phone Pomoc-kontakt

The New York Times Agency May 2010

EN_00913897_9571
The New York Times Agency May 2010
(NYT8) NEW YORK -- Oct. 3, 2003 -- Adv. for Sun., Oct. 5 -- ISRAELI-ARTISTS -- Artist Uri Aran and his sister Tal, 27, a dancer are part of a subculture of young secular Israelis transplanted to New York's bohemian precincts. They have left behind political conflict, violence and a depressed economy. At sleek bars like Pianos on the Lower East Side, at places like Cafe Orlin and Cafe Mogador on St. Marks Place in the East Village and at the Grand Cafe and Anytime, both in Williamsburg, they are as much purveyors as consumers of youth leisure. Aran with his installation sculpture in Brooklyn on Sept. 13, 2003. (Aaron Lee Fineman/The New York Times)
CENA MINIMALNA - 100 USD
2003-10-03
EAST NEWS
The New York Times Agency
Aaron Lee Fineman/The New York Times/Redux
15374952
0,87MB
25cm x 17cm przy 300dpi
13, 2003, 27, 3, 5, A, AARON, ADV, AND, ANYTIME, ARAN, ARE, ARTIST, AS, AT, BARS, BEHIND, BOHEMIAN, BOTH, BROOKLYN, CAFE, CONFLICT, CONSUMERS, DANCER, DEPRESSED, EAST, ECONOMY, FINEMAN, FOR, GRAND, HAVE, HIS, IN, INSTALLATION, ISRAELI-ARTISTS, ISRAELIS, LEE, LEFT, LEISURE, LIKE, LOWER, MARKS, MEDIAXPRESS, MOGADOR, MUCH, NEW, NYT8, OF, ON, ORLIN, PART, PIANOS, PLACE, PLACES, POLITICAL, PRECINCTS, PURVEYORS, REDUX, SCULPTURE, SECULAR, SEPT, SIDE, SISTER, SLEEK, SUBCULTURE, SUN, TAL, THE, THEY, TIMES, TO, TRANSPLANTED, URI, VILLAGE, VIOLENCE, WIECK, WILLIAMSBURG, WITH, YORK, YOUNG, YOUTH,