logo
#

Latest news with #DronePhotography

Aerial Photographer of the Year: the 2025 winners
Aerial Photographer of the Year: the 2025 winners

Times

time02-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Times

Aerial Photographer of the Year: the 2025 winners

The inaugural Aerial Photographer of the Year awards attracted 1,549 entries from around the globe, the photographers using drones, aircraft, helicopters and even balloons. The judging panel selected the top 101 images for publication and awarded the ultimate accolade to Joanna Steidle of the United States. Daniel Viñé Garcia, from Spain, and David Swindler, another American, took second and third place respectively in the photographer of the year category. Australia's Ignacio Palacios won photograph of the year, second and third place going to Talor Stone and Thomas Vijayan respectively. Awards for special categories spanning black and white, abstract, drone and chairman's choice were also handed out. Pal Hermansen, who won the special award in the drone category, captured a snow blizzard by a lake's edge in Norway COVER IMAGES Colin Leonhardt's photo of an alumina mine tailings dam, a waste pond for bauxite ore extraction, earned the special award in the abstract category COVER IMAGES Two seals lounging on a drifting slab of ice in the Jokulsarlon glacial lagoon, southern Iceland, helped Fabien Guittard seal the win in the chairman's choice category COVER IMAGES A lava river flows out of the Litli-Hrutur volcano, Iceland, hours after its 2023 eruption, in this panoramic shot by Mike Mezeul SWNS Ignacio Palacios's photo of the Cono de Arita in the middle of the Arizaro salt flats in Argentina earned him the photograph of the year award COVER IMAGES A polar bear in Svalbard, the Norwegian archipelago, after eating a walrus carcass, captured by Pal Hermansen, the winner of the special award in the drone category COVER IMAGES The alumina mine near Collie in Western Australia, photographed by Colin Leonhardt COVER IMAGES The Brasvellbreen glacier, part of the Austfonna Ice Cap in Svalbard, earned Thomas Vijayan third place in the photograph of the year category and reminded the public of the reality of climate change COVER IMAGES David Swindler captured a swarm of flamingos surrounding a small group of pelicans, as he won third place in the photographer of the year contest COVER IMAGES Glacial calving, the process where chunks of ice break off from a glacier, reveals an organic pattern in the waters of Northeast Greenland National Park in this photograph by Talor Stone COVER IMAGES Daniel Viñé Garcia caught the moment lava from Iceland's Fagradalsfjall volcano formed a pattern resembling a skull COVER IMAGES Joanna Steidle, the overall winner, also took a photograph of a fever of cownose rays approaching a school of menhaden off the coast of Southampton, New York COVER IMAGES David Swindler's photo of a desert playa, among the flattest of landforms, which can periodically get covered by water — leaving salt, sand and mud after it evaporates COVER IMAGES A dormant volcano in the high-altitude Puna plateau of Argentina reveals intricate erosion patterns sculpted by wind and time in a photo by Daniel Viñé Garcia COVER IMAGES Barbara Brown, the winner of the special award in the black and white category, photographed a salt lake in the Goldfields region of Western Australia COVER IMAGES Joanna Steidle's shot of a humpback whale diving back under the surface of the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Southampton COVER IMAGES

We woke up with a Banksy mural on our house… it's cost us over £400k and cursed our lives – he's an uncaring a**ehole
We woke up with a Banksy mural on our house… it's cost us over £400k and cursed our lives – he's an uncaring a**ehole

Scottish Sun

time17-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Scottish Sun

We woke up with a Banksy mural on our house… it's cost us over £400k and cursed our lives – he's an uncaring a**ehole

Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) GERT and Garry Coutts were at home in North London when they had a strange call from the tenant renting their house in Lowestoft, Suffolk. Hearing that scaffolding had been erected overnight, they assumed that the council was fixing the chimney. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 12 Gert and Garry woke up to find a Banksy mural on the side of the house they owned Credit: Alamy 12 The seagull mural was the largest work yet by the anonymous street artist Credit: Oliv3r Drone Photography/ 12 The artwork ended up leaving the couple seriously out of pocket Credit: Supplied By the following morning it had disappeared to reveal a giant seagull, some 14ft in size, painted on the end of the wall of the house. It was the largest work ever done by the famous yet anonymous street artist, Banksy. In the foreground he had placed a real skip which had strips of insulation in it that resembled chips. The piece, which appeared in August 2021, attracted worldwide attention with hundreds of people flocking to the site, some putting their young children in the skip that the gull was dive-bombing, to take photographs. With talk of the art work being worth £3million, the stunned couple wondered what to do next. But instead of making them a fortune, the street art has caused them years of anguish left them seriously out of pocket. It eventually cost them in excess of £400,000 to have it removed and put in storage and they continue to fork out £3,000 a month to keep it there in the hope of eventually finding a buyer. 'It's not a seagull, it's an albatross!' says an angry Gert. 'At first you think you are gifted by Banksy but you are actually not.' Their extraordinary story and that of another seaside home owner in Margate, Kent, are told in the BBC Sounds podcast The Banksy Story: When Banksy Comes to Town, presented by James Peak. BANKING IN Moment new Banksy artwork is hauled away by council workers in high-vis jackets 'I didn't know what to think or what to do when I first saw it,' says Gert. Amidst all the commotion, the local council decided to act and asked the couple's permission to place a huge Perspex screen over the seagull. 'But it started hanging off because the wind got under it,' says Gert. 'The council then contacted us saying it could be dangerous to the public if it fell off and that we needed to replace it. I said, 'Surely it's your problem.' "They wanted to put a preservation order on it and we would be liable for the upkeep of the artwork at a cost of £40,000 a year. So, there you go Banksy. Does he realise what the consequences are of his art work - or does he care?' Depressed and sick The co-owner of Gert and Garry's house, Rod, managed to arrangea loan to get the wall removed. In a huge undertaking, the 16-tonne structure was lifted off by crane overnight. 12 The seagull artwork quickly become a popular spot for tourists and locals to pose for photos Credit: PA 12 It cost in excess of £400,000 to remove and store the artwork Credit: Oliv3r Drone Photography/ 12 Only the internal walls of the house were left when the mural was removed Credit: Andrew Styczynski After all costs were factored in, including road closure, it was an eye-watering sum in excess of £400,000. But while experts usually value the price of a Banksy artwork in the millions, the reality of selling it on is very different as the unfortunate trio soon discovered. All the auction houses they approached turn down the offer to try to sell it leaving Gert, Garry and Rod to pay £3,000 a month to keep it stored in a climate controlled-warehouse - and ruing the day Banksy came to town. 'I'm completely depressed and sick about it,' says Garry. 'I've done everything I can, tried to do the right things, and me and my wife have just had the p**s taken out of us. I'm so angry about what has gone on because of that a**ehole Banksy. It's as simple as that.' Rod adds: 'Banksy does these things without thought of the consequences – or doesn't give a damn about the consequences." To us he's an uncaring, unthinking person who has had a massive detrimental impact Rod 'He might say, just paint over it if you don't want it but if we did that the public would say, 'How dare you destroy such a phenomenal piece of art?' "We can't win. To us he's an uncaring, unthinking person who has had a massive detrimental impact. "It would have been great if we had got together and worked out how to get the artwork to remain in the public domain and, okay, we may want a little bit of money on top of that, but he has never come forward.' Repeat offender A similar tale happened to homeowner Sam, at her property in Margate. 'I was in bed on a miserable February morning when I checked my phone and there was a message from my tenant at the house, saying, 'Sam, we need to talk,'' she recalls. 'She added a picture of the house with a Banksy on it.' The work released on February 14, 2023 was called Valentine's Day Mascara and featured a painting of a 50s-style housewife wearing an apron and yellow washing-up gloves. With a missing front tooth and a swollen eye, she appears to have pushed her abusive husband into a real-life discarded freezer in front of the painting, with his protruding legs painted on the wall behind. 12 Banksy's "Valentine's Day Mascara" made use of rubbish that had been left in the street Credit: Reuters 12 A perspex screen was eventually placed over the artwork Credit: Getty Other real items included a frying pan at her feet with splashes of red on it, indicating it to be the bloodied murder weapon, an empty beer bottle and a broken white plastic garden chair. Intriguingly, Sam works with domestic abuse charities, suggesting that the siting may not have been a coincidence. 'I am Kent born and bred and have a long association with Margate. I used to go on holiday there,' says Sam. 'There are two sides to Margate that I know – those who don't have much money and who are really struggling on benefits, and the arty side with people from London who have gone there to capitalise on the property market. 12 "For me, as a social entrepreneur, I believe there are ways to do good and make money. So, I wanted this to do as much good for as many people as we could. "I thought we could use the art work to raise money for the domestic abuse charity, Oasis, in Margate. It would be great for the charity and for the town. 'The first thing I did was to Google, 'What do you do when you wake up with a Banksy on your wall?' I thought it would definitely provide the answers, step-by-step. But it said nothing. Despite all the money and the palaver and the global attention, he [Banksy] is just a vandal Sam 'So, I thought, right, I need to contact the council and find an art gallery that can advise me. "The first one I rang didn't really seem to get it, the second one was Red Eight and the guy who answered the phone said, 'We'll be there within an hour.'' But the problem for the town was that Banksy had decided to do this work in the style of fly-tipped junk – something the council had been criticised for not getting to grips with. Embarrassed by the public attention, council workmen were sent to remove the freezer and the other 'rubbish', leaving behind a by-now meaningless woman and disembodied pair of legs on the wall. Public pressure The public ridicule prompted a quick U-turn and they replaced the freezer but the frying pan had been lost in the rubbish tip. Red Eight chief executive Julian managed to track down the person who had pinched the three-legged chair and had to pay over the odds for its return. With the piece obviously so vulnerable, Julian and Sam went into partnership to have the wall removed for over £200,000 and placed on public exhibition at the Dreamland complex in Margate – along with the freezer and upturned chair – where they are hoping to one day find a buyer. 12 The cost of removing the mural came to more than £200,000 Credit: Chris Eades 12 The artwork now sits on display in Margate's Dreamland complex Credit: PA 12 Fortunately the fridge and chair were returned Credit: The Sun - Jane Matthews 'It's cost more than the house is worth! That's the bizarre thing,' says Sam. 'Somehow this has been gifted to us as our responsibility. The people of Margate also had a huge vested interest in it and that was really big pressure. "There's no precedent and it's easy to look back with hindsight but at the time you are very quickly making decisions on things you don't really understand or know anything about. "Despite all the money and the palaver and the global attention, he [Banksy] is just a vandal.' Rod, who has shared similar grief and expense with the 'Lowestoft Seagull,' shares Sam's despair. 'There's a certain amount of hypocrisy on Bankys's part,' he says. 'He does all these street art works, gets a massive amount of publicity for it, which boosts the price of his art work, but he's saying the people on whom he has imposed the artworks can't have anything. "They've got to live with the cost and the emotional disturbance. 'It's clearly very difficult to sell 16 tonnes of brick and a skip.' We have contacted Banksy's representatives for comment.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store