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Sunday, May 31, 2009

Change = 180

"Change". There are many definition for this word. A word that makes the world crave for it. A word that leads to something. A word that makes a black man to be the first president of the most powerful country today. "Change". On more personal note, everybody need this word, especially if encountering in some destructive consequence. Yes everybody needs change.

I was inspired to write an article about this because somebody from deviantArt.com influenced me too. At first I was doubtful enough to challenge myself in creating/making my own personal views on something, especially on certain topics.

Yes, then I saw light. As I read here article/discussion( or whatever you wanted t
o call it) I was forced to write on my own. Her site can be seen here http://dreamsofchange.wordpress.com. I smiled when I read about her discussion on change into 180. A number, I was thinking of 360, and then I realized that in the latter you are just making a turn around, nothing's new. I had to admit, I am not that good in math, yet I know some things about this. 180 means turning back, change, a complete one.

Now, after
that realization, I had to change my Point of view, I have to write, I have to. Writing is my passion, and I know I am not that good in sentence construction. Maybe because of lack of educational learning, yet, as I see it, I know how to speak English and writing is one part of speaking. I do have wrong grammars, may plenty in this article, and who cares. The most important thing is you have written something that someone could understand your views. You have the right to express, and that is how should it goes. See, again, wrong grammar. Who cares? Change...a nice word. Change, 180, turn around. Change.


David Mikael Taclino
Inyu Web Development and Design
Creative Writer

Pictures for bid...Highest ever.

Aside of course from having your passion on photography and the bla bla principle of I love to catch precious moments from my camera, one reason why many people engage in photography is the monetary value of every picture you are taken, here are some of the highest bidded picture in the history of mankind;


1. Andreas Gursky’s “99 Cent II Diptych”

99cent.jpg
Photo Courtesy Sotheby’s

The first photograph to sell for more than $3 million, Andreas Gurky’s 99 cent II, Diptych reached $3,340,456 at a Sotheby’s auction in London, February 2007. This was the third time the photograph had sold for more than $2 million. Another print of the same image was sold for $2.25 million in May, 2006, and yet another print had reached $2.48 million just six months later.

Interestingly, the record-breaking photograph was sold not at a photography auction, but at a sale of contemporary art. That might suggest that how an artwork is sold plays an important role in defining how much it can sell for.

2. Edward Steichen’s “The Pond-Moonlight”

thepond.jpg
Courtesy of Sotheby’s


Just missing the $3 million mark, and for a while the world’s highest-selling photograph, Edward Steichen’s “The Pond - Moonlight” was sold for $2,928,000 at Sotheby’s in New York in February, 2006.

The picture shows moonlight between trees and reflecting on a pond, and appears to be in color. However, color photography did not begin until 1907, three years after the photograph was taken.

Steichen used layers of light-sensitive gum to create an impression of color. Only three prints exist, with the other two in museum collections.

One way to create an expensive photo then could be to use a unique process, keep it rare… and wait a hundred years.

3. Richard Prince’s “Anonymous (Cowboy)”

cowboy.jpg
Courtesy of Christie’s

Richard Prince’s photograph of a cowboy was perhaps an odd choice as the first photograph to reach a million dollars at auction. It sold for $1,248,000 at Christie’s in New York in November 2005.

The photograph, which was taken in 1989, wasn’t original but a shot of part of a Marlboro ad. Prince had started shooting images of magazine ads while collating press clips for Time Life in the 1970s.

The only other image, other than the proof in the possession of the artist, is in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Subject matter and rarity count it seems.

4. Joseph-Philibert Girault de Prangey’s “AthĆØnes, T[emple] de J[upiter] olympien pris de l’est”

athenes.jpg
Courtesy of Christie’s

It’s a little easier to understand the appeal — and the price — of French photographer Joseph-Philibert Girault de Prangey’s image of the ruins of the Temple of Jupiter in Athens, which was sold at Christie’s in London for $922,488 in 2003.

Shot in 1842, the daguerreotype is believed to be the oldest image of the temple still existing.

It makes you wonder what the first photograph of the iPhone might be worth in 150 years…

5. Gustave Le Gray’s “The Great Wave, Sete”

thegreatwave.jpg
Sometimes a combination of the rarity an old image brings and a striking subject matter can be enough to create a high price. For Gustave Le Gray, it created a picture that sold for $838,000 at Sotheby’s in London in 1999.

Le Gray’s image marked the first time that a photographer had managed to expose landscape and sky correctly in the same image. He did this by creating one negative for the sky and one for the sea, and printing them together on the same sheet of paper. In effect, he created a collage.

It’s an easy technique for a modern photographer to emulate but try doing it without a digital camera, Photoshop… and from a glass negative.

Before you start sorting through your archive to pull out better images than these, bear in mind that the value of a photograph at auction depends on all sorts of factors that go beyond the quality of the image. These might include the state of the stock market, the fame of the artist, the number of prints, when the print was made and the restrictions imposed on the negative.

Creating a million dollar photo often requires a lot more than getting the shot right.




David Mikael Taclino
Inyu Web Development and Design
Creative Writer

Cleveland vs Orlando

Watch live video from Magic vs Cavaliers on Justin.tv

Who will win?

Cleveland


1. Lebron James - There were no secrets, no trick plays, no deception. It was the fourth quarter, a tight game and the Cleveland Cavaliers were facing elimination, facing an uncertain future. No one was going to mess around.
Give it to LeBron.
2. Cleveland Offense - In general, it seems to me, the Cleveland offense is good when it features movement. Shooters, cutting, passing, layups, dunks ... this is what this team has learned to do! At its worst, on the other hand, ten players are standing still. This patented Cleveland bog down, most of the time, is a victory in and of itself for Orlando. LeBron James, catching the ball on the move, is probably the most efficient scoring machine in the NBA. With James alone with the ball, and everyone standing still watching, that can't happen.
3. The Supporting Cast - Everybody in Cleveland line up should take a shot and make some offense around Magic. If they don't they can't match up Magic offensive power.
4.-5. Again its all Lebron James - We give LeBron the ball and get out of the way,” West said. Added Cavs reserve Daniel Gibson(notes), “we’ve got 23,” referring to James’ jersey number. Whether Cleveland can beat the Magic in a seven-game series with that strategy remains to be seen.The often one-versus-five approach has been enough to keep the Cavs in this series. If not for James’ buzzer-beating 3-pointer in Game 2, the Cavs might already be on summer vacation. James’ struggling teammates have given him little support. Even with Mo Williams(notes) and Zydrunas Ilgauskas(notes) having one of their best games of the series Thursday, it was James who rescued the Cavs from a fourth-quarter deficit.

They just spread the floor and let James go to work.

ORLANDO MAGIC

1. Dwight Howard - Dwight Howard scored 10 points in overtime and Orlando, raining down 3-pointers like a Florida thunderstorm, withstood 44 points and the last-second fling by James for a 116-114 victory over the Cleveland Cavaliers on Tuesday night to take a 3-1 lead in the Eastern Conference finals.
2. Magic's Magic - Rafer Alston knows he is perceived as the “weakest link” in the Orlando Magic’s starting lineup.He’s the smallest. He’s the oldest, and he’s replacing an All-Star in injured point guard Jameer Nelson.“I’m probably not the most consistent one out of all the bunch as far as making 3s,” Alston admits. He also knows anytime Orlando struggles, he’s usually the first one blamed. After all, the Magic had the best record in the NBA in January with Nelson at the helm. But it’s Alston who’s helped them survive time and advance in the playoffs. Alston kept the Magic’s championship hopes within reach when he was acquired from the Houston Rockets at the trade deadline. He did it again in the biggest spot yet, scoring a season-high 26 points in Game 4 of the Eastern Conference finals to give the Magic a commanding 3-1 series lead and help end any doubt that they can’t win a title without Nelson.

3. Offensive Fire Power - Yes, Orlando's comeback from that 22-point, first-quarter deficit was every bit as impressive as the comebacks the Magic engineered in Games 1 and 2 (they actually went ahead by eight in the third quarter, marking a 30-point swing). But they had the finishing kick of a mule, not a thoroughbred, and they had run their biggest race of the season at half-speed with blinders on. "I think we've proven to the nation that we have mental toughness and will fight back, but we don't need to do that by falling behind by 20 each night," Van Gundy said. So they move on to Game 6 on Saturday, back at their own gym, a place where there hasn't been an NBA Finals game since Shaquille O'Neal was 40 pounds lighter and sporting a flattop haircut.

David Mikael Taclino
Inyu Web Development and Design
Creative Writer

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