Lady Cop
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Posts: 23,675
Joined: Jun 2008
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RE: ~ART~
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| 03-15-2012 12:27 PM |
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Lady Cop
SuperMod
    
Posts: 23,675
Joined: Jun 2008
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RE: ~ART~
i like this painting.
These days the occasional vicious dog is the only obstacle postal workers face when doing their rounds.
But almost 200 years ago mailmen were attacked by a lion as they traveled through the English countryside in an extraordinary incident.
Despite the terrified workers fleeing for their lives as the Exeter Mail Coach was ambushed by an escaped circus beast, the post still arrived at its final destination just 45 minutes late.
A lost painting of the long-forgotten attack has come to light and is due to go under the hammer at auction later this month.
In the picture the escaped lioness is seen mauling one of the horses, with its jaw clamped around the stricken animal's neck.
As the attack happened, the terrified postal workers fled to a nearby pub and barricaded themselves inside in Winterslow, near Salisbury, Wiltshire.
Despite the attack, the lion was quickly caught and the mail workers continued on to London with the post.
The lion attack occurred on the night of October 20, 1816, as the mail coach - nicknamed Quicksilver due to its speed - travelled from Exeter to the capital.
The oil painting was made a short time after the attack based on eyewitness accounts.
A copy of the 22ins by 29ins painting by artist James Pollard has now emerged and it will be auctioned in Salisbury. It was rescued from a skip 30 years ago.
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| 03-16-2012 10:26 AM |
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Lady Cop
SuperMod
    
Posts: 23,675
Joined: Jun 2008
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RE: ~ART~
i always thought this looked like a 9-year-old did it with crayons.
P.T. Barnum said it best. 
![[Image: article-2138678-12E016DA000005DC-756_634x845.jpg]](http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2012/05/03/article-2138678-12E016DA000005DC-756_634x845.jpg)
New York (CNN) -- A pastel version of "The Scream" by Edvard Munch fetched nearly $120 million from an anonymous buyer Wednesday at Sotheby's in New York, setting a new world record for a work of art sold at auction.
Experts had expected the masterpiece to break new ground at the famed New York auction house; its presale estimate of at least $80 million was the highest ever listed at Sotheby's.
It sold for $119,922,500, which includes the premium paid to Sotheby's.
Previously, the most expensive artwork ever sold there was Pablo Picasso's painting "Nude, Green Leaves, and Bust," which brought in $106.5 million two years ago. The previous record for a Munch work of art was just over $38 million.
The version of "The Scream" on the block Wednesday was one of four -- two pastels and two paintings -- executed between 1893 and 1910, Sotheby's said, and is one of the best-known images in modern art.
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| 05-02-2012 09:51 PM |
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Lady Cop
SuperMod
    
Posts: 23,675
Joined: Jun 2008
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RE: ~ART~
fabulous!
![[Image: article-2140734-12F73445000005DC-847_634x405.jpg]](http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2012/05/07/article-2140734-12F73445000005DC-847_634x405.jpg)
![[Image: article-2140734-12F7352D000005DC-760_634x752.jpg]](http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2012/05/07/article-2140734-12F7352D000005DC-760_634x752.jpg)
![[Image: article-2140734-12F733F3000005DC-819_634x350.jpg]](http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2012/05/07/article-2140734-12F733F3000005DC-819_634x350.jpg)
![[Image: article-2140734-12F72F82000005DC-475_634x551.jpg]](http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2012/05/07/article-2140734-12F72F82000005DC-475_634x551.jpg)
![[Image: article-2140734-12F72FDA000005DC-422_634x373.jpg]](http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2012/05/07/article-2140734-12F72FDA000005DC-422_634x373.jpg)
They are viewed by many now as a sign of animal cruelty, but centuries ago, owning a pair of intricately-carved elephant tusks were seen as mark of honor.
Now the biggest pair of tusks ever to come on the open market are expected to sell for £250,000, according to expert predictions.
The carved scenes on them show animals, plants, trees, birds, buildings and scenes from Chinese mythology.
They also display people playing a board game, reading scrolls, riding on mythical creatures, and playing musical instruments.
They were made during China’s Qing Dynasty between 1644 and 1912 and were for a high-ranking individual who would have had them to show off his status.
they came from an Asian elephant at a time when the ivory trade was more acceptable.
daily mail
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| 05-07-2012 10:39 AM |
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