Show Navigation

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
{ 1094 images found }

Loading ()...

  • The statue of Sir Thomas Guy stands outside the historical entrance of Guys hospital, on 9th June 2020, in London, England. Thomas Guy (1644 – 1724) was British bookseller, speculator and founder of Guy's Hospital, London whose links to the global slave trade is now a controversial aspect of this businessman by anti-slavery activists and more recently, Black Lives Matter protesters. His wealth came through shares in the South Sea Company whose main business was in the selling of slaves from Africa to the Spanish colonies. In 1720 he successfully sold his stock of the company for approx £400 million (at today's prices) and amassed a large fortune, opening the Guy's Hospital  in 1725 which today serves as one of  the capital's major NHS healthcare centres. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Guy's and other statues of British slavery owners and profiteers, have become a focus of impassioned protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-28-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by its owner, the Canal and River Trust charity, the statue of slave merchant, Robert Milligan stands covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of London's Docklands Museum on West India Quay, once the world's longest warehouse paid for by slavery profits, on 9th June 2020, in London, England. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligan's and other statues of British slavery profiteers, have become a focus of protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-26-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by its owner, the Canal and River Trust charity, the statue of slave merchant, Robert Milligan stands covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of London's Docklands Museum on West India Quay, once the world's longest warehouse paid for by slavery profits, on 9th June 2020, in London, England. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligan's and other statues of British slavery profiteers, have become a focus of protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-24-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by its owner, the Canal and River Trust charity, the statue of slave merchant, Robert Milligan stands covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of London's Docklands Museum on West India Quay, once the world's longest warehouse paid for by slavery profits, on 9th June 2020, in London, England. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligan's and other statues of British slavery profiteers, have become a focus of protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-23-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by its owner, the Canal and River Trust charity, the statue of slave merchant, Robert Milligan stands covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of London's Docklands Museum on West India Quay, once the world's longest warehouse paid for by slavery profits, on 9th June 2020, in London, England. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligan's and other statues of British slavery profiteers, have become a focus of protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-22-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by its owner, the Canal and River Trust charity, the statue of slave merchant, Robert Milligan stands covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of London's Docklands Museum on West India Quay, once the world's longest warehouse paid for by slavery profits, on 9th June 2020, in London, England. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligan's and other statues of British slavery profiteers, have become a focus of protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-16-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by its owner, the Canal and River Trust charity, the statue of slave merchant, Robert Milligan stands covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of London's Docklands Museum on West India Quay, once the world's longest warehouse paid for by slavery profits, on 9th June 2020, in London, England. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligan's and other statues of British slavery profiteers, have become a focus of protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-13-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by its owner, the Canal and River Trust charity, the statue of slave merchant, Robert Milligan stands covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of London's Docklands Museum on West India Quay, once the world's longest warehouse paid for by slavery profits, on 9th June 2020, in London, England. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligan's and other statues of British slavery profiteers, have become a focus of protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-12-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by its owner, the Canal and River Trust charity, the statue of slave merchant, Robert Milligan stands covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of London's Docklands Museum on West India Quay, once the world's longest warehouse paid for by slavery profits, on 9th June 2020, in London, England. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligan's and other statues of British slavery profiteers, have become a focus of protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-10-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by its owner, the Canal and River Trust charity, the statue of slave merchant, Robert Milligan stands covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of London's Docklands Museum on West India Quay, once the world's longest warehouse paid for by slavery profits, on 9th June 2020, in London, England. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligan's and other statues of British slavery profiteers, have become a focus of protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-07-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by its owner, the Canal and River Trust charity, the statue of slave merchant, Robert Milligan stands covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of London's Docklands Museum on West India Quay, once the world's longest warehouse paid for by slavery profits, on 9th June 2020, in London, England. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligan's and other statues of British slavery profiteers, have become a focus of protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-06-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by its owner, the Canal and River Trust charity, the statue of slave merchant, Robert Milligan stands covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of London's Docklands Museum on West India Quay, once the world's longest warehouse paid for by slavery profits, on 9th June 2020, in London, England. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligan's and other statues of British slavery profiteers, have become a focus of protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-04-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by its owner, the Canal and River Trust charity, the statue of slave merchant, Robert Milligan stands covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of London's Docklands Museum on West India Quay, once the world's longest warehouse paid for by slavery profits, on 9th June 2020, in London, England. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligan's and other statues of British slavery profiteers, have become a focus of protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-02-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by its owner, the Canal and River Trust charity, the statue of slave merchant, Robert Milligan stands covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of London's Docklands Museum on West India Quay, once the world's longest warehouse paid for by slavery profits, on 9th June 2020, in London, England. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligan's and other statues of British slavery profiteers, have become a focus of protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-27-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by its owner, the Canal and River Trust charity, the statue of slave merchant, Robert Milligan stands covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of London's Docklands Museum on West India Quay, once the world's longest warehouse paid for by slavery profits, on 9th June 2020, in London, England. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligan's and other statues of British slavery profiteers, have become a focus of protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-25-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by the Canal and River Trust, the statue of merchant slave owner, Robert Milligan stands partially covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of London's Docklands Museum on the former quay of West India Docks, on 9th June 2020, in London, England. Scottish merchant Robert Milligan (1746 - 1809) grew up on his family's sugar plantation in Jamaica and by the time of his death, owned 526 slaves of his own. Because of the theft of his sugar and rum cargoes from the docks of the day, he and other busnessmen built the massive West India Docks trade hub, him becoming Deputy Chairman of the West India Dock Company. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligan's and other statues of British slavery owners and profiteers, have become a focus of impassioned protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-21-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by its owner, the Canal and River Trust charity, the statue of slave merchant, Robert Milligan stands covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of London's Docklands Museum on West India Quay, once the world's longest warehouse paid for by slavery profits, on 9th June 2020, in London, England. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligan's and other statues of British slavery profiteers, have become a focus of protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-20-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by its owner, the Canal and River Trust charity, the statue of slave merchant, Robert Milligan stands covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of London's Docklands Museum on West India Quay, once the world's longest warehouse paid for by slavery profits, on 9th June 2020, in London, England. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligan's and other statues of British slavery profiteers, have become a focus of protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-19-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by its owner, the Canal and River Trust charity, the statue of slave merchant, Robert Milligan stands covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of London's Docklands Museum on West India Quay, once the world's longest warehouse paid for by slavery profits, on 9th June 2020, in London, England. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligan's and other statues of British slavery profiteers, have become a focus of protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-18-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by its owner, the Canal and River Trust charity, the statue of slave merchant, Robert Milligan stands covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of London's Docklands Museum on West India Quay, once the world's longest warehouse paid for by slavery profits, on 9th June 2020, in London, England. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligan's and other statues of British slavery profiteers, have become a focus of protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-17-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by its owner, the Canal and River Trust charity, the statue of slave merchant, Robert Milligan stands covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of London's Docklands Museum on West India Quay, once the world's longest warehouse paid for by slavery profits, on 9th June 2020, in London, England. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligan's and other statues of British slavery profiteers, have become a focus of protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-15-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by its owner, the Canal and River Trust charity, the statue of slave merchant, Robert Milligan stands covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of London's Docklands Museum on West India Quay, once the world's longest warehouse paid for by slavery profits, on 9th June 2020, in London, England. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligan's and other statues of British slavery profiteers, have become a focus of protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-14-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by its owner, the Canal and River Trust charity, the statue of slave merchant, Robert Milligan stands covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of London's Docklands Museum on West India Quay, once the world's longest warehouse paid for by slavery profits, on 9th June 2020, in London, England. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligan's and other statues of British slavery profiteers, have become a focus of protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-11-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by its owner, the Canal and River Trust charity, the statue of slave merchant, Robert Milligan stands covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of London's Docklands Museum on West India Quay, once the world's longest warehouse paid for by slavery profits, on 9th June 2020, in London, England. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligan's and other statues of British slavery profiteers, have become a focus of protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-08-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by its owner, the Canal and River Trust charity, the statue of slave merchant, Robert Milligan stands covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of London's Docklands Museum on West India Quay, once the world's longest warehouse paid for by slavery profits, on 9th June 2020, in London, England. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligan's and other statues of British slavery profiteers, have become a focus of protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-09-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by its owner, the Canal and River Trust charity, the statue of slave merchant, Robert Milligan stands covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of London's Docklands Museum on West India Quay, once the world's longest warehouse paid for by slavery profits, on 9th June 2020, in London, England. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligan's and other statues of British slavery profiteers, have become a focus of protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-05-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by its owner, the Canal and River Trust charity, the statue of slave merchant, Robert Milligan stands covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of London's Docklands Museum on West India Quay, once the world's longest warehouse paid for by slavery profits, on 9th June 2020, in London, England. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligan's and other statues of British slavery profiteers, have become a focus of protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-03-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by its owner, the Canal and River Trust charity, the statue of slave merchant, Robert Milligan stands covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of London's Docklands Museum on West India Quay, once the world's longest warehouse paid for by slavery profits, on 9th June 2020, in London, England. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligan's and other statues of British slavery profiteers, have become a focus of protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-01-09-06-2...jpg
  • A week after a Black Lives Matter protest turned to violence when the statue of wartime Prime Minister Sir Winston Churchill was daubed in graffiti which called him a racist, a billboard quoting American George Floyd's last words is written at Lambeth North, on 13th June 2020, in London, England.
    black_lives_matter_billboard-02-13-0...jpg
  • A week after a Black Lives Matter protest turned to violence when the statue of wartime Prime Minister Sir Winston Churchill was daubed in graffiti which called him a racist, a billboard quoting American George Floyd's last words is written at Lambeth North, on 13th June 2020, in London, England.
    black_lives_matter_billboard-01-13-0...jpg
  • The head of former South African activist and president Nelson Mandela, an artwork by sculptor Ian Walters, has been covered to protect it from right-wing protesters as a result of slavery profiteers' statues being targetted by the Black Lives Matter movement. The far-right have been promising to attack prominent statues of black politicians such as Mandela here, outside the Royal festival Hall on the Southbank, and elsewhere like Parliament Square, on 23rd June 2020, in London, England.
    mandela_head-02-23-06-2020.jpg
  • After the weekend's violence aginst police by far-right groups protesting about Black Lives Matter campaign, and especially the daubing of anti-racist graffiti on the plinth below wartime British Prime Minister the week before, Sir Winston Churchill's statue remains boarded up and boxed in a quiet Parliament Square, on 15th June 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_shops-03-15-06-2020.jpg
  • At the beginning of the fourth week of the UK government's lockdown during the Coronavirus pandemic, and with 120,067 UK reported cases with 16,060 deaths, a bus remains stationary in front of a deserted bus shelter displaying a 'Stay At Home', 'Save Lives' poster, at Waterloo bus station in South London, on 20th April 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_lockdown-21-20-04-2020.jpg
  • As the second week of the UK government's Coronavirus lockdown ends on a fine Spring weekend, and 24hrs after it was reported that 3,000 Londoners had been counted in Brockwell Park, Herne Hill, resulting in the closure of this significant public green space by Lambeth council, an NHS digital ad displayed in an empty Herne Hill railway station ticket hall, asks for the public to stay at home to save lives while two members of the public play on the pavement outside, on 5th April 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_HerneHill-22-05-04-2020.jpg
  • Aerial view through misted bus window of London mother's drab lives below during seasonal downpour of rain.
    rain_window11-19-04-2012.jpg
  • Aerial view through misted bus window of Londoners drab lives below during seasonal downpour of rain.
    rain_window06-19-04-2012.jpg
  • Aerial view through misted bus window of Londoners drab lives below during seasonal downpour of rain.
    rain_window02-19-04-2012.jpg
  • Aerial view through misted bus window of Londoners drab lives below during seasonal downpour of rain.
    rain_window03-19-04-2012.jpg
  • The head of former South African activist and president Nelson Mandela, an artwork by sculptor Ian Walters, has been covered to protect it from right-wing protesters as a result of slavery profiteers' statues being targetted by the Black Lives Matter movement. The far-right have been promising to attack prominent statues of black politicians such as Mandela here, outside the Royal festival Hall on the Southbank, and elsewhere like Parliament Square, on 23rd June 2020, in London, England.
    mandela_head-01-23-06-2020.jpg
  • Aerial view through misted bus window of McDonalds restaurant and Londoners drab lives below during seasonal downpour of rain.
    rain_window10-19-04-2012.jpg
  • Aerial view through misted bus window of Argos branch and Londoners drab lives below during seasonal downpour of rain.
    rain_window07-19-04-2012.jpg
  • Aerial view through misted bus window of Londoners drab lives below during seasonal downpour of rain.
    rain_window04-19-04-2012.jpg
  • Aerial view through misted bus window of Londoners drab lives below during seasonal downpour of rain.
    rain_window01-19-04-2012.jpg
  • During a journey into America's hinterlands, days after the September 11th attacks in New York and Washington DC, the breaking news flashes from Fox TV's studios that there are expected to be no more survivors found at Ground Zero. The tragic message reads 'No Signs of Life' in large red letters, read by passers-by along the on the Avenue of the Americas on Manhattan. As the news travels across the building, the camera blurs other TV pictures of live broadcasts with a sense of urgency, speed and desperation in the fruitless search for life.
    september11th016-17-09_2001.jpg
  • Family album of photos framed and attached to a tree in a south London cemetery.
    family_pictures02-25-02-2014.jpg
  • As the UK government tells the nation to prepare for the worst two weeks of the Coronavirus pandemic, a warning aimed at the population to stay at home and minimise contact with others, but in the week when new vaccination centres are opening, a 'Stay At Home' message is displayed at a bus shelter in Shoreditch, on 11th January 2021, in London, England.
    coronavirus_city03-11-01-2021.jpg
  • As the UK government tells the nation to prepare for the worst two weeks of the Coronavirus pandemic, a warning aimed at the population to stay at home and minimise contact with others, but in the week when new vaccination centres are opening, a 'Stay At Home' message is displayed at a bus shelter in Shoreditch, on 11th January 2021, in London, England.
    coronavirus_city02-11-01-2021.jpg
  • Climate Change activists take their Environmental and Economy protest called 'The Walk of Shame' to the City of London, the capital's financial district , on 4th September 2020, in London, England. According to XR, "companies and institutions have profited from the slave trade and the profit from the exploitation of people and the planet. Companies on their tour of City insitutions such as Lloyds of London, Aviva Insurance and the Bank of England, are financing and insuring major fossil fuel projects, fuelling the climate and ecological emergency."
    extinction_rebellion30-04-09-2020.jpg
  • Climate Change activists take their Environmental and Economy protest called 'The Walk of Shame' to the City of London, the capital's financial district , on 4th September 2020, in London, England. According to XR, "companies and institutions have profited from the slave trade and the profit from the exploitation of people and the planet. Companies on their tour of City insitutions such as Lloyds of London, Aviva Insurance and the Bank of England, are financing and insuring major fossil fuel projects, fuelling the climate and ecological emergency."
    extinction_rebellion31-04-09-2020.jpg
  • On the day that UK Prime Minster, Boris Johnson announced in parliament of a major easing of Coronavirus pandemic restrictions on July 4th next week - including the re-opening of pubs, restaurants, hotels and hairdressers in England - a detail of a billboard shows peeling imagery of black men, near the Southbank which remains closed for the forseeable future, on 23rd June 2020, in London, England. The three month two metre social distance will be also reduced to one metre plus but in the last 24hrs, a further 171 have died from Covid, bringing the UK total to 42,927.
    coronavirus_southbank-03-23-06-2020.jpg
  • On the day that UK Prime Minster, Boris Johnson announced in parliament of a major easing of Coronavirus pandemic restrictions on July 4th next week - including the re-opening of pubs, restaurants, hotels and hairdressers in England - a detail of a billboard shows peeling imagery of black men, near the Southbank which remains closed for the forseeable future, on 23rd June 2020, in London, England. The three month two metre social distance will be also reduced to one metre plus but in the last 24hrs, a further 171 have died from Covid, bringing the UK total to 42,927.
    coronavirus_southbank-02-23-06-2020.jpg
  • As the UK's Coronavirus pandemic lockdown continues into its 5th week, and UK deaths from Covid-19 reached 21,678 - a daily rise of 586, swings and climbing frames are deserted during seasonal rain Ruskin Park in Lambeth, where until now, this green space in south London has been busy with those exercising according to social distance requirements, on 28th April 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_Ruskin-06-28-04-2020.jpg
  • As the UK's Coronavirus pandemic lockdown continues into its 5th week, and UK deaths from Covid-19 reached 21,678 - a daily rise of 586, swings and climbing frames are deserted during seasonal rain Ruskin Park in Lambeth, where until now, this green space in south London has been busy with those exercising according to social distance requirements, on 28th April 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_Ruskin-05-28-04-2020.jpg
  • As the UK's Coronavirus pandemic lockdown continues into its 5th week, and UK deaths from Covid-19 reached 21,678 - a daily rise of 586, a gate is taped-off while seasonal rain empties Ruskin Park in Lambeth, where until now, this green space in south London has been busy with those exercising according to social distance requirements, on 28th April 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_Ruskin-01-28-04-2020.jpg
  • As the UK government's lockdown restrictions during the Coronavirus pandemic continues, and number of UK reported cases rose to 138,078 with a total now of 18,738 deaths, a Londoner passes a banner by Lambeth Council advising on social distancing restrictions and overall behaviour has been stretched across the gates of Brockwell Park, a public green space in the south London borough of Lambeth, on 23rd April 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_lockdown-34-23-04-2020.jpg
  • At the beginning of the fourth week of the UK government's lockdown during the Coronavirus pandemic, and with 120,067 UK reported cases with 16,060 deaths, a Transport For London (TFL) sign at Tottenham Court Road underground station, tells Londoners that only essential workers should travel on the transport system, on 20th April 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_lockdown-47-20-04-2020.jpg
  • At the beginning of the fourth week of the UK government's lockdown during the Coronavirus pandemic, and with 120,067 UK reported cases with 16,060 deaths, a single traveller exits Tottenham Court Road underground station and passes a Transport For London (TFL) sign telling Londoners that only essential workers should travel on the transport system, on 20th April 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_lockdown-46-20-04-2020.jpg
  • At the beginning of the fourth week of the UK government's lockdown during the Coronavirus pandemic, and with 120,067 UK reported cases with 16,060 deaths, a digital ad telling Londoners to stay at home is displayed on Oxford Street that would normally be a busy thoroughfare for shoppers and traffic and which remains largely deserted at mid-day, on 20th April 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_lockdown-32-20-04-2020.jpg
  • On the first day of the Easter Bank Holiday weekend, and at the end of the second week of lockdown restrictions by the UK government, Lambeth council banners have started appearing outside entrances across the borough, including at Ruskin Park, on 10th April 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_RuskinPark-02-10-04-2020.jpg
  • On the first day of the Easter Bank Holiday weekend, and at the end of the second week of lockdown restrictions by the UK government, Lambeth council banners have started appearing outside entrances across the borough, including at Ruskin Park, on 10th April 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_RuskinPark-03-10-04-2020.jpg
  • On the first day of the Easter Bank Holiday weekend, and at the end of the second week of lockdown restrictions by the UK government, Lambeth council banners have started appearing outside entrances across the borough, including at Ruskin Park, on 10th April 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_RuskinPark-01-10-04-2020.jpg
  • Graffiti scrawled on the exteriour of Barts Hospital, by fans of the popular TV show Sherlock starring Benedict Cumberbatch where the fictional character was filmed, seemingly jumping to his death, on 5th March 2017, at Smithfield, in the City of London, England.
    sherlock_graffiti-02-05-03-2017.jpg
  • Police officer walks beneath a world map on a bakery business hoarding.
    bakery_hoarding05-21-05-2015.jpg
  • Man walks beneath a world map on a bakery business hoarding.
    bakery_hoarding04-21-05-2015.jpg
  • Muslim couple walk beneath a world map on a bakery business hoarding.
    bakery_hoarding02-21-05-2015.jpg
  • Local map of Somma Vesuviana, a town situated on the slopes of the dormant Vesuvius volcano, last active in 1945.
    vesuvius248-29-05-2014.jpg
  • The Bay of Naples (population 3.5m) seen from the south-western slopes of the Vesuvius Volcano which last erupted in 1945.
    vesuvius47-29-05-2014.jpg
  • The Bay of Naples (population 3.5m) seen from the south-western slopes of the Vesuvius Volcano which last erupted in 1945.
    vesuvius39-29-05-2014.jpg
  • Warning sign of risk on the western slope of Vesuvius with the urban sprawl of Naples in the distance.<br />
<br />
From the Introduction page of the book 'Risk Wise: Nine Everyday Adventures' by Polly Morland (Allianz, The School of Life, Profile Books, 2014).
    vesuvius49-29-05-2014.jpg
  • Warning sign of risk on the western slope of Vesuvius with the urban sprawl of Naples in the distance.
    vesuvius51-29-05-2014.jpg
  • Boughs heavy with apricots, grapes, lemons and plums are tinged pink by the setting sun on land owned by Baldassare and Felicia De Simons in the village of Somma Vesuviana, in the Red (evacuation) Zone on the western slope of Vesvius, Somma, Italy. <br />
<br />
From the chapter entitled 'Under the Volcano' and from the book 'Risk Wise: Nine Everyday Adventures' by Polly Morland (Allianz, The School of Life, Profile Books, 2015).
    vesuvius465-29-05-2014.jpg
  • Boughs heavy with apricots, grapes, lemons and plums are tinged pink by the setting sun on land owned by Baldassare and Felicia De Simons in the village of Somma Vesuviana, in the Red (evacuation) Zone on the western slope of Vesvius, Somma, Italy. <br />
<br />
From the chapter entitled 'Under the Volcano' and from the book 'Risk Wise: Nine Everyday Adventures' by Polly Morland (Allianz, The School of Life, Profile Books, 2015).
    vesuvius466-29-05-2014.jpg
  • Shrine to Padre Pio, (1887 – 1968) at a smallholding located on the slopes of the Vesuvius volcano which last erupted in 1945. Pio was a friar, priest, stigmatist and mystic of the Roman Catholic Order of Friars Minor Capuchin. Padre Pio became famous for bearing the stigmata for most of his life, which generated much interest and controversy around him. He is now venerated as a saint in the Catholic Church.
    vesuvius457-29-05-2014.jpg
  • Reflections of a beautiful landscape and a painting hanging on a wall on a smallholding located on the slopes of the Vesuvius volcano which last erupted in 1945.
    vesuvius418-29-05-2014.jpg
  • Homes perched on the slopes of the Vesuvius volcano, seen in the distance which last erupted in 1945.
    vesuvius283-29-05-2014.jpg
  • Lemons grow on fertile soil on a smallholding located on the slopes of the Vesuvius volcano, seen in the distance which last erupted in 1945.
    vesuvius287-29-05-2014.jpg
  • Local farmer tends crops in a fertile field on his smallholding, located on the slopes of the Vesuvius volcano, seen in the distance which last erupted in 1945.
    vesuvius265-29-05-2014.jpg
  • Local farmer tends crops in a fertile field on his smallholding, located on the slopes of the Vesuvius volcano, seen in the distance which last erupted in 1945.
    vesuvius263-29-05-2014.jpg
  • Italian relatives on a rooftop of their home in the village of Somma Vesuviana, in the Red (evacuation) Zone on the western slope of Vesvius, Somma, Italy.
    vesuvius404-29-05-2014.jpg
  • Italian relatives on a rooftop of their home in the village of Somma Vesuviana, in the Red (evacuation) Zone on the western slope of Vesvius, Somma, Italy.
    vesuvius389-29-05-2014.jpg
  • Baldassare and Felicia De Simons and family surrounded by lemons in their garden in the village of Somma Vesuviana, in the Red (evacuation) Zone on the western slope of Vesvius, Somma, Italy. <br />
<br />
From the chapter entitled 'Under the Volcano' and from the book 'Risk Wise: Nine Everyday Adventures' by Polly Morland (Allianz, The School of Life, Profile Books, 2015).
    vesuvius343-29-05-2014.jpg
  • Baldassare and Felicia De Simons and family surrounded by lemons in their garden in the village of Somma Vesuviana, in the Red (evacuation) Zone on the western slope of Vesvius, Somma, Italy. <br />
<br />
From the chapter entitled 'Under the Volcano' and from the book 'Risk Wise: Nine Everyday Adventures' by Polly Morland (Allianz, The School of Life, Profile Books, 2015).
    vesuvius375-29-05-2014.jpg
  • Baldassare and Felicia De Simons, in their kitchen in the village of Somma Vesuviana, in the Red (evacuation) Zone on the western slope of Vesuvius which last erupted in 1945.
    vesuvius320-29-05-2014.jpg
  • A sign for the green environment in a housing estate located in the former Eastern Bloc Communist East Germany known as the GDR (German Democratic Republic) during the cold war. This was once a restricted zone due to its proximity to the notorious secret police (Stasi) Hohenschonhausen prison before the fall of the Berlin wall in Nov 1989.
    hohenschonhausen_stasi_prison02-05-0...jpg
  • Peeling billboard reveals older layers of Primesight street advertising incl a dystopian "It's a wonderful world."
    wonderful_world03-28-04-2012.jpg
  • Peeling billboard reveals older layers of Primesight street advertising incl a dystopian "It's a wonderful world."
    wonderful_world01-28-04-2012.jpg
  • The fantasy of a model sunbathing on a beach is the opposite of rainy London on an April morning for local girl.
    rain_ad01-27-04-2012.jpg
  • Lonely looking woman standing at the kerbside on a London street, seen from a travelling commuter bus.
    bus_journey03-26-04-2012.jpg
  • London bus passenger showing the everyday tedium of commuting in the UK capital and a romantic film ad.
    bus_commuter02-27-04-2012.jpg
  • A young boy has his photo taken at the fairground on Southend seafront in the early nineteen sixties.
    sixties_archive11-20-08-1962.jpg
  • A mother holds her young son up to show him a paddle steamer on Southend pier in the early nineteen sixties.
    sixties_archive10-15-06-1961.jpg
  • A young boy sits in the family Anglia car with his older sister on an Essex estate in the early nineteen sixties.
    sixties_archive08-20-04-1963.jpg
  • A young boy sits on the grass after falling from his tricycle on a summer's day in the family garden in the early nineteen sixties.
    sixties_archive07-13-07-1964.jpg
  • A young boy waters shrubs with a toy watering can in the family garden on an Essex estate in the early nineteen sixties.
    sixties_archive05-13-07-1964.jpg
  • An assortment of properties are displayed in a Sevenoaks estate agent's high street window.
    properties_window1-02-September-2011.jpg
  • Elderly couplerest on a Cambridge wall as a younger, Asian man and European woman eat food.
    cambridge9-28-August-2011.jpg
  • city_night07-03-04-2011.jpg
  • city_night03-03-04-2011.jpg
  • city_night02-03-04-2011.jpg
  • Education slogan for London Metropolitan University's Holloway Road campus.
    met_london_university19-02-11-2010.jpg
Next
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x

Richard Baker Photography

  • Archive
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area
  • Portfolio
  • About
  • Contact
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • Blog