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$3.89 Million For a Photograph

19 May

Cindy Sherman had a very good day at Christie’s auction house. Her photograph (seen above), entitled “Untitled #96,” was sold for $3.89 million. That’s a record for a photograph.

The buyer was New York dealer Philippe Segalot, and the underbidder was Per Skarstedt, also a New York dealer. No word on what they will do with their newly acquired work of art.

Sherman is no stranger to success in the auction world. Another of her photographs, Untitled #153, was sold for $2.7 million recently. It features the artist as a mud-caked corpse.

Do you think the picture is worth how much it sold for?

Flickr’s Most Viewed Picture

7 May

Despite the incredible popularity of the White House’s Situation Room picture, where President Biden, Vice President Biden, Secretary Clinton and others watch the operation against Bin Laden live, that photo has not dethroned Flickr’s most popular shot. Yet. Here is the incredibly banal picture that has been seen more than any other shot on Flickr.

Funniest Royal Wedding Picture Stars Grace Van Cutsem

29 Apr

Take a look at the happy couple’s first kiss and then look at the bottom left corner. Someone wasn’t happy. Update: her name is Grace Van Cutsem, and she is the great-great-great-granddaughter of William Waldorf Astor.

(via)

Videos and Pictures of Alabama Tornadoes

28 Apr

At least 250 people have died in 6 southern states as a string of vicious tornadoes leveled property and left a swath of destruction in their path. Alabama was the hardest hit of the states with at least 162 confirmed fatalities. Governor Robert Bentley said, “We had a major catastrophic event.”  Tornadoes also caused fatalities in Mississippi, Tennessee, Georgia, Virginia and Kentucky. Each of the states affected has declared a state of emergency.

The tornadoes moved in rapidly and devastated urban areas like Tuscaloosa, Alabama. Residents had little time to flee or prepare for the storms. The National Weather Service said it received reports of 137 tornadoes from the storm. An estimated 1 million people are without power and several hundred people were injured in the storm. A nuclear power plant was shut down in the aftermath of the storm.

Residents produced some absolutely incredible and terrifying videos of the disaster. In this clip, an obviously terrified videographer records as the tornado tears up trees in a nearby parking lot.

Entire neighborhoods were destroyed by the tornadoes.

Here’s video from storm chasers of four different tornadoes that touched down during the storms.

You can see how terrified the newscasters are as they report the storm live. The weatherman is clearly in shock and trying to keep it together.

This photo just captures the sheer size of one of the storms.

In this footage (posted by the AP), you get a real sense of just how wide these storms were.

Look at the sheer size of the storm as it approaches. Also, note that it is right downtown, in a highly populated area.

This video was shot from inside a car during the storms. You can see just how large the storm is and watch as it jumps across the highway.

I have no idea why anyone would be outside when they can see this so close to them.

This photo is perhaps most shocking of them all. The tornado is just tearing about an urban area.

Will update as new images/ videos become available.

Last Photos by Chris Hondros

21 Apr

Pulitzer Prize-nominated photojournalist and general good guy Chris Hondros was killed yesterday while taking photos of heavy street fighting in the Libyan town of Misrata. Lots of touching remembrances have emerged since his death was announced yesterday. His work appeared on the front page of the Washington Post on the day of his death. Hondros and renowned journalist Tim Hetherington were struck by a rocket propelled grenade and died shortly afterwards of their wounds. Two other photographers with them survived, though one was seriously injured.

Hondros submitted some photos shortly before his death. Here are a couple of them. For more, see the BBC.