Tourist posing for pictures rips through priceless masterpiece painting
A clumsy tourist fell through a priceless 300-year-old painting while posing for a picture.
Security footage from the Uffizi Gallery in Florence, Italy, shows the unidentified visitor posing for a photo in front of a 1712 artwork by Anton Domenico Gabbiani.
As he tries to mimic the pose in the painting, the tourist suddenly loses balance and falls back against the canvas — tearing a hole near the bottom where the subject's foot is.
The painting, which is normally kept at Palazzo Pitti, a separate art gallery, was only temporarily in the Uffizi for an exhibition when disaster struck on Saturday, Corriere Fiorentino reported.
The bumbling tourist tripped over a step installed specifically to keep visitors at a safe distance.
The tourist was quickly apprehended and formally reported to police, management at the Uffizi told Italian media.
He faced charges of damaging cultural heritage, according to the Wanted in Rome outlet.
The painting — of Ferdinando de' Medici, the grand prince of Tuscany — has been removed for repairs, a museum spokesperson said.
A new crackdown on badly behaved tourists at the world-famous art gallery is being imposed in the wake of the stunt.
'We will set very precise limits, preventing behaviour that is not compatible with the sense of our institutions and respect for cultural heritage,' Uffizi director Simone Verde said in a statement following the incident.
'The problem of visitors who come to museums to make memes or take selfies for social media is rampant,' he added.
Saturday's incident is the latest in a recent string of examples of tourists damaging priceless artworks in Italy, causing many in the country to accuse visitors of disrespecting their heritage.
Earlier this month, an idiot tourist was filmed damaging a precious work of art after he sat on it to take a picture.
The tourist had sat on the delicate chair, adorned with thousands of Swarovski crystals, causing it to crumble beneath his weight.
Both the man and his female companion fled, leaving the 'van Gogh' chair art piece by artist Nicola Bolla warped and mangled.
'They ignored every rule of respect for art and cultural heritage,' management at Verona's Palazzo Maffei said on social media, noting that the visitors waited for security to leave the room before the ill-fated photo op.
The pair were branded 'superficial' and 'disrespectful' by the museum.
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News.com.au
3 days ago
- News.com.au
Tourist posing for pictures rips through priceless masterpiece painting
A clumsy tourist fell through a priceless 300-year-old painting while posing for a picture. Security footage from the Uffizi Gallery in Florence, Italy, shows the unidentified visitor posing for a photo in front of a 1712 artwork by Anton Domenico Gabbiani. As he tries to mimic the pose in the painting, the tourist suddenly loses balance and falls back against the canvas — tearing a hole near the bottom where the subject's foot is. The painting, which is normally kept at Palazzo Pitti, a separate art gallery, was only temporarily in the Uffizi for an exhibition when disaster struck on Saturday, Corriere Fiorentino reported. The bumbling tourist tripped over a step installed specifically to keep visitors at a safe distance. The tourist was quickly apprehended and formally reported to police, management at the Uffizi told Italian media. He faced charges of damaging cultural heritage, according to the Wanted in Rome outlet. The painting — of Ferdinando de' Medici, the grand prince of Tuscany — has been removed for repairs, a museum spokesperson said. A new crackdown on badly behaved tourists at the world-famous art gallery is being imposed in the wake of the stunt. 'We will set very precise limits, preventing behaviour that is not compatible with the sense of our institutions and respect for cultural heritage,' Uffizi director Simone Verde said in a statement following the incident. 'The problem of visitors who come to museums to make memes or take selfies for social media is rampant,' he added. Saturday's incident is the latest in a recent string of examples of tourists damaging priceless artworks in Italy, causing many in the country to accuse visitors of disrespecting their heritage. Earlier this month, an idiot tourist was filmed damaging a precious work of art after he sat on it to take a picture. The tourist had sat on the delicate chair, adorned with thousands of Swarovski crystals, causing it to crumble beneath his weight. Both the man and his female companion fled, leaving the 'van Gogh' chair art piece by artist Nicola Bolla warped and mangled. 'They ignored every rule of respect for art and cultural heritage,' management at Verona's Palazzo Maffei said on social media, noting that the visitors waited for security to leave the room before the ill-fated photo op. The pair were branded 'superficial' and 'disrespectful' by the museum.

News.com.au
6 days ago
- News.com.au
Moment tragic billionaire's yacht wreck is raised from depths after businessman Mike Lynch, daughter & 5 others died on board
This is the tragic moment the Bayesian superyacht wreckage is lifted from the depths of the sea – after seven people died when it sank off the coast of Sicily last summer. Tech tycoon Mike Lynch, 59, and his daughter Hannah, 18, were among those on board the doomed vessel when it plummeted to the bottom of the Mediterranean. The vessel sunk in just 16 minutes after being hit by a violent downburst. Haunting images showed the Bayesian resurface for the first time in 10 months after it sank in August 2024. A gruelling rescue operation near the fishing village of Porticello, Italy, to recover the $A29 million yacht has been going on since May. Bystanders watched in awe as the multimillion-pound ship rose to the top of the water as it was dragged up by one of Europe's biggest cranes. A spokesperson for the rescue operation firm said the yacht had been raised slowly from its position 165ft below the surface. The TMC Maritime official said they had been at work for the last three days to allow the steel lifting straps, slings and harnesses to be secured properly under the keel. The top of the passenger area of the Bayesian was visible on Friday, but not the entirety of the vessel. The huge $A41million recovery undertaking has been plagued by delays and even more tragedy – after a diver working on the operation died last month. Robcornelis Maria Huijben Uiben, 39, died when working 160ft below the ocean alongside other workers – just days after recovery operations began. This has prompted some locals to believe that the sunken ship is 'cursed'. A source with TMC Marine told MailOnline: 'It was scheduled for Saturday but with the good weather and the accelerated progress things moved quickly on Friday and she was brought to the surface earlier than planned. 'She will remain half submerged until Saturday when the final lift will take place and she will then be sailed to a specially built cradle on the dockside.' Workmen were seen on the vessel's deck fixing guide lines as crews geared up for the next phase of the tricky recovery mission. When the wreck finally resurfaced, the Bayesian was missing its towering 236ft mast, which had been sliced off and left on the seabed to be hauled up later. Salvage teams said the mast had to be cut away so the yacht's hull could be tilted upright and brought to the surface. It comes after a bombshell report revealed the astonishing 'vulnerability' of Mike Lynch's 'unsinkable' Bayesian superyacht which led to its tragic demise. After examining the sinking of the 180ft Bayesian off Sicily last year, investigators now say the ship was knocked over by 'extreme wind' and could not recover. And they confirmed the vessel's critical weakness was that the ship was vulnerable to wind. 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Billionaire Dr Lynch was celebrating being cleared of a massive fraud over the sale of Autonomy to computer giant Hewlett-Packard in 2011 when the Bayesian went down. The other victims were banker Jonathan Bloomer, 70, and his wife Judy Bloomer, 71, as well as US lawyer Chris Morvillo and his wife Neda Morvillo, and Canadian-Antiguan chef Recaldo Thomas. A further 15 people were rescued. Inside the Bayesian's final 16 minutes Data recovered from the Bayesian's Automatic Identification System (AIS) breaks down exactly how it sank in a painful minute-by-minute timeline. At 3.50am on Monday August 19 the Bayesian began to shake 'dangerously' during a fierce storm, Italian outlet Corriere reported. Just minutes later at 3.59am the boat's anchor gave way, with a source saying the data showed there was 'no anchor left to hold'. After the ferocious weather ripped away the boat's mooring it was dragged some 358 metres through the water. By 4am it had began to take on water and was plunged into a blackout, indicating that the waves had reached its generator or even engine room. At 4.05am the Bayesian fully disappeared underneath the waves. An emergency GPS signal was finally emitted at 4.06am to the coastguard station in Bari, a city nearby, alerting them that the vessel had sunk. Early reports suggested the disaster struck around 5am local time off the coast of Porticello Harbour in Palermo, Sicily. The new data pulled from the boat's AIS appears to suggest it happened an hour earlier at around 4am. Some 15 of the 22 on-board were rescued, 11 of them scrambling onto an inflatable life raft that sprung up on the deck. A smaller nearby boat – named Sir Robert Baden Powell – then helped take those people to shore.

ABC News
7 days ago
- ABC News
Inside the 'delicate' operation to hoist Mike Lynch's superyacht back up to the surface
The sunken wreck of a superyacht has been raised from Sicilian waters as authorities investigate an accident that killed seven people, including UK tech magnate Mike Lynch. The British-flagged luxury yacht has been underwater since it sunk off the coast of Sicily in August. But over the weekend, it was raised from the depths. The white top and blue hull of the 56-metre-long Bayesian, covered with algae and mud, was visibly clear of the sea in a holding area of a yellow floating crane barge off the Sicilian port of Porticello. Crane ships were tasked with bringing the yacht back up to the surface. But given the yacht weighed nearly 430 tonnes and was about 50 metres below the water, it was always going to take time to resurface the vessel. It was slowly raised from the seabed over three days. Before raising the yacht, the recovery crew cut off its 72m mast on Tuesday. It had to be detached to allow the hull to be brought to a nearly upright position that would allow the craft to be raised. TMC Maritime, the company conducting the recovery, said this move sped up the operation by about a week. The recovery crew used a remote-controlled cutting tool to shear off the mast, which was left on the seabed for future removal. Steel lifting straps were secured under the keel. When conditions were right, a steel wire lifting system began raising the vessel out of the water. As the superyacht was raised, seawater was pumped out of the hull. TMC described the operation as a "delicate lifting procedure". In photos of the operation, Bayesian's upper decks appeared badly damaged while the blue hull was encrusted with mud. Recovery crews finalised the complex operation to lift it out of the water on Sunday. Keeping the vessel completely out of the water, the barge moved towards the Sicilian port of Termini Imerese — about 20 kilometres away from Porticello by land. The barge docked in Termini Imerese in the early afternoon. From there, it's expected to be transported and settled in a specially built steel cradle on Monday, local time. It'll be made available for investigators for further examinations to help determine the cause of the sinking. Marine salvage experts began the operation to recover the superyacht in early May. However, the operation was temporarily halted after a diver's death a few days later. Italian news agencies reported the diver was a 39-year-old Dutch national who worked for the Dutch specialist salvage company Hebo Maritiemservice. In early June, salvage teams recovered 17 pieces of suspected Bayesian debris from the sea floor identified using a remote-controlled submersible. They were taken to shore in Termini Imerese as part of the investigation. The yacht sank off Porticello, near Palermo, during a violent storm on August 19. Lynch died along five of his guests and one crew member. Fifteen people survived, including the captain and the remaining crew members. Among the dead were Mr Lynch's 18-year-old daughter Hannah, Mr Lynch's lawyer Chris Morvillo and his wife Neda, banker Jonathan Bloomer and his wife Judy, and onboard chef Recaldo Thomas. Mr Thomas's body was found near the wreck hours after the disaster. The bodies of the remaining dead were recovered by divers in the days following the sinking. Mr Lynch had been treating friends to a cruise to celebrate his acquittal on fraud charges two months earlier in the US. He founded a search engine called Autonomy in 1996, which he ending up selling to Hewlett-Packard for $US11 billion in 2011. However, the deal quickly turned sour after he was accused of forging the software's financial records to make the sale. The British tycoon eventually walked free of the criminal charges in June 2024. Italian authorities are conducting a full criminal investigation. British investigators said in an interim report issued last month that the yacht was knocked over by "extreme wind" and couldn't recover. The report said the crew of the Bayesian had chosen the site where it sank as shelter from forecast thunderstorms. Wind speeds exceeded 70 knots at the time of the sinking and "violently" knocked the vessel over to a 90-degree angle in under 15 seconds. ABC with Wires