Sujets:
Christo, (4 notices ; auteur de 4 notices)1935-
Buren, Daniel, 1938-
Pagès, Bernard, (Auteur de 1 notice )1940-
Raynaud, Jean-Pierre, (Auteur de 1 notice )1939-
Huang, Yong Ping, 1954-
Pinoncelli, Pierre
Art (123 notices)--20e siècle ;
Modernisme (Art) (12 notices)
N6490.H435 1998
Auteurs:
Christo, (4 notices ; sujet de 4 notices)1935- ;
Alloway, Lawrence, (3 notices)1926-
Titre:Christo / [by] Lawrence Alloway.
Éditeur:
New York :
H. N. Abrams, c1969.
NB893 C5.A4 1969
Auteur:
Christo, (4 notices ; sujet de 4 notices)1935-
Titre:Christo : Surrounded islands, Biscayne Bay, Greater Miami, Florida, 1980-83 / Christo ; photos, Wolfgang Volz ; introd. and picture comment., David Bourdon ; essay, Jonathan Fineberg ; report, Janet Mulholland.
Éditeur:
New York :
H. N. Abrams., 1986.
N7193 C5.A76 1986 R.P
Baal-Teshuva, Jacob, 1929- ;
Philippi, Simone ;
Christo, (4 notices ; sujet de 4 notices)1935- ;
Jeanne-Claude, (Sujet de 1 notice )1935-
Titre:Christo & Jeanne-Claude / Jacob Baal-Teshuva ; avec des photos. de Wolfgang Volz ; trad. française, Jacques Bosser.
Éditeur:
Cologne, Allemagne :
Taschen, c1995.
Auteurs:
N7193 C5.B3214 1995
Environnement (Art).$a Land art.$a Art conceptuel.
Pour la majorité des gens, les banques forment un monde feutré, voire mythique, en partie car les transactions demeurent privées. L'architecture imposante des banques ou bien leurs coffres-forts fermés par d'indéchiffrables combinaisons entretiennent ce côté mystérieux et secret.
The bank began operations on March 11, 1935, after the passage of the Bank of Canada Act. Initially the bank was founded as a privately owned corporation in order to ensure it was free from political influence. In 1938, under Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King, it became " a special type of " Crown corporation, fully owned by the government; thus, in effect, by the Canadian taxpayers; with the governor appointed by Cabinet. The responsibility for creating small bills was transferred from the finance department and the private banks were ordered to remove their currency from circulation by 1949.[
Fractional-reserve banking is a type of banking whereby the bank does not retain all of a customer’s deposits within the bank. Funds received by the bank are generally lent to other customers. This means that available funds (called bank reserves) are only a fraction (called the reserve ratio) of the quantity of deposits at the bank. As most bank deposits are treated as money in their own right, fractional reserve banking increases the money supply, and banks are said to create money.