Ousting Mugabe is not exactly a catastrophic outcome tbh but it seems they just want to purge his associates and reinstate him for his last leg? Idk, I'm not a Zimbabwe expert.
Ousting Mugabe is not exactly a catastrophic outcome tbh but it seems they just want to purge his associates and reinstate him for his last leg? Idk, I'm not a Zimbabwe expert.
[04:55] Lianru: i3uster is actuallly quite cute
Yeah, but times of political unrest - especially when the military are involved - are rarely conducive to safety for the people.
Last edited by SpoonyViking; November 15th, 2017 at 01:41 PM.
Especially military coups, agreed.
[04:55] Lianru: i3uster is actuallly quite cute
____ days since last shooting
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-42002015
Linger: Complete. August, 1995. I met him. A branch off Part 3. Mikiya keeps his promise to meet Azaka, and meets again with that mysterious girl he once found in the rain.
Shinkai: Set in the Edo period. DHO-centric. As mysterious figures gather in the city, a young woman unearths the dark secrets of the Asakami family.
The Dollkeeper: A Fate side-story. The memoirs of the last tuner of the Einzberns. A record of the end of a family.
Overcount 2030: Extra x Notes. A girl with no memories is found by a nameless soldier, and wakes up to a world of war.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-42000696
Painting supposedly by da Vinci fetches a cool 400 mill
She must be pleased
That's a lot of saint quartz...
<NEW FIC!> Revolution #9: Somewhere out there, there's a universe in which your mistakes and failures never happened, and all you wished for is true. How hard would you fight to make that real?
[11:20:46 AM] GlowStiks: lucina is supes attractive
[12:40] Lace: lucina is amazing
[12:40] Neir: lucina is pretty much flawless
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-41995722
Artist creates bot on Tinder that only speaks in lines from Lady Chatterley's Lover.
Salvator Mundi was sold for $10,000 at an auction in 2005. Imagine finding that. Before that it was sold for £58, admittedly in 1958.
Here's a more in depth article about it: https://news.artnet.com/opinion/leon...isties-1137170
Last edited by Strife ❤️; November 16th, 2017 at 12:18 PM.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/42032629
Fighter pilots draw sky penis using contrail
That's about as reliable an art-examining demographic as a bunch of Twitter eggs.
<NEW FIC!> Revolution #9: Somewhere out there, there's a universe in which your mistakes and failures never happened, and all you wished for is true. How hard would you fight to make that real?
[11:20:46 AM] GlowStiks: lucina is supes attractive
[12:40] Lace: lucina is amazing
[12:40] Neir: lucina is pretty much flawless
Even in the event that it was somehow submitted to and cleared by a reputable auction house and still managed to be a fake, forgery, or misattribution, there is a surprising amount of monetary value attached to pieces of controversial authenticity and forgeries that entertain a certain celebrity status of their own.
Essentially, sometimes fakes are even more valuable to collectors than the real deal.
I understand the reasoning behind this, but historically works found later to be forgeries have, consequently, had their supposed value refunded to the buyer and then fallen into obscurity. This happened to a work by some Dutch artist that went on auction a while back, as well as (later found, incorrectly) some paintings by Johannes Vermeer suspected to be forgeries.
<NEW FIC!> Revolution #9: Somewhere out there, there's a universe in which your mistakes and failures never happened, and all you wished for is true. How hard would you fight to make that real?
[11:20:46 AM] GlowStiks: lucina is supes attractive
[12:40] Lace: lucina is amazing
[12:40] Neir: lucina is pretty much flawless
Yes, I mean, what kind of auction house would wreck their reputation by not doing that?
But what I mean is, works where the authenticity has been in question prior to bidding or works that are known forgeries with a notoriety about them or produced by a prolific forger. They can and do hold inherent bidding value for some collectors.
It’s not necessarily the case here of course, and if this were to turn out a fraud I’m sure Christie’s would issue a refund faster than Usain Bolt, but to ultra-billionaires, the intrigue can be a factor that heightens their bidding adrenaline.
Weirdly enough, I know a guy this happened to; he bought a fire-damaged painting at auction for 3k and when he had it cleaned up and investigated, they told him it was an authentic Courbet that was probably work at least a hundred times what he paid. So he put it on his wall and called it his retirement plan.