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Amir G. Kabiri is an Israeli businessman, art collector, owner of Hapoel Tel-Aviv F.C., and best known as the President of the M.T. Abraham Foundation and the (Hermitage Museum Foundation Israel ). ==Biography== Amir G. Kabiri (Hebrew: אמיר גרוס כבירי) was born on August 29, 1980. He attended Ironi Daled high school in Tel-Aviv, Israel from 1992 to 1998, where he majored in economics. In 2000 he attended UCLA with a major in business and managerial economics.〔 From August 2004 to late 2005 he was a partner and shareholder at (Charm and More ) Almaty in Kazakhstan, a company specialized in boutique hotels accommodation. In late 2007 he became a partner and director at Taj-holdings, which focused in commodities trades in the Republic of Tajikistan, leaving that post in March 2010.〔 Starting in March 2011 he became CEO of Max Steiner Internet Industries,〔 a web development company based in Los Angeles and Tel Aviv with English-speaking clients worldwide.〔 Kabiri became President of the M.T. Abraham Foundation in January 2004.〔 Since the organization's inception he's been adamant about keeping the works of art held by the foundation "in the public domain" via a loan program.〔 In particular, he's overseen the exhibition of 74 Edgar Degas statues in museums such as the Tel Aviv Art Museum,〔 the Valencian Institute of Modern Art,〔〔〔〔 and the Herakleidon Art Museum in Athens, Greece.〔 In May 2012 on behalf of the M.T. Abraham Foundation he took part in a seminar concerning the attribution of bronze statues, and an academic colloquium was held on the issue at the Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg, Russia.〔 He was appointed as the Chairman of M.T.A. Publishing in August 2012.〔 During 2012-2013, he co-directed a book on the Soviet sale of Hermitage paintings, among other topics, titled ''Selling Russia's Treasures''.〔 As of early 2013 he is editing and managing the catalogue raisone of El Lissitzky's "Jewish period",〔 and is often invited to take part in conferences regarding the Russian Avant Garde movements.〔 In early 2013, Prof. Mikhail B. Piotrovsky, Director of the State Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg, agreed to Kabiri heading the (Hermitage Museum Foundation Israel ),〔 whose main objective is supporting The State Hermitage Museum in its artistic, scientific, cultural and educational activities.〔 In 2013, as part of “Tel Aviv Days in St. Petersburg”, a cultural event led by the Israeli General Consulate in St. Petersburg,〔 Kabiri supported the events on behalf of the Hermitage Museum Foundation Israel.〔 He also helped organize an international exhibition titled “White City – Bauhaus Architecture in Tel Aviv”, which portrays Tel Aviv's urban and architectural heritage at the State Hermitage Museum.〔 In 2013, he co-edited and directed the publication titled ''White City – Bauhaus Architecture in Tel Aviv.''〔 The same year he co-edited and directed the publication ''Lissitzky – Kabakov, Utopia and Reality at the Hermitage Museum.''〔〔 In 2014, as the head of the Hermitage Museum Foundation Israel, he promoted and supported Dada & Surrealism exhibition from the Israel Museum Collection that took place at the State Hermitage Museum. Earlier that year he supported the Lod Mosaics exhibition that also took place at the State Hermitage Museum. In 2015 he bought Hapoel Tel Aviv soccer club from Israel. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Amir Gross Kabiri」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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