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Jilted lover’s novel revenge on ‘cold’ Carla BruniONE of Carla Bruni’s jilted lovers has taken his revenge with a fictional account of their relationship in which the Italian supermodel, singer and French first lady is painted as cold and heartless.
Jean-Paul Enthoven, a silver-haired literary critic of 59, has good reason to feel bitter about Bruni, 40. She left him for Raphaël, his son, a professor of philosophy, with whom she had a child before marrying President Nicolas Sarkozy earlier this year.
The novel was the talk of le tout Paris last week and an example of the latest fashion among members of the French cultural elite for savaging each other under a flimsy fictional cloak where the characters are strikingly similar to real people.
Bruni has already fallen victim to this fad for the roman à clef. When Raphaël, 30, went off with Bruni, Justine Lévy, his wife, wrote a vitriol-filled novel about the break-up in which she referred to the Italian temptress as “the Terminator”. Now Enthoven Sr is having his say. His novel
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Olympic Bird's Nest architects design 57-story 'Rubik's Cube' high-rise for NYC The Swiss architects of the iconic Bird's Nest stadium at the Beijing Olympics are bringing their innovative style to New York City with a translucent glass skyscraper designed to look like houses stacked in the sky. Architects Jacques Herzog and Pierre de Meuron's $650 million, 57-story condominium featuring dramatic, cantilevered terraces is slated to begin going up in mid-October in lower Manhattan.
It will be their first high-rise commission anywhere in the world. The design is scheduled to be unveiled Monday.
The architects liken their design to "houses stacked in the sky," with each level staggered progressively with different-sized boxes arranged at varying angles to create unique floor plans for each of the 145 apartments.
They said the tower reinvents the classic American skyscraper "as a lacy, pixilated Rubik's Cube." Its concealed framing results in a nearly all-glass structure with cityscape views from virtually every angle.
Herzog said the firm uses "well-known forms and materials in a new way so that they become alive again," just like Andy Warhol "used common pop images to say something new."
The building will feature a massive stainless steel sculpture by Anish Kapoor that will be "playfully squished" into the tower's base as homage to the city's culture, said developer Izak Senbahar of Alexico Group.
It will be the first permanent public artwork in New York City for Kapoor, best known for his enigmatic sculptural forms including "Sky Mirror," a temporary installation at Rockefeller Center, and "Cloud Gate" in Chicago's Millennium Park.
Senbahar said he commissioned Kapoor to create the balloon-shaped form as a permanent site-specific work because "great art and architecture are essential parts of everyday life." The sculpture also articulates the architects' vision of blending the indoors and outdoors.
The building will have an expansive 18-foot-high black granite lobby, a 75-foot pool, outdoor sun deck, library lounge, screening room and fitness center.
The apartments will be offered for $3.5 million to $33 million. The tower is slated to open in 2010.
Herzog & de Meuron is currently redesigning the Tate Modern in London. The twisted silver beams of its $450 million Bird's Nest stadium became one of the most enduring images of the Olympics.
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