Thursday, 12 January 2017

Sameer Shergill is on youtube and the songs gone viral now

Hi friends you know me as Sameer Shergill aka Arpit Singh Gill. Friends It was since ages when I was live on my blog because I was so much busy on my other projects and here I am. My videos is on YouTube now and you can find me as a singer here. Please guyz love me support me watch my videos and please like, subscribe and share my videos. The link is given below :-
https://youtu.be/EQ1-LjuFrRc
(Please copy it and search on web you will able to visit on my channel and my videos)


Friends this is the logo of my channel please visit it for at least one time.
My channel's name is :-
Million Dollars Music - M.D.M

Friday, 1 January 2016

The engraving on TAJ MAHAL

Hey friends this is sameer after a long time. How are you all? May be fine. So, friends today I'm here to tell you something about the architecture and art work done on the "Taj Mahal".



 It was the golden era of mughal empire when the Taj was made. The emperor was Shahjahan the great who make his wife's last dream a reality. This was about 22 years taking to complete the taj and 20,000 workers works day and night to make their king's dream true. Many European works works on the engraving of taj mahal. The name is "Pietra Dura". It was a style of Italian engraving which is done with the help of gems, ruby's, emereld, sapphire and many more precious stones.


Shahjahan invited the pietra dura artists from Europe and asked him to help in their project. There are many steps for doing the pietra dura on a stone. Firstly clean the part of a stone and than cut the design from the stone than ready a precious stone of the design shape and reset it on the stone with the help of the white cement.
                  Actually many of the people didn't know that front side of the taj mahal is from the river and today where we enter in the taj it is the back side of it. The backside complex of taj is bigger more than the 4 football grounds.
                   It was the royal engraving on the river side of the TAJ.


At that time if any ordinary people has the courage to se this royal engraving. He can't see any thing after that. He need to lost his eyes. Because this engraving was only for royal people. This art work is done on the red sand stone.
              But today the beauty of the Taj is expoiled by the pollution and the thousands of tourists which reach daily. Really it is a wonder of love which is of a king towards his wife.







Monday, 12 October 2015

A new world record set by the Pablo Picasso painting

A painting by Pablo Picasso has set a new world record for the most expensive artwork to be sold at auction after reaching $179m (£115m) in New York.



Women of Algiers (Version O) had been expected to exceed $140m before the auction but the final price far exceeded those estimates in a sale at Christie’s auction house at a time when collectors’ appetite for masterpieces of impressionist, modern and contemporary art is increasing. 
On Monday night, several bidders competing via telephone drove the winning bid to $160m, for a final price of $179,365,000 including Christie’s commission of just over 12%. Previously the most expensive work sold at auction was Francis Bacon’s triptych Three Studies of Lucian Freud, which sold for $142.4m at Christie’s in November 2013.
Experts say the prices are driven by artworks’ investment value and by wealthy new and established collectors seeking out the very best works. 
“I don’t really see an end to it, unless interest rates drop sharply, which I don’t see happening in the near future,” Manhattan dealer Richard Feigen said.
Picasso’s work is a vibrant, multi-hued painting featuring a scantily attired woman amid smaller nudes. The evening sale also featured Alberto Giacometti’s life-size sculpture Pointing Man which reached estimated $141.3m, earning it the title of most expensive sculpture sold at auction.
Impressionist and modern artworks continue to corner the market because “they are beautiful, accessible and a proven value,” said Sarah Lichtman, a professor of design history and curatorial studies at the New School. “Prices for works from these periods only seem to go up each auction cycle and the reputations of the artists become further enshrined,” she said. “Today the works epitomise the conservative, moneyed establishment.”
Women of Algiers, once owned by the American collectors Victor and Sally Ganz, was inspired by Picasso’s fascination with the 19th-century French artist Eugène Delacroix. It is part of a 15-work series Picasso created in 1954-1955 designated with the letters A to O. It has appeared in several major museum retrospectives of the artist.
Overall, 34 of 35 lots sold at Monday’s auction for a total of $706 million.