Miguel Bosé is safe after he said he and his family were tied up as their home was ransacked by 10 allegedly armed men at his home in Mexico City on Friday.
The Spanish music legend shared a statement on his Instagram Monday revealing that a group of men had allegedly “tied up” the singer, his two children, and his home personnel for more than two hours while the suspects took “all” of the singer’s belongings.
“It was all very tense, uneasy, and unpleasant,” Bosé wrote on his Instagram Story,...
The Spanish music legend shared a statement on his Instagram Monday revealing that a group of men had allegedly “tied up” the singer, his two children, and his home personnel for more than two hours while the suspects took “all” of the singer’s belongings.
“It was all very tense, uneasy, and unpleasant,” Bosé wrote on his Instagram Story,...
- 8/21/2023
- by Tomás Mier
- Rollingstone.com
Musée d'Art Moderne, Paris
The show starts demonstratively, with $50,000 cut into the wall above the entrance by a series of bullet holes. The ironic title of this installation is No hay artista joven que resista un cañonazo de $50,000 dólares (No young artist can resist a $50,000 cannon blast). The work by the Tercerunquinto collective introduces Resisting the Present (until 8 July). The opening work harks back to a disabused remark by Álvaro Obregón, the president of Mexico in 1920-24, condemning the corruption rife among the military during the revolution in the 1910s: "No hay general que resista un cañonazo de 50,000 pesos".
Has the country really changed since? The 20 or so young artists, whose work is gathered here, offer a terrifying picture, dominated by drug traffickers, corruption, kidnapping, submission to global capitalism and an all-powerful Us neighbour, nostalgia for the revolution – the real thing, not the version served up by the Institutional Revolutionary...
The show starts demonstratively, with $50,000 cut into the wall above the entrance by a series of bullet holes. The ironic title of this installation is No hay artista joven que resista un cañonazo de $50,000 dólares (No young artist can resist a $50,000 cannon blast). The work by the Tercerunquinto collective introduces Resisting the Present (until 8 July). The opening work harks back to a disabused remark by Álvaro Obregón, the president of Mexico in 1920-24, condemning the corruption rife among the military during the revolution in the 1910s: "No hay general que resista un cañonazo de 50,000 pesos".
Has the country really changed since? The 20 or so young artists, whose work is gathered here, offer a terrifying picture, dominated by drug traffickers, corruption, kidnapping, submission to global capitalism and an all-powerful Us neighbour, nostalgia for the revolution – the real thing, not the version served up by the Institutional Revolutionary...
- 5/15/2012
- The Guardian - Film News
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