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  • PEOPLE: Als Rauchen noch Salonfähig war - Promis posieren mit Zigarette
    DUK10005103_065
    PEOPLE: Als Rauchen noch Salonfähig war - Promis posieren mit Zigarette
    May 8, 1960 - Location Unknown - AVA GARDNER (1922-1990) is one of Hollywood's leading actresses, considered one of the most beautiful women of her day. PICTURED: Ava Gardner smoking a cigarette. (Credit Image: © Keystone Press Agency/Keystone USA via ZUMAPRESS.com)
    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Den Durchblick aus dem Spiegelhaus in Gstaad
    DUK10114371_011
    FEATURE - Den Durchblick aus dem Spiegelhaus in Gstaad


    American artist Doug Aitken has installed a ranch-style house clad in mirrors in the snow-covered mountains of Gstaad, Switzerland.

    The single-storey Mirage structure uses the frequency of light to reflect the sublime Alpine landscape as part of a continually changing encounter in which land and sky, subject and object, inside and outside are in constant flux.

    With every available surface clad in mirror it both absorbs and reflects the landscape around in such ways that the exterior will seemingly disappear just as the interior draws the viewer into a neverending kaleidoscope of light and reflection.

    The installation forms part of Frequencies, a site-specific set of art performances that run from 1 to 3 February 2019 in Gstaad, curated by Neville Wakefield and Olympia Scarry.

    Aitken's structure is set to remain in its mountain location for two years. Visitors can freely explore the mirrored structure, which has an open door.

    "The viewer can come back to the piece as the seasons are changing, in fall in a storm or in the summer when it's a green pasture. As our lives change the artwork is shifting with us."

    The structure is modeled on the Californian ranch houses developed in the 1920s and 1930s that incorporated the ideas of modernist architect Frank Lloyd Wright with the traditional ranch houses of the American West.

    Aitken has previously installed Mirage in the desert outside Palm Springs in 2017 and inside a former state bank in Detroit last year.

    Featuring: Doug Aitken’s ‘Mirage Gstaad’
    Where: Gstaad, Switzerland
    When: 04 Feb 2019
    Credit: Stefan Altenburger/Cover Images

    **EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDITORIAL STORY. THE USE OF THESE MATERIALS FOR ADVERTISING, MARKETING OR ANY OTHER COMMERCIAL PURPOSE IS PROHIBITED. COVER IMAGES DOES NOT CLAIM ANY OWNERSHIP OF THE MATERIALS. MATERIAL COPYRIGHT REMAINS WITH THE PHOTOGRAPHER.** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Den Durchblick aus dem Spiegelhaus in Gstaad
    DUK10114371_010
    FEATURE - Den Durchblick aus dem Spiegelhaus in Gstaad


    American artist Doug Aitken has installed a ranch-style house clad in mirrors in the snow-covered mountains of Gstaad, Switzerland.

    The single-storey Mirage structure uses the frequency of light to reflect the sublime Alpine landscape as part of a continually changing encounter in which land and sky, subject and object, inside and outside are in constant flux.

    With every available surface clad in mirror it both absorbs and reflects the landscape around in such ways that the exterior will seemingly disappear just as the interior draws the viewer into a neverending kaleidoscope of light and reflection.

    The installation forms part of Frequencies, a site-specific set of art performances that run from 1 to 3 February 2019 in Gstaad, curated by Neville Wakefield and Olympia Scarry.

    Aitken's structure is set to remain in its mountain location for two years. Visitors can freely explore the mirrored structure, which has an open door.

    "The viewer can come back to the piece as the seasons are changing, in fall in a storm or in the summer when it's a green pasture. As our lives change the artwork is shifting with us."

    The structure is modeled on the Californian ranch houses developed in the 1920s and 1930s that incorporated the ideas of modernist architect Frank Lloyd Wright with the traditional ranch houses of the American West.

    Aitken has previously installed Mirage in the desert outside Palm Springs in 2017 and inside a former state bank in Detroit last year.

    Featuring: Doug Aitken’s ‘Mirage Gstaad’
    Where: Gstaad, Switzerland
    When: 04 Feb 2019
    Credit: Stefan Altenburger/Cover Images

    **EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDITORIAL STORY. THE USE OF THESE MATERIALS FOR ADVERTISING, MARKETING OR ANY OTHER COMMERCIAL PURPOSE IS PROHIBITED. COVER IMAGES DOES NOT CLAIM ANY OWNERSHIP OF THE MATERIALS. MATERIAL COPYRIGHT REMAINS WITH THE PHOTOGRAPHER.** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Den Durchblick aus dem Spiegelhaus in Gstaad
    DUK10114371_009
    FEATURE - Den Durchblick aus dem Spiegelhaus in Gstaad


    American artist Doug Aitken has installed a ranch-style house clad in mirrors in the snow-covered mountains of Gstaad, Switzerland.

    The single-storey Mirage structure uses the frequency of light to reflect the sublime Alpine landscape as part of a continually changing encounter in which land and sky, subject and object, inside and outside are in constant flux.

    With every available surface clad in mirror it both absorbs and reflects the landscape around in such ways that the exterior will seemingly disappear just as the interior draws the viewer into a neverending kaleidoscope of light and reflection.

    The installation forms part of Frequencies, a site-specific set of art performances that run from 1 to 3 February 2019 in Gstaad, curated by Neville Wakefield and Olympia Scarry.

    Aitken's structure is set to remain in its mountain location for two years. Visitors can freely explore the mirrored structure, which has an open door.

    "The viewer can come back to the piece as the seasons are changing, in fall in a storm or in the summer when it's a green pasture. As our lives change the artwork is shifting with us."

    The structure is modeled on the Californian ranch houses developed in the 1920s and 1930s that incorporated the ideas of modernist architect Frank Lloyd Wright with the traditional ranch houses of the American West.

    Aitken has previously installed Mirage in the desert outside Palm Springs in 2017 and inside a former state bank in Detroit last year.

    Featuring: Doug Aitken’s ‘Mirage Gstaad’
    Where: Gstaad, Switzerland
    When: 04 Feb 2019
    Credit: Stefan Altenburger/Cover Images

    **EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDITORIAL STORY. THE USE OF THESE MATERIALS FOR ADVERTISING, MARKETING OR ANY OTHER COMMERCIAL PURPOSE IS PROHIBITED. COVER IMAGES DOES NOT CLAIM ANY OWNERSHIP OF THE MATERIALS. MATERIAL COPYRIGHT REMAINS WITH THE PHOTOGRAPHER.** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Den Durchblick aus dem Spiegelhaus in Gstaad
    DUK10114371_008
    FEATURE - Den Durchblick aus dem Spiegelhaus in Gstaad


    American artist Doug Aitken has installed a ranch-style house clad in mirrors in the snow-covered mountains of Gstaad, Switzerland.

    The single-storey Mirage structure uses the frequency of light to reflect the sublime Alpine landscape as part of a continually changing encounter in which land and sky, subject and object, inside and outside are in constant flux.

    With every available surface clad in mirror it both absorbs and reflects the landscape around in such ways that the exterior will seemingly disappear just as the interior draws the viewer into a neverending kaleidoscope of light and reflection.

    The installation forms part of Frequencies, a site-specific set of art performances that run from 1 to 3 February 2019 in Gstaad, curated by Neville Wakefield and Olympia Scarry.

    Aitken's structure is set to remain in its mountain location for two years. Visitors can freely explore the mirrored structure, which has an open door.

    "The viewer can come back to the piece as the seasons are changing, in fall in a storm or in the summer when it's a green pasture. As our lives change the artwork is shifting with us."

    The structure is modeled on the Californian ranch houses developed in the 1920s and 1930s that incorporated the ideas of modernist architect Frank Lloyd Wright with the traditional ranch houses of the American West.

    Aitken has previously installed Mirage in the desert outside Palm Springs in 2017 and inside a former state bank in Detroit last year.

    Featuring: Doug Aitken’s ‘Mirage Gstaad’
    Where: Gstaad, Switzerland
    When: 04 Feb 2019
    Credit: Stefan Altenburger/Cover Images

    **EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDITORIAL STORY. THE USE OF THESE MATERIALS FOR ADVERTISING, MARKETING OR ANY OTHER COMMERCIAL PURPOSE IS PROHIBITED. COVER IMAGES DOES NOT CLAIM ANY OWNERSHIP OF THE MATERIALS. MATERIAL COPYRIGHT REMAINS WITH THE PHOTOGRAPHER.** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Den Durchblick aus dem Spiegelhaus in Gstaad
    DUK10114371_007
    FEATURE - Den Durchblick aus dem Spiegelhaus in Gstaad


    American artist Doug Aitken has installed a ranch-style house clad in mirrors in the snow-covered mountains of Gstaad, Switzerland.

    The single-storey Mirage structure uses the frequency of light to reflect the sublime Alpine landscape as part of a continually changing encounter in which land and sky, subject and object, inside and outside are in constant flux.

    With every available surface clad in mirror it both absorbs and reflects the landscape around in such ways that the exterior will seemingly disappear just as the interior draws the viewer into a neverending kaleidoscope of light and reflection.

    The installation forms part of Frequencies, a site-specific set of art performances that run from 1 to 3 February 2019 in Gstaad, curated by Neville Wakefield and Olympia Scarry.

    Aitken's structure is set to remain in its mountain location for two years. Visitors can freely explore the mirrored structure, which has an open door.

    "The viewer can come back to the piece as the seasons are changing, in fall in a storm or in the summer when it's a green pasture. As our lives change the artwork is shifting with us."

    The structure is modeled on the Californian ranch houses developed in the 1920s and 1930s that incorporated the ideas of modernist architect Frank Lloyd Wright with the traditional ranch houses of the American West.

    Aitken has previously installed Mirage in the desert outside Palm Springs in 2017 and inside a former state bank in Detroit last year.

    Featuring: Doug Aitken’s ‘Mirage Gstaad’
    Where: Gstaad, Switzerland
    When: 04 Feb 2019
    Credit: Stefan Altenburger/Cover Images

    **EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDITORIAL STORY. THE USE OF THESE MATERIALS FOR ADVERTISING, MARKETING OR ANY OTHER COMMERCIAL PURPOSE IS PROHIBITED. COVER IMAGES DOES NOT CLAIM ANY OWNERSHIP OF THE MATERIALS. MATERIAL COPYRIGHT REMAINS WITH THE PHOTOGRAPHER.** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Den Durchblick aus dem Spiegelhaus in Gstaad
    DUK10114371_006
    FEATURE - Den Durchblick aus dem Spiegelhaus in Gstaad


    American artist Doug Aitken has installed a ranch-style house clad in mirrors in the snow-covered mountains of Gstaad, Switzerland.

    The single-storey Mirage structure uses the frequency of light to reflect the sublime Alpine landscape as part of a continually changing encounter in which land and sky, subject and object, inside and outside are in constant flux.

    With every available surface clad in mirror it both absorbs and reflects the landscape around in such ways that the exterior will seemingly disappear just as the interior draws the viewer into a neverending kaleidoscope of light and reflection.

    The installation forms part of Frequencies, a site-specific set of art performances that run from 1 to 3 February 2019 in Gstaad, curated by Neville Wakefield and Olympia Scarry.

    Aitken's structure is set to remain in its mountain location for two years. Visitors can freely explore the mirrored structure, which has an open door.

    "The viewer can come back to the piece as the seasons are changing, in fall in a storm or in the summer when it's a green pasture. As our lives change the artwork is shifting with us."

    The structure is modeled on the Californian ranch houses developed in the 1920s and 1930s that incorporated the ideas of modernist architect Frank Lloyd Wright with the traditional ranch houses of the American West.

    Aitken has previously installed Mirage in the desert outside Palm Springs in 2017 and inside a former state bank in Detroit last year.

    Featuring: Doug Aitken’s ‘Mirage Gstaad’
    Where: Gstaad, Switzerland
    When: 04 Feb 2019
    Credit: Elevation 1049: Frequencies/Cover Images

    **EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDITORIAL STORY. THE USE OF THESE MATERIALS FOR ADVERTISING, MARKETING OR ANY OTHER COMMERCIAL PURPOSE IS PROHIBITED. COVER IMAGES DOES NOT CLAIM ANY OWNERSHIP OF THE MATERIALS. MATERIAL COPYRIGHT REMAINS WITH THE PHOTOGRAPHER.** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Den Durchblick aus dem Spiegelhaus in Gstaad
    DUK10114371_005
    FEATURE - Den Durchblick aus dem Spiegelhaus in Gstaad


    American artist Doug Aitken has installed a ranch-style house clad in mirrors in the snow-covered mountains of Gstaad, Switzerland.

    The single-storey Mirage structure uses the frequency of light to reflect the sublime Alpine landscape as part of a continually changing encounter in which land and sky, subject and object, inside and outside are in constant flux.

    With every available surface clad in mirror it both absorbs and reflects the landscape around in such ways that the exterior will seemingly disappear just as the interior draws the viewer into a neverending kaleidoscope of light and reflection.

    The installation forms part of Frequencies, a site-specific set of art performances that run from 1 to 3 February 2019 in Gstaad, curated by Neville Wakefield and Olympia Scarry.

    Aitken's structure is set to remain in its mountain location for two years. Visitors can freely explore the mirrored structure, which has an open door.

    "The viewer can come back to the piece as the seasons are changing, in fall in a storm or in the summer when it's a green pasture. As our lives change the artwork is shifting with us."

    The structure is modeled on the Californian ranch houses developed in the 1920s and 1930s that incorporated the ideas of modernist architect Frank Lloyd Wright with the traditional ranch houses of the American West.

    Aitken has previously installed Mirage in the desert outside Palm Springs in 2017 and inside a former state bank in Detroit last year.

    Featuring: Doug Aitken’s ‘Mirage Gstaad’
    Where: Gstaad, Switzerland
    When: 04 Feb 2019
    Credit: Elevation 1049: Frequencies/Cover Images

    **EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDITORIAL STORY. THE USE OF THESE MATERIALS FOR ADVERTISING, MARKETING OR ANY OTHER COMMERCIAL PURPOSE IS PROHIBITED. COVER IMAGES DOES NOT CLAIM ANY OWNERSHIP OF THE MATERIALS. MATERIAL COPYRIGHT REMAINS WITH THE PHOTOGRAPHER.** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Den Durchblick aus dem Spiegelhaus in Gstaad
    DUK10114371_004
    FEATURE - Den Durchblick aus dem Spiegelhaus in Gstaad


    American artist Doug Aitken has installed a ranch-style house clad in mirrors in the snow-covered mountains of Gstaad, Switzerland.

    The single-storey Mirage structure uses the frequency of light to reflect the sublime Alpine landscape as part of a continually changing encounter in which land and sky, subject and object, inside and outside are in constant flux.

    With every available surface clad in mirror it both absorbs and reflects the landscape around in such ways that the exterior will seemingly disappear just as the interior draws the viewer into a neverending kaleidoscope of light and reflection.

    The installation forms part of Frequencies, a site-specific set of art performances that run from 1 to 3 February 2019 in Gstaad, curated by Neville Wakefield and Olympia Scarry.

    Aitken's structure is set to remain in its mountain location for two years. Visitors can freely explore the mirrored structure, which has an open door.

    "The viewer can come back to the piece as the seasons are changing, in fall in a storm or in the summer when it's a green pasture. As our lives change the artwork is shifting with us."

    The structure is modeled on the Californian ranch houses developed in the 1920s and 1930s that incorporated the ideas of modernist architect Frank Lloyd Wright with the traditional ranch houses of the American West.

    Aitken has previously installed Mirage in the desert outside Palm Springs in 2017 and inside a former state bank in Detroit last year.

    Featuring: Doug Aitken’s ‘Mirage Gstaad’
    Where: Gstaad, Switzerland
    When: 04 Feb 2019
    Credit: Elevation 1049: Frequencies/Cover Images

    **EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDITORIAL STORY. THE USE OF THESE MATERIALS FOR ADVERTISING, MARKETING OR ANY OTHER COMMERCIAL PURPOSE IS PROHIBITED. COVER IMAGES DOES NOT CLAIM ANY OWNERSHIP OF THE MATERIALS. MATERIAL COPYRIGHT REMAINS WITH THE PHOTOGRAPHER.** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Den Durchblick aus dem Spiegelhaus in Gstaad
    DUK10114371_003
    FEATURE - Den Durchblick aus dem Spiegelhaus in Gstaad


    American artist Doug Aitken has installed a ranch-style house clad in mirrors in the snow-covered mountains of Gstaad, Switzerland.

    The single-storey Mirage structure uses the frequency of light to reflect the sublime Alpine landscape as part of a continually changing encounter in which land and sky, subject and object, inside and outside are in constant flux.

    With every available surface clad in mirror it both absorbs and reflects the landscape around in such ways that the exterior will seemingly disappear just as the interior draws the viewer into a neverending kaleidoscope of light and reflection.

    The installation forms part of Frequencies, a site-specific set of art performances that run from 1 to 3 February 2019 in Gstaad, curated by Neville Wakefield and Olympia Scarry.

    Aitken's structure is set to remain in its mountain location for two years. Visitors can freely explore the mirrored structure, which has an open door.

    "The viewer can come back to the piece as the seasons are changing, in fall in a storm or in the summer when it's a green pasture. As our lives change the artwork is shifting with us."

    The structure is modeled on the Californian ranch houses developed in the 1920s and 1930s that incorporated the ideas of modernist architect Frank Lloyd Wright with the traditional ranch houses of the American West.

    Aitken has previously installed Mirage in the desert outside Palm Springs in 2017 and inside a former state bank in Detroit last year.

    Featuring: Doug Aitken’s ‘Mirage Gstaad’
    Where: Gstaad, Switzerland
    When: 04 Feb 2019
    Credit: Elevation 1049: Frequencies/Cover Images

    **EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDITORIAL STORY. THE USE OF THESE MATERIALS FOR ADVERTISING, MARKETING OR ANY OTHER COMMERCIAL PURPOSE IS PROHIBITED. COVER IMAGES DOES NOT CLAIM ANY OWNERSHIP OF THE MATERIALS. MATERIAL COPYRIGHT REMAINS WITH THE PHOTOGRAPHER.** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Den Durchblick aus dem Spiegelhaus in Gstaad
    DUK10114371_002
    FEATURE - Den Durchblick aus dem Spiegelhaus in Gstaad


    American artist Doug Aitken has installed a ranch-style house clad in mirrors in the snow-covered mountains of Gstaad, Switzerland.

    The single-storey Mirage structure uses the frequency of light to reflect the sublime Alpine landscape as part of a continually changing encounter in which land and sky, subject and object, inside and outside are in constant flux.

    With every available surface clad in mirror it both absorbs and reflects the landscape around in such ways that the exterior will seemingly disappear just as the interior draws the viewer into a neverending kaleidoscope of light and reflection.

    The installation forms part of Frequencies, a site-specific set of art performances that run from 1 to 3 February 2019 in Gstaad, curated by Neville Wakefield and Olympia Scarry.

    Aitken's structure is set to remain in its mountain location for two years. Visitors can freely explore the mirrored structure, which has an open door.

    "The viewer can come back to the piece as the seasons are changing, in fall in a storm or in the summer when it's a green pasture. As our lives change the artwork is shifting with us."

    The structure is modeled on the Californian ranch houses developed in the 1920s and 1930s that incorporated the ideas of modernist architect Frank Lloyd Wright with the traditional ranch houses of the American West.

    Aitken has previously installed Mirage in the desert outside Palm Springs in 2017 and inside a former state bank in Detroit last year.

    Featuring: Doug Aitken
    Where: Gstaad, Switzerland
    When: 04 Feb 2019
    Credit: Elevation 1049: Frequencies/Cover Images

    **EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDITORIAL STORY. THE USE OF THESE MATERIALS FOR ADVERTISING, MARKETING OR ANY OTHER COMMERCIAL PURPOSE IS PROHIBITED. COVER IMAGES DOES NOT CLAIM ANY OWNERSHIP OF THE MATERIALS. MATERIAL COPYRIGHT REMAINS WITH THE PHOTOGRAPHER.** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Den Durchblick aus dem Spiegelhaus in Gstaad
    DUK10114371_001
    FEATURE - Den Durchblick aus dem Spiegelhaus in Gstaad


    American artist Doug Aitken has installed a ranch-style house clad in mirrors in the snow-covered mountains of Gstaad, Switzerland.

    The single-storey Mirage structure uses the frequency of light to reflect the sublime Alpine landscape as part of a continually changing encounter in which land and sky, subject and object, inside and outside are in constant flux.

    With every available surface clad in mirror it both absorbs and reflects the landscape around in such ways that the exterior will seemingly disappear just as the interior draws the viewer into a neverending kaleidoscope of light and reflection.

    The installation forms part of Frequencies, a site-specific set of art performances that run from 1 to 3 February 2019 in Gstaad, curated by Neville Wakefield and Olympia Scarry.

    Aitken's structure is set to remain in its mountain location for two years. Visitors can freely explore the mirrored structure, which has an open door.

    "The viewer can come back to the piece as the seasons are changing, in fall in a storm or in the summer when it's a green pasture. As our lives change the artwork is shifting with us."

    The structure is modeled on the Californian ranch houses developed in the 1920s and 1930s that incorporated the ideas of modernist architect Frank Lloyd Wright with the traditional ranch houses of the American West.

    Aitken has previously installed Mirage in the desert outside Palm Springs in 2017 and inside a former state bank in Detroit last year.

    Featuring: Doug Aitken
    Where: Gstaad, Switzerland
    When: 04 Feb 2019
    Credit: Elevation 1049: Frequencies/Cover Images

    **EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDITORIAL STORY. THE USE OF THESE MATERIALS FOR ADVERTISING, MARKETING OR ANY OTHER COMMERCIAL PURPOSE IS PROHIBITED. COVER IMAGES DOES NOT CLAIM ANY OWNERSHIP OF THE MATERIALS. MATERIAL COPYRIGHT REMAINS WITH THE PHOTOGRAPHER.** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Welches dieser Bilder ist das Naturfoto des Jahres ?
    DUK10108633_027
    FEATURE - Welches dieser Bilder ist das Naturfoto des Jahres ?
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by RMetS/AccuWeather/REX/Shutterstock (9980428i)
    An optical phenomenon formed by the reflection or refraction of light by ice crystals in the atmosphere taken during the Giraglia Rolex Cup by Georgy Akimov
    Weather photographer of year competition - Nov 2018
    *Full story: https://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/uk31
    A picture of LIGHTNING striking in Blackpool has come top in the annual Weather Photographer of the Year competition.The photo entitled, Electric Blackpool, taken by Stephen Cheatley, beat more than 4,000 pictures in the contest, which show weather phenomena around the world. Other pictures show a double rainbow over the Grand Canyon, a late season dust storm in Arizona and a spectacular reflection bow in the Lofoten Islands in Norway. The competition was organised by The Royal Meteorological Society (RMetS) in association with AccuWeather.

    (c) Dukas

     

  • dukas 17525829 top
    DUKAS_17525829_TOP
    dukas 17525829 top
    PHILIP GLASS ;
    Composer and pianist ;
    Rehearsing at Angel Place, Sydney, Australia ;
    18 January 2011 ;
    Credit: Keith Saunders / ArenaPAL ;
    www.arenapal.com (FOTO:DUKAS/TOPFOTO)

    DUKAS/TOPFOTO

     

  • Dr. Conrad Murray Visits Michael Jackson's Burial Site
    DUKAS_12920753_NPG
    Dr. Conrad Murray Visits Michael Jackson's Burial Site
    ©NATIONAL PHOTO GROUP
    Doctor Conrad Murray visits the burial site of Michael Jackson at Forest Lawn Memorial in Glendale as he prepares to be charged by Los Angeles prosecutors.
    Job: 020410J4
    *** NO WEB ***
    EXCLUSIVE Feb. 3rd, 2010 Glendale, CA
    nationalphotogroup.com (FOTO: DUKAS/NATIONAL PHOTO GROUP)

    DUKAS/NATIONAL PHOTO GROUP

     

  • Struggling actress MISCHA BARTON making weird faces while getting her hair done at Byron & Tracey salon
    DUKAS_13055154_MWP
    Struggling actress MISCHA BARTON making weird faces while getting her hair done at Byron & Tracey salon
    Beverly Hills, 2010-2-16 / She can make really weird faces! Struggling actress MISCHA BARTON decided to get blonde and headed to the trendy 'Byron & Tracey' salon to get her hair done. MISCHA posed in front of the mirror while talking on her cell phone and putting on tons of make up before jumping in her vintage 1970 Cadillac convertible with her two dogs, Charlie and Ziggy. MISCHA, who was charged with a DUI in 2007, was spotted yesterday driving around Los Angeles and smoking something handmade that didn't look like a regular cigarette.. © Copyright 2010, Most Wanted Pictures, Inc. | Tarzana | CA 91356 | USA | photo@mostwantedpictures.net (FOTO:DUKAS/MOST WANTED PICS)
    DUKAS/MOST WANTED PICTURES

     

  • Dr. Conrad Murray Visits Michael Jackson's Burial Site
    DUKAS_12920695_NPG
    Dr. Conrad Murray Visits Michael Jackson's Burial Site
    ©NATIONAL PHOTO GROUP
    Doctor Conrad Murray visits the burial site of Michael Jackson at Forest Lawn Memorial in Glendale as he prepares to be charged by Los Angeles prosecutors.
    Job: 020410J4
    *** NO WEB ***
    EXCLUSIVE Feb. 3rd, 2010 Glendale, CA
    nationalphotogroup.com (FOTO: DUKAS/NATIONAL PHOTO GROUP)

    DUKAS/NATIONAL PHOTO GROUP

     

  • Olympic Village, Vancouver, Canada - 2009
    DUKAS_12445515_REX
    Olympic Village, Vancouver, Canada - 2009
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Canadian Press / Rex Features ( 1057016e )
    14 metre tall set of Olympic rings illuminated in the harbour outside the Vancouver Convention Centre
    Olympic Village, Vancouver, Canada - 2009
    People stop to look at a 14 metre tall set of Olympic rings after they were illuminated in the harbour outside the Vancouver Convention Centre in Vancouver, B.C., on Wednesday November 4, 2009. The convention centre will be the main press centre during the Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympic Games.
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Raquel Welch - 1965
    DUKAS_53235225_REX
    Raquel Welch - 1965
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Praturlon/REX Shutterstock (10774c)
    Raquel Welch in front of mirror
    Raquel Welch - 1965

    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Woman Walking Alone Up Stairs At Belgian Railway Station
    DUKAS_189178798_NUR
    Woman Walking Alone Up Stairs At Belgian Railway Station
    A woman wearing a headscarf walks alone upstairs inside the railway station in Liege, Belgium, on September 6, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • OpenAI And NVIDIA Announce Strategic Partnership
    DUKAS_189158971_NUR
    OpenAI And NVIDIA Announce Strategic Partnership
    In Creteil, France, on September 23, 2025, the OpenAI logo appears on a smartphone reflecting the Nvidia logo. The two companies unveil a strategic partnership to build next-generation artificial intelligence infrastructure. (Photo by Samuel Boivin/NurPhoto)

     

  • OpenAI And NVIDIA Announce Strategic Partnership
    DUKAS_189158970_NUR
    OpenAI And NVIDIA Announce Strategic Partnership
    In Creteil, France, on September 23, 2025, the OpenAI logo appears on a smartphone reflecting the Nvidia logo. The two companies unveil a strategic partnership to build next-generation artificial intelligence infrastructure. (Photo by Samuel Boivin/NurPhoto)

     

  • OpenAI And NVIDIA Announce Strategic Partnership
    DUKAS_189158967_NUR
    OpenAI And NVIDIA Announce Strategic Partnership
    In Creteil, France, on September 23, 2025, the OpenAI logo appears on a smartphone reflecting the Nvidia logo. The two companies unveil a strategic partnership to build next-generation artificial intelligence infrastructure. (Photo by Samuel Boivin/NurPhoto)

     

  • Young People And Reflections
    DUKAS_189149753_NUR
    Young People And Reflections
    Young people gather and look at their reflections on a mirrored surface in Rotterdam, Netherlands, on September 9, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Illustrations Of The Meta And Ray-Ban Partnership
    DUKAS_189149257_NUR
    Illustrations Of The Meta And Ray-Ban Partnership
    In this photographic illustration, the Meta logo appears on a smartphone reflecting an abstract, predominantly blue image in Creteil, France, on September 22, 2025. (Photo by Samuel Boivin/NurPhoto)

     

  • Illustrations Of The Meta And Ray-Ban Partnership
    DUKAS_189149256_NUR
    Illustrations Of The Meta And Ray-Ban Partnership
    In this photographic illustration, the Meta logo appears on a smartphone, which reflects an abstract, predominantly blue image with a hand reaching out toward the logo in Creteil, France, on September 22, 2025. (Photo by Samuel Boivin/NurPhoto)

     

  • Illustrations Of The Meta And Ray-Ban Partnership
    DUKAS_189149255_NUR
    Illustrations Of The Meta And Ray-Ban Partnership
    In this photographic illustration, the Meta logo appears on a smartphone reflecting an abstract, predominantly blue image in Creteil, France, on September 22, 2025. (Photo by Samuel Boivin/NurPhoto)

     

  • Illustrations Of The Meta And Ray-Ban Partnership
    DUKAS_189149248_NUR
    Illustrations Of The Meta And Ray-Ban Partnership
    In this photographic illustration, the Meta logo appears on a smartphone reflecting an abstract, predominantly blue image in Creteil, France, on September 22, 2025. (Photo by Samuel Boivin/NurPhoto)

     

  • Illustrations Of The Meta And Ray-Ban Partnership
    DUKAS_189149247_NUR
    Illustrations Of The Meta And Ray-Ban Partnership
    In this photographic illustration, the Meta logo appears on a smartphone reflecting an abstract, predominantly blue image in Creteil, France, on September 22, 2025. (Photo by Samuel Boivin/NurPhoto)

     

  • Illustrations Of The Meta And Ray-Ban Partnership
    DUKAS_189149246_NUR
    Illustrations Of The Meta And Ray-Ban Partnership
    In this photographic illustration, the Meta logo appears on a smartphone reflecting an abstract, predominantly blue image in Creteil, France, on September 22, 2025. (Photo by Samuel Boivin/NurPhoto)

     

  • Woman Looking At Her Reflection
    DUKAS_189149175_NUR
    Woman Looking At Her Reflection
    A woman in a red jacket with a black-and-white backpack looks at her reflection in the mirrored surface of a building in Rotterdam, Netherlands, on September 9, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Early Autumn Evening By Wooden Lake Pier
    DUKAS_189123846_NUR
    Early Autumn Evening By Wooden Lake Pier
    People relax under a red umbrella on a wooden pier during an early autumn evening at Lake Starnberg in Starnberg, Bavaria, Germany, on September 21, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Early Autumn Evening By Wooden Lake Pier
    DUKAS_189123843_NUR
    Early Autumn Evening By Wooden Lake Pier
    Three women sit on a wooden pier during an early autumn evening at Lake Starnberg in Starnberg, Bavaria, Germany, on September 21, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • People On The Lake Promenade In Early Autumn
    DUKAS_189123839_NUR
    People On The Lake Promenade In Early Autumn
    Two men stand at the lakeside promenade with views of the pier, sailing boats, and distant hills in Starnberg, Bavaria, Germany, on September 21, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • People On The Lake Promenade In Early Autumn
    DUKAS_189123835_NUR
    People On The Lake Promenade In Early Autumn
    Two women wearing black headscarves stand in front of an entrance sign marked ''Eingang'' (Entrance) with an arrow symbol by Lake Starnberg in Starnberg, Bavaria, Germany, on September 21, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Pollution And Wildlife At The Oxbow Nature Conservancy In Lawrenceburg, Indiana
    DUKAS_189100089_NUR
    Pollution And Wildlife At The Oxbow Nature Conservancy In Lawrenceburg, Indiana
    A great egret is seen in flight at sunrise with the reflection of the stacks of the Miami Fort Power Station in Lawrenceburg, Indiana, on September 20, 2025, at the Oxbow Nature Conservancy. (Photo by Jason Whitman/NurPhoto)

     

  • Pollution And Wildlife In Indiana And Ohio
    DUKAS_189062171_NUR
    Pollution And Wildlife In Indiana And Ohio
    A beaver is seen on the water's surface as the sun rises at the Oxbow Nature Conservancy in Lawrenceburg, Indiana, on September 19, 2025. (Photo by Jason Whitman/NurPhoto)

     

  • Pollution And Wildlife In Indiana And Ohio
    DUKAS_189062168_NUR
    Pollution And Wildlife In Indiana And Ohio
    A beaver is seen on the water's surface as the sun rises at the Oxbow Nature Conservancy in Lawrenceburg, Indiana, on September 19, 2025. (Photo by Jason Whitman/NurPhoto)

     

  • Pollution And Wildlife In Indiana And Ohio
    DUKAS_189062166_NUR
    Pollution And Wildlife In Indiana And Ohio
    A beaver is seen on the water's surface as the sun rises at the Oxbow Nature Conservancy in Lawrenceburg, Indiana, on September 19, 2025. (Photo by Jason Whitman/NurPhoto)

     

  • Pollution And Wildlife In Indiana And Ohio
    DUKAS_189062163_NUR
    Pollution And Wildlife In Indiana And Ohio
    A beaver is seen on the water's surface as the sun rises at the Oxbow Nature Conservancy in Lawrenceburg, Indiana, on September 19, 2025. (Photo by Jason Whitman/NurPhoto)

     

  • Pollution And Wildlife In Indiana And Ohio
    DUKAS_189062160_NUR
    Pollution And Wildlife In Indiana And Ohio
    A great egret is seen in flight along the water's surface as the sun rises at the Oxbow Nature Conservancy in Lawrenceburg, Indiana, on September 19, 2025. (Photo by Jason Whitman/NurPhoto)

     

  • Pollution And Wildlife In Indiana And Ohio
    DUKAS_189062152_NUR
    Pollution And Wildlife In Indiana And Ohio
    A beaver is seen on the water's surface as the sun rises at the Oxbow Nature Conservancy in Lawrenceburg, Indiana, on September 19, 2025. (Photo by Jason Whitman/NurPhoto)

     

  • Pollution And Wildlife In Indiana And Ohio
    DUKAS_189062146_NUR
    Pollution And Wildlife In Indiana And Ohio
    A beaver is seen on the water's surface as the sun rises at the Oxbow Nature Conservancy in Lawrenceburg, Indiana, on September 19, 2025. (Photo by Jason Whitman/NurPhoto)

     

  • Pollution And Wildlife In Indiana And Ohio
    DUKAS_189062143_NUR
    Pollution And Wildlife In Indiana And Ohio
    A beaver is seen on the water's surface as the sun rises at the Oxbow Nature Conservancy in Lawrenceburg, Indiana, on September 19, 2025. (Photo by Jason Whitman/NurPhoto)

     

  • Pollution And Wildlife In Indiana And Ohio
    DUKAS_189062141_NUR
    Pollution And Wildlife In Indiana And Ohio
    A beaver is seen on the water's surface as the sun rises at the Oxbow Nature Conservancy in Lawrenceburg, Indiana, on September 19, 2025. (Photo by Jason Whitman/NurPhoto)

     

  • Pollution And Wildlife In Indiana And Ohio
    DUKAS_189062138_NUR
    Pollution And Wildlife In Indiana And Ohio
    A beaver is seen on the water's surface as the sun rises at the Oxbow Nature Conservancy in Lawrenceburg, Indiana, on September 19, 2025. (Photo by Jason Whitman/NurPhoto)

     

  • Pollution And Wildlife In Indiana And Ohio
    DUKAS_189062134_NUR
    Pollution And Wildlife In Indiana And Ohio
    A great egret is seen in flight along the water's surface as the sun rises at the Oxbow Nature Conservancy in Lawrenceburg, Indiana, on September 19, 2025. (Photo by Jason Whitman/NurPhoto)

     

  • Pollution And Wildlife In Indiana And Ohio
    DUKAS_189062086_NUR
    Pollution And Wildlife In Indiana And Ohio
    A great egret is seen in flight along the water's surface as the sun rises at the Oxbow Nature Conservancy in Lawrenceburg, Indiana, on September 19, 2025. (Photo by Jason Whitman/NurPhoto)

     

  • Pollution And Wildlife In Indiana And Ohio
    DUKAS_189062074_NUR
    Pollution And Wildlife In Indiana And Ohio
    A great egret is seen in flight along the water's surface as the sun rises at the Oxbow Nature Conservancy in Lawrenceburg, Indiana, on September 19, 2025. (Photo by Jason Whitman/NurPhoto)

     

  • Consumers Flock To Apple BKC As IPhone 17 Hits Stores In India
    DUKAS_189053298_NUR
    Consumers Flock To Apple BKC As IPhone 17 Hits Stores In India
    The reflection of the Apple logo is seen in a water puddle outside Apple BKC during the launch of the iPhone 17 in Mumbai, India, on September 19, 2025. (Photo by Indranil Aditya/NurPhoto)

     

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