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  • A mother waits to walk 0ver a crossing opposite a question mark in the context of a billboard ad at East Dulwich, on 14th February 2019, in London, England.
    question_mark-03-14-02-2019.jpg
  • Mothers pass a question mark in the context of a billboard ad and mothers at East Dulwich, on 10th February 2019, in London, England.
    question_mark-03-12-02-2019.jpg
  • An EDF Energy van passes a question mark in the context of a billboard ad and traffic at East Dulwich, on 10th February 2019, in London, England.
    question_mark-01-12-02-2019.jpg
  • A south London landscape with a question mark being held in the context of a billboard ad, on 10th February 2019, in London, England.
    question_mark-05-11-02-2019.jpg
  • An EDF Energy van passes a question mark in the context of a billboard ad and traffic at East Dulwich, on 10th February 2019, in London, England.
    question_mark-02-12-02-2019.jpg
  • A south London child walks beneath a question mark being held in the context of a billboard ad, on 10th February 2019, in London, England.
    question_mark-01-11-02-2019.jpg
  • Seated in a presidential palace meeting room is Dr Ghazi Salahudin Atabani, a special advisor to the Sudanese President Omar Hassan Ahmad al-Bashir during a media briefing in Khartoum.
    sudan248-24-05-2009.jpg
  • An EDF Energy van passes a question mark in the context of a billboard ad and traffic at East Dulwich, on 10th February 2019, in London, England.
    question_mark-01-14-02-2019.jpg
  • A lady presses the crossing signal in front of a question mark in the context of a billboard ad at East Dulwich, on 14th February 2019, in London, England.
    question_mark-02-14-02-2019.jpg
  • A question mark in the context of a billboard ad in East Dulwich, on 10th February 2019, in London, England.
    question_mark-04-12-02-2019.jpg
  • A south London landscape with a question mark being held in the context of a billboard ad, on 10th February 2019, in London, England.
    question_mark-04-11-02-2019.jpg
  • A south London child walks beneath a question mark being held in the context of a billboard ad, on 10th February 2019, in London, England.
    question_mark-02-11-02-2019.jpg
  • Seated in a presidential palace meeting room is Dr Ghazi Salahudin Atabani, a special advisor to the Sudanese President Omar Hassan Ahmad al-Bashir during a media briefing in Khartoum.
    sudan251-24-05-2009.jpg
  • Seated in a presidential palace meeting room is Dr Ghazi Salahudin Atabani, a special advisor to the Sudanese President Omar Hassan Ahmad al-Bashir during a media briefing in Khartoum.
    sudan250-24-05-2009.jpg
  • Seated in a presidential palace meeting room is Dr Ghazi Salahudin Atabani, a special advisor to the Sudanese President Omar Hassan Ahmad al-Bashir during a media briefing in Khartoum.
    sudan249-24-05-2009.jpg
  • Seated in a presidential palace meeting room is Dr Ghazi Salahudin Atabani, a special advisor to the Sudanese President Omar Hassan Ahmad al-Bashir during a media briefing in Khartoum.
    sudan246-24-05-2009.jpg
  • Seated in a presidential palace meeting room is Dr Ghazi Salahudin Atabani, a special advisor to the Sudanese President Omar Hassan Ahmad al-Bashir during a media briefing in Khartoum.
    sudan247-24-05-2009.jpg
  • "I love Lambeth because .." post-it notes express an affection for south Londoners' home borough, left on a country show noticeboard. Pink heart-shaped stickers tell the viewer how much they appreciate life in this inner-city region of the capital where crime is a major negative aspect of living here. Many reasons are written by children whose optimism seems untainted.
    love_lambeth01-15-09-2012.jpg
  • Father Peter Geldard sits in his former Anglican Church near Faversham, England. He sits in a pew clasping his hands together and looking away as if lost in thought, the Christian cross and altar in the distance. Geldard is known for his stance against the Church of England's vote allowing the ordination of women priests in 1992, causing a huge row with Anglican church worshippers. Clergy, including five bishops, eventually left to join the Catholic Church including Father Geldard, who led the opposition and became a notorious debater, campaigner, and general nuisance to the church. He eventually resigned from his Anglican orders, moved out of his vicarage house and along with thirty-five members of his former parish (including the churchwardens and all the members of the parish council), now attends Mass at the Catholic church in Faversham. .
    priest01.jpg
  • Feminist theologian, writer and pioneering woman Anglican priest Jan Fortune-Wood at the altar of her Birmingham church St Barnabas Church in Kingshurst, Solihull.
    woman_priest01-13-03-1994.jpg
  • We look down behind an airline passenger who is alone on seating in the departures concourse of Heathrow Airport's Terminal 5. Mourning the death of a mother, the lady sits with a floral tribute to the recently-deceased relative whose name 'Mum' is laid out next to her in pink flowers. On her lap is the organic Soil Association's magazine Living Earth. Perhaps the woman is on her way to a family funeral and is flying from T5 on this sad flight. Amid the otherwise bustling international airport, the woman seeks solace and tries to sleep before her check-in zone opens. From writer Alain de Botton's book project "A Week at the Airport: A Heathrow Diary" (2009). .
    heathrow_airport1122-12-08-2009.jpg
  • Feminist theologian, writer and Anglican priest Jan Fortune-Wood outside her St Barnabas Church in Kingshurst.
    woman_priest-13-03-1994.jpg
  • A religious man seemingly at prayer beneath the lion on the Southbank, south side of Westminster Bridge,
    religious_man02-09-09-2015.jpg
  • Debris of Korean Air Cargo Flight 8509, a Boeing 747-2B5F, registered HL7451 and bound for Milano-Malpensa Airport, which crashed due to instrument malfunction and pilot error on 22 December 1999 shortly after take-off from London Stansted Airport. The aircraft crashed into Hatfield Forest near the village of Great Hallingbury close to but clear of some local houses. All four crew on board were killed.
    korean_cargo_crash01-23-12-1999.jpg
  • The rider of a motorbike who has been stopped by City of London Police, talks to officers at the roadside in the Square Mile, the capital's financial district, on 6th August 2020, in London, England.
    bus_journey03-06-08-2020.jpg
  • The rider of a motorbike who has been stopped by City of London Police, talks to officers at the roadside in the Square Mile, the capital's financial district, on 6th August 2020, in London, England.
    bus_journey04-06-08-2020.jpg
  • A religious man seemingly at prayer beneath the lion on the Southbank, south side of Westminster Bridge,
    religious_man01-09-09-2015.jpg
  • Sprayed writing on a closed recession business window.
    last_day01-31-05-2012.jpg
  • Three laughing ladies hold up their sticks of rock beneath a seaside character on the seafront at Blackpool, on 18th July 1993, Blackpool, Lancashire, England. In 1887, sugar-boiling factory owner Ben Bullock bought some plain stick candy band had the idea of putting ‘Blackpool Rock’ through the centre of the rock. Now a major industry in the holiday season in Britain and many seaside towns have their versions with their own names running through the rock. Modern seaside rock is thicker, about 1 inch, and more solid than the original form. Its sugar content is nowadays a reason not to buy as much, the adverse effects on teeth from sugar and colouring by the confectionary industry being a main reason for its decline.
    blackpool_rock_ladies-18-07-1993.jpg
  • A detail of a rock and holiday souvenir seller in the Lancashire seaside town of Blackpool. Standing in his shop, we see the owner of this seaside shop on the northwest England resort where buying seaside gifts and souvenirs is ever popular by visitors and daytrippers. In 1887, sugar-boiling factory owner Ben Bullock bought some plain stick candy band had the idea of putting ‘Blackpool Rock’ through the centre of the rock. Now a major industry in the holiday season in Britain and many seaside towns have their versions with their own names running through the rock. Modern seaside rock is thicker, about 1 inch, and more solid than the original form. Its sugar content is nowadays a reason not to buy as much, the adverse effects on teeth from sugar and colouring by the confectionary industry being a main reason for its decline.
    blackpool_rock-19-07-1993.jpg
  • Two elderly ladies reason with police about a local matter during a protest in the centre of Canterbury, Kent England.
    archbishop_enthronement36-21-03-2013.jpg
  • Beneath an ugly breeze block concrete wall, a couple are enjoying their holiday in the English seaside town of Paignton, Devon. Sitting in striped deckchairs they are both curiously touching their own genital areas between their legs, perhaps both scratching an itch. The lady in sunglasses wearing a floral dress on the left looks guilty while her topless male partner appears more amused by the interruption. In this depressing corner of Paignton, also called the English Riviera, the grey construction behind them is a grim reminder of what it is often like to holiday in one's own home country where few exotic luxuries are found. Such squalor is unfortunately common around the UK and a reason why people take their vacations abroad. Even the grass below them is bare with weeds growing and soil at the foot of the wall.
    england_beach01-15-12-2007 .jpg
  • In an office stock room, an archivist in British Airways' Customer Experiences Divition shows some conceptual design ideas for future Business Class cabin layouts, seen at the airline's corporate headquarters at Waterside at Harmondsworth near Heathrow Airport. Having listened to their passengers' ideas for what they'd like to experience in their long-haul cabins, BA regularly come up with ways to make the flight for premium users a reason to become loyal fare-payers. From writer Alain de Botton's book project "A Week at the Airport: A Heathrow Diary" (2009). ..
    heathrow_airport1637-20-08-2009.jpg
  • The 18th century historic Sir Cloudesley Shovell Corn Exchange clock (1771) in Rochester High Street, on 22nd July, in Rochester, England. The historic timepiece, a gift from Sir Cloudesley who was MP for Rochester from 1695 to 1701, has recently been restored at a cost of £40,000 after centuries of wear and tear took its toll and much of the clock had to be dismantled for safety reasons.
    rochester-04-22-07-2018.jpg
  • The 18th century historic Sir Cloudesley Shovell Corn Exchange clock (1771) in Rochester High Street, on 22nd July, in Rochester, England. The historic timepiece, a gift from Sir Cloudesley who was MP for Rochester from 1695 to 1701, has recently been restored at a cost of £40,000 after centuries of wear and tear took its toll and much of the clock had to be dismantled for safety reasons.
    rochester-02-22-07-2018.jpg
  • Wall mural showing WW2 bombing targets in what is now an overgrown, mildew-ridden farm shack in woodland at Seething, Norfolk England. Seething is a former Royal Air Force station, assigned to the 448th Bombardment Group (Heavy) flying B-24 Liberators as part of the Eighth Air Force's strategic bombing campaign. The group enered combat on 22 December 1943, and until April 1945 served primarily as a strategic bombardment organization, hitting such targets as aircraft factories in Gotha, ball-bearing plants in Berlin, an airfield at Hanau, U-boat facilities at Kiel, a chemical plant at Ludwigshafen, synthetic oil refineries at Politz, aircraft engine plants at Rostock, marshalling yards at Cologne, and a Buzz-bomb assembly plant at Fallersleben. Some of these buildings are in a reasonable condition, although they are derelict and overgrown.
    WW2_bomber_base07-05-10-2000.jpg
  • William Blake's poem London is written in the pavement at Bunhill Fields, the place in the City of London where the poet is buried. London is a poem by William Blake, published in Songs of Experience in 1794. William Blake was a poet and artist who specialised in illuminated texts, often of a religious nature. He rejected established religion for various reasons, including the failure of the established Church to help children in London who were forced to work. Blake lived and worked in the capital, so he was arguably well placed to write clearly about the conditions people who lived there faced.
    william_blake-12-12-1999.jpg
  • Locals walk over the exposed stone walls of the once-thriving village of Ashopton that now lies at the bottom of Ladybower reservoir, Derbyshire, England. Remains of the village were revealed during the drought of 1989 the levels of water dropped from the country's reservoirs as rainfall failed in the heatwave while demand peaked in the cities such as Sheffield. The villages of Derwent & Ashopton were submerged when the valley was flooded, between 1943 & 1945, amid much controversy. Derwent church tower was left standing at first, but demolished in 1947 for safety reasons. The remains of the buildings are still visible when the water is very low, as it was in 1989.
    drought_reservoir-12-08-1989.jpg
  • A message for help has been left on the inside of a vacant business in Cheapside (Street) in the City of London. Written back to front from inside, the writer has mis-spelled the word 'we're' . In the UK, vacant or redeveloped shops and businesses, are smeared with diluted white emulsion paint and water thereby obscuring the building's interior for security reasons.
    window02.jpg
  • The 18th century historic Sir Cloudesley Shovell Corn Exchange clock (1771) in Rochester High Street, on 22nd July, in Rochester, England. The historic timepiece, a gift from Sir Cloudesley who was MP for Rochester from 1695 to 1701, has recently been restored at a cost of £40,000 after centuries of wear and tear took its toll and much of the clock had to be dismantled for safety reasons.
    rochester-03-22-07-2018.jpg
  • An NHS surgeon performs an operation in a London hospital using endoscopy. Endoscopy (pronounced means looking inside and typically refers to looking inside the body for medical reasons using an endoscope, an instrument used to examine the interior of a hollow organ or cavity of the body. Unlike most other medical imaging devices, endoscopes are inserted directly into the organ. Endoscopy can also refer to using a borescope in technical situations where direct line-of-sight observation is not feasible.
    hospital_surgery03-20-05-1994.jpg
  • A sawn-off tree trunk is left on the pavement, taped up for health & safety reasons near progress of new car park architecture.
    city_tree-20-10-2002.jpg
  • A detail of a shoe shop window that has closed for economic reasons. The window is in Victoria, the area of central London close to the mainline station and has been distempered with a mixture of white emulsion paint and water which prevents outsiders from peering inside, where stock may still be stored. Swirls from the cloth that wiped the paint across the glass has left a chaotic and confusing trace that makes it an almost abstract piece of art made by a disturbed artist. The word Shoe remains in bright red lettering and the single letter M afterwards. ..
    shoe_window-10-12_2002.jpg
  • While on ceremonial duties at the Queen's Buckingham Palace, members of the Welsh Guards prepare the finer details of uniform presentation at the Wellington barracks, opposite the Palace in central London, England. Buffing up their bearskin hats and brushing away any specks of dust from shoulders, they each help the other appear as near-perfect as they can before parading in front of thousands during the Changing of the Guard or at other times, during tropping of the Colour on the Queen's birthday occasion. Formed in 1915 by order of King George V,  have fought in every war since but are housed at the Wellington Barracks purely for ceremonial reasons, also serving on active duty in the world's trouble spots, where their professionalism is demanded by their British Ministry of Defence masters.
    army01-15-12-2007 .jpg
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