Sunday, 29 November 2015
BARUTO!!!
NARUTO THE MOVIE
THIS MOVIE ALREADY BECOME A PHENOMENAL AND LISTED IN THE BOX OFFICE.
THEY HAD GAINED 200 MILLION OF PROFIT AROUND THE WORLD.
THE SYNOPSIS OF THE MOVIE IS ABOUT NARUTO AND HIS SON'S BARUTO
NARUTO NOW HAVING A FAMILY PROBLEM BECAUSE HE NOT OFTENLY COME BACK HOME. BECAUSE AS HE BECOME A HOKAGE. HE SPENT MORE TIME AT HOKAGE OFFICE TO PROTECT THE VILLAGERS
IF YOU GUYS WANT TO KNOW MORE ABOUT THE FAMILY CONFLICT, I PERSONALLY RECOMEND THIS MOVIE TO ALL FAMILY. BESIDES OF CARTOON AND ANIME MOVIE, THIS MOVIE ALSO HAVE THEIR OWN MORAL VALUE AND TEACH US ABOUT THE PRECIOUS PRICE OF FAMILY BONDING
THE GLAMOROUS RED GIANT FOOTBALL TEAM
Once the red giant football team had become one of the most fear team in Malaysia league.
Red Giant in 2014 defeat Singapore in Sultan Selangor Cup
The former striker of Harimau Malaya once play for Selangor for about 11 years before he decided to move to Southern Tigers team
Legendary line up for 2014 which bring victory for Selangor when they defeated Singapore 3-1 in the Sultan Selangor Cup.
19:57 -
Amin Azmer Pravin & Raj
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Mega shippers - The World’s 10 biggest shipping Companies (containers)
(1) A.P. Møller-Maersk - 2.8m TEU
Danish company A.P. Møller-Maersk's container shipping division Maersk Line operates a fleet of 580 container vessels making it the world's biggest shipping company. The fleet includes 272 Maersk-owned vessels with a combined capacity of 1.7m TEU and 308 chartered vessels with a combined capacity of 1.1m TEU as of September 2014.
Møller-Maersk, founded by Arnold Peter Møller in April 1904, is headquartered in Copenhagen, Denmark, and employs 88,909 people in 135 countries. It earned revenues of $47.39bn in 2013 and $35.85bn in the first nine months of 2014.
(2) Mediterranean Shipping Company - 2.43m TEU
Mediterranean Shipping Company, based in Geneva, Switzerland, has an intake capacity of 2.43m TEU. Founded in 1970, MSC has a fleet comprising 471 container vessels. Its vessels call at over 316 ports worldwide and sail on more than 200 international trade routes.
The privately-owned shipping line operates in 150 countries and employs more than 24,000 people.
(3) CMA CGM - 1.55m TEU
CMA CGM Group, France's leading container shipping company, operates a fleet of 428 vessels with a combined capacity of 1.55m TEU. The containers sail on 170 shipping routes, serving 400 commercial ports worldwide.
CMA CGM Group was formed when Compagnie Maritime d'Affretement (CMA), founded by Jacques Saadé in 1978, acquired Compagnie Generale Maritime (CGM), a state-owned company that was privatised in 1996. The shipping line has presence in 150 countries, employs more than 18,000 people and earned revenues of $15.9bn in 2013.
(4) American President Lines (APL) - 1.1m TEU
American President Lines, headquartered in Singapore operates a fleet of 150 vessels with a combined capacity of more than 1.1m TEU. APL's containers have been spanning the world's major trade lanes for the last 165 years. The shipping conglomerate provides more than 80 weekly services across 95 countries and also facilitates inland reach through intermodal networks.
APL was incorporated in 1848 in the US as Pacific Mail Steamship Company, which was bought by Neptune Orient Lines (NOL) in 1997.
(5) Hapag-Lloyd - 1m TEU
German shipping company Hapag-Lloyd merged with Chilean firm Compañía Sud Americana de Vapores (CSAV) in December 2014, which increased the conglomerate's fleet size to 200 vessels with a combined capacity of one million TEU - the world's fifth biggest.
Approximately 100 liner services operated by Hapag-Lloyd merged with 40 services provided by CSAV across 112 countries. Hapag-Lloyd was founded in 1970 with the merger of Hamburg America Line or Hapag and North German Lloyd, both established in mid-1800.
(6) Evergreen Line - 850,000 TEU
Evergreen Line, a containerised-freight shipping company based in Taiwan, operates more than 190 ships with a combined carrying capacity of approximately 850,000TEU.
Evergreen Line is a brand name established in 2007 to include five shipping companies within the Evergreen Group, namely Evergreen Marine Corp. (Taiwan), Italia Marittima, Evergreen Marine (UK), Evergreen Marine (Hong Kong) and Evergreen Marine (Singapore). The global carrier covers 114 countries and its busiest trade route is between the Far East and North America.
(7) COSCO Container Lines (COSCON) - 786,252 TEU
COSCO Container Lines or COSCON, a container transport company owned by China Ocean Shipping (Group) Company (COSCO), operates a fleet of 173 container vessels with a total capacity of up to 786,252 TEU as of December 2013.
Founded in 1997, COSCON operates in more than 162 principal ports across 49 countries and employs 13,895 people. It is one of the world's biggest dry bulk carriers and has operations across 84 international shipping routes, 23 international feeder routes, 23 routes along coastal China and 79 routes in the Zhu Jiang delta and the Chang Jiang River. It reported revenues of $7.85m in 2013.
(8) China Shipping Container Lines - 706,000 TEU
China Shipping Container Lines (CSCL), based in Shanghai, operates 156 vessels with a total capacity of 706,000 TEU. An affiliate of China Shipping Group, CSCL was founded in 1997 and employs 7,000 people. Its fleet includes the world's biggest container shipsCSCL Globe and CSCL Pacific Ocean, which have a capacity of 19,100 TEU each.
CSCL vessels connect to 180 ports across 60 countries and regions, and sail on 80 international and domestic trade lanes. The company also offers feeder network covering South China, North China, Yangtze River Delta region a
(9) Hanjin Shipping Company - 640,348 TEU
Hanjin Shipping, South Korea's biggest container carrier service, owns a fleet of 170 containerships and bulk carriers. Its container fleet has a capacity of 640,348 TEU, including 291,370 TEU for the 41 owned container vessels and 348,978 TEU for the 63 chartered-in vessels. The vessels call at more than 90 ports in over 35 countries and have 13 container terminals in major ports.
The shipping company, founded in 1977, reported revenues of $9.02bn in 2013 and employs approximately 5,800 people globally.
(10) Mitsui O.S.K. Lines- 513,000 TEU
Mitsui O.S.K. Lines (MOL), established in 1884 in Tokyo, operates 119 containerships with combined capacity of 513,000 TEU, while the individual capacity of the vessels ranges from 700 TEU to 8,000 TEU.
Originally founded as OSK Lines, the company merged with Mitsui Steamship in 1964 to form MOL. It also operates coastal liners, LNG carriers, tankers, cruise ships and ferries, and reported $16.8bn in revenues in 2013.
Container carrier play a major role for shipping industry with all world trade being handed to them. Highest of gratitude to all seafarers on the container trade vessels. That is all for now thank you very much to spend your time for the reading.
Victor Frankestien
Victor frankestien actually is the maker of the frankestien .
He started the experiment to give life
on the dead creature by using the dead monkey.
This is because he eagerly wants gave life to his brother who dead long time ago.
Finally , he success to return of his beloved brother in this world. But finally, he realizes that his brother does not have any feeling and cannot be control .
At last, he kills back his brother and.....
Continue at the cinema by yourself>>>>>>
Saturday, 28 November 2015
18:13 -
Amin Azmer Pravin & Raj
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10 More Consistent Ghost Story Elements
As mentioned before, ghost stories can have some elements that are alike. Let’s be honest with ourselves, with so many dead spirits roaming the planet, there are bound to be uncanny consistencies. I mean, how many of us have been walking around a public place or watching television and seen our doppelgänger? So why can’t the same be said for ghosts? They are bound to see other, more well-known spirits haunting us living souls, and thought, “I can do that!” And so a clone ghost story is born. Obviously, unoriginal apparitions are the best explanation for for our fireside stories sounding so close together, right? No way us humans spread the fake lore ourselves, that would be preposterous.
10
Only Reacts to One Gender
So there was this young girl, right? She bites it, probably from getting jilted by her husband. Well, a husband, not necessarily hers. She’s pretty down in the dumps, now she hates men, and she either gets sick and dies or takes the ghosts’ favorite way out, suicide by hanging. Either way, she is dead, but it wouldn’t be a ghost story if she didn’t remain to haunt (pick one of the following: her old residence, her burial site, a favorite location of her and her lover, or the place where she died). You and your friends, naturally, go in search of the spirit. But, you are all guys, and the story says she hates men so she will only react to a girl. Better bring somebody’s girlfriend, fellas, and hope she doesn’t freak out too easily so your ghost hunt doesn’t get flushed down the toilet. Or, maybe a few states or provinces away, a similar spirit will only torment your male friends. Either way, it will be frustrating to prove this is legit.
9
Abandoned Buildings
What is creepier than an abandoned building? Who knows what could be in there? Creaky floors, holes in the walls, feral dogs, a vagrant or two or three. Anything I’m forgetting? Oh, duh, ghosts! Evil entities and sorrowful spirits flock to abandoned locations like it’s a pilgrimage to Mecca. Where else is better? You can lurk in peace, and those pesky kids with their cameras will wander around, looking over their shoulder at every tiny noise you make. They’ll blame it on the floor creaking or building settling at first, but soon you will get your credit where it’s due. Wait until their breathing is at its fastest to pop into one of their pictures, that is the best time to do it!
8
Blacked-Out or Distorted Photos
Speaking of photos, many haunted locations have the ability to distort your photos or black them out entirely. Many a camera malfunction has probably unnerved an unwitting photographer, but how do you explain when faces are blurred out or certain features get scratched out? Back in the heyday of film cameras, this could easily be explained as a bad exposure. After all, those darkrooms have a tendency to live up to their names. But at some point, it has to be a ghost or demon marking his next victim, right? I would say so. Look for this spooky element in the trailers and posters for the upcoming film Harry Potter and the Woman In Black.
7
Moving Objects
In this item, we will not be discussing poltergeist activity (visualize plates flying all over the place while the doors and cabinets slam open and shut, and confused parents and an angst teenager watch from the other room). We will be discussing the behind-closed-crypt-doors rearranging of which the dead seem so fond. A prime example is a local legend from my neck of the woods, where a young girl hung herself from a tree in the back of a small cemetery, and has to constantly pick up and move her tombstone in the front to the spot where she died, in the back. A more internationally accessible example is the Chase Vault in Barbados, where coffins are continuously moved and rearranged in the vault. If the people burying the dead got the Feng Shui right the first time, the deceased souls wouldn’t have to do it themselves. That’s like asking somebody to come in for a shift after they retired, so inconsiderate.
6
Exclusive to the Moon Phases
Well, we went to our local haunted cemetery, snapped photos, recorded unanswered questions asked to thin air, and just all-round wasted our night walking around in the cold, looking for the apparently non-existent ghosts. We went home, put our heads in our hands, and determined there must not, in fact, be ghosts. After one member of our ghost hunting team couldn’t handle the declaration as truth and ran crying from the room, we reread the legend and came to a happy conclusion. Our lack of evidence was due to the fact that we didn’t search during a full moon! If we came back in a few weeks, we were bound to get something. In the meantime, we are going to embark on a road trip to the next state over to catch that hitchhiker that only appears in your backseat during new moons.
5
Ambiguous or “Lost” Locales
What a great legend! Let me tell you about it. So there was this girl, and she jumped off of a bridge… What was that? You asked what bridge? Well… I’m not sure, EXACTLY, but, okay, I have no idea where this ghost story happened. I Googled it, and it got hits in five states and three other countries. Well, I can tell you about this other legend, we will totally have to check it out… Well, the house it happened in got moved by the original owners to a knew location. Or maybe it was the one that got demolished? Actually, let’s just play Modern Warfare 3 instead.
4
Summoning the Spirits
Like a rockstar from his dressing room or a silver screen starlet from her trailer, some spirits only reluctantly make an appearance when they are relentlessly summoned. The biggest celebrity in this summoning spirit game is our favorite, Bloody Mary. Like any good ghoul, Miss Mary has plenty of variations around the world, but she isn’t the only ghost to come when called. Introducing Bloody Mary’s understudy in case she doesn’t show, the Midnight Man. His full ritual can easily be found online, but his rider contract is a little more extensive than Mary’s. It involves candles, blood, and perfect timing. After the Midnight Man enters your place of residence, and stalks you and your friends for 3 and a half hours. Make sure your candle stays lit, and if it blows out you better work quick to surround yourself with the mythical circle of salt, or prepare to face the horrific hallucinations of your worst fears incarnate. Tell us about your favorite spirits to summon and how well it worked out for you, in the comment section!
3
Unfinished Business
Let’s not drag this one. It’s high up on the list because of how common it is, but we can smell the cliche from a mile away. “Oh, dammit!” our featured apparition presumably says, “I bit the dust too early, I never got to spin a clay pot with my lover!” Now the poor lost soul has to haunt some place, looking for somebody sensitive enough to paranormal entities to pick up your signal, interpret it, and squash the urge to run away screaming long enough to help you accomplish your task.
2
Civil War Ghosts
That would be the American Civil War specifically I have no idea how this war differs from the rest of them in creating ghosts to eternally haunt former battlefields, but it just seems to be greatest war for ghosts. How many times have you been flipping through your television channels, and you stumble upon a documentary featuring “ghosts of Gettysburg” or some such nonsense. I have barely heard tales from either World War, The American Revolution, and forget wars from other countries. They get no international love, as far as I have heard. But the American Civil War? Forget it, as far as I’m concerned, every soldier from North and South who died in combat, died of infection, or passed on from dysentery, is still in this Earthly realm, and still hates their counterparts to the north or south.
1
Perceptible to Children or Animals
Well, consider this the catch-all explanation for why you don’t get to see and hear the ghosts in your house. You aren’t a five year old, that’s all! Or a dog. Does you toddler point at the “bad man” in the corner? Does your dog start growling at the empty hallway? Cat hiss when the room temperature inexplicably drops a few degrees? Does your children wake you up at night claiming the strange lady is at the foot of her bed again? Many stories the world over, and reports of actual activity, claim that only children and animals can perceive the beings haunting our dwellings (or at least perceive them better). As paranormal studies is not yet a proven science, only straw-grasping and indecisive explanations have cropped up, all of them explaining the children’s and animals’ odd behavior. I hear these odd stories, personally, and remember two things: a lot of animals have heightened senses compared to humans (dogs have better hearing and smell, remember?), and I don’t know about you, but I had quite the active imagination as a kid. So I’ll leave this one up in the air.
Friday, 27 November 2015
02:21 -
Amin Azmer Pravin & Raj
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Napoleon Bonaparte - Shortest Military Commander in History.
Napoleon Bonaparte was a military general who became the first emperor of France. His drive for military expansion changed the world.
Synopsis
Military general and first emperor of France, Napoleon Bonaparte was born on August 15, 1769, in Ajaccio, Corsica, France. One of the most celebrated leaders in the history of the West, he revolutionized military organization and training, sponsored Napoleonic Code, reorganized education and established the long-lived Concordat with the papacy. He died on May 5, 1821, on the island of St. Helena in the South Atlantic Ocean.
Early Years
Considered one of the world's greatest military leaders, Napoleon Bonaparte was born on August 15, 1769, in Ajaccio, Corsica, France. He was the fourth, and second surviving, child of Carlo Buonaparte, a lawyer, and his wife, Letizia Ramolino.
By the time around Napoleon's birth, Corsica's occupation by the French had drawn considerable local resistance. Carlo Buonaparte had at first supported the nationalists siding with their leader, Pasquale Paoli. But after Paoli was forced to flee the island, Carlo switched his allegiance to the French. After doing so he was appointed assessor of the judicial district of Ajaccio in 1771, a plush job that eventually enabled him to enroll his two sons, Joseph and Napoleon, in France's College d'Autun.
Eventually, Napoleon ended up at the military college of Brienne, where he studied for five years, before moving on to the military academy in Paris. In 1785, while Napoleon was at the academy, his father died of stomach cancer. This propelled Napoleon to take the reins as the head of the family. Graduating early from the military academy, Napoleon, now second lieutenant of artillery, returned to Corsica in 1786.
Back home Napoleon got behind the Corsican resistance to the French occupation, siding with his father's former ally, Pasquale Paoli. But the two soon had a falling-out, and when a civil war in Corsica began in April 1793, Napoleon, now an enemy of Paoli, and his family relocated to France, where they assumed the French version of their name: Bonaparte.
Rise to Power
For Napoleon, the return to France meant a return to service with the French military. Upon rejoining his regiment at Nice in June 1793, the young leader quickly showed his support for the Jacobins, a far-left political movement and the most well-known and popular political club from the French Revolution.
It had certainly been a tumultuous few years for France and its citizens. The country was declared a republic in 1792, three years after the Revolution had begun, and the following year King Louis XVI was executed.
Ultimately, these acts led to the rise of Maximilien de Robespierre and what became, essentially, the dictatorship of the Committee of Public Safety. The years of 1793 and 1794 came to be known as the Reign of Terror, in which many as 40,000 people were killed. Eventually the Jacobins fell from power and Robespierre was executed. In 1795 the Directory took control of the country, a power it would it assume until 1799.
All of this turmoil created opportunities for ambitious military leaders like Napoleon. After falling out of favor with Robespierre, he came into the good graces of the Directory in 1795 after he saved the government from counter-revolutionary forces. For his efforts, Napoleon was soon named commander of the Army of the Interior. In addition he was a trusted advisor to the Directory on military matters.
In 1796, Napoleon took the helm of the Army of Italy, a post he'd been coveting. The army, just 30,000 strong, disgruntled and underfed, was soon turned around by the young military commander. Under his direction the rebuilt army won numerous crucial victories against the Austrians, greatly expanded the French empire and helped make Napoleon the military's brightest star.
His national profile was enhanced by his marriage to Joséphine de Beauharnais, widow of General Alexandre de Beauharnais (guillotined during the Reign of Terror) and the mother of two children. The two were married in a civil ceremony on March 9, 1796.
After squashing an internal threat by the royalists, who wished to return France to a monarchy, Napoleon was on the move again, this time to the Middle East to undermine Great Britain's empire by occupying Egypt and disrupting English trade routes to India.
But his military campaign proved disastrous. On August 1, 1798, Admiral Horatio Nelson's fleet decimated his forces in the Battle of the Nile. Napoleon's image was greatly harmed by the loss, and in a show of newfound confidence against the commander, Britain, Austria, Russia and Turkey formed a new coalition against France. In the spring of 1799, French armies were defeated in Italy, forcing France to give up much of the peninsula.
Inside France itself, unrest continued to ensue, and in June of 1799 a coup resulted in the Jacobins taking control of the Directory. In October, Napoleon returned to France. Working with one of the new directors, Emmanuel Sieyes, he hatched plans for a second coup that would place the two men, and another, Pierre-Roger Ducos, atop a new government, called the Consulate.
First Consul
Napoleon's great political skills soon led to a new constitution that created the position of first consul, which amounted to nothing less than a dictatorship. Under the new guidelines the first consul was permitted to appoint ministers, generals, civil servants, magistrates and even members of the legislative assemblies. Napoleon would of course be the one who would fulfill the first consul's duties, and in February 1800 the new constitution was easily accepted.
Under his direction Napoleon turned his reforms to other areas of the country, including its economy, legal system and education, and even the Church, as he reinstated Roman Catholicism as the state religion. He also instituted the Napoleonic Code, which forbade privileges based on birth, allowed freedom of religion and stated that government jobs must be given to the most qualified. Internationally, he negotiated a European peace.
Napoleon's reforms proved popular. In 1802 he was elected consul for life, and two years later he was proclaimed emperor of France.
More War
Napoleon's negotiated peace with Europe lasted just three years. In 1803 France again returned to war with Britain, and then with Russia and Austria. The British registered an important naval victory against Napoleon in 1805 at Trafalgar, which led Napoleon to scrap his plans to invade England. Instead he set his sights on Austria and Russia, and beat back both militaries in Austerlitz.
Other victories soon followed, allowing Napoleon to greatly expand the French empire, paving the way for loyalists to his government to be installed in Holland, Italy, Naples, Sweden, Spain and Westphalia.
Changes were also afoot in Napoleon's personal life. In 1810 he arranged for the annulment of his marriage to Joséphine, who was unable to give him a son, so that he could marry Marie-Louise, the 18-year-old daughter of the emperor of Austria. The couple had a son, Napoleon II (a.k.a. the King of Rome) on March 20, 1811.
Napoleon's military success, however, soon gave way to broader defeats, beginning in 1810, when France suffered a string of losses that tapped the country's military budget. In 1812 France was devastated when its invasion of Russia turned out to be a colossal failure in which scores of soldiers in Napoleon's Grand Army were killed or badly wounded. Out of an original fighting force of some 600,000 men, just 10,000 soldiers were still fit for battle.
News of the defeat reinvigorated Napoleon's enemies, both inside and outside of France. A failed coup was attempted while Napoleon led his charge against Russia, while the British began to advance through French territories.
With international pressure mounting and his government lacking the resources to fight back against his enemies, Napoleon surrendered to allied forces on March 30, 1814. He went into exile on the island of Elba.
Return to Power
Napoleon's exile did not last long. He watched as France stumbled forward without him. In March 1815 he escaped the island and quickly made his way to Paris, where he triumphantly returned to power. But the enthusiasm that greeted Napoleon when he resumed control of the government soon gave way to old frustrations and fears about his leadership.
Napoleon immediately led his country back into battle. He led troops into Belgium and defeated the Prussians on June 16, 1815. But then, two days later, at Waterloo, he was defeated in a raging battle against British, who were reinforced by Prussian fighters. Napoleon once again suffered a humiliating loss.
Later Years
On June 22, 1815, he abdicated his powers. In an effort to prolong his dynasty, Napoleon pushed to have his young son, Napoleon II, named emperor, but the coalition rejected the offer. Additionally, fearing a repeat of his earlier return from exile, the British government sent him to the remote island of St. Helena in the southern Atlantic.
For the most part Napoleon was free to do as he pleased at his new home. He had leisurely mornings, wrote often and read a lot. But the routine of life soon got to him, and he often shut himself indoors.
His health began to deteriorate, and by 1817 he showed the early signs of a stomach ulcer or possibly cancer. By early 1821 he was bedridden and growing weaker by the day. In April of that year, he dictated his last will: "I wish my ashes to rest on the banks of the Seine, in the midst of that French people which I have loved so much. I die before my time, killed by the English oligarchy and its hired assassins." Napoleon died on May 5, 1821.
(REF: biography.com)
Wednesday, 25 November 2015
19:58 -
Amin Azmer Pravin & Raj
No comments
The Most Expensive Drawing In The World
To evaluate the drawings, we cant only use our eyes, we will need our sense of an artists too. so, lets begins the list of the most expensive drawing in the world.
#1. $250 million. The Card Players by Paul Cézanne,2011.
The exact price of The Card Players (even the currency of sale) is not known, with estimates from $259 million to even $320 million. The Card Players is a series of oil paintings by the French Post-Impressionist artist Paul Cézanne. Painted during Cézanne’s final period in the early 1890s, there are five paintings in the series. Keep in mind though guys, the Royal Family of Qatar didn’t buy the series – they bought just that one painting for ~259 million). The series is considered by critics to be a cornerstone of Cézanne’s art during the early-to-mid 1890s period, as well as a „prelude“ to his final years, when he painted some of his most acclaimed work.The models for the paintings were local farm hands, some of whom worked on the Cézanne family estate, the Jas de Bouffan. Each scene is depicted as one of quiet, still concentration; the men look down at their cards rather than at each other, with the cards being perhaps their sole means of communication outside of work. One critic described the scenes as „human still life“, while another speculated that the men’s intense focus on their game mirrors that of the painter’s absorption in his art.
#2. $155 million. La Rêve (The Dream) by Pablo Picasso, 1932.
„La Rêve (The Dream)“ is one of Picasso’s most sensual and famous paintings, depicting her lover Marie-Therese Walter sitting on a red armchair with her eyes closed. In 2006, Steve Wynn agreed to sell the painting to Steven Cohen for $139 million, but the sale was cancelled when Mr. Wynn accidentally damaged the work.
#3. $142,4 million. Three Studies of Lucian Freud by Francis Bacon, 1969.
Not only the most expensive painting ever auctioned, but also a record for a contemporary work of art. Christie’s explained that when this work was painted, „the relationship between Freud and Bacon was at its apex“.
#4. $140,000,000. Jackson Pollock – No.5, 1948.
It is claimed by the New York Times that this painting was sold by David Geffen (of Geffen Records), to David Martinez (managing partner of Fintech Advisory). However, a press release issued on behalf of Martinez states that he didn’t actually purchase the painting. So the truth is shrouded in mystery, and it can only be rumored to have sold for a record-breaking $140 million.
#5. $137,500,000. Willem de Kooning – Woman III.
Another painting sold by Geffen in 2006, but this time bought by billionaire Steven A. Cohen. It is part of a series of 6 painted by de Kooning in the period of 1951-53, which revolved around the theme of a woman, and is allegedly the only Woman still in private hands.
#6. $135,000,000. Gustav Klimt – Portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer I.
This was sold by Maria Altmann, who – after a lengthy and complicated court battle – was deemed rightful owner of this Klimt and several others. Altmann was named as an inheritor of the painting in the will of by the widowed husband of the model herself, despite the efforts of the Austrian State, as Adele Bloch-Bauer had originally left the painting to the State Gallery in her own will. The painting was bought by Ronald Lauder for his Neue Galerie in New York, to be the centerpiece of a collection of Jewish-owned art rescued from the Nazi looting that took place in the Second World War.
#7. $119.9 million. The Scream by Edvard Munch, 1895
This iconic work was the most expensive painting ever sold at auction until it was surpassed by Bacon’s „Three Studies of Lucian Freud“. The work is the most colorful of the four versions of Edvard Munch’s masterpiece „The Scream“, and the only one still in private hands.
#8. $110 million. Flag by Jasper Johns, 1958
„Flags“ are Jasper Johns most famous works. The artist painted his first American flag in 1954–55, a work now at the MoMA.
#9. $106.5 million. Nude, Green Leaves and Bust by Pablo Picasso, 1932.
This sensual and colorful masterpiece is the most expensive work by Picasso ever sold at auction. The work, formerly in the collection of Mrs. Sidney F. Brody, had been never exhibited in public since 1961.
#10. $105.4 million. Silver Car Crash [Double Disaster] by Andy Warhol, 1932.
The most expensive work by the most famous legend of Pop Art, Andy Warhol’s monumental „Silver Car Crash“ was the star of the Contemporary Art evening sale at Sotheby’s.
The drawing above are the most expensive drawing up until 2014 record. There are possible for the most expensive one will take over this year.
Reference: www.whudat.de
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