use Air Liquide SantĂ© France ensures the supply of medical gases their distribution systems and associated services to hospitals private practitioners and emergency services The Group also supports patients with chronic pathologies the Engineering & Construction activity is responsible for designing and building the Group's production units and offering its external customers technologies and processes It has an engineering site in Champigny-sur-Marne and two manufacturing sites in Vitry-sur-Seine Air Liquide has several sites in France dedicated to innovation The Campus Technologies Grenoble focuses on deep tech and energy transition Alizent (specializing in digital solutions for industry) and the Digital Factory are located in Paris technologies and services for industry and healthcare Present in 60 countries with approximately 66,500 employees the Group serves more than 4 million customers and patients French police oversaw the eviction of hundreds of migrants and homeless people from an abandoned building in a suburb of Paris on Wednesday, the latest move in what one local charity has called "a social cleansing" ahead of the 2024 Paris Olympics though there were also several young mothers with children The eviction came exactly 100 days ahead of the start of the Paris Games Utopia 56, a non-profit that supports displaced and homeless people in France, is among several organizations in Paris that have monitored and criticized the evictions − which, according to news reports "Utopia 56 observes a clear increase in expulsions from camps where exiled people survive, which systematically give rise to regional movements, without a lasting accommodation solution for some of them," the organization said in a news release in February "The people affected by the social cleansing provisions are numerous the need for access to social services and support is constant If Paris wants to be magnificent this summer this cannot be done to the detriment of the most precarious." A spokesperson for Paris 2024 told USA TODAY Sports in an email that the organizing committee takes issues of homelessness and emergency social care "very seriously and with a lot of humility" and is working with relevant government entities "The pressure on emergency housing capacity in the Paris region is unfortunately not new and has been increasing independently of the Games context," Paris 2024 said "The Housing Ministry has reminded everyone that the temporary programme of emergency accommodation currently being implemented outside the Paris region has nothing to do with the Games." the International Olympic Committee said only that homelessness in Paris is "clearly outside the remit of the Games organisers." The Olympic and Paralympic Games are not just a massive but also an opportunity for host cities like Paris to bask in a near-unprecedented global spotlight And hosts have historically gone to great lengths to clean up their image before hosting the Games from building shiny new facilities or revamping public transit networks to relocating poor and homeless people near venues while 720,000 people were evicted in the leadup to the 1988 Seoul Games In December, Reuters counted at least 60 squats, or homeless and migrant encampments, that were shut down last year in Seine-Saint-Denis which is home to several Olympic and Paralympic venues French government officials have previously said it is necessary to relocate migrants and homeless people to other parts of France due to a fear that there might not be necessary resources in Paris to accommodate them Contact Tom Schad at tschad@usatoday.com or on social media @Tom_Schad Charities say authorities want to clear homeless people from streets and squats to make city look better for Games Police have evicted hundreds of people from the biggest squat in France prompting fresh accusations from charities that authorities are seeking to clear refugees asylum seekers and homeless people from the capital area before the Olympics in an abandoned bus company headquarters in Vitry-sur-Seine As they left the building they were encouraged to board buses to other parts of France The early morning eviction by police in riot gear began just as France celebrated the milestone of 100 days until the start of the Paris Games Charities have said the state and authorities want to clear homeless people from the streets and squats to make Paris and its suburbs look better for the event 300 people left the squat at Vitry-sur-Seine calmly as about 250 police and gendarmes arrived ready to take people to the central city of OrlĂ©ans or the south-western city of Bordeaux Many of those who had lived in the squat said they did not want to leave the Paris region because they had jobs there He was in Paris to do a logistics course and had been promised a job in a supermarket The 450 people living at the squat included 50 women and 20 children At least 10 children attended local schools The squat had doubled in size after hundreds of asylum seekers, refugees and homeless people were evicted last year from another squat in Île-Saint-Denis, near the Olympic Village site Paul Alauzy ,of the humanitarian organisation MĂ©decins du Monde had been giving health support at the Vitry-sur-Seine squat for three years He is also a spokesperson for Revers de la MĂ©daille (The Medal’s Other Side) a collective of charities and aid workers who warn that the Olympics are having an impact on the most vulnerable homeless people in the Paris area Alauzy said the collective denounced what they called “the effects of social cleansing for the Olympic Games” He said there had been a steady pace of clearing groups of homeless people or squats for the past year the population of this squat would not have doubled The numbers grew because of the eviction of a squat near the Olympic Village,” he said Two women wait with their belongings during the evacuation of the squat Photograph: Emmanuel Dunand/AFP/Getty ImagesAlauzy said the system put in place to bus people far from Paris and the surrounding area was concerning Free weekly newsletterThe most pressing stories and debates for Europeans – from identity to economics to the environment brushing their teeth and packing their last things when the police arrived,” he said Alauzy said 80% of the people living at the squat had refugee status or were asylum seekers and had legal documentation including on building sites and in carpentry One Sudanese man had shown his legal documentation it’s impossible to find housing – landlords won’t accept you,” Alauzy said He said many of the people did not have proper access to healthcare “There is also the question of psychological issues People arrive at a squat and think they will finally have a place to live in a collective squat with very little chance of integrating in the country said: “We know the rate of evictions from buildings and camps [of tents] has accelerated over the past few months This building had no planning permission 
 The building evicted in Île-Saint-Denis is still empty 
 We can only draw the conclusion that they are trying to clear up the area for the arrival of tourists and international media for the Olympics “The situation of not having a place to sleep existed before the Olympics It’s a crisis affecting a lot of European countries while over 50% had refugee status and many had work From June 30 to September 4, 2023, the guinguette in the port of Ivry-Vitry is the place to be for a vacation without even leaving the Paris region the program is unmistakable: it smells like summer and family afternoons with their feet in the sand The guinguette offers the perfect spot to relax and unwind wooden games and a sandpit to let the little ones have fun all afternoon enjoy free family entertainment (from 2pm to 7pm) and take part in creative workshops for children on Saturdays and Sundays (from 5pm) to learn how to make your own kite or hat.. Or opt for the more festive guinguette option with free open-air DJ sets and concerts from Friday to Sunday the on-site "Ă  l'abordage" bar offers tapas and planchas hot dogs and artisanal ice creams for gourmets you'll find plenty of food for the hungriest among you to party the night away (or play non-stop until you drop) Organized by the La Foraine and Carnavaliers associations, the guinguette is accessible by RER (line C) or bus, and above all, it's open all summer long, from July 5 to September 8, 2024: head to 12 quai Henri Pourchasse to discover this spot you won't be able to get enough of Alcohol abuse is dangerous for your health This bird’s-eye view of the station displays the harmony between the canopy and the surrounding neighborhood.The station will be connected to the red line of the Grand Paris Express, a year-old project aimed to bring more rapid modes of transportation around the dense city. Construction for various lines and metro stations for the Grand Paris Express are projected to continue through 2030. Louise DarblayReviews12 February 2024ArtReview The artist’s first retrospective in his home country – at MAC VAL Vitry-sur-Seine – reveals a career spent poking at notions of fame and value Opening Matthieu Laurette’s first retrospective in his home country is a CRT monitor that plays a looped excerpt of a 1990s French talkshow in which the young artist to millions of viewers how to eat for free by taking advantage of the money-back guarantees and other marketing strategies of big brands the project started out as a sort of anarcho-capitalist lifestyle experiment that allowed him to survive as a young artist It is presented here in the various guises it took over the years: a vitrine display of the eligible products that toured around France as an artwork-cum-information stand; flyers advertising his tour stops and ‘guided tours’ of supermarkets; a very Jeff Koons-ian hyperrealist lifesize wax sculpture of himself pushing a shopping cart filled to the brim with ‘free’ products; and a slew of press clippings from France and abroad blown up into posters lining the wall below the monitor with such killer headlines as ‘King of Freebies teaches canny Scots how to bid bills “au revoir”’ who for the past 30 years has been operating between the artworld and the real world as a sort of jester figure poking at notions of fame and value (economic cultural) in the age of spectacle and unbridled neoliberalism Laurette’s work could be the love child of conceptualism (and institutional critique) legacies he acknowledges head-on with remakes of iconic works by Joseph Kosuth among the many art-historical references present in the show Infiltrating the media and tv in particular became an artistic pursuit for Laurette sometimes as an actual guest (he famously starred in a very popular dating show and sent out ‘vernissage’ card invitations for the show’s scheduled broadcast time) which involved him appearing in the background of on-the-ground news reports waving placards such as ‘Guy Debord is so cool!’ Part artwork the placards and the compiled video excerpts are accompanied here by a projection of the first episode of El Gran Trueque (2000) a TV show he created for Basque television For this Laurette used a part of the production budget to purchase a car as an initial prize and invited the public to offer up one of their possessions in exchange which would become the prize for the following episode This bartering chain ended grotesquely (and rather quickly) with a set of drinking glasses that was too cheap to trade – an attempt to demonstrate the arbitrary value of money these ‘infiltrations’ amounted to what he calls ‘irl institutional critique’ reflecting on the power dynamics of society at large by intervening directly in it Laurette has turned his own retrospective into a conceptual exercise of sorts as if observing his career from the outside: Untitled (World Map) (1993–) is a giant map on which the artist has pinned all the locations in which he’s ever exhibited; for Selected Works Currently On Display Elsewhere (1993–) he’s displayed pictures of his works in other concurrent shows on a shelf; meanwhile largescale views from previous exhibitions hang from the ceiling like billboards advertising his own artistic success reads as a direct nod to the Situationists’ practice of the dĂ©rive encouraged here by the nonlinear and nonchronological staging of the show a way to point to what ends up in the gallery as ‘byproducts’ of the art that happens in the real world here it also literally translates into a display of actual merch produced for this show in collaboration with a design agency printed with images of his media appearances If Laurette lost some of his visibility from the 2000s it’s perhaps to do with his turn away from the media and towards pure institutional critique shifting his focus to the very structures that conditioned his existence as an artist Other Countries Pavilion/Citizenship Project (2001–23) sent to the countries not yet represented at the Venice Biennale candidly offering to act as their representative in exchange for citizenship Other projects return more directly to economic strategies of survival as an artist: for THINGS (Purchased with funds provided by) (2010–) and DEMANDS & SUPPLIES (2012–) Laurette gets collectors to buy him stuff and cover his expenses in exchange for an A4 contract turning the actual financial transactions into framed artworks necessary commentary on the reality of being an artist in an increasingly financialised market a reality he’s simultaneously attempting to cheat with delightful irony Lining another wall is perhaps Laurette’s longest running series consisting of the titular statement being written on hotel letterheads during his travels each iteration reading as a sort of mantra or a ritual – to keep his eye on the prize une rĂ©trospective dĂ©rivĂ©e (1993–2023) at MAC VAL, Vitry-sur-Seine, through 3 March Mark RappoltReviews Claudia RossReviews Martin HerbertReviews Tom MortonReviews Gaby CepedaReviews ArtReviewNewsartreview.com06 May 2025 U.S. artist identified television as both a subject and material John Torres & Shireen Seno take 2025 Han Nefkens Foundation, Mori Art Museum, M+ and Singapore Art Museum – Moving Image CommissionArtReviewNewsartreview.com06 May 2025 Seno and Torres will receive USD$100,000 to produce a screen-based video artwork AdvertisementIslamic Arts Biennale 2025 Review: The Weight of the MaterialMark RappoltReviewsArtReview06 May 2025 ‘And All That Is In Between’ demonstrates that many of the aspects of global culture, or the way culture circulates globally, are not actually a new phenomenon of our ‘globalised’ times Defne Ayas appointed new director of Van AbbemuseumArtReviewNewsartreview.com06 May 2025 She succeeds Charles Esche, who will step down after two decades in the role Mark Rothko painting damaged by child in Dutch museumArtReviewNewsartreview.com02 May 2025 The painting, worth €50 million, has sustained visible scratches The 10 Exhibitions to See in May 2025ArtReviewPreviewsartreview.com02 May 2025 Our editors on the exhibitions they’re looking forward to this month, from the Venice Architecture Biennale to Gallery Weekends in Berlin and Beijing How the Museum Became a WeaponWilliam ShokiOpinionartreview.com02 May 2025 In apartheid South Africa, museums glorified white settlement and erased Black history; in the US today, they are again being captured under the guise of neutrality Vyjayanthi Rao to curate 2026 Sharjah Architecture TriennialMia SternNewsartreview.com02 May 2025 She will be joined by Tau Tavengwa as associate curator Ari Emanuel buys Frieze from EndeavorArtReviewNewsartreview.com01 May 2025 The entertainment company’s own former chief executive has acquired Frieze for a reported $200m Inaugural Annie Leibowitz prize awarded to photographer of migrant experiencesArtReviewNewsartreview.com01 May 2025 ZĂ©lie Hallosserie to receive $10,000 for her documentary work in Calais We use cookies to understand how you use our site and to improve your experience. This includes personalizing content. By continuing to use our site, you accept our use of cookies, revised Privacy we'll be celebrating the FĂȘte de la Musique on the voie Georges-Pompidou The program features a variety of DJs and musical styles to get the public up and dancing in a festive atmosphere Join us forElectroFlow and Seine contre courant two convivial events you won't want to miss becoming an international celebration of musical diversity and artistic expression bringing together millions of people who rejoice together During these two days, voie Georges-Pompidou is the perfect opportunity to immerse yourself in an electric a variety of shows are planned to ensure a convivial experience closed to traffic since 2017 between theentrance to the Tuileries tunnel and the exit from the Henri IV tunnel It is one of Paris' s most emblematic thoroughfares offering breathtaking views of some of the city's most famous monuments Named after former French president Georges Pompidou the avenue is a popular strolling destination for Parisians and visitors alike it's an ideal place for strolling or cycling So on Saturday June 17 and Wednesday June 21 we're off to Georges-Pompidou avenue to celebrate the music le programme est mis Ă  jour en fonction des annonces officielles the holes carved out from the concrete canopy provides a connection to the park and its context the station is part of a grander scheme of modernizing the transport route the vitry-center station will be based on the south-east portion of the red line of the grand paris express the station has been designed in harmony with the parc du coteau where it emerges in almost organic manner it is at the town center, linking the town hall, sports and cultural facilities, and to above-ground transport networks happening now! partnering with antonio citterio, AXOR presents three bathroom concepts that are not merely places of function, but destinations in themselves — sanctuaries of style, context, and personal expression. The town of Vitry-sur-Seine, in Paris, will host the first Cuban Film Festival in June with various proposals that address history, culture and society, according to the coordinator of the project, Miguel Quintero. The first vice president of Cuba CoopĂ©ration France (CubaCoop), the association promoter of the event together with the local Mayor’s Office, specified that it will take place from June 17 to 24 with six feature films on display and an extensive program of activities. “It will be an opportunity for the French public to get closer to the island and to get to know a part of its cinematography and also its reality, through conferences after the films and other activities”, the vice president commented. The program is made up of the films Benny, which includes passages from the life of the famous Cuban singer-songwriter Benny MorĂ©; the multi-award-winning Fresa y Chocolate; El Mayor, a film inspired by the patriot and independence fighter Ignacio Agramonte, the social drama Conducta; and very different comedies such as Esther somewhere and BoccaccerĂ­as Habaneras. According to Quintero, the feature films will be screened in a cinema in Vitry-sur-Seine that has three rooms, with three sessions planned for each of them during the week. In addition to the films, the public will be able to enjoy documentaries, with a planned tribute to TelevisiĂłn Serrana on its 30th anniversary, an audiovisual platform created in 1993 in the municipality of Buey Arriba, in the heart of the Sierra Maestra, in the eastern province of Granma, to provide an approach to the local peasantry. The first vice president of CubaCoop announced that the festival will be accompanied by the performance of French students from music schools, who will perform hits by Benny MorĂ©, a painting exhibition and a photographic exhibition. Regarding the conferences, he explained that they will be dedicated to the history of the island, daily life and the evolution of the rights of the LGBT community, the latter with the presentation of a guest from the National Center for Sexual Education (Cenesex) of the largest of the Antilles. Quintero highlighted the support and enthusiasm of the Mayor’s Office of Vitry-sur-Seine and the contribution of the Cuban Institute of Cinematographic Art and Industry (Icaic) in the preparations for an event that CubaCoop aspires to continue, without its definition being defined for the moment. Solidarity with the island will have a space at the first Cuban Film Festival in Vitry-sur-Seine, with a meeting to denounce the US economic, commercial and financial blockade imposed on Cuba for more than six decades. Regarding the income from the event, he declared that they will be used to cover the shipment of a solidarity cargo from the host city to the Caribbean country, and if the benefits allow it, to finance other support projects. CBC LiteSectionsNews ‱ Canada ‱ NorthNorthern Quebec Cree man shares and teaches cultural art in FranceVanna Blacksmith | CBC News | Posted: March 26, 2025 7:13 PM | Last Updated: March 26 Cree artist Tim Whiskeychan has been making art for over 40 years Caption: Tim Whiskeychan shares Cree culture and teaches art to French students from CollĂšge Josette et Maurice Audin in Vitry-sur-Seine, France, on March 18. (Submitted by Tim Whiskeychan) Caption: French students painting individual murals, based on their research projects on Indigenous artifacts. (Submitted by Tim Whiskeychan) Caption: Teachers from CollĂšge Josette et Maurice Audin were proud to hang the mural in their school, said Whiskeychan. (Submitted by Tim Whiskeychan) Caption: The students huddle together, painting a large mural to hang in their school. (Submitted by Tim Whiskeychan) This Page Has Washed AwayLooks like this page has disappeared with the tide — perhaps it’s buried in the sand at Vazon or drifting off Petit Port Sanofi on Monday announced that it is investing more than €1 billion to create new bioproduction capacity at its sites in Vitry-sur-Seine (Val de Marne) According to the company’s statement this new investment will create more than 500 jobs and significantly strengthen France’s ability to control the production of essential medicines from start to finish This plan brings to more than €3.5 billion the amount committed by Sanofi since the Covid-19 pandemic in major projects to keep production of medicines and vaccines in France for patients around the world Sanofi will invest €1 billion to build a new facility that will double the site’s monoclonal antibody production capacity Several biologics in development amongst Sanofi’s 12 potential blockbusters in chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder (COPD) could be produced in Vitry to meet the needs of millions of patients in France and around the world Sanofi anticipates the creation of 350 jobs as a result of this investment,” the company stated Sanofi will invest €100 million to develop new capacity for biologics formulation It will support the launch of future biologics and vaccines as well as the continued growth of Dupixent which already is indicated in several inflammatory diseases and could soon become the first biologic indicated in COPD Sanofi is investing €10 million to locate the production of TZield in France Tzield is a biologic for type 1 diabetes that Sanofi acquired in April 2023 and which has been manufactured outside Europe “Thanks to the transformation undertaken since 2020 Sanofi has a record number of medicines and vaccines in development that could become best-in-class and help meet major public health challenges With these unprecedented industrial investments we remain true to our history by once again choosing France to produce these future medicines and make them available to patients around the world at the heart of Sanofi’s strategy,” Paul Hudson Sanofi carries out more than 60 percent of its global production in the European Union and sources only 5 percent of its active ingredients in Asia compared to an average of 80 percent in the pharmaceutical industry Sanofi’s contribution to France’s trade balance amounted to more than €13 billion in 2023 Le Trait and Lyon Gerland add up to major projects launched since the Covid-19 pandemic to build in France new drugs and vaccines production capacity in-line with Sanofi’s world class pipeline of best and first-in-class assets and meet public health needs €15 million to locate the production of a drug to fight high cholesterol in France This investment will allow the construction of a new high-volume granulation unit and a tablet-coating line in a new building The capacity of this new unit will be around 700 million boxes per year for some 20 countries particularly in Europe and Asia,” it added This is why we chose our Vitry site to double its monoclonal antibody production capacity We have also strengthened our API production sites in the south of France has always been and remains unique,” Audrey Derveloy These efforts are part of the new chapter of Sanofi’s Play to Win strategy presented at the end of 2023 which focuses on cutting-edge science and its ambition to become the world leader in immunology Sanofi will invest an additional €700 million per year in R&D over the next two years Moody’s downgraded India’s GDP growth forecast for 2025 to 6.3% due to global economic slowdown caused by US policy uncertainty and trade restrictions including those between India and Pakistan Moody’s expects RBI to cut rates to boost growth The US and China are also facing trade tensions This website is using a security service to protect itself from online attacks The action you just performed triggered the security solution There are several 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