Le Journal

Le nouveau plan stratégique d'Ipsos convainc les investisseurs

Davos: Danish PM rules out negotiations on Greenland’s sovereignty as part of Trump’s ‘deal’– live updates

On Censorship by Ai Weiwei review – are we losing the battle for free speech?
China isn’t the only country imposing limits on creative expression, argues the provocative artist‘Chinese culture is the opposite of provocation,” Ai Weiwei once told an interviewer. “It tries to seek harmony in human nature and society.” Harmony has never been his bag. Provocation though? In spades. As a student at the Beijing Film Academy in the late 1970s, he joined an artist group called Stars that had a slogan: “We Demand Political Democracy and Artistic Freedom”. In the 1990s, returning to Beijing after a decade in downtown New York, he and a couple of friends published and distributed samizdat-style books devoted to off-piste, often-political art of the kind that government censors tend to fear.Ai’s own work was bolshie and anathema to custodians of good taste. His Study of Perspective series showed him raising a middle finger at global sites – among them Tiananmen Square, the Eiffel Tower, the White House – that are expected to produce awe, delight, reverence. In the self-explanatory photographic sequence Dropping a Han Dynasty Urn (1995), itself the follow-up to Han Jar Overpainted with Coca-Cola Logo (1994), he asked viewers to decide who was the bigger cultural vandal: himself, a mere artist – or a Chinese state for whom iconoclasm was a defining feature of its modernising project. A 2000 exhibition in Shanghai that he helped to stage bore the name Fuck Off. (Its Chinese subtitle was “Ways to Not Cooperate’”.) Continue reading...

Interparfums se montre prudent pour 2026 malgré une fin d'année «légèrement meilleure que prévu»

Deutsche Börse s’empare d’Allfunds

Thursday news quiz: Farage breaking rules and a cow that uses tools
Test yourself on topical news trivia, pop culture and general knowledge every Thursday. How will you fare?Thursday comes around again, and thanks to the whimsical illustrations of Anaïs Mims, it is time to find out whether you are the shiny red apple of knowledge or the awkward little question mark worm wriggling inside and ruining it. Fifteen questions on the week’s headlines, pop culture and general knowledge await. There are no prizes, but at least you can use the comments to let us know which side of the fruit bowl you fell on. Allons-y!The Thursday news quiz, No 231 Continue reading...

Les investisseurs privés dans le crédit se retirent en masse
Pour la première fois depuis le début de l’essor du crédit privé, un grand nombre d’investisseurs individuels tentent de récupérer leur argent aux Etats-Unis.

AEW poursuit sa réorganisation avec l’arrivée d’Anthony Butler
La société de gestion d’actifs immobiliers a créé le poste de Head of Industrial & Logistics Europe.

Tenacious D will return: Jack Black and Kyle Gass ‘hashed it out’ after Trump joke controversy

Rachel Roddy’s recipe for pasta e fagioli with coconut, spring onion, chilli and lemon | A kitchen in Rome

The pub that changed me: ‘It taught me not to be obnoxious’

