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  • Iran-Daily
    DUKAS_184609076_NUR
    Iran-Daily
    A general view shows villas and constructions on a coast of the Caspian Sea near the city of Noshahr, 194 km (96 miles) north of Tehran, Iran, on May 8, 2025. (Photo by Morteza Nikoubazl/NurPhoto)

     

  • Iran-Daily
    DUKAS_184609071_NUR
    Iran-Daily
    A general view shows villas on foothills near a coast of the Caspian Sea near the city of Noshahr, 194 km (96 miles) north of Tehran, Iran, on May 8, 2025. (Photo by Morteza Nikoubazl/NurPhoto)

     

  • Iran-Daily
    DUKAS_184609053_NUR
    Iran-Daily
    A general view shows villas and constructions on a coast of the Caspian Sea near the city of Noshahr, 194 km (96 miles) north of Tehran, Iran, on May 8, 2025. (Photo by Morteza Nikoubazl/NurPhoto)

     

  • Iran-Daily
    DUKAS_184609049_NUR
    Iran-Daily
    A general view shows villas and constructions on a coast of the Caspian Sea near the city of Noshahr, 194 km (96 miles) north of Tehran, Iran, on May 8, 2025. (Photo by Morteza Nikoubazl/NurPhoto)

     

  • Iran-Daily
    DUKAS_184609041_NUR
    Iran-Daily
    A view of a coastal villa near the city of Noshahr, 194 km (96 miles) north of Tehran, Iran, at sunset, on a coast of the Caspian Sea on May 7, 2025. (Photo by Morteza Nikoubazl/NurPhoto)

     

  • Paternal Leave' Rome Photocall
    DUKAS_184373720_ZUM
    Paternal Leave' Rome Photocall
    May 6, 2025, Rome, Italy: JULI GRABENHENRICH attends the photocall of the movie ''Paternal Leave'' at Casa del Cinema in Villa Borghese, Rome, Italy. (Credit Image: © Mario Cartelli/SOPA Images via ZUMA Press Wire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    Represented by ZUMA Press, Inc.

     

  • King and Queen visit Italy - Day One
    DUKAS_183331397_EYE
    King and Queen visit Italy - Day One
    07/04/2025. Rome, Italy.

    King and Queen visit Italy - Day One. King Charles III and Queen Camilla pose for a portrait at Villa Wolkonsky on April 07, 2025 in Rome, Italy. Ahead of the 20th Wedding Anniversary of Their Majesties, King Charles III and Queen Camilla on Wednesday 9th April 2025.

    Picture by Parsons Media / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    ©2025 Parsons Media

     

  • King and Queen visit Italy - Day One
    DUKAS_183331377_EYE
    King and Queen visit Italy - Day One
    07/04/2025. Rome, Italy.

    King and Queen visit Italy - Day One. King Charles III and Queen Camilla pose for a portrait at Villa Wolkonsky on April 07, 2025 in Rome, Italy. Ahead of the 20th Wedding Anniversary of Their Majesties, King Charles III and Queen Camilla on Wednesday 9th April 2025.

    Picture by Parsons Media / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    ©2025 Parsons Media

     

  • King and Queen visit Italy - Day One
    DUKAS_183331396_EYE
    King and Queen visit Italy - Day One
    07/04/2025. Rome, Italy.

    King and Queen visit Italy - Day One. King Charles III and Queen Camilla pose for a portrait at Villa Wolkonsky on April 07, 2025 in Rome, Italy. Ahead of the 20th Wedding Anniversary of Their Majesties, King Charles III and Queen Camilla on Wednesday 9th April 2025.

    Picture by Parsons Media / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    ©2025 Parsons Media

     

  • FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt
    DUK10162684_015
    FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt

    **VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
    A newly discovered fresco in Pompeii is shedding fresh light on the mysterious Dionysiac cults of the ancient world - and how they depicted “wild” women who broke free of the male order.
    More than a century after the famous Villa of the Mysteries was unearthed, archaeologists have revealed a strikingly detailed frieze depicting the procession of Dionysus, the god of wine.
    The nearly life-sized fresco, known as a "megalography" due to its large-scale figures, was found in a grand banqueting room in Insula 10 of Region IX in central Pompeii. It spans three sides of the room, while the fourth side opens onto a garden.
    The vivid artwork portrays bacchantes, or maenads, as both dancers and fierce hunters. Some carry slaughtered kid goats or wield swords while holding the innards of animals. Young satyrs, with their distinctive pointed ears, are shown playing the double flute. At the centre of the frieze stands a mortal woman accompanied by an aged Silenus holding a torch, suggesting her initiation into the Dionysiac mysteries—a cult promising rebirth and the possibility of an afterlife.
    Explaining its significance, Gabriel Zuchtriegel said: “These frescoes have a profoundly religious meaning which, however, was also designed to decorate areas for holding banquets and feasts, rather like when we find a copy of Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam on the wall of an Italian restaurant in New York to create a little bit of atmosphere.
    “Behind these magnificent paintings, which play with illusion and reality, we can observe the signs of a religious crisis that was affecting the ancient world, but we can also grasp the grandeur of a ritual that dates back to an archaic world.”
    He also said the bacchante or maenad, “expressed the wild, untameable side of women,” who “break free from male order to dance freely” and take on traditional male pursuits like hunting.
    Intriguingly, all the figures appear to *** Local Ca

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt
    DUK10162684_003
    FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt

    **VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
    A newly discovered fresco in Pompeii is shedding fresh light on the mysterious Dionysiac cults of the ancient world - and how they depicted “wild” women who broke free of the male order.
    More than a century after the famous Villa of the Mysteries was unearthed, archaeologists have revealed a strikingly detailed frieze depicting the procession of Dionysus, the god of wine.
    The nearly life-sized fresco, known as a "megalography" due to its large-scale figures, was found in a grand banqueting room in Insula 10 of Region IX in central Pompeii. It spans three sides of the room, while the fourth side opens onto a garden.
    The vivid artwork portrays bacchantes, or maenads, as both dancers and fierce hunters. Some carry slaughtered kid goats or wield swords while holding the innards of animals. Young satyrs, with their distinctive pointed ears, are shown playing the double flute. At the centre of the frieze stands a mortal woman accompanied by an aged Silenus holding a torch, suggesting her initiation into the Dionysiac mysteries—a cult promising rebirth and the possibility of an afterlife.
    Explaining its significance, Gabriel Zuchtriegel said: “These frescoes have a profoundly religious meaning which, however, was also designed to decorate areas for holding banquets and feasts, rather like when we find a copy of Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam on the wall of an Italian restaurant in New York to create a little bit of atmosphere.
    “Behind these magnificent paintings, which play with illusion and reality, we can observe the signs of a religious crisis that was affecting the ancient world, but we can also grasp the grandeur of a ritual that dates back to an archaic world.”
    He also said the bacchante or maenad, “expressed the wild, untameable side of women,” who “break free from male order to dance freely” and take on traditional male pursuits like hunting.
    Intriguingly, all the figures appear to *** Local Ca

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt
    DUK10162684_017
    FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt

    **VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
    A newly discovered fresco in Pompeii is shedding fresh light on the mysterious Dionysiac cults of the ancient world - and how they depicted “wild” women who broke free of the male order.
    More than a century after the famous Villa of the Mysteries was unearthed, archaeologists have revealed a strikingly detailed frieze depicting the procession of Dionysus, the god of wine.
    The nearly life-sized fresco, known as a "megalography" due to its large-scale figures, was found in a grand banqueting room in Insula 10 of Region IX in central Pompeii. It spans three sides of the room, while the fourth side opens onto a garden.
    The vivid artwork portrays bacchantes, or maenads, as both dancers and fierce hunters. Some carry slaughtered kid goats or wield swords while holding the innards of animals. Young satyrs, with their distinctive pointed ears, are shown playing the double flute. At the centre of the frieze stands a mortal woman accompanied by an aged Silenus holding a torch, suggesting her initiation into the Dionysiac mysteries—a cult promising rebirth and the possibility of an afterlife.
    Explaining its significance, Gabriel Zuchtriegel said: “These frescoes have a profoundly religious meaning which, however, was also designed to decorate areas for holding banquets and feasts, rather like when we find a copy of Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam on the wall of an Italian restaurant in New York to create a little bit of atmosphere.
    “Behind these magnificent paintings, which play with illusion and reality, we can observe the signs of a religious crisis that was affecting the ancient world, but we can also grasp the grandeur of a ritual that dates back to an archaic world.”
    He also said the bacchante or maenad, “expressed the wild, untameable side of women,” who “break free from male order to dance freely” and take on traditional male pursuits like hunting.
    Intriguingly, all the figures appear to *** Local Ca

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt
    DUK10162684_004
    FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt

    **VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
    A newly discovered fresco in Pompeii is shedding fresh light on the mysterious Dionysiac cults of the ancient world - and how they depicted “wild” women who broke free of the male order.
    More than a century after the famous Villa of the Mysteries was unearthed, archaeologists have revealed a strikingly detailed frieze depicting the procession of Dionysus, the god of wine.
    The nearly life-sized fresco, known as a "megalography" due to its large-scale figures, was found in a grand banqueting room in Insula 10 of Region IX in central Pompeii. It spans three sides of the room, while the fourth side opens onto a garden.
    The vivid artwork portrays bacchantes, or maenads, as both dancers and fierce hunters. Some carry slaughtered kid goats or wield swords while holding the innards of animals. Young satyrs, with their distinctive pointed ears, are shown playing the double flute. At the centre of the frieze stands a mortal woman accompanied by an aged Silenus holding a torch, suggesting her initiation into the Dionysiac mysteries—a cult promising rebirth and the possibility of an afterlife.
    Explaining its significance, Gabriel Zuchtriegel said: “These frescoes have a profoundly religious meaning which, however, was also designed to decorate areas for holding banquets and feasts, rather like when we find a copy of Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam on the wall of an Italian restaurant in New York to create a little bit of atmosphere.
    “Behind these magnificent paintings, which play with illusion and reality, we can observe the signs of a religious crisis that was affecting the ancient world, but we can also grasp the grandeur of a ritual that dates back to an archaic world.”
    He also said the bacchante or maenad, “expressed the wild, untameable side of women,” who “break free from male order to dance freely” and take on traditional male pursuits like hunting.
    Intriguingly, all the figures appear to *** Local Ca

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt
    DUK10162684_013
    FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt

    **VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
    A newly discovered fresco in Pompeii is shedding fresh light on the mysterious Dionysiac cults of the ancient world - and how they depicted “wild” women who broke free of the male order.
    More than a century after the famous Villa of the Mysteries was unearthed, archaeologists have revealed a strikingly detailed frieze depicting the procession of Dionysus, the god of wine.
    The nearly life-sized fresco, known as a "megalography" due to its large-scale figures, was found in a grand banqueting room in Insula 10 of Region IX in central Pompeii. It spans three sides of the room, while the fourth side opens onto a garden.
    The vivid artwork portrays bacchantes, or maenads, as both dancers and fierce hunters. Some carry slaughtered kid goats or wield swords while holding the innards of animals. Young satyrs, with their distinctive pointed ears, are shown playing the double flute. At the centre of the frieze stands a mortal woman accompanied by an aged Silenus holding a torch, suggesting her initiation into the Dionysiac mysteries—a cult promising rebirth and the possibility of an afterlife.
    Explaining its significance, Gabriel Zuchtriegel said: “These frescoes have a profoundly religious meaning which, however, was also designed to decorate areas for holding banquets and feasts, rather like when we find a copy of Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam on the wall of an Italian restaurant in New York to create a little bit of atmosphere.
    “Behind these magnificent paintings, which play with illusion and reality, we can observe the signs of a religious crisis that was affecting the ancient world, but we can also grasp the grandeur of a ritual that dates back to an archaic world.”
    He also said the bacchante or maenad, “expressed the wild, untameable side of women,” who “break free from male order to dance freely” and take on traditional male pursuits like hunting.
    Intriguingly, all the figures appear to *** Local Ca

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt
    DUK10162684_014
    FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt

    **VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
    A newly discovered fresco in Pompeii is shedding fresh light on the mysterious Dionysiac cults of the ancient world - and how they depicted “wild” women who broke free of the male order.
    More than a century after the famous Villa of the Mysteries was unearthed, archaeologists have revealed a strikingly detailed frieze depicting the procession of Dionysus, the god of wine.
    The nearly life-sized fresco, known as a "megalography" due to its large-scale figures, was found in a grand banqueting room in Insula 10 of Region IX in central Pompeii. It spans three sides of the room, while the fourth side opens onto a garden.
    The vivid artwork portrays bacchantes, or maenads, as both dancers and fierce hunters. Some carry slaughtered kid goats or wield swords while holding the innards of animals. Young satyrs, with their distinctive pointed ears, are shown playing the double flute. At the centre of the frieze stands a mortal woman accompanied by an aged Silenus holding a torch, suggesting her initiation into the Dionysiac mysteries—a cult promising rebirth and the possibility of an afterlife.
    Explaining its significance, Gabriel Zuchtriegel said: “These frescoes have a profoundly religious meaning which, however, was also designed to decorate areas for holding banquets and feasts, rather like when we find a copy of Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam on the wall of an Italian restaurant in New York to create a little bit of atmosphere.
    “Behind these magnificent paintings, which play with illusion and reality, we can observe the signs of a religious crisis that was affecting the ancient world, but we can also grasp the grandeur of a ritual that dates back to an archaic world.”
    He also said the bacchante or maenad, “expressed the wild, untameable side of women,” who “break free from male order to dance freely” and take on traditional male pursuits like hunting.
    Intriguingly, all the figures appear to *** Local Ca

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt
    DUK10162684_010
    FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt

    **VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
    A newly discovered fresco in Pompeii is shedding fresh light on the mysterious Dionysiac cults of the ancient world - and how they depicted “wild” women who broke free of the male order.
    More than a century after the famous Villa of the Mysteries was unearthed, archaeologists have revealed a strikingly detailed frieze depicting the procession of Dionysus, the god of wine.
    The nearly life-sized fresco, known as a "megalography" due to its large-scale figures, was found in a grand banqueting room in Insula 10 of Region IX in central Pompeii. It spans three sides of the room, while the fourth side opens onto a garden.
    The vivid artwork portrays bacchantes, or maenads, as both dancers and fierce hunters. Some carry slaughtered kid goats or wield swords while holding the innards of animals. Young satyrs, with their distinctive pointed ears, are shown playing the double flute. At the centre of the frieze stands a mortal woman accompanied by an aged Silenus holding a torch, suggesting her initiation into the Dionysiac mysteries—a cult promising rebirth and the possibility of an afterlife.
    Explaining its significance, Gabriel Zuchtriegel said: “These frescoes have a profoundly religious meaning which, however, was also designed to decorate areas for holding banquets and feasts, rather like when we find a copy of Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam on the wall of an Italian restaurant in New York to create a little bit of atmosphere.
    “Behind these magnificent paintings, which play with illusion and reality, we can observe the signs of a religious crisis that was affecting the ancient world, but we can also grasp the grandeur of a ritual that dates back to an archaic world.”
    He also said the bacchante or maenad, “expressed the wild, untameable side of women,” who “break free from male order to dance freely” and take on traditional male pursuits like hunting.
    Intriguingly, all the figures appear to *** Local Ca

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt
    DUK10162684_005
    FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt

    **VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
    A newly discovered fresco in Pompeii is shedding fresh light on the mysterious Dionysiac cults of the ancient world - and how they depicted “wild” women who broke free of the male order.
    More than a century after the famous Villa of the Mysteries was unearthed, archaeologists have revealed a strikingly detailed frieze depicting the procession of Dionysus, the god of wine.
    The nearly life-sized fresco, known as a "megalography" due to its large-scale figures, was found in a grand banqueting room in Insula 10 of Region IX in central Pompeii. It spans three sides of the room, while the fourth side opens onto a garden.
    The vivid artwork portrays bacchantes, or maenads, as both dancers and fierce hunters. Some carry slaughtered kid goats or wield swords while holding the innards of animals. Young satyrs, with their distinctive pointed ears, are shown playing the double flute. At the centre of the frieze stands a mortal woman accompanied by an aged Silenus holding a torch, suggesting her initiation into the Dionysiac mysteries—a cult promising rebirth and the possibility of an afterlife.
    Explaining its significance, Gabriel Zuchtriegel said: “These frescoes have a profoundly religious meaning which, however, was also designed to decorate areas for holding banquets and feasts, rather like when we find a copy of Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam on the wall of an Italian restaurant in New York to create a little bit of atmosphere.
    “Behind these magnificent paintings, which play with illusion and reality, we can observe the signs of a religious crisis that was affecting the ancient world, but we can also grasp the grandeur of a ritual that dates back to an archaic world.”
    He also said the bacchante or maenad, “expressed the wild, untameable side of women,” who “break free from male order to dance freely” and take on traditional male pursuits like hunting.
    Intriguingly, all the figures appear to *** Local Ca

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt
    DUK10162684_012
    FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt

    **VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
    A newly discovered fresco in Pompeii is shedding fresh light on the mysterious Dionysiac cults of the ancient world - and how they depicted “wild” women who broke free of the male order.
    More than a century after the famous Villa of the Mysteries was unearthed, archaeologists have revealed a strikingly detailed frieze depicting the procession of Dionysus, the god of wine.
    The nearly life-sized fresco, known as a "megalography" due to its large-scale figures, was found in a grand banqueting room in Insula 10 of Region IX in central Pompeii. It spans three sides of the room, while the fourth side opens onto a garden.
    The vivid artwork portrays bacchantes, or maenads, as both dancers and fierce hunters. Some carry slaughtered kid goats or wield swords while holding the innards of animals. Young satyrs, with their distinctive pointed ears, are shown playing the double flute. At the centre of the frieze stands a mortal woman accompanied by an aged Silenus holding a torch, suggesting her initiation into the Dionysiac mysteries—a cult promising rebirth and the possibility of an afterlife.
    Explaining its significance, Gabriel Zuchtriegel said: “These frescoes have a profoundly religious meaning which, however, was also designed to decorate areas for holding banquets and feasts, rather like when we find a copy of Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam on the wall of an Italian restaurant in New York to create a little bit of atmosphere.
    “Behind these magnificent paintings, which play with illusion and reality, we can observe the signs of a religious crisis that was affecting the ancient world, but we can also grasp the grandeur of a ritual that dates back to an archaic world.”
    He also said the bacchante or maenad, “expressed the wild, untameable side of women,” who “break free from male order to dance freely” and take on traditional male pursuits like hunting.
    Intriguingly, all the figures appear to *** Local Ca

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt
    DUK10162684_006
    FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt

    **VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
    A newly discovered fresco in Pompeii is shedding fresh light on the mysterious Dionysiac cults of the ancient world - and how they depicted “wild” women who broke free of the male order.
    More than a century after the famous Villa of the Mysteries was unearthed, archaeologists have revealed a strikingly detailed frieze depicting the procession of Dionysus, the god of wine.
    The nearly life-sized fresco, known as a "megalography" due to its large-scale figures, was found in a grand banqueting room in Insula 10 of Region IX in central Pompeii. It spans three sides of the room, while the fourth side opens onto a garden.
    The vivid artwork portrays bacchantes, or maenads, as both dancers and fierce hunters. Some carry slaughtered kid goats or wield swords while holding the innards of animals. Young satyrs, with their distinctive pointed ears, are shown playing the double flute. At the centre of the frieze stands a mortal woman accompanied by an aged Silenus holding a torch, suggesting her initiation into the Dionysiac mysteries—a cult promising rebirth and the possibility of an afterlife.
    Explaining its significance, Gabriel Zuchtriegel said: “These frescoes have a profoundly religious meaning which, however, was also designed to decorate areas for holding banquets and feasts, rather like when we find a copy of Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam on the wall of an Italian restaurant in New York to create a little bit of atmosphere.
    “Behind these magnificent paintings, which play with illusion and reality, we can observe the signs of a religious crisis that was affecting the ancient world, but we can also grasp the grandeur of a ritual that dates back to an archaic world.”
    He also said the bacchante or maenad, “expressed the wild, untameable side of women,” who “break free from male order to dance freely” and take on traditional male pursuits like hunting.
    Intriguingly, all the figures appear to *** Local Ca

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt
    DUK10162684_016
    FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt

    **VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
    A newly discovered fresco in Pompeii is shedding fresh light on the mysterious Dionysiac cults of the ancient world - and how they depicted “wild” women who broke free of the male order.
    More than a century after the famous Villa of the Mysteries was unearthed, archaeologists have revealed a strikingly detailed frieze depicting the procession of Dionysus, the god of wine.
    The nearly life-sized fresco, known as a "megalography" due to its large-scale figures, was found in a grand banqueting room in Insula 10 of Region IX in central Pompeii. It spans three sides of the room, while the fourth side opens onto a garden.
    The vivid artwork portrays bacchantes, or maenads, as both dancers and fierce hunters. Some carry slaughtered kid goats or wield swords while holding the innards of animals. Young satyrs, with their distinctive pointed ears, are shown playing the double flute. At the centre of the frieze stands a mortal woman accompanied by an aged Silenus holding a torch, suggesting her initiation into the Dionysiac mysteries—a cult promising rebirth and the possibility of an afterlife.
    Explaining its significance, Gabriel Zuchtriegel said: “These frescoes have a profoundly religious meaning which, however, was also designed to decorate areas for holding banquets and feasts, rather like when we find a copy of Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam on the wall of an Italian restaurant in New York to create a little bit of atmosphere.
    “Behind these magnificent paintings, which play with illusion and reality, we can observe the signs of a religious crisis that was affecting the ancient world, but we can also grasp the grandeur of a ritual that dates back to an archaic world.”
    He also said the bacchante or maenad, “expressed the wild, untameable side of women,” who “break free from male order to dance freely” and take on traditional male pursuits like hunting.
    Intriguingly, all the figures appear to *** Local Ca

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt
    DUK10162684_011
    FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt

    **VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
    A newly discovered fresco in Pompeii is shedding fresh light on the mysterious Dionysiac cults of the ancient world - and how they depicted “wild” women who broke free of the male order.
    More than a century after the famous Villa of the Mysteries was unearthed, archaeologists have revealed a strikingly detailed frieze depicting the procession of Dionysus, the god of wine.
    The nearly life-sized fresco, known as a "megalography" due to its large-scale figures, was found in a grand banqueting room in Insula 10 of Region IX in central Pompeii. It spans three sides of the room, while the fourth side opens onto a garden.
    The vivid artwork portrays bacchantes, or maenads, as both dancers and fierce hunters. Some carry slaughtered kid goats or wield swords while holding the innards of animals. Young satyrs, with their distinctive pointed ears, are shown playing the double flute. At the centre of the frieze stands a mortal woman accompanied by an aged Silenus holding a torch, suggesting her initiation into the Dionysiac mysteries—a cult promising rebirth and the possibility of an afterlife.
    Explaining its significance, Gabriel Zuchtriegel said: “These frescoes have a profoundly religious meaning which, however, was also designed to decorate areas for holding banquets and feasts, rather like when we find a copy of Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam on the wall of an Italian restaurant in New York to create a little bit of atmosphere.
    “Behind these magnificent paintings, which play with illusion and reality, we can observe the signs of a religious crisis that was affecting the ancient world, but we can also grasp the grandeur of a ritual that dates back to an archaic world.”
    He also said the bacchante or maenad, “expressed the wild, untameable side of women,” who “break free from male order to dance freely” and take on traditional male pursuits like hunting.
    Intriguingly, all the figures appear to *** Local Ca

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt
    DUK10162684_008
    FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt

    **VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
    A newly discovered fresco in Pompeii is shedding fresh light on the mysterious Dionysiac cults of the ancient world - and how they depicted “wild” women who broke free of the male order.
    More than a century after the famous Villa of the Mysteries was unearthed, archaeologists have revealed a strikingly detailed frieze depicting the procession of Dionysus, the god of wine.
    The nearly life-sized fresco, known as a "megalography" due to its large-scale figures, was found in a grand banqueting room in Insula 10 of Region IX in central Pompeii. It spans three sides of the room, while the fourth side opens onto a garden.
    The vivid artwork portrays bacchantes, or maenads, as both dancers and fierce hunters. Some carry slaughtered kid goats or wield swords while holding the innards of animals. Young satyrs, with their distinctive pointed ears, are shown playing the double flute. At the centre of the frieze stands a mortal woman accompanied by an aged Silenus holding a torch, suggesting her initiation into the Dionysiac mysteries—a cult promising rebirth and the possibility of an afterlife.
    Explaining its significance, Gabriel Zuchtriegel said: “These frescoes have a profoundly religious meaning which, however, was also designed to decorate areas for holding banquets and feasts, rather like when we find a copy of Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam on the wall of an Italian restaurant in New York to create a little bit of atmosphere.
    “Behind these magnificent paintings, which play with illusion and reality, we can observe the signs of a religious crisis that was affecting the ancient world, but we can also grasp the grandeur of a ritual that dates back to an archaic world.”
    He also said the bacchante or maenad, “expressed the wild, untameable side of women,” who “break free from male order to dance freely” and take on traditional male pursuits like hunting.
    Intriguingly, all the figures appear to *** Local Ca

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt
    DUK10162684_009
    FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt

    **VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
    A newly discovered fresco in Pompeii is shedding fresh light on the mysterious Dionysiac cults of the ancient world - and how they depicted “wild” women who broke free of the male order.
    More than a century after the famous Villa of the Mysteries was unearthed, archaeologists have revealed a strikingly detailed frieze depicting the procession of Dionysus, the god of wine.
    The nearly life-sized fresco, known as a "megalography" due to its large-scale figures, was found in a grand banqueting room in Insula 10 of Region IX in central Pompeii. It spans three sides of the room, while the fourth side opens onto a garden.
    The vivid artwork portrays bacchantes, or maenads, as both dancers and fierce hunters. Some carry slaughtered kid goats or wield swords while holding the innards of animals. Young satyrs, with their distinctive pointed ears, are shown playing the double flute. At the centre of the frieze stands a mortal woman accompanied by an aged Silenus holding a torch, suggesting her initiation into the Dionysiac mysteries—a cult promising rebirth and the possibility of an afterlife.
    Explaining its significance, Gabriel Zuchtriegel said: “These frescoes have a profoundly religious meaning which, however, was also designed to decorate areas for holding banquets and feasts, rather like when we find a copy of Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam on the wall of an Italian restaurant in New York to create a little bit of atmosphere.
    “Behind these magnificent paintings, which play with illusion and reality, we can observe the signs of a religious crisis that was affecting the ancient world, but we can also grasp the grandeur of a ritual that dates back to an archaic world.”
    He also said the bacchante or maenad, “expressed the wild, untameable side of women,” who “break free from male order to dance freely” and take on traditional male pursuits like hunting.
    Intriguingly, all the figures appear to *** Local Ca

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt
    DUK10162684_007
    FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt

    **VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
    A newly discovered fresco in Pompeii is shedding fresh light on the mysterious Dionysiac cults of the ancient world - and how they depicted “wild” women who broke free of the male order.
    More than a century after the famous Villa of the Mysteries was unearthed, archaeologists have revealed a strikingly detailed frieze depicting the procession of Dionysus, the god of wine.
    The nearly life-sized fresco, known as a "megalography" due to its large-scale figures, was found in a grand banqueting room in Insula 10 of Region IX in central Pompeii. It spans three sides of the room, while the fourth side opens onto a garden.
    The vivid artwork portrays bacchantes, or maenads, as both dancers and fierce hunters. Some carry slaughtered kid goats or wield swords while holding the innards of animals. Young satyrs, with their distinctive pointed ears, are shown playing the double flute. At the centre of the frieze stands a mortal woman accompanied by an aged Silenus holding a torch, suggesting her initiation into the Dionysiac mysteries—a cult promising rebirth and the possibility of an afterlife.
    Explaining its significance, Gabriel Zuchtriegel said: “These frescoes have a profoundly religious meaning which, however, was also designed to decorate areas for holding banquets and feasts, rather like when we find a copy of Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam on the wall of an Italian restaurant in New York to create a little bit of atmosphere.
    “Behind these magnificent paintings, which play with illusion and reality, we can observe the signs of a religious crisis that was affecting the ancient world, but we can also grasp the grandeur of a ritual that dates back to an archaic world.”
    He also said the bacchante or maenad, “expressed the wild, untameable side of women,” who “break free from male order to dance freely” and take on traditional male pursuits like hunting.
    Intriguingly, all the figures appear to *** Local Ca

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt
    DUK10162684_002
    FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt

    **VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
    A newly discovered fresco in Pompeii is shedding fresh light on the mysterious Dionysiac cults of the ancient world - and how they depicted “wild” women who broke free of the male order.
    More than a century after the famous Villa of the Mysteries was unearthed, archaeologists have revealed a strikingly detailed frieze depicting the procession of Dionysus, the god of wine.
    The nearly life-sized fresco, known as a "megalography" due to its large-scale figures, was found in a grand banqueting room in Insula 10 of Region IX in central Pompeii. It spans three sides of the room, while the fourth side opens onto a garden.
    The vivid artwork portrays bacchantes, or maenads, as both dancers and fierce hunters. Some carry slaughtered kid goats or wield swords while holding the innards of animals. Young satyrs, with their distinctive pointed ears, are shown playing the double flute. At the centre of the frieze stands a mortal woman accompanied by an aged Silenus holding a torch, suggesting her initiation into the Dionysiac mysteries—a cult promising rebirth and the possibility of an afterlife.
    Explaining its significance, Gabriel Zuchtriegel said: “These frescoes have a profoundly religious meaning which, however, was also designed to decorate areas for holding banquets and feasts, rather like when we find a copy of Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam on the wall of an Italian restaurant in New York to create a little bit of atmosphere.
    “Behind these magnificent paintings, which play with illusion and reality, we can observe the signs of a religious crisis that was affecting the ancient world, but we can also grasp the grandeur of a ritual that dates back to an archaic world.”
    He also said the bacchante or maenad, “expressed the wild, untameable side of women,” who “break free from male order to dance freely” and take on traditional male pursuits like hunting.
    Intriguingly, all the figures appear to *** Local Ca

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt
    DUK10162684_001
    FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt

    **VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
    A newly discovered fresco in Pompeii is shedding fresh light on the mysterious Dionysiac cults of the ancient world - and how they depicted “wild” women who broke free of the male order.
    More than a century after the famous Villa of the Mysteries was unearthed, archaeologists have revealed a strikingly detailed frieze depicting the procession of Dionysus, the god of wine.
    The nearly life-sized fresco, known as a "megalography" due to its large-scale figures, was found in a grand banqueting room in Insula 10 of Region IX in central Pompeii. It spans three sides of the room, while the fourth side opens onto a garden.
    The vivid artwork portrays bacchantes, or maenads, as both dancers and fierce hunters. Some carry slaughtered kid goats or wield swords while holding the innards of animals. Young satyrs, with their distinctive pointed ears, are shown playing the double flute. At the centre of the frieze stands a mortal woman accompanied by an aged Silenus holding a torch, suggesting her initiation into the Dionysiac mysteries—a cult promising rebirth and the possibility of an afterlife.
    Explaining its significance, Gabriel Zuchtriegel said: “These frescoes have a profoundly religious meaning which, however, was also designed to decorate areas for holding banquets and feasts, rather like when we find a copy of Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam on the wall of an Italian restaurant in New York to create a little bit of atmosphere.
    “Behind these magnificent paintings, which play with illusion and reality, we can observe the signs of a religious crisis that was affecting the ancient world, but we can also grasp the grandeur of a ritual that dates back to an archaic world.”
    He also said the bacchante or maenad, “expressed the wild, untameable side of women,” who “break free from male order to dance freely” and take on traditional male pursuits like hunting.
    Intriguingly, all the figures appear to *** Local Ca

    (c) Dukas

     

  • Italian artist Live Music Show - Festival di Sanremo - Guest on Villa Nobel, SANREMO, Italy
    DUKAS_181344668_DAL
    Italian artist Live Music Show - Festival di Sanremo - Guest on Villa Nobel, SANREMO, Italy
    NOA
    February 11, 2025, Sanremo, Italy: SANREMO, Italy, VILLA NOBEL - SANREMO , February 11, 2025, GUEST OF VILLE NOBEL IN SANREMO during Festival di Sanremo - Guest on Villa Nobel - Italian artist Live Music Show. (Credit Image: © Renata Roattino/LPS via ZUMA Press W_DALLE (FOTO: DUKAS/DALLE) --- NO WEB USAGE ---

    © DALLE arpf

     

  • Music Concert - VILLA NOBEL -SANREMO 2025 - GLI OSPITI DEL 13/02, SANREMO, Italy
    DUKAS_181344420_DAL
    Music Concert - VILLA NOBEL -SANREMO 2025 - GLI OSPITI DEL 13/02, SANREMO, Italy
    February 13, 2025, Sanremo, Italy: ROSE VILLAIN arrives at Villa Nobel during Sanremo, 75th Italian Song Festival 2025. (Credit Image: © Simone Comi/IPA via ZUMA _DALLE (FOTO: DUKAS/DALLE) --- NO WEB USAGE ---
    © DALLE arpf

     

  • Music Concert - VILLA NOBEL -SANREMO 2025 - GLI OSPITI DEL 13/02, SANREMO, Italy
    DUKAS_181344360_DAL
    Music Concert - VILLA NOBEL -SANREMO 2025 - GLI OSPITI DEL 13/02, SANREMO, Italy
    February 13, 2025, Sanremo, Italy: SANREMO, Italy, SANREMO, February 13, 2025, IL VOLO guests of Villa Nobel in Sanremo during VILLA NOBEL -SANREMO 2025 - GLI OSPITI DEL 13/02 - Music Concert. (Credit Image: © Renata Roattino/LPS via ZUMA Press _DALLE (FOTO: DUKAS/DALLE) --- NO WEB USAGE ---
    © DALLE arpf

     

  • Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    DUKAS_168559202_FER
    Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Airliner 1
    Ref 15770
    17/04/2024
    See Ferrari text
    Pictures must credit: Geometrium Studio

    A new holiday home has been created for high flyers — made from the fuselage of a Boeing 737 airliner.

    The decommissioned plane is now a private villa for vacation rentals.

    It is perched 150 meters above the sea on the Indonesia island of Bali and boasts 100 sqm of living space with a kitchen-living room, two bedrooms and a wing terrace.

    There’s also an outside pool and barbecue area.

    It was originally bought when it left the service in 2008 to be converted into a restaurant.

    The aircraft was sighted at another Bali location but the plans never came to fruition.

    It sat there for 13 years until being purchased by local developer Felix Demin in 2021.

    He moved it to the cliff overlooking Nyang Nyang Beach offering a new take on luxury living.

    Design studio Geometrium was given the task of turning the plane of turning it into luxury accommodation at the exclusive site.

    OPS: The Private Jet Villa

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    DUKAS_168559200_FER
    Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Airliner 1
    Ref 15770
    17/04/2024
    See Ferrari text
    Pictures must credit: Geometrium Studio

    A new holiday home has been created for high flyers — made from the fuselage of a Boeing 737 airliner.

    The decommissioned plane is now a private villa for vacation rentals.

    It is perched 150 meters above the sea on the Indonesia island of Bali and boasts 100 sqm of living space with a kitchen-living room, two bedrooms and a wing terrace.

    There’s also an outside pool and barbecue area.

    It was originally bought when it left the service in 2008 to be converted into a restaurant.

    The aircraft was sighted at another Bali location but the plans never came to fruition.

    It sat there for 13 years until being purchased by local developer Felix Demin in 2021.

    He moved it to the cliff overlooking Nyang Nyang Beach offering a new take on luxury living.

    Design studio Geometrium was given the task of turning the plane of turning it into luxury accommodation at the exclusive site.

    OPS: The Private Jet Villa

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    DUKAS_168559198_FER
    Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Airliner 1
    Ref 15770
    17/04/2024
    See Ferrari text
    Pictures must credit: Geometrium Studio

    A new holiday home has been created for high flyers — made from the fuselage of a Boeing 737 airliner.

    The decommissioned plane is now a private villa for vacation rentals.

    It is perched 150 meters above the sea on the Indonesia island of Bali and boasts 100 sqm of living space with a kitchen-living room, two bedrooms and a wing terrace.

    There’s also an outside pool and barbecue area.

    It was originally bought when it left the service in 2008 to be converted into a restaurant.

    The aircraft was sighted at another Bali location but the plans never came to fruition.

    It sat there for 13 years until being purchased by local developer Felix Demin in 2021.

    He moved it to the cliff overlooking Nyang Nyang Beach offering a new take on luxury living.

    Design studio Geometrium was given the task of turning the plane of turning it into luxury accommodation at the exclusive site.

    OPS: The Private Jet Villa

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    DUKAS_168559196_FER
    Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Airliner 1
    Ref 15770
    17/04/2024
    See Ferrari text
    Pictures must credit: Geometrium Studio

    A new holiday home has been created for high flyers — made from the fuselage of a Boeing 737 airliner.

    The decommissioned plane is now a private villa for vacation rentals.

    It is perched 150 meters above the sea on the Indonesia island of Bali and boasts 100 sqm of living space with a kitchen-living room, two bedrooms and a wing terrace.

    There’s also an outside pool and barbecue area.

    It was originally bought when it left the service in 2008 to be converted into a restaurant.

    The aircraft was sighted at another Bali location but the plans never came to fruition.

    It sat there for 13 years until being purchased by local developer Felix Demin in 2021.

    He moved it to the cliff overlooking Nyang Nyang Beach offering a new take on luxury living.

    Design studio Geometrium was given the task of turning the plane of turning it into luxury accommodation at the exclusive site.

    OPS: The Private Jet Villa

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    DUKAS_168559192_FER
    Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Airliner 1
    Ref 15770
    17/04/2024
    See Ferrari text
    Pictures must credit: Geometrium Studio

    A new holiday home has been created for high flyers — made from the fuselage of a Boeing 737 airliner.

    The decommissioned plane is now a private villa for vacation rentals.

    It is perched 150 meters above the sea on the Indonesia island of Bali and boasts 100 sqm of living space with a kitchen-living room, two bedrooms and a wing terrace.

    There’s also an outside pool and barbecue area.

    It was originally bought when it left the service in 2008 to be converted into a restaurant.

    The aircraft was sighted at another Bali location but the plans never came to fruition.

    It sat there for 13 years until being purchased by local developer Felix Demin in 2021.

    He moved it to the cliff overlooking Nyang Nyang Beach offering a new take on luxury living.

    Design studio Geometrium was given the task of turning the plane of turning it into luxury accommodation at the exclusive site.

    OPS: The Private Jet Villa

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    DUKAS_168559191_FER
    Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Airliner 1
    Ref 15770
    17/04/2024
    See Ferrari text
    Pictures must credit: Geometrium Studio

    A new holiday home has been created for high flyers — made from the fuselage of a Boeing 737 airliner.

    The decommissioned plane is now a private villa for vacation rentals.

    It is perched 150 meters above the sea on the Indonesia island of Bali and boasts 100 sqm of living space with a kitchen-living room, two bedrooms and a wing terrace.

    There’s also an outside pool and barbecue area.

    It was originally bought when it left the service in 2008 to be converted into a restaurant.

    The aircraft was sighted at another Bali location but the plans never came to fruition.

    It sat there for 13 years until being purchased by local developer Felix Demin in 2021.

    He moved it to the cliff overlooking Nyang Nyang Beach offering a new take on luxury living.

    Design studio Geometrium was given the task of turning the plane of turning it into luxury accommodation at the exclusive site.

    OPS: The Private Jet Villa

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    DUKAS_168559189_FER
    Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Airliner 1
    Ref 15770
    17/04/2024
    See Ferrari text
    Pictures must credit: Geometrium Studio

    A new holiday home has been created for high flyers — made from the fuselage of a Boeing 737 airliner.

    The decommissioned plane is now a private villa for vacation rentals.

    It is perched 150 meters above the sea on the Indonesia island of Bali and boasts 100 sqm of living space with a kitchen-living room, two bedrooms and a wing terrace.

    There’s also an outside pool and barbecue area.

    It was originally bought when it left the service in 2008 to be converted into a restaurant.

    The aircraft was sighted at another Bali location but the plans never came to fruition.

    It sat there for 13 years until being purchased by local developer Felix Demin in 2021.

    He moved it to the cliff overlooking Nyang Nyang Beach offering a new take on luxury living.

    Design studio Geometrium was given the task of turning the plane of turning it into luxury accommodation at the exclusive site.

    OPS: The Private Jet Villa

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    DUKAS_168559187_FER
    Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Airliner 1
    Ref 15770
    17/04/2024
    See Ferrari text
    Pictures must credit: Geometrium Studio

    A new holiday home has been created for high flyers — made from the fuselage of a Boeing 737 airliner.

    The decommissioned plane is now a private villa for vacation rentals.

    It is perched 150 meters above the sea on the Indonesia island of Bali and boasts 100 sqm of living space with a kitchen-living room, two bedrooms and a wing terrace.

    There’s also an outside pool and barbecue area.

    It was originally bought when it left the service in 2008 to be converted into a restaurant.

    The aircraft was sighted at another Bali location but the plans never came to fruition.

    It sat there for 13 years until being purchased by local developer Felix Demin in 2021.

    He moved it to the cliff overlooking Nyang Nyang Beach offering a new take on luxury living.

    Design studio Geometrium was given the task of turning the plane of turning it into luxury accommodation at the exclusive site.

    OPS: The Private Jet Villa

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    DUKAS_168559183_FER
    Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Airliner 1
    Ref 15770
    17/04/2024
    See Ferrari text
    Pictures must credit: Geometrium Studio

    A new holiday home has been created for high flyers — made from the fuselage of a Boeing 737 airliner.

    The decommissioned plane is now a private villa for vacation rentals.

    It is perched 150 meters above the sea on the Indonesia island of Bali and boasts 100 sqm of living space with a kitchen-living room, two bedrooms and a wing terrace.

    There’s also an outside pool and barbecue area.

    It was originally bought when it left the service in 2008 to be converted into a restaurant.

    The aircraft was sighted at another Bali location but the plans never came to fruition.

    It sat there for 13 years until being purchased by local developer Felix Demin in 2021.

    He moved it to the cliff overlooking Nyang Nyang Beach offering a new take on luxury living.

    Design studio Geometrium was given the task of turning the plane of turning it into luxury accommodation at the exclusive site.

    OPS: The Private Jet Villa

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    DUKAS_168559180_FER
    Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Airliner 1
    Ref 15770
    17/04/2024
    See Ferrari text
    Pictures must credit: Geometrium Studio

    A new holiday home has been created for high flyers — made from the fuselage of a Boeing 737 airliner.

    The decommissioned plane is now a private villa for vacation rentals.

    It is perched 150 meters above the sea on the Indonesia island of Bali and boasts 100 sqm of living space with a kitchen-living room, two bedrooms and a wing terrace.

    There’s also an outside pool and barbecue area.

    It was originally bought when it left the service in 2008 to be converted into a restaurant.

    The aircraft was sighted at another Bali location but the plans never came to fruition.

    It sat there for 13 years until being purchased by local developer Felix Demin in 2021.

    He moved it to the cliff overlooking Nyang Nyang Beach offering a new take on luxury living.

    Design studio Geometrium was given the task of turning the plane of turning it into luxury accommodation at the exclusive site.

    OPS: The Private Jet Villa

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    DUKAS_168559165_FER
    Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Airliner 1
    Ref 15770
    17/04/2024
    See Ferrari text
    Pictures must credit: Geometrium Studio

    A new holiday home has been created for high flyers — made from the fuselage of a Boeing 737 airliner.

    The decommissioned plane is now a private villa for vacation rentals.

    It is perched 150 meters above the sea on the Indonesia island of Bali and boasts 100 sqm of living space with a kitchen-living room, two bedrooms and a wing terrace.

    There’s also an outside pool and barbecue area.

    It was originally bought when it left the service in 2008 to be converted into a restaurant.

    The aircraft was sighted at another Bali location but the plans never came to fruition.

    It sat there for 13 years until being purchased by local developer Felix Demin in 2021.

    He moved it to the cliff overlooking Nyang Nyang Beach offering a new take on luxury living.

    Design studio Geometrium was given the task of turning the plane of turning it into luxury accommodation at the exclusive site.

    OPS: The Private Jet Villa

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    DUKAS_168559163_FER
    Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Airliner 1
    Ref 15770
    17/04/2024
    See Ferrari text
    Pictures must credit: Geometrium Studio

    A new holiday home has been created for high flyers — made from the fuselage of a Boeing 737 airliner.

    The decommissioned plane is now a private villa for vacation rentals.

    It is perched 150 meters above the sea on the Indonesia island of Bali and boasts 100 sqm of living space with a kitchen-living room, two bedrooms and a wing terrace.

    There’s also an outside pool and barbecue area.

    It was originally bought when it left the service in 2008 to be converted into a restaurant.

    The aircraft was sighted at another Bali location but the plans never came to fruition.

    It sat there for 13 years until being purchased by local developer Felix Demin in 2021.

    He moved it to the cliff overlooking Nyang Nyang Beach offering a new take on luxury living.

    Design studio Geometrium was given the task of turning the plane of turning it into luxury accommodation at the exclusive site.

    OPS: The Private Jet Villa

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    DUKAS_168559156_FER
    Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Airliner 1
    Ref 15770
    17/04/2024
    See Ferrari text
    Pictures must credit: Geometrium Studio

    A new holiday home has been created for high flyers — made from the fuselage of a Boeing 737 airliner.

    The decommissioned plane is now a private villa for vacation rentals.

    It is perched 150 meters above the sea on the Indonesia island of Bali and boasts 100 sqm of living space with a kitchen-living room, two bedrooms and a wing terrace.

    There’s also an outside pool and barbecue area.

    It was originally bought when it left the service in 2008 to be converted into a restaurant.

    The aircraft was sighted at another Bali location but the plans never came to fruition.

    It sat there for 13 years until being purchased by local developer Felix Demin in 2021.

    He moved it to the cliff overlooking Nyang Nyang Beach offering a new take on luxury living.

    Design studio Geometrium was given the task of turning the plane of turning it into luxury accommodation at the exclusive site.

    OPS: The Private Jet Villa

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    DUKAS_168559149_FER
    Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Airliner 1
    Ref 15770
    17/04/2024
    See Ferrari text
    Pictures must credit: Geometrium Studio

    A new holiday home has been created for high flyers — made from the fuselage of a Boeing 737 airliner.

    The decommissioned plane is now a private villa for vacation rentals.

    It is perched 150 meters above the sea on the Indonesia island of Bali and boasts 100 sqm of living space with a kitchen-living room, two bedrooms and a wing terrace.

    There’s also an outside pool and barbecue area.

    It was originally bought when it left the service in 2008 to be converted into a restaurant.

    The aircraft was sighted at another Bali location but the plans never came to fruition.

    It sat there for 13 years until being purchased by local developer Felix Demin in 2021.

    He moved it to the cliff overlooking Nyang Nyang Beach offering a new take on luxury living.

    Design studio Geometrium was given the task of turning the plane of turning it into luxury accommodation at the exclusive site.

    OPS: The Private Jet Villa

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    DUKAS_168559147_FER
    Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Airliner 1
    Ref 15770
    17/04/2024
    See Ferrari text
    Pictures must credit: Geometrium Studio

    A new holiday home has been created for high flyers — made from the fuselage of a Boeing 737 airliner.

    The decommissioned plane is now a private villa for vacation rentals.

    It is perched 150 meters above the sea on the Indonesia island of Bali and boasts 100 sqm of living space with a kitchen-living room, two bedrooms and a wing terrace.

    There’s also an outside pool and barbecue area.

    It was originally bought when it left the service in 2008 to be converted into a restaurant.

    The aircraft was sighted at another Bali location but the plans never came to fruition.

    It sat there for 13 years until being purchased by local developer Felix Demin in 2021.

    He moved it to the cliff overlooking Nyang Nyang Beach offering a new take on luxury living.

    Design studio Geometrium was given the task of turning the plane of turning it into luxury accommodation at the exclusive site.

    OPS: The Private Jet Villa

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    DUKAS_168559145_FER
    Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Airliner 1
    Ref 15770
    17/04/2024
    See Ferrari text
    Pictures must credit: Geometrium Studio

    A new holiday home has been created for high flyers — made from the fuselage of a Boeing 737 airliner.

    The decommissioned plane is now a private villa for vacation rentals.

    It is perched 150 meters above the sea on the Indonesia island of Bali and boasts 100 sqm of living space with a kitchen-living room, two bedrooms and a wing terrace.

    There’s also an outside pool and barbecue area.

    It was originally bought when it left the service in 2008 to be converted into a restaurant.

    The aircraft was sighted at another Bali location but the plans never came to fruition.

    It sat there for 13 years until being purchased by local developer Felix Demin in 2021.

    He moved it to the cliff overlooking Nyang Nyang Beach offering a new take on luxury living.

    Design studio Geometrium was given the task of turning the plane of turning it into luxury accommodation at the exclusive site.

    OPS: The Private Jet Villa

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    DUKAS_168559144_FER
    Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Airliner 1
    Ref 15770
    17/04/2024
    See Ferrari text
    Pictures must credit: Geometrium Studio

    A new holiday home has been created for high flyers — made from the fuselage of a Boeing 737 airliner.

    The decommissioned plane is now a private villa for vacation rentals.

    It is perched 150 meters above the sea on the Indonesia island of Bali and boasts 100 sqm of living space with a kitchen-living room, two bedrooms and a wing terrace.

    There’s also an outside pool and barbecue area.

    It was originally bought when it left the service in 2008 to be converted into a restaurant.

    The aircraft was sighted at another Bali location but the plans never came to fruition.

    It sat there for 13 years until being purchased by local developer Felix Demin in 2021.

    He moved it to the cliff overlooking Nyang Nyang Beach offering a new take on luxury living.

    Design studio Geometrium was given the task of turning the plane of turning it into luxury accommodation at the exclusive site.

    OPS: The Private Jet Villa

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    DUKAS_168559139_FER
    Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Airliner 1
    Ref 15770
    17/04/2024
    See Ferrari text
    Pictures must credit: Geometrium Studio

    A new holiday home has been created for high flyers — made from the fuselage of a Boeing 737 airliner.

    The decommissioned plane is now a private villa for vacation rentals.

    It is perched 150 meters above the sea on the Indonesia island of Bali and boasts 100 sqm of living space with a kitchen-living room, two bedrooms and a wing terrace.

    There’s also an outside pool and barbecue area.

    It was originally bought when it left the service in 2008 to be converted into a restaurant.

    The aircraft was sighted at another Bali location but the plans never came to fruition.

    It sat there for 13 years until being purchased by local developer Felix Demin in 2021.

    He moved it to the cliff overlooking Nyang Nyang Beach offering a new take on luxury living.

    Design studio Geometrium was given the task of turning the plane of turning it into luxury accommodation at the exclusive site.

    OPS: The Private Jet Villa

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    DUKAS_168559138_FER
    Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Airliner 1
    Ref 15770
    17/04/2024
    See Ferrari text
    Pictures must credit: Geometrium Studio

    A new holiday home has been created for high flyers — made from the fuselage of a Boeing 737 airliner.

    The decommissioned plane is now a private villa for vacation rentals.

    It is perched 150 meters above the sea on the Indonesia island of Bali and boasts 100 sqm of living space with a kitchen-living room, two bedrooms and a wing terrace.

    There’s also an outside pool and barbecue area.

    It was originally bought when it left the service in 2008 to be converted into a restaurant.

    The aircraft was sighted at another Bali location but the plans never came to fruition.

    It sat there for 13 years until being purchased by local developer Felix Demin in 2021.

    He moved it to the cliff overlooking Nyang Nyang Beach offering a new take on luxury living.

    Design studio Geometrium was given the task of turning the plane of turning it into luxury accommodation at the exclusive site.

    OPS: The Private Jet Villa

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    DUKAS_168559136_FER
    Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Airliner 1
    Ref 15770
    17/04/2024
    See Ferrari text
    Pictures must credit: Geometrium Studio

    A new holiday home has been created for high flyers — made from the fuselage of a Boeing 737 airliner.

    The decommissioned plane is now a private villa for vacation rentals.

    It is perched 150 meters above the sea on the Indonesia island of Bali and boasts 100 sqm of living space with a kitchen-living room, two bedrooms and a wing terrace.

    There’s also an outside pool and barbecue area.

    It was originally bought when it left the service in 2008 to be converted into a restaurant.

    The aircraft was sighted at another Bali location but the plans never came to fruition.

    It sat there for 13 years until being purchased by local developer Felix Demin in 2021.

    He moved it to the cliff overlooking Nyang Nyang Beach offering a new take on luxury living.

    Design studio Geometrium was given the task of turning the plane of turning it into luxury accommodation at the exclusive site.

    OPS: The Private Jet Villa

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    DUKAS_168559135_FER
    Boeing 737 turned into holiday villa for high flyers
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Airliner 1
    Ref 15770
    17/04/2024
    See Ferrari text
    Pictures must credit: Geometrium Studio

    A new holiday home has been created for high flyers — made from the fuselage of a Boeing 737 airliner.

    The decommissioned plane is now a private villa for vacation rentals.

    It is perched 150 meters above the sea on the Indonesia island of Bali and boasts 100 sqm of living space with a kitchen-living room, two bedrooms and a wing terrace.

    There’s also an outside pool and barbecue area.

    It was originally bought when it left the service in 2008 to be converted into a restaurant.

    The aircraft was sighted at another Bali location but the plans never came to fruition.

    It sat there for 13 years until being purchased by local developer Felix Demin in 2021.

    He moved it to the cliff overlooking Nyang Nyang Beach offering a new take on luxury living.

    Design studio Geometrium was given the task of turning the plane of turning it into luxury accommodation at the exclusive site.

    OPS: The Private Jet Villa

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

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