I just saw her quoted as affirming her right to buy stocks.
Free Market ya know.
This image I came across had the blue stripes and some blue checkerboards on what looks like aristocratic "arms" on the side of an historic french building
I haven't ID'd the building yet but I found this blurb about the book I found it in
"Opus Délits # 30: Ernest Pignon-Ernest - The place and the formula From the 1960s, Ernest Pignon-Ernest was the first to use stencils in situ, to invest the real world with drawn or painted silhouettes. On a human scale, these figures take place in a place chosen for its history, its aestheticism, its soul, and as soon as posed, become one with this place that they embrace, becoming inseparable from their support. 'images, a shock: that of the human impact of the bombs of Hiroshima and Nagazaki. How to represent the memory of volatilized bodies? The answer lies in the buried memories and the symbolic potential of a space, revealed through the evocative power of the image. Powerful, poetic, and political,Ernest Pignon-Ernest's images sublimate history and memory with their presence as essential as it is ephemeral.In this Opus Délits, Jérôme Gulon navigates through time and space to present several of the artist's series in detail. : first interventions outside Albion (1966), Rimbaud in Paris (1978), La Commune (1971), Caravaggio and Napples (1988/1995), telephone booths (1996), homage to Mahmut Darwich in Ramallah (2009), etc.tribute to Mahmut Darwish in Ramallah (2009), etc.tribute to Mahmut Darwish in Ramallah (2009), etc. "
The artist stencilled a naked boy crawling up the side of the building. I believe the piece was done in the 60s
https://archive.md/GvMJS
His name is EARNEST PIGNON-EARNEST
born 1942
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ernest_Pignon-Ernest
He's a Fluxus artist and did street art starting in '66 -
Check out the stencil of the naked child climbing the wall an the blue stripes on the arms of the Nobility stuck on the side of the building.
This photo was given a place of prominence in the book collection representing his work.