Showing posts with label FAT CHICK. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FAT CHICK. Show all posts

You jsut spent $33.6 million for a painting of a naked fat chick ???

"Benefits Supervisor Sleeping" depicts Sue Tilley lying on a worn-out couch.




LONDON, England (CNN) -- A picture of an overweight woman lying naked on a couch, painted by British artist Lucian Freud, set a record Tuesday night for the most money
ever paid for a painting

The 1995 life-size work, "Benefits Supervisor Sleeping," fetched $33.6 million during bidding at Christie's auction house in New York. The previous record was for "Hanging Heart," a painting by Jeff Koonz that sold for $23.5 million, said Rik Pike, a spokesman for Christie's.

"Benefits Supervisor Sleeping" depicts Sue Tilley, a manager of a government-run job center in London, lying on her side on a worn-out couch with nothing to hide her folds of flesh.

Christie's calls it a "bold and imposing example of the stark power of Lucian Freud's realism," depicting "the forceful and undeniable physical presence of people and things."

Tilley, 51, said she was initially embarrassed to pose naked for the artist, but they soon grew comfortable in the studio -- so comfortable, in fact, that she confessed to falling asleep while posing.

"I didn't mind if he noticed," she said.

The painting challenges modern notions of beauty and elicits a reaction from everyone who sees it. That may have been precisely the aim of Freud, who told London's Tate Gallery in 2002 that he wanted his paintings to "astonish, disturb, seduce, convince."

Though some regard the painting as shocking -- ugly, even -- that is also the appeal for collectors, said Michael Hall, editor of Apollo Magazine in London.

"There's a reaction against art that's regarded as too pretty," he said.

Hall said he thinks a more conventionally beautiful painting would not be able to fetch such a large amount.

"It's the sort of thing that everyone immediately wants to voice an opinion about," he said of the painting. "It challenges conventional taste ... and people do find that rather exciting and interesting to talk about."

Collectors may also view this as a rare chance to buy something by a prolific artist painted at the peak of his work, he said.

Freud, 85, has been described as Britain's greatest living realist painter. He is the grandson of psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud and came to London from Germany when he was a child.

With Tilley, Freud said he was "very aware of all kinds of spectacular things to do with her size, like amazing craters and things one's never seen before," according to the 2002 interview with the Tate. He added, "I have perhaps a predilection towards people of unusual or strange proportions, which I don't want to over-indulge."

Freud painted the portrait of Tilley over nine months in 1995. Tilley said she posed for eight hours a day, two or three days a week.

She had been introduced to the artist through a mutual friend, Australian performance artist Leigh Bowery, who also posed for Freud. It was Bowery's idea for Tilley to pose for Freud, so he arranged a meeting.

Tilley knew the meeting was more of an interview for the job of Freud's muse, and she didn't find out until later -- through Bowery -- that she'd gotten the job, she said.

"Lucian just said to Leigh, 'Oh, tell Sue she can start next week,' " Tilley said.

Tilley still works full-time at the job center in London's West End and calls her newfound fame "a bit bizarre." She laughs as she describes how she now has to arrange her schedule to accommodate media interviews.

She said she's excited to find out how much the painting will sell for, but knowing that it could set a record is "a bit scary."

"It's hard to put your head around it, really," she said. "But it's all good."

MARKETING 101- SELL SOMETHING PEOPLE WANT !






MADRID, Spain — Seven middle-aged Spanish moms who posed for a tongue-in-cheek erotic calendar — a fundraiser for their children's tiny, rural school — are now saddled with debt and 5,000 unwanted copies.

One of the photos shows the mothers with Christmas tinsel as their only garb — no private parts on view. Other goofy poses include a shotgun-toting mom wearing only a fox pelt kneeling on a table, and another with a mother covering her body with a red umbrella on a picnic table.

The photos came out as calendars in November and at first proved to be a big hit. But the plan backfired.

The women acknowledge being rank amateurs in publishing and advertising, and because of a miscue with a distributor they missed out on the Christmas shopping rush. Now, sales of the euro5 (US$8) calendar have dried up and they owe a printer nearly euro10,000 (US$16,000).

"The sad part for us is figuring out what to do with them because it is not something you can recycle," said Rosa Garin, 36, one of the models in Serradilla del Arroyo, a village of 400 people in northern Salamanca province.

The hamlet is a snapshot of rural Spain: quaint but graying, with retirees accounting for 75 percent of the population. The arrival of a new family with small kids is greeted like manna from heaven. Funding for services is scant.

Its elementary school has one classroom and one teacher who handles its seven pupils, spanning four grades, and ranging in age from 7 to 11. But it is so cramped, the village matrons came up with the idea of building a recreation center for their kids.

Their goal was to offset what they call government neglect of rural communities.

"Nobody remembers the villages. Everybody comes and says, 'Wow, this is so pretty, what lovely countryside, you live so well here,' but then they don't help you at all. They give you absolutely nothing," Itziar Zamarreno, a 40-year-old town councilor who posed for the calendar, said in an interview Tuesday.

Among other pictures, she appears as Miss October, covered only with fox fur and holding a borrowed shotgun. This reflects a desire to depict typical scenes in an area where hunting is popular.

"I do not like to hunt. I do not like to kill things. But we had to do something representative," she said.

The plight of the mothers of Serradilla del Arroyo resurfaced recently because the distributor filed a complaint alleging they were behind on payments and local media picked up the story.

ALI VINCENT IS THE "BIGGEST LOSER" ! ! !






Alison “Ali” Vincent, winner of The Biggest Loser (Season 5) was once an outgoing and beautiful girl trapped inside her own body. This former champion synchronized swimmer found herself smothering beneath the weight that had piled on as an adult. Working as a hairdresser in high-end salons was a constant reminder of the dissatisfaction she experienced with her weight.

As a contestant on NBC’s hit reality show The Biggest Loser, Ali embodied the idea of “Believe it, Be it,” her personal mantra throughout the show. As a result of her hard work and unwavering commitment to herself and the process she has set the record for most weight lost during the filming of the show by a woman contestant - 99 pounds.

During the six weeks between the contestants time on The Biggest Loser campus and last nights finale, Ali lost another 13 pounds - putting her final weight loss at 112 pounds, which was enough to give her the win. Her percentage of weight loss was an astounding 47.86% - which topped that of all other contestants. She took home the grand prize of $250,000 for her efforts.

Ali, 32, feels strongly about sharing what she has learned through her experience with TBL and has plans to create a non-profit foundation to support young girls and women in getting appropriate nutrition and exercise information as well as learning how to feel beautiful in their own skin.

Ali, from Mesa, Arizona, was the first ever female winner of the Biggest Loser

SUPER SIZED (235LB) BALLERINAS ???



The first Scottish performance in the latest tour of a group of super-sized ballerinas has been held in Langholm.

The Russian Big Ballet company has one main entrance qualification - all its members must be over 17 stone (108kg).

The Dumfries and Galloway show was part of the second UK tour to be held by the alternative ballet group.

One section of the performance is a parody of popular classical ballets while the second part is performed to more contemporary music.

The current 16 female dancers weigh in at an average of 20 stone (127kg).

Prima ballerina Ekatarina Yurkova said one of the aims of the show was to prove that people with a fuller figure could dance well.


You definitely have to have a sense of humour to be in the Big Ballet but we still take our work very seriously
Tatyana Gladkaya

"We eat normal amounts of food and the same kind of food as everybody else - our size is in our genes," she said.

"We had the opportunity and, under one of the world's leading choreographers, we gained the ability and confidence to take to the stage and show that we are as good at professional dance as thin people."

Fellow dancer Tatyana Gladkaya said the company, which was set up 14 years ago, kept a light-hearted approach to its work.

"You definitely have to have a sense of humour to be in the Big Ballet but we still take our work very seriously," she said.

"Having said that, it's easy to do the splits with 120 kilos of down-force."

Dancer suspended

Preparations for the tour have not gone entirely smoothly with one of the troupe being suspended - for being too light.

Tatyana Gladkikh slipped below the 17-stone mark which was attributed to the extra work being put in during training and rehearsals.

However, after a period of rest, she was reinstated to the group last week in time for the tour.

The Big Ballet was at Langholm's Buccleuch Centre on Thursday night.

It moves on to Stirling on 3 April and Kilmarnock the day after.