|
Banksy's Instagram - Black Lives Matter, by searchandrescue on Jun 6, 2020 20:27:33 GMT 1, Roll up Roll up! Hear it here again! He can go fuck himself!
Roll up Roll up! Hear it here again! He can go fuck himself!
|
|
|
Banksy's Instagram - Black Lives Matter, by searchandrescue on Jun 6, 2020 20:26:24 GMT 1, he can go fuck himself
he can go fuck himself
|
|
|
Banksy's Instagram - Black Lives Matter, by searchandrescue on Jun 6, 2020 17:25:00 GMT 1, Banksy I was watching you on Rivington Street when you were stencilling. Don't come this shit now you cunt. Look around you, in you studio, in your agents, producers and the art world. You will see that black lives do not matter a jot. Don't pretend they do now.
Banksy I was watching you on Rivington Street when you were stencilling. Don't come this shit now you cunt. Look around you, in you studio, in your agents, producers and the art world. You will see that black lives do not matter a jot. Don't pretend they do now.
|
|
|
Share your favorite Black/Minority Artist , by searchandrescue on Jun 6, 2020 17:20:35 GMT 1, I hope you lot aren'ts**tting me? you're serious? You need to take a long hard look at your selves you bunch of c**t! thanks for censoring me. C U Next Tuesday
I hope you lot aren'ts**tting me? you're serious? You need to take a long hard look at your selves you bunch of c**t! thanks for censoring me. C U Next Tuesday
|
|
|
Share your favorite Black/Minority Artist , by searchandrescue on Jun 6, 2020 17:19:31 GMT 1, I hope you lot aren't shitting me? you're serious? You need to take a long hard look at your selves you bunch of c**t!
I hope you lot aren't shitting me? you're serious? You need to take a long hard look at your selves you bunch of c**t!
|
|
|
|
|
Coronavirus effect on the art market?, by searchandrescue on May 28, 2020 10:46:32 GMT 1, Carnivorous is a nasty little virus, that is not in doubt. It's a flu like many others and flush tend to target the very old and sick and sometimes others but mainly the old. Wash your hands as your mother told you. Know need for face mask and gloved unless in a confined space for long periods and that's a maybe. Fear is at a high level just walk around your local area, it's wrong in my eyes. People need to find out and ask more question of the people we put in power on behalf of us. They work for us!! er, it's a coronavirus, like the name says.
Carnivorous is a nasty little virus, that is not in doubt. It's a flu like many others and flush tend to target the very old and sick and sometimes others but mainly the old. Wash your hands as your mother told you. Know need for face mask and gloved unless in a confined space for long periods and that's a maybe. Fear is at a high level just walk around your local area, it's wrong in my eyes. People need to find out and ask more question of the people we put in power on behalf of us. They work for us!! er, it's a coronavirus, like the name says.
|
|
|
Coronavirus effect on the art market?, by searchandrescue on May 28, 2020 10:42:39 GMT 1, "If a more rigid isolation period was put in place and monitored and enforced properly with out the issue of infected care home individuals sent back to care homes from hospitals from the start of the pandemic this could of been wiped out internally by now in the uk
Instead we are now in cycles of infection rates and controlled deaths"
Yeah, pretty much. Instead we are now in cycles of local lockdowns. This should get fun!!
"If a more rigid isolation period was put in place and monitored and enforced properly with out the issue of infected care home individuals sent back to care homes from hospitals from the start of the pandemic this could of been wiped out internally by now in the uk
Instead we are now in cycles of infection rates and controlled deaths"
Yeah, pretty much. Instead we are now in cycles of local lockdowns. This should get fun!!
|
|
|
Coronavirus effect on the art market?, by searchandrescue on May 28, 2020 10:41:00 GMT 1, Tomorrow's METRO front page. Nice t-shirt on the chap with the banner. bin that t-shirt
Tomorrow's METRO front page. Nice t-shirt on the chap with the banner. bin that t-shirt
|
|
|
Yeah, god for bid the racing fraternity (landed gentry) didn't get their annual shindig!
|
|
|
Coronavirus effect on the art market?, by searchandrescue on May 14, 2020 9:36:38 GMT 1, "Next a huge swath of test results carried out by non-NHS providers have gone missing."
Sorry, just learned it may be that this has been handed to a US? "big data" firm...this gets worse!
"Next a huge swath of test results carried out by non-NHS providers have gone missing."
Sorry, just learned it may be that this has been handed to a US? "big data" firm...this gets worse!
|
|
|
Coronavirus effect on the art market?, by searchandrescue on May 13, 2020 23:47:40 GMT 1, Either tests are producing figures much higher than the government want which will cause fear in the public returning to work or the testing kits are unreliable which all available kits around the world have been shown to be 40-80% reliable so the results are unsafe , either way releasing the public from isolations without secure accurate testing kits ,having a track and trace system in place and displaying factual data to the public is asking for chaos to occur . Still no commitment to all care home testing ? The workers at these homes will be the biggest risk of infections to the general public , residents are contained but staff are free to mingle in the community with many using public transport to get to work which is shown to have non existent isolation distancing , one infected care home staff member on a shopping trip in a supermarket could infect untold members of the public ?testing needs to be a priority Figures initially didn’t include deaths in care homes. Then they did and they were appalling. Next a huge swath of test results carried out by non-NHS providers have gone missing. Just a disgrace. Furthermore I’ve heard suggestions of an insurance / indemnity issue around GP’s / coroners putting Covid on death certificates. Don’t know enough about it to fully understand or verify. One minute we are being favourably compared to other countries next we’re not. It’s all just a f**king mess! S. Korea and UAE / Qatar? Seem to be able to do an accurate test and give results in 3 hrs, why can’t we do that for care workers NHS staff? This has been handled in a shambolic fashion. Lockdown could have begun 2-3 weeks earlier. We could have been coming out of it now. We cannot simply stay in for 2-3 years till a vaccine is developed. No one expects us to, just get the basics right, tracking, testing, treatment. In the mean time social distancing, masks, PPE etc should have been resolved months ago, not being applied to public transport for example as an afterthought.
Either tests are producing figures much higher than the government want which will cause fear in the public returning to work or the testing kits are unreliable which all available kits around the world have been shown to be 40-80% reliable so the results are unsafe , either way releasing the public from isolations without secure accurate testing kits ,having a track and trace system in place and displaying factual data to the public is asking for chaos to occur . Still no commitment to all care home testing ? The workers at these homes will be the biggest risk of infections to the general public , residents are contained but staff are free to mingle in the community with many using public transport to get to work which is shown to have non existent isolation distancing , one infected care home staff member on a shopping trip in a supermarket could infect untold members of the public ?testing needs to be a priority Figures initially didn’t include deaths in care homes. Then they did and they were appalling. Next a huge swath of test results carried out by non-NHS providers have gone missing. Just a disgrace. Furthermore I’ve heard suggestions of an insurance / indemnity issue around GP’s / coroners putting Covid on death certificates. Don’t know enough about it to fully understand or verify. One minute we are being favourably compared to other countries next we’re not. It’s all just a f**king mess! S. Korea and UAE / Qatar? Seem to be able to do an accurate test and give results in 3 hrs, why can’t we do that for care workers NHS staff? This has been handled in a shambolic fashion. Lockdown could have begun 2-3 weeks earlier. We could have been coming out of it now. We cannot simply stay in for 2-3 years till a vaccine is developed. No one expects us to, just get the basics right, tracking, testing, treatment. In the mean time social distancing, masks, PPE etc should have been resolved months ago, not being applied to public transport for example as an afterthought.
|
|
|
Coronavirus effect on the art market?, by searchandrescue on May 13, 2020 17:28:17 GMT 1, this is just what they want, on the one hand the unions baying for employers blood, on the other workers refusing to go back. Business is f**ked.
this is just what they want, on the one hand the unions baying for employers blood, on the other workers refusing to go back. Business is f**ked.
|
|
|
|
|
Coronavirus effect on the art market?, by searchandrescue on May 13, 2020 17:20:27 GMT 1, A cynic would suggest that the government is creating ambiguity to make it easier for employers to force people back to work. Which is why I’m suggesting it. The message seems to be that construction workers should go back to work, on foot, to make money for people who don’t care if they live or die. that's exactly what is happening
A cynic would suggest that the government is creating ambiguity to make it easier for employers to force people back to work. Which is why I’m suggesting it. The message seems to be that construction workers should go back to work, on foot, to make money for people who don’t care if they live or die. that's exactly what is happening
|
|
|
Coronavirus effect on the art market?, by searchandrescue on May 10, 2020 14:45:19 GMT 1, After initially being a ghost town, in the past week, my road came alive again. The younger residents (under 50 and with no visible health conditions?) have had multiple tradesmen in, working on several (very occupied) houses. No social distancing of any kind. Mugs of tea and tools passed back and forth by residents and builders. They may as well French kiss. I've also witnessed days of them sneaking friends and family in so they can have a few drinks in their back gardens. The older residents? They are still unseen, hunkered down in their homes, and getting groceries dropped off in their gardens. Poor Mrs Bennett next door, won't even come out into her garden if I'm in mine. Although that could just be because she hates me. I saw her a few weeks ago, peering at me through her conservatory door. I waved. She waved back. She's friendly, I thought, and I waved again. She waved back. Then waved again, more enthusiastically. And again. And again. After a few minutes I realised she was trying to tell me to f*ck off so she could go outside and get her washing in. Whatever the future of this pandemic looks like, whatever this government announces, in just my street alone, it's like the easing of restrictions has organically happened already. They're either not frightened anymore or they figure it's worth the risk, but the younger residents are getting back to normal, while those at risk are having to continue to take extra precautions and avoid society. Without a vaccine, that might be how society will look for a while. Thanks drip, I loved it, but I did read it in my best Alan Bennett voice so perhaps lost something?
After initially being a ghost town, in the past week, my road came alive again. The younger residents (under 50 and with no visible health conditions?) have had multiple tradesmen in, working on several (very occupied) houses. No social distancing of any kind. Mugs of tea and tools passed back and forth by residents and builders. They may as well French kiss. I've also witnessed days of them sneaking friends and family in so they can have a few drinks in their back gardens. The older residents? They are still unseen, hunkered down in their homes, and getting groceries dropped off in their gardens. Poor Mrs Bennett next door, won't even come out into her garden if I'm in mine. Although that could just be because she hates me. I saw her a few weeks ago, peering at me through her conservatory door. I waved. She waved back. She's friendly, I thought, and I waved again. She waved back. Then waved again, more enthusiastically. And again. And again. After a few minutes I realised she was trying to tell me to f*ck off so she could go outside and get her washing in. Whatever the future of this pandemic looks like, whatever this government announces, in just my street alone, it's like the easing of restrictions has organically happened already. They're either not frightened anymore or they figure it's worth the risk, but the younger residents are getting back to normal, while those at risk are having to continue to take extra precautions and avoid society. Without a vaccine, that might be how society will look for a while. Thanks drip, I loved it, but I did read it in my best Alan Bennett voice so perhaps lost something?
|
|
|
Coronavirus effect on the art market?, by searchandrescue on May 10, 2020 14:42:49 GMT 1, sideshow Steve ?
|
|
|
Yana Movchan Fine Artist, by searchandrescue on Apr 2, 2020 11:31:55 GMT 1, Yanina (Yana) Movchan was born in Kiev in 1971.
Yana’s sublime mastery of the technique and structure of Renaissance painting combines with the instinctive symbolism of “magical realism” to create a personal neo-realist idiom. Her work is formal, yet playful; contemporary, yet timeless; and joyous, yet mysterious, evocative and dreamlike.
In Yana’s paintings, the intellectual and the emotional synthesize to form images that touch the viewer’s heart whilst issuing a challenge: there are deeper meanings to be unraveled, hidden clues amongst the hyper-real still lives, portraits and animal scenes; meanings which echo deep in the unconscious mind. Reviewers have compared Movchan’s work to Velasquez, Colville and Magritte.
Yana trained at the Ukrainian Art Academy. Her master’s thesis project (a triptych entitled “Life on Earth”) won the Golden Fund Prize, the Academy’s highest art award. Her work has featured in solo and group exhibitions in the Ukraine, Prague, London and Canada. She is based in Halifax, Canada, where she lives with her husband and two young sons.
Yana is a fine artist in the Old Masters tradition. Her original paintings are photographed using NASA's space photography technology and printed onto silk using a technology similar to that used by Etro.
Yana's prints and homewares are available at Neiman Marcus
www.neimanmarcus.com/en-gb/search.jsp?from=brSearch&responsive=true&request_type=search&search_type=keyword&q=yana%20movchan&l=yana%20movchan&src=suggest&dq=yana%20movchan&aq=yana%20movchan&fl=
and
www.yanacouture.com/collections/prints
and
www.yanacouture.com/collections/scarves
Kindest,
SAR
Yanina (Yana) Movchan was born in Kiev in 1971. Yana’s sublime mastery of the technique and structure of Renaissance painting combines with the instinctive symbolism of “magical realism” to create a personal neo-realist idiom. Her work is formal, yet playful; contemporary, yet timeless; and joyous, yet mysterious, evocative and dreamlike. In Yana’s paintings, the intellectual and the emotional synthesize to form images that touch the viewer’s heart whilst issuing a challenge: there are deeper meanings to be unraveled, hidden clues amongst the hyper-real still lives, portraits and animal scenes; meanings which echo deep in the unconscious mind. Reviewers have compared Movchan’s work to Velasquez, Colville and Magritte. Yana trained at the Ukrainian Art Academy. Her master’s thesis project (a triptych entitled “Life on Earth”) won the Golden Fund Prize, the Academy’s highest art award. Her work has featured in solo and group exhibitions in the Ukraine, Prague, London and Canada. She is based in Halifax, Canada, where she lives with her husband and two young sons. Yana is a fine artist in the Old Masters tradition. Her original paintings are photographed using NASA's space photography technology and printed onto silk using a technology similar to that used by Etro. Yana's prints and homewares are available at Neiman Marcus www.neimanmarcus.com/en-gb/search.jsp?from=brSearch&responsive=true&request_type=search&search_type=keyword&q=yana%20movchan&l=yana%20movchan&src=suggest&dq=yana%20movchan&aq=yana%20movchan&fl=and www.yanacouture.com/collections/printsand www.yanacouture.com/collections/scarvesKindest, SAR
|
|
|
Coronavirus effect on the art market?, by searchandrescue on Mar 31, 2020 11:57:34 GMT 1, I think privatisation of the NHS is now inevitable long term, the impact this is going to have on public finances will mean that health services over coming years will be stripped back to critical and emergency services with all other services being privatised or subject to very long waiting lists. Going forward unless there is a big change in the policial landscape cuts will always be preferred to tax hikes for business. Pumping new money into the economy without altering power relations will only exacerbate existing inequalities. The legacy of this crisis will be the concentration of economic and political power in even fewer hands. this is 2008 2.0 instead of fixing the roof we were bailing out banks, ftse 100 / Dow / Nasdaq businesses. No fixing the housing affordability problem, on both sides of the pond, no fixing gender, race, class equality, no rebalancing of off shoring production etc etc
I think privatisation of the NHS is now inevitable long term, the impact this is going to have on public finances will mean that health services over coming years will be stripped back to critical and emergency services with all other services being privatised or subject to very long waiting lists. Going forward unless there is a big change in the policial landscape cuts will always be preferred to tax hikes for business. Pumping new money into the economy without altering power relations will only exacerbate existing inequalities. The legacy of this crisis will be the concentration of economic and political power in even fewer hands. this is 2008 2.0 instead of fixing the roof we were bailing out banks, ftse 100 / Dow / Nasdaq businesses. No fixing the housing affordability problem, on both sides of the pond, no fixing gender, race, class equality, no rebalancing of off shoring production etc etc
|
|
|
Coronavirus effect on the art market?, by searchandrescue on Mar 29, 2020 14:46:59 GMT 1, I didn't post a conspiracy theory. Just some info from sources you are free to check if you want. Bats that carry the corona virus took years of searching for and they were found hundreds of miles away from the source of the outbreak. They could not find any in Wuhan region. Plus they found different genes in bats which when taken as a whole, were 97% the same as the corona virus. There is however a biological lab only three hundred yards from the market in Wuhan. I agree about conspiracy theories. There are some in the con theo game who are promoting that this epidemic is caused by chemtrails and drinking cognac protects people. Others say cocaine prevents the virus, Lots of con merchants out there. To be fair if you have the virus a lot of cocaine will make you feel better.
I didn't post a conspiracy theory. Just some info from sources you are free to check if you want. Bats that carry the corona virus took years of searching for and they were found hundreds of miles away from the source of the outbreak. They could not find any in Wuhan region. Plus they found different genes in bats which when taken as a whole, were 97% the same as the corona virus. There is however a biological lab only three hundred yards from the market in Wuhan. I agree about conspiracy theories. There are some in the con theo game who are promoting that this epidemic is caused by chemtrails and drinking cognac protects people. Others say cocaine prevents the virus, Lots of con merchants out there. To be fair if you have the virus a lot of cocaine will make you feel better.
|
|
|
Coronavirus effect on the art market?, by searchandrescue on Mar 29, 2020 14:45:15 GMT 1, aeging population?
|
|
|
Coronavirus effect on the art market?, by searchandrescue on Mar 29, 2020 14:26:08 GMT 1, WTF is the actual point of sending a letter from our Prime Minister in hiding to every household in the UK costing 5.8 million pounds and adding huge unnecessary pressure on the UK postal system? The virus can stay on paper for up to 3 days. This is a massive vanity project that needs to be stopped now. I don't do twitter but for crying out loud please can somebody start a hashtag STOPTHEVANITYPROJECTLETTERFROMTHEPM. or words to that effect. Do they really think people don't have access to TV/Radio/internet/family&friends and are already acutely aware of the contents of the letter. This is utter madness and needs to be stopped. It’s Cummings’ latest idea to achieve herd immunity. Boris will be personally sneezing in the letters of those identified as expendable before they seal them up. I'm a fan of Cummings. Him sprinting from the back door of number 10 was hilarious!
WTF is the actual point of sending a letter from our Prime Minister in hiding to every household in the UK costing 5.8 million pounds and adding huge unnecessary pressure on the UK postal system? The virus can stay on paper for up to 3 days. This is a massive vanity project that needs to be stopped now. I don't do twitter but for crying out loud please can somebody start a hashtag STOPTHEVANITYPROJECTLETTERFROMTHEPM. or words to that effect. Do they really think people don't have access to TV/Radio/internet/family&friends and are already acutely aware of the contents of the letter. This is utter madness and needs to be stopped. It’s Cummings’ latest idea to achieve herd immunity. Boris will be personally sneezing in the letters of those identified as expendable before they seal them up. I'm a fan of Cummings. Him sprinting from the back door of number 10 was hilarious!
|
|
|
|
Coronavirus effect on the art market?, by searchandrescue on Mar 25, 2020 12:24:08 GMT 1, ...he should have been self isolating at York Grove St. James, Highgrove, Clarence House, Birkhall, Dumfries House, Castle of May, Llwynywermod, Tamarisk, ...
...he should have been self isolating at York Grove St. James, Highgrove, Clarence House, Birkhall, Dumfries House, Castle of May, Llwynywermod, Tamarisk, ...
|
|
|
|
Election to be held on 12 December , by searchandrescue on Dec 13, 2019 10:39:39 GMT 1, I don’t understand how Labour got it so wrong. While the hardcore of the party (Momentum) love him, he just doesn’t chime we the vast majority of voters. If they had just stuck a centre left candidate up it would’ve likely been a very different result. Inconsistency in the Brexit message has also been hugely damaging. For democracy to function well we need a strong opposition. I’m shocked at the exit poll result, but let’s see what comes out the next few hours. ...probably because labour has been an islington cabal since the blair / brown granita pact? Basically ignore the "noises" coming from anywhere out side of the M25 / Media class and take the north / post industrial regions vote for granted. I dunno?
I don’t understand how Labour got it so wrong. While the hardcore of the party (Momentum) love him, he just doesn’t chime we the vast majority of voters. If they had just stuck a centre left candidate up it would’ve likely been a very different result. Inconsistency in the Brexit message has also been hugely damaging. For democracy to function well we need a strong opposition. I’m shocked at the exit poll result, but let’s see what comes out the next few hours. ...probably because labour has been an islington cabal since the blair / brown granita pact? Basically ignore the "noises" coming from anywhere out side of the M25 / Media class and take the north / post industrial regions vote for granted. I dunno?
|
|
|
Jean-Michel Basquiat 🇺🇸 Brooklyn, New York • Graffiti Art , by searchandrescue on Aug 22, 2019 13:19:07 GMT 1, Hi all,
Have a Basquiat Barbican Poster for Sale.
(Central London Pick Up if possible)
42cm x 60cm stored flat. VG Condition £55
PM for pic
Kindest,
Sar
Hi all, Have a Basquiat Barbican Poster for Sale. (Central London Pick Up if possible) 42cm x 60cm stored flat. VG Condition £55 PM for pic Kindest, Sar
|
|
|
Marina Abramovic 🇷🇸 Serbia • Performance Artist, by searchandrescue on Dec 20, 2018 19:26:11 GMT 1, swerve
swerve
|
|
|
Brexit
Nov 29, 2018 12:37:08 GMT 1
Brexit, by searchandrescue on Nov 29, 2018 12:37:08 GMT 1, ....the thrum of the Spitfire engine over the strains of "Pomp & Circumstance"
....the thrum of the Spitfire engine over the strains of "Pomp & Circumstance"
|
|
|
Brexit
Nov 29, 2018 12:32:09 GMT 1
Brexit, by searchandrescue on Nov 29, 2018 12:32:09 GMT 1, This is about very ordinary people of all denominations / backgrounds who have been fucked by politicians for the last 50 or so years. Being pissed on and being told it's raining. It can only last so long. I think you're probably right about those motives, sadly. However, it certainly seems like those leading the charge have extremely full bladders and will be lining up to unzip their flies once we're out. But I guess some won't care as long as it's good old British piss (the best piss in the world), and not that unelected-bureaucrat piss from Brussels. That's the spirit kernow!
This is about very ordinary people of all denominations / backgrounds who have been fucked by politicians for the last 50 or so years. Being pissed on and being told it's raining. It can only last so long. I think you're probably right about those motives, sadly. However, it certainly seems like those leading the charge have extremely full bladders and will be lining up to unzip their flies once we're out. But I guess some won't care as long as it's good old British piss (the best piss in the world), and not that unelected-bureaucrat piss from Brussels. That's the spirit kernow!
|
|
|
Brexit
Nov 29, 2018 12:31:17 GMT 1
Brexit, by searchandrescue on Nov 29, 2018 12:31:17 GMT 1, Laughing out loud
Laughing out loud
|
|