Sun Rises on Contemporary ArtJudd and Lichtenstein works are set to make auction history
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BEAM THEM UP
History was made at former U.N.
diplomat Esther Coopersmith's dinner
when a pair whose records can never
be topped were linked: Valentina
Tereshkova, the first woman in space,
and Sen. John Glenn, one of the first
American man in space.
Valentina, a twenty-six-year-old Russian was dubbed "The Seagull" as she orbited the earth; "Forty-eight times!" she reminded us happily, "for three days." John Glenn went into space again at age 70, astounding everyone, including wife Annie, who nixed the idea of a repeat when the question was raised at dinner.
Among the guests was author Susan Eisenhower, (Ike's granddaughter), long active in Russian-linked matters, often with Esther, who has a finger in so many global pies.
CROISSANTS T THREE PACES
For a few minutes at the
Organization of the American States,
the always elegant Inter-American
Economic Council Gala looked like a
scene from Animal House. Texan R. Allen
Stanford, the honoree of the Council's
2006 Excellence in Leadership Award,
(hunky enough to have appeared on
Dallas), is also the visionary founder
of a global wealth-management and
financial services company, and a
philanthropist. His projects range from
St. Jude's Hospital to the National Civil
Rights Museum's Freedom Awards,
(whose 2005 honoree was Oprah),
and include scholarships and grants of
low-interest loans to small businesses
across Latin America.
Laid-back Stanford also enjoys a joke, and he took it like a champion when, in retaliation for his bread-ball ambush of some of the group last year, they responded in kind, first announcing a special presentation for him, then pelting him as he stood waiting at the microphone.
The crowd of ambassadors, socialites and business men included Washington's former ambassador from Ecuador Ivonne Baki, now that country's Minister of Commerce (and one of the pelters), her artist and fashion-designer daughter, Tatiana Baki, Harriet Mayor Fulbright, Patricia Bennett Sagon and Barry Featherman.
ANOTHER OLE EVENING
Author Gail Scott was mistress of
ceremonies at the OAS for the Latin
Students Fund Gala, which provides
tutoring and academic support to
over 500 D.C. public school students,
and 40 private and parochial schools.
Costa Rican ambassador Tomas
Duenas praised founder Rosalia
Guitierrez-Huete Miller for all she
has accomplished in only 12 years.
Sponsored by OAS Secretary
General José Miguel Insulza and his
wife Georgina, guests included new
Federal Reserve Board chairman
Ben Bernanke, and his wife Anna,
and Washington Post publisher Donald
Graham. Ambassadors included
Costa Rica's Guillermo Castillo
and his wife Flor Maria, Paraguay's
James Spalding and wife Maria,
and the OAS Nicaraguan ambassador
Jose Luis Velasquez.
TEENAGER'S TRIUMPH
When pianist Sara Daneshpour
concluded a brilliant performance
the whole audience rose at once, as if
pulled up by a puppeteer's strings, in
a long-lasting ovation.
Triumph is no new thing for Sara,
a beautiful and endearing nineteenyear-
old hailed for her musicianship
here and abroad. Sara appeared at the
National Museum of Women in the
Arts as part of the Shenson Concert
Series, whose artistic directorship is
under Gilan Tocco Corn, joined
by Linda Hohenfeld Slatkin, wife
of National Symphony conductor
Leonard Slatkin. Among the
audience, Wilhelmina Cole Holladay,
CEO and founder of the museum,
and her husband Wallace Holladay,
Climis and Carol Lascaris, Mary
Mochary, Nancy and Dr. Roger
Stevenson, Magda Chrobog, wife of the former German ambassador and
Dr. Milton Corn.
Members of the Junior League of Washington, D.C. were
treated on April 13 to a complete Indian experience by
kalpana sen, wife of Ambassador ronen sen of India. The
afternoon featured Indian fashion and cuisine as well as
Yoga Sessions. - Photo by Immanuel Jayachandran |
AN OMNIBUS ALMANAC
Notables with ancestral ties to
Nordic lands or the Baltics, from the
late Supreme Court Chief Justice
William Rehnquist to multitalented
"Rings" actor Viggo Mortensen, are
profiled in an entertaining volume
honored with a reception hosted
by the new Ambassador of Finland,
Pekka Lintu.
This "phone-book plus" Nordic- Baltic-U.S. Almanac covers all eight northern countries: their diplomacy, business, trade, science, investment, education, histories, peoples and cultures. Editor Jay Ryfa includes 3,000 comprehensive listings for government departments, related businesses and heritage organizations here and abroad in the volume published by Stephen Strickland. Present were State Department Under Secretary for Global Affairs Paula Dobriansky; Martin Szabo and his wife Sylvia; Sen. Ben Nelson and his wife Diane; the ambassadors of Norway, Iceland, Sweden, Estonia, Lithuania; the deputy chiefs of mission of Denmark and Latvia; and three members of parliament from Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia. The touching Rehnquist memoir, which he released to Strickland shortly before his death, tells of his Swedish ancestral roots. Among the socialite crowd was lively Washingtonian Evelyn Stefansson, widow of profiled explorer Vilhjalmur Stefansson. Evvie shared his Dartmouth years, learned his native Icelandic language, lectured and wrote four books herself.
MUSIC MAESTRO PLEASE!
J
ane Sloat chaired an outstanding
gala at the Russian Federation
saluting Maestro Valery Gergiev,
the artistic and general director of
the Mariinsky Theater, who with the
Kirov Opera, Ballet and Orchestra
has toured 45 countries including the
U.S. The evening was under the aegis
of the American-Russian Cultural
Cooperation Foundation, headed by
James Symington, and included all
the usual suspects including his wife
headed by longtime patron of the arts
Gerson Nordlinger.
KALEIDOSCOPE
A party-with-a-purpose was
greatly appreciated by the guests of
Jordanian ambassador Karim Kawar
and Luma as it brought New York
Times writer Tom Friedman here to
discuss his best-seller The World Is Flat.
The three-time Pulitzer Prize winner
outlined future and present changes
in our globally complex world …
Heard at a recent Giorgio and Anna
Mari Via hoe-down: "I haven't seen
so many ambassadors in one space
since the Fourth of July party at the
American embassy."…Hors d'oeuvres,
wine and beer fueled a rollicking
evening for a serious cause at The
Michelle Susan Kogod Memorial
"Casino Night" at the Manor
Country Club. The foundation
was named after the late daughter
of Bernie and Bonnie Kogod, the
co-chairs of the event with Matthew
and Jamie Kogod-Levin to benefit
The Wellness Community-Greater
Washington DC. President and
CEO Paula Rothenberg told us 21
Wellness Communities in the US,
and two international sites bring nocharge
cancer support, education and
hope to sufferers funded by corporate
and individual donations.
If there is an upcoming event Around Town should know about, email donnashor@washingtonlife.com.