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)
{ 82 images found }

Loading ()...

  • The rain comes down and the traditional boggy conditions arrive. The 2011 Glastonbury Festival, Worthy Farm, Glastonbury.
    Glastonbury 04.jpg
  • Pendulum play the Pyramid Stage, Sunday. The 2011 Glastonbury Festival, Worthy Farm, Glastonbury.
    Pendulum Glastonbury.jpg
  • The dancing begins as Shangri-La opens its doors for the first time on a muddy Thursday afternoon. The 2011 Glastonbury Festival, Worthy Farm, Glastonbury.
    Glastonbury 03.jpg
  • Supporters of Mark Duggan’s family hold a vigil outside Tottenham  police station. They gathered, alongside family members and his mother Pam Duggan and Aunt Carole Duggan (pictured) , at 2pm following an inquest jury ruling that Duggan was lawfully killed when police shot him dead while he was unarmed.  Within days of his shooting, in 2011, rioting broke out on the streets of London, and spread to other urban areas in England.  Pastor Nims Obunge, who oversaw Duggan’s funeral in 2011, said: “The message from the family is that this vigil is intended to be a very peaceful vigil”. Tottenham, London, UK 11 January 2014. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    Duggan Vigil GBPhotos 07_1.jpg
  • MINT Polo in The Park is the leading outdoor polo and lifestyle event in Central London.  Held at Hurlingham Park, Fulham the tournament included six international teams from London, New York, Moscow, Abu Dhabi, Sydney and Buenos Aries. Friday 3 June 2011
    Polo CP GBPhotos 05.jpg
  • The Joan Miro, Ladder of Escape exhibition opens at the Tate Modern on 14 April 2011.  The show is introduced by the joint curators Matthew Gale and Marko Daniel, here they talk about Burn Canvas.  Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    Miro Tate GBPhotos 13.jpg
  • Supporters of Mark Duggan’s family hold a vigil outside Tottenham  police station. They gathered, alongside family members and his mother Pam Duggan, at 2pm following an inquest jury ruling that Duggan was lawfully killed when police shot him dead while he was unarmed.  Within days of his shooting, in 2011, rioting broke out on the streets of London, and spread to other urban areas in England.  Pastor Nims Obunge, who oversaw Duggan’s funeral in 2011, said: “The message from the family is that this vigil is intended to be a very peaceful vigil”. Tottenham, London, UK 11 January 2014. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    Duggan Vigil GBPhotos 04.jpg
  • A retrospective of Pop-art pioneer Richard Hamilton opens at the Tate this week. He was widely regarded as the founding figure of Pop art, and this exhibition presents over 60 years of work from 1950s installations to his final paintings of 2011. Major works include: Fun House – An immersive Pop installation featuring a jukebox and blown-up images from Hollywood movies, science-fiction and advertising;  Swingeing London – An iconic image of Mick Jagger following his arrest on drugs charges in 1967; Untitled 2011 (pictured);  and his final work – A triptych of computer-aided images printed onto canvas, inspired by the Italian Renaissance masters. Tate Modern, London, UK 11 Feb 2014.
    SentGB9198.jpg
  • Supporters of Mark Duggan’s family hold a vigil outside Tottenham  police station. They gathered, alongside family members and his mother Pam Duggan, at 2pm following an inquest jury ruling that Duggan was lawfully killed when police shot him dead while he was unarmed.  Within days of his shooting, in 2011, rioting broke out on the streets of London, and spread to other urban areas in England.  Pastor Nims Obunge, who oversaw Duggan’s funeral in 2011, said: “The message from the family is that this vigil is intended to be a very peaceful vigil”. Tottenham, London, UK 11 January 2014. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    Duggan Vigil GBPhotos 01.jpg
  • Supporters of Mark Duggan’s family hold a vigil outside Tottenham  police station. They gathered, alongside family members and his mother Pam Duggan, at 2pm following an inquest jury ruling that Duggan was lawfully killed when police shot him dead while he was unarmed.  Within days of his shooting, in 2011, rioting broke out on the streets of London, and spread to other urban areas in England.  Pastor Nims Obunge (pctured with mike) who oversaw Duggan’s funeral in 2011, said: “The message from the family is that this vigil is intended to be a very peaceful vigil”. Tottenham, London, UK 11 January 2014. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    Duggan Vigil GBPhotos 16.jpg
  • Supporters of Mark Duggan’s family hold a vigil outside Tottenham  police station. They gathered, alongside family members and his mother Pam Duggan and Aunt Carole Duggan (pictured) , at 2pm following an inquest jury ruling that Duggan was lawfully killed when police shot him dead while he was unarmed.  Within days of his shooting, in 2011, rioting broke out on the streets of London, and spread to other urban areas in England.  Pastor Nims Obunge, who oversaw Duggan’s funeral in 2011, said: “The message from the family is that this vigil is intended to be a very peaceful vigil”. Tottenham, London, UK 11 January 2014. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    Duggan Vigil GBPhotos 15.jpg
  • Supporters of Mark Duggan’s family hold a vigil outside Tottenham  police station. They gathered, alongside family members and his mother Pam Duggan (pictured) , at 2pm following an inquest jury ruling that Duggan was lawfully killed when police shot him dead while he was unarmed.  Within days of his shooting, in 2011, rioting broke out on the streets of London, and spread to other urban areas in England.  Pastor Nims Obunge, who oversaw Duggan’s funeral in 2011, said: “The message from the family is that this vigil is intended to be a very peaceful vigil”. Tottenham, London, UK 11 January 2014. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    Duggan Vigil GBPhotos 14.jpg
  • Supporters of Mark Duggan’s family hold a vigil outside Tottenham  police station. They gathered, alongside family members and his mother Pam Duggan, at 2pm following an inquest jury ruling that Duggan was lawfully killed when police shot him dead while he was unarmed.  Within days of his shooting, in 2011, rioting broke out on the streets of London, and spread to other urban areas in England.  Pastor Nims Obunge, who oversaw Duggan’s funeral in 2011, said: “The message from the family is that this vigil is intended to be a very peaceful vigil”. Tottenham, London, UK 11 January 2014. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    Duggan Vigil GBPhotos 12.jpg
  • Supporters of Mark Duggan’s family hold a vigil outside Tottenham  police station. They gathered, alongside family members and his mother Pam Duggan and Aunt Carole Duggan (pictured) , at 2pm following an inquest jury ruling that Duggan was lawfully killed when police shot him dead while he was unarmed.  Within days of his shooting, in 2011, rioting broke out on the streets of London, and spread to other urban areas in England.  Pastor Nims Obunge, who oversaw Duggan’s funeral in 2011, said: “The message from the family is that this vigil is intended to be a very peaceful vigil”. Tottenham, London, UK 11 January 2014. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    Duggan Vigil GBPhotos 13.jpg
  • Supporters of Mark Duggan’s family hold a vigil outside Tottenham  police station. They gathered, alongside family members and his mother Pam Duggan and Aunt Carole Duggan (pictured) , at 2pm following an inquest jury ruling that Duggan was lawfully killed when police shot him dead while he was unarmed.  Within days of his shooting, in 2011, rioting broke out on the streets of London, and spread to other urban areas in England.  Pastor Nims Obunge, who oversaw Duggan’s funeral in 2011, said: “The message from the family is that this vigil is intended to be a very peaceful vigil”. Tottenham, London, UK 11 January 2014. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    Duggan Vigil GBPhotos 09.jpg
  • Supporters of Mark Duggan’s family hold a vigil outside Tottenham  police station. They gathered, alongside family members and his mother Pam Duggan and Aunt Carole Duggan (pictured) , at 2pm following an inquest jury ruling that Duggan was lawfully killed when police shot him dead while he was unarmed.  Within days of his shooting, in 2011, rioting broke out on the streets of London, and spread to other urban areas in England.  Pastor Nims Obunge, who oversaw Duggan’s funeral in 2011, said: “The message from the family is that this vigil is intended to be a very peaceful vigil”. Tottenham, London, UK 11 January 2014. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    Duggan Vigil GBPhotos 11.jpg
  • Supporters of Mark Duggan’s family hold a vigil outside Tottenham  police station. They gathered, alongside family members and his mother Pam Duggan and Aunt Carole Duggan (pictured) , at 2pm following an inquest jury ruling that Duggan was lawfully killed when police shot him dead while he was unarmed.  Within days of his shooting, in 2011, rioting broke out on the streets of London, and spread to other urban areas in England.  Pastor Nims Obunge, who oversaw Duggan’s funeral in 2011, said: “The message from the family is that this vigil is intended to be a very peaceful vigil”. Tottenham, London, UK 11 January 2014. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    Duggan Vigil GBPhotos 10.jpg
  • Supporters of Mark Duggan’s family hold a vigil outside Tottenham  police station. They gathered, alongside family members and his mother Pam Duggan, at 2pm following an inquest jury ruling that Duggan was lawfully killed when police shot him dead while he was unarmed.  Within days of his shooting, in 2011, rioting broke out on the streets of London, and spread to other urban areas in England.  Pastor Nims Obunge, who oversaw Duggan’s funeral in 2011, said: “The message from the family is that this vigil is intended to be a very peaceful vigil”. Tottenham, London, UK 11 January 2014. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    Duggan Vigil GBPhotos 08.jpg
  • Supporters of Mark Duggan’s family hold a vigil outside Tottenham  police station. They gathered, alongside family members and his mother Pam Duggan, at 2pm following an inquest jury ruling that Duggan was lawfully killed when police shot him dead while he was unarmed.  Within days of his shooting, in 2011, rioting broke out on the streets of London, and spread to other urban areas in England.  Pastor Nims Obunge, who oversaw Duggan’s funeral in 2011, said: “The message from the family is that this vigil is intended to be a very peaceful vigil”. Tottenham, London, UK 11 January 2014. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    Duggan Vigil GBPhotos 06.jpg
  • Supporters of Mark Duggan’s family hold a vigil outside Tottenham  police station. They gathered, alongside family members and his mother Pam Duggan, at 2pm following an inquest jury ruling that Duggan was lawfully killed when police shot him dead while he was unarmed.  Within days of his shooting, in 2011, rioting broke out on the streets of London, and spread to other urban areas in England.  Pastor Nims Obunge, who oversaw Duggan’s funeral in 2011, said: “The message from the family is that this vigil is intended to be a very peaceful vigil”. Tottenham, London, UK 11 January 2014. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    Duggan Vigil GBPhotos 05.jpg
  • Supporters of Mark Duggan’s family hold a vigil outside Tottenham  police station. They gathered, alongside family members and his mother Pam Duggan, at 2pm following an inquest jury ruling that Duggan was lawfully killed when police shot him dead while he was unarmed.  Within days of his shooting, in 2011, rioting broke out on the streets of London, and spread to other urban areas in England.  Pastor Nims Obunge, who oversaw Duggan’s funeral in 2011, said: “The message from the family is that this vigil is intended to be a very peaceful vigil”. Tottenham, London, UK 11 January 2014. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    Duggan Vigil GBPhotos 04_1.jpg
  • Supporters of Mark Duggan’s family hold a vigil outside Tottenham  police station. They gathered, alongside family members and his mother Pam Duggan, at 2pm following an inquest jury ruling that Duggan was lawfully killed when police shot him dead while he was unarmed.  Within days of his shooting, in 2011, rioting broke out on the streets of London, and spread to other urban areas in England.  Pastor Nims Obunge, who oversaw Duggan’s funeral in 2011, said: “The message from the family is that this vigil is intended to be a very peaceful vigil”. Tottenham, London, UK 11 January 2014. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    Duggan Vigil GBPhotos 03.jpg
  • Supporters of Mark Duggan’s family hold a vigil outside Tottenham  police station. They gathered, alongside family members and his mother Pam Duggan, at 2pm following an inquest jury ruling that Duggan was lawfully killed when police shot him dead while he was unarmed.  Within days of his shooting, in 2011, rioting broke out on the streets of London, and spread to other urban areas in England.  Pastor Nims Obunge, who oversaw Duggan’s funeral in 2011, said: “The message from the family is that this vigil is intended to be a very peaceful vigil”. Tottenham, London, UK 11 January 2014. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    Duggan Vigil GBPhotos 02_1.jpg
  • Singer Pixie Lott (wearing her TCT broach) visits the Teenage cancer Trust unit at UCLH (University College London Hospital) in Euston Road, London, 25 October 2011. For more info see www.teenagecancertrust.org. © Guy Bell Photography, GBPhotos
    Singer Pixie Lott.jpg
  • Fans go wild as the Fun Lovin' Criminals come on stage. The Saturday of Ben and Jerrys Sundae ice cream and music festival on Clapham Common 23 July 2011. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    Ben and Jerrys GBPhotos 06.jpg
  • Union Jacks decorate the street in celebration of the marriage of Prince William and Kate middleton on29 April 2011. In the bagground is All Souls Church, Langham Place, at the top of Regent Street.  It is next to Broadcasting House, and has a distinctive circular portico surmounted by a stone spire. Completed in 1823 and consecrated in 1824, All Souls is the only surviving building in Regent Street that was designed by John Nash
    GB32823.jpg
  • The Wombles perform on the Avalon Stage. The 2011 Glastonbury Festival, Worthy Farm, Glastonbury.
    The Wombles GBPhotos.jpg
  • Stage Curtain 2011 and I see Season 2010 by Makiko Kudo - Saatchi Gallery’s autumn show ICONOCLASTS: Art out of the Mainstream opens on 27th September 2017. It comes exactly 20 years after Charles Saatchi’s exhibition Sensation which launched the careers of the Young British artists. ICONOCLASTS explores the work of 13 ground breaking British and international artists whose image-making practice is unorthodox.
    Saatchi Iconoclasts GBPhotos 56.jpg
  • Corvid, 2011 by Kate MccGuire - Saatchi Gallery’s autumn show ICONOCLASTS: Art out of the Mainstream opens on 27th September 2017. It comes exactly 20 years after Charles Saatchi’s exhibition Sensation which launched the careers of the Young British artists. ICONOCLASTS explores the work of 13 ground breaking British and international artists whose image-making practice is unorthodox.
    Saatchi Iconoclasts GBPhotos 52.jpg
  • Corvid, 2011 by Kate MccGuire - Saatchi Gallery’s autumn show ICONOCLASTS: Art out of the Mainstream opens on 27th September 2017. It comes exactly 20 years after Charles Saatchi’s exhibition Sensation which launched the careers of the Young British artists. ICONOCLASTS explores the work of 13 ground breaking British and international artists whose image-making practice is unorthodox.
    Saatchi Iconoclasts GBPhotos 49.jpg
  • New Skin for an old ceremony, 2011 by Douglas White - Saatchi Gallery’s autumn show ICONOCLASTS: Art out of the Mainstream opens on 27th September 2017. It comes exactly 20 years after Charles Saatchi’s exhibition Sensation which launched the careers of the Young British artists. ICONOCLASTS explores the work of 13 ground breaking British and international artists whose image-making practice is unorthodox.
    Saatchi Iconoclasts GBPhotos 43.jpg
  • Corvid, 2011 by Kate MccGuire - Saatchi Gallery’s autumn show ICONOCLASTS: Art out of the Mainstream opens on 27th September 2017. It comes exactly 20 years after Charles Saatchi’s exhibition Sensation which launched the careers of the Young British artists. ICONOCLASTS explores the work of 13 ground breaking British and international artists whose image-making practice is unorthodox.
    Saatchi Iconoclasts GBPhotos 19.jpg
  • A Danish family study Ugo Rondinone​'s Summer Moon (2011) - The Frieze Sculpture Park 2017 comprises large-scale works, set in the English Gardens . The installations will remain on view until 8 Oct 2017. 
    Frieze Sculptures GBPhotos 33.jpg
  • Emily Young, Planet (2012) and Ugo Rondinone​, Summer Moon (2011) - The Frieze Sculpture Park 2017 comprises large-scale works, set in the English Gardens . The installations will remain on view until 8 Oct 2017. 
    Frieze Sculptures GBPhotos 21.jpg
  • Headlight 2012 and Munuwata sky 2011 - Wolfgang Tillmans: 2017. Tate Modern’s new exhibition. Highlights include: large scale photographic works printed especially for this exhibition, including the four-meter tall Weed 2014 and dramatic seascapes such as The State We’re In, A 2015;   New ‘text and table’ sculptures including Time Mirrored 3 2017, on display to the public for the first time; and slide projection Book for Architects 2014. The show is at Tate Modern from 15 February to 11 June 2017.
    Wolfgang Tillmans Tate Modern GBPhot...jpg
  • Headlight 2012 and Munuwata sky 2011 - Wolfgang Tillmans: 2017. Tate Modern’s new exhibition. Highlights include: large scale photographic works printed especially for this exhibition, including the four-meter tall Weed 2014 and dramatic seascapes such as The State We’re In, A 2015;   New ‘text and table’ sculptures including Time Mirrored 3 2017, on display to the public for the first time; and slide projection Book for Architects 2014. The show is at Tate Modern from 15 February to 11 June 2017.
    Wolfgang Tillmans Tate Modern GBPhot...jpg
  • Pill Clock 2011/15Carsten Höller: Decision is the artist’s largest survey show in the UK to date. It immerses visitors in a series of experimental environments, exploring perception and decision making. Over the past 20 years Holler has created devices, vehicles and situations that alter visitors’ physical and psychological states. Carsten Höller: Decision offers visitors the chance to see the world upside-down, experience uncanny bodily sensations and soar above London’s traffic in a flying machine. Hoping to ‘induce hallucinations, in the widest sense’ Höller has populated the gallery with disorientating objects and installations, including giant revolving mushrooms and two robotically-engineered beds that – day and night – roam the exhibition like a pair of restless, insomniac twins. It culminates in the artist’s Isomeric Slides. Accessed from Hayward Gallery’s roof, these slides turn ordinary gallery activity on its head. In a setting usually reserved for contemplation, Höller’s slides are an invitation to lose control. A slide, Höller has remarked, is both ‘a sculpture that you can travel inside’ and a ‘device for experiencing a unique condition somewhere between delight and madness’. The exhibition runs from Wednesday 10 June – Sunday 6 September 2015 at the Haywayrd Gallery, London, UK. 09 June 2015.
    Carston Holler Hayward GBPhotos 20.jpg
  • A retrospective of Pop-art pioneer Richard Hamilton opens at the Tate this week. He was widely regarded as the founding figure of Pop art, and this exhibition presents over 60 years of work from 1950s installations to his final paintings of 2011. Major works include: Fun House – An immersive Pop installation featuring a jukebox and blown-up images from Hollywood movies, science-fiction and advertising;  Swingeing London (pictured) – An iconic image of Mick Jagger following his arrest on drugs charges in 1967; and his final work – A triptych of computer-aided images printed onto canvas, inspired by the Italian Renaissance masters. Tate Modern, London, UK 11 Feb 2014.
    SentGB9190.jpg
  • A retrospective of Pop-art pioneer Richard Hamilton opens at the Tate this week. He was widely regarded as the founding figure of Pop art, and this exhibition presents over 60 years of work from 1950s installations to his final paintings of 2011. Major works include: Fun House  (pictured) – An immersive Pop installation featuring a jukebox and blown-up images from Hollywood movies, science-fiction and advertising;  Swingeing London – An iconic image of Mick Jagger following his arrest on drugs charges in 1967; and his final work – A triptych of computer-aided images printed onto canvas, inspired by the Italian Renaissance masters. Tate Modern, London, UK 11 Feb 2014.
    SentGB9228.jpg
  • A retrospective of Pop-art pioneer Richard Hamilton opens at the Tate this week. He was widely regarded as the founding figure of Pop art, and this exhibition presents over 60 years of work from 1950s installations to his final paintings of 2011. Major works include: Fun House – An immersive Pop installation featuring a jukebox and blown-up images from Hollywood movies, science-fiction and advertising;  Swingeing London – An iconic image of Mick Jagger following his arrest on drugs charges in 1967; the Reaper series pictured); and his final work computer-aided images printed onto canvas, inspired by the Italian Renaissance masters. Tate Modern, London, UK 11 Feb 2014.
    SentGB9218.jpg
  • A retrospective of Pop-art pioneer Richard Hamilton opens at the Tate this week. He was widely regarded as the founding figure of Pop art, and this exhibition presents over 60 years of work from 1950s installations to his final paintings of 2011. Major works include: Fun House – An immersive Pop installation featuring a jukebox and blown-up images from Hollywood movies, science-fiction and advertising;  Swingeing London – An iconic image of Mick Jagger following his arrest on drugs charges in 1967; Here is a Lush Situation  (pictured); and his final work – A triptych of computer-aided images printed onto canvas, inspired by the Italian Renaissance masters. Tate Modern, London, UK 11 Feb 2014.
    SentGB9216.jpg
  • A retrospective of Pop-art pioneer Richard Hamilton opens at the Tate this week. He was widely regarded as the founding figure of Pop art, and this exhibition presents over 60 years of work from 1950s installations to his final paintings of 2011. Major works include: Fun House – An immersive Pop installation featuring a jukebox and blown-up images from Hollywood movies, science-fiction and advertising;  Swingeing London – An iconic image of Mick Jagger following his arrest on drugs charges in 1967; The Solomon R. Guggenheim series (pictured); and his final work – A triptych of computer-aided images printed onto canvas, inspired by the Italian Renaissance masters. Tate Modern, London, UK 11 Feb 2014.
    SentGB9212.jpg
  • A retrospective of Pop-art pioneer Richard Hamilton opens at the Tate this week. He was widely regarded as the founding figure of Pop art, and this exhibition presents over 60 years of work from 1950s installations to his final paintings of 2011. Major works include: Fun House – An immersive Pop installation featuring a jukebox and blown-up images from Hollywood movies, science-fiction and advertising;  Swingeing London – An iconic image of Mick Jagger following his arrest on drugs charges in 1967; The Solomon R. Guggenheim series (pictured); and his final work – A triptych of computer-aided images printed onto canvas, inspired by the Italian Renaissance masters. Tate Modern, London, UK 11 Feb 2014.
    SentGB9210.jpg
  • A retrospective of Pop-art pioneer Richard Hamilton opens at the Tate this week. He was widely regarded as the founding figure of Pop art, and this exhibition presents over 60 years of work from 1950s installations to his final paintings of 2011. Major works include: Fun House – An immersive Pop installation featuring a jukebox and blown-up images from Hollywood movies, science-fiction and advertising;  Swingeing London – An iconic image of Mick Jagger following his arrest on drugs charges in 1967; Lobby  (pictured); and his final work – A triptych of computer-aided images printed onto canvas, inspired by the Italian Renaissance masters. Tate Modern, London, UK 11 Feb 2014.
    SentGB9208.jpg
  • A retrospective of Pop-art pioneer Richard Hamilton opens at the Tate this week. He was widely regarded as the founding figure of Pop art, and this exhibition presents over 60 years of work from 1950s installations to his final paintings of 2011. Major works include: Fun House – An immersive Pop installation featuring a jukebox and blown-up images from Hollywood movies, science-fiction and advertising;  Swingeing London – An iconic image of Mick Jagger following his arrest on drugs charges in 1967; Shock and Awe with a western Tony Blair (pictured);  and his final work – A triptych of computer-aided images printed onto canvas, inspired by the Italian Renaissance masters. Tate Modern, London, UK 11 Feb 2014.
    SentGB9193.jpg
  • Corvid, 2011 by Kate MccGuire - Saatchi Gallery’s autumn show ICONOCLASTS: Art out of the Mainstream opens on 27th September 2017. It comes exactly 20 years after Charles Saatchi’s exhibition Sensation which launched the careers of the Young British artists. ICONOCLASTS explores the work of 13 ground breaking British and international artists whose image-making practice is unorthodox.
    Saatchi Iconoclasts GBPhotos 51.jpg
  • Corvid, 2011 by Kate MccGuire - Saatchi Gallery’s autumn show ICONOCLASTS: Art out of the Mainstream opens on 27th September 2017. It comes exactly 20 years after Charles Saatchi’s exhibition Sensation which launched the careers of the Young British artists. ICONOCLASTS explores the work of 13 ground breaking British and international artists whose image-making practice is unorthodox.
    Saatchi Iconoclasts GBPhotos 50.jpg
  • New Skin for an old ceremony, 2011 by Douglas White (pictured) - Saatchi Gallery’s autumn show ICONOCLASTS: Art out of the Mainstream opens on 27th September 2017. It comes exactly 20 years after Charles Saatchi’s exhibition Sensation which launched the careers of the Young British artists. ICONOCLASTS explores the work of 13 ground breaking British and international artists whose image-making practice is unorthodox.
    Saatchi Iconoclasts GBPhotos 47.jpg
  • New Skin for an old ceremony, 2011 by Douglas White - Saatchi Gallery’s autumn show ICONOCLASTS: Art out of the Mainstream opens on 27th September 2017. It comes exactly 20 years after Charles Saatchi’s exhibition Sensation which launched the careers of the Young British artists. ICONOCLASTS explores the work of 13 ground breaking British and international artists whose image-making practice is unorthodox.
    Saatchi Iconoclasts GBPhotos 18.jpg
  • Ugo Rondinone​, Summer Moon (2011) - The Frieze Sculpture Park 2017 comprises large-scale works, set in the English Gardens . The installations will remain on view until 8 Oct 2017. 
    Frieze Sculptures GBPhotos 30.jpg
  • Ugo Rondinone​, Summer Moon (2011) - The Frieze Sculpture Park 2017 comprises large-scale works, set in the English Gardens . The installations will remain on view until 8 Oct 2017. 
    Frieze Sculptures GBPhotos 29.jpg
  • Pill Clock 2011/15Carsten Höller: Decision is the artist’s largest survey show in the UK to date. It immerses visitors in a series of experimental environments, exploring perception and decision making. Over the past 20 years Holler has created devices, vehicles and situations that alter visitors’ physical and psychological states. Carsten Höller: Decision offers visitors the chance to see the world upside-down, experience uncanny bodily sensations and soar above London’s traffic in a flying machine. Hoping to ‘induce hallucinations, in the widest sense’ Höller has populated the gallery with disorientating objects and installations, including giant revolving mushrooms and two robotically-engineered beds that – day and night – roam the exhibition like a pair of restless, insomniac twins. It culminates in the artist’s Isomeric Slides. Accessed from Hayward Gallery’s roof, these slides turn ordinary gallery activity on its head. In a setting usually reserved for contemplation, Höller’s slides are an invitation to lose control. A slide, Höller has remarked, is both ‘a sculpture that you can travel inside’ and a ‘device for experiencing a unique condition somewhere between delight and madness’. The exhibition runs from Wednesday 10 June – Sunday 6 September 2015 at the Haywayrd Gallery, London, UK. 09 June 2015.
    Carston Holler Hayward GBPhotos 21.jpg
  • A retrospective of Pop-art pioneer Richard Hamilton opens at the Tate this week. He was widely regarded as the founding figure of Pop art, and this exhibition presents over 60 years of work from 1950s installations to his final paintings of 2011. Major works include: Fun House  (pictured) – An immersive Pop installation featuring a jukebox and blown-up images from Hollywood movies, science-fiction and advertising;  Swingeing London – An iconic image of Mick Jagger following his arrest on drugs charges in 1967; and his final work – A triptych of computer-aided images printed onto canvas, inspired by the Italian Renaissance masters. Tate Modern, London, UK 11 Feb 2014.
    SentGB9230.jpg
  • A retrospective of Pop-art pioneer Richard Hamilton opens at the Tate this week. He was widely regarded as the founding figure of Pop art, and this exhibition presents over 60 years of work from 1950s installations to his final paintings of 2011. Major works include: Fun House  (pictured) – An immersive Pop installation featuring a jukebox and blown-up images from Hollywood movies, science-fiction and advertising;  Swingeing London – An iconic image of Mick Jagger following his arrest on drugs charges in 1967; and his final work – A triptych of computer-aided images printed onto canvas, inspired by the Italian Renaissance masters. Tate Modern, London, UK 11 Feb 2014.
    SentGB9227.jpg
  • A retrospective of Pop-art pioneer Richard Hamilton opens at the Tate this week. He was widely regarded as the founding figure of Pop art, and this exhibition presents over 60 years of work from 1950s installations to his final paintings of 2011. Major works include: Fun House  (pictured) – An immersive Pop installation featuring a jukebox and blown-up images from Hollywood movies, science-fiction and advertising;  Swingeing London – An iconic image of Mick Jagger following his arrest on drugs charges in 1967; and his final work – A triptych of computer-aided images printed onto canvas, inspired by the Italian Renaissance masters. Tate Modern, London, UK 11 Feb 2014.
    SentGB9225.jpg
  • A retrospective of Pop-art pioneer Richard Hamilton opens at the Tate this week. He was widely regarded as the founding figure of Pop art, and this exhibition presents over 60 years of work from 1950s installations to his final paintings of 2011. Major works include: Fun House  (pictured) – An immersive Pop installation featuring a jukebox and blown-up images from Hollywood movies, science-fiction and advertising;  Swingeing London – An iconic image of Mick Jagger following his arrest on drugs charges in 1967; and his final work – A triptych of computer-aided images printed onto canvas, inspired by the Italian Renaissance masters. Tate Modern, London, UK 11 Feb 2014.
    SentGB9223.jpg
  • A retrospective of Pop-art pioneer Richard Hamilton opens at the Tate this week. He was widely regarded as the founding figure of Pop art, and this exhibition presents over 60 years of work from 1950s installations to his final paintings of 2011. Major works include: Fun House  (pictured) – An immersive Pop installation featuring a jukebox and blown-up images from Hollywood movies, science-fiction and advertising;  Swingeing London – An iconic image of Mick Jagger following his arrest on drugs charges in 1967; and his final work – A triptych of computer-aided images printed onto canvas, inspired by the Italian Renaissance masters. Tate Modern, London, UK 11 Feb 2014.
    SentGB9222.jpg
  • A retrospective of Pop-art pioneer Richard Hamilton opens at the Tate this week. He was widely regarded as the founding figure of Pop art, and this exhibition presents over 60 years of work from 1950s installations to his final paintings of 2011. Major works include: Fun House  (interior pictured) – An immersive Pop installation featuring a jukebox and blown-up images from Hollywood movies, science-fiction and advertising;  Swingeing London – An iconic image of Mick Jagger following his arrest on drugs charges in 1967; and his final work – A triptych of computer-aided images printed onto canvas, inspired by the Italian Renaissance masters. Tate Modern, London, UK 11 Feb 2014.
    SentGB9217.jpg
  • A retrospective of Pop-art pioneer Richard Hamilton opens at the Tate this week. He was widely regarded as the founding figure of Pop art, and this exhibition presents over 60 years of work from 1950s installations to his final paintings of 2011. Major works include: Fun House – An immersive Pop installation featuring a jukebox and blown-up images from Hollywood movies, science-fiction and advertising;  Swingeing London – An iconic image of Mick Jagger following his arrest on drugs charges in 1967; Sign  (pictured); and his final work – A triptych of computer-aided images printed onto canvas, inspired by the Italian Renaissance masters. Tate Modern, London, UK 11 Feb 2014.
    SentGB9213.jpg
  • A retrospective of Pop-art pioneer Richard Hamilton opens at the Tate this week. He was widely regarded as the founding figure of Pop art, and this exhibition presents over 60 years of work from 1950s installations to his final paintings of 2011. Major works include: Fun House – An immersive Pop installation featuring a jukebox and blown-up images from Hollywood movies, science-fiction and advertising;  Swingeing London – An iconic image of Mick Jagger following his arrest on drugs charges in 1967; Lobby  (pictured); and his final work – A triptych of computer-aided images printed onto canvas, inspired by the Italian Renaissance masters. Tate Modern, London, UK 11 Feb 2014.
    SentGB9209.jpg
  • A retrospective of Pop-art pioneer Richard Hamilton opens at the Tate this week. He was widely regarded as the founding figure of Pop art, and this exhibition presents over 60 years of work from 1950s installations to his final paintings of 2011. Major works include: Fun House – An immersive Pop installation featuring a jukebox and blown-up images from Hollywood movies, science-fiction and advertising;  Swingeing London – An iconic image of Mick Jagger following his arrest on drugs charges in 1967; Reapers and Growth and Form (pictured); and his final work – A triptych of computer-aided images printed onto canvas, inspired by the Italian Renaissance masters. Tate Modern, London, UK 11 Feb 2014.
    SentGB9205.jpg
  • A retrospective of Pop-art pioneer Richard Hamilton opens at the Tate this week. He was widely regarded as the founding figure of Pop art, and this exhibition presents over 60 years of work from 1950s installations to his final paintings of 2011. Major works include: Fun House – An immersive Pop installation featuring a jukebox and blown-up images from Hollywood movies, science-fiction and advertising;  Swingeing London – An iconic image of Mick Jagger following his arrest on drugs charges in 1967; Reapers and Growth and Form (pictured); and his final work – A triptych of computer-aided images printed onto canvas, inspired by the Italian Renaissance masters. Tate Modern, London, UK 11 Feb 2014.
    SentGB9204.jpg
  • A retrospective of Pop-art pioneer Richard Hamilton opens at the Tate this week. He was widely regarded as the founding figure of Pop art, and this exhibition presents over 60 years of work from 1950s installations to his final paintings of 2011. Major works include: Fun House – An immersive Pop installation featuring a jukebox and blown-up images from Hollywood movies, science-fiction and advertising;  Swingeing London – An iconic image of Mick Jagger following his arrest on drugs charges in 1967; Reapers and Growth and Form (pictured); and his final work – A triptych of computer-aided images printed onto canvas, inspired by the Italian Renaissance masters. Tate Modern, London, UK 11 Feb 2014.
    SentGB9203.jpg
  • A retrospective of Pop-art pioneer Richard Hamilton opens at the Tate this week. He was widely regarded as the founding figure of Pop art, and this exhibition presents over 60 years of work from 1950s installations to his final paintings of 2011. Major works include: Fun House – An immersive Pop installation featuring a jukebox and blown-up images from Hollywood movies, science-fiction and advertising;  Swingeing London – An iconic image of Mick Jagger following his arrest on drugs charges in 1967; Reapers and Growth and Form (pictured); and his final work – A triptych of computer-aided images printed onto canvas, inspired by the Italian Renaissance masters. Tate Modern, London, UK 11 Feb 2014.
    SentGB9201.jpg
  • A retrospective of Pop-art pioneer Richard Hamilton opens at the Tate this week. He was widely regarded as the founding figure of Pop art, and this exhibition presents over 60 years of work from 1950s installations to his final paintings of 2011. Major works include: Fun House – An immersive Pop installation featuring a jukebox and blown-up images from Hollywood movies, science-fiction and advertising;  Swingeing London – An iconic image of Mick Jagger following his arrest on drugs charges in 1967; Shock and Awe with a western Tony Blair (pictured);  and his final work – A triptych of computer-aided images printed onto canvas, inspired by the Italian Renaissance masters. Tate Modern, London, UK 11 Feb 2014.
    SentGB9194.jpg
  • A retrospective of Pop-art pioneer Richard Hamilton opens at the Tate this week. He was widely regarded as the founding figure of Pop art, and this exhibition presents over 60 years of work from 1950s installations to his final paintings of 2011. Major works include: Fun House – An immersive Pop installation featuring a jukebox and blown-up images from Hollywood movies, science-fiction and advertising;  Swingeing London – An iconic image of Mick Jagger following his arrest on drugs charges in 1967; the reflective Toaster Deluxe series  (pictured); and his final work – A triptych of computer-aided images printed onto canvas, inspired by the Italian Renaissance masters. Tate Modern, London, UK 11 Feb 2014.
    SentGB9197.jpg
  • A retrospective of Pop-art pioneer Richard Hamilton opens at the Tate this week. He was widely regarded as the founding figure of Pop art, and this exhibition presents over 60 years of work from 1950s installations to his final paintings of 2011. Major works include: Fun House – An immersive Pop installation featuring a jukebox and blown-up images from Hollywood movies, science-fiction and advertising;  Swingeing London – An iconic image of Mick Jagger following his arrest on drugs charges in 1967; Treatment Room - with Margaret Thatcher video  (pictured);and his final work – A triptych of computer-aided images printed onto canvas, inspired by the Italian Renaissance masters. Tate Modern, London, UK 11 Feb 2014.
    SentGB9191.jpg
  • A retrospective of Pop-art pioneer Richard Hamilton opens at the Tate this week. He was widely regarded as the founding figure of Pop art, and this exhibition presents over 60 years of work from 1950s installations to his final paintings of 2011. Major works include: Fun House – An immersive Pop installation featuring a jukebox and blown-up images from Hollywood movies, science-fiction and advertising;  Swingeing London – An iconic image of Mick Jagger following his arrest on drugs charges in 1967; Reapers and Growth and Form (pictured); and his final work – A triptych of computer-aided images printed onto canvas, inspired by the Italian Renaissance masters. Tate Modern, London, UK 11 Feb 2014.
    GB9202.jpg
  • The Turner Prize 2012 exhibition opens on 2 October at Tate Britain. It features work by the four shortlisted artists: Spartacus Chetwynd, Luke Fowler, Paul Noble and Elizabeth Price. Here performers from the work of Spartacus - which is based on her show 'Odd Man Out 2011', including the oracle and a puppet show of Jesus and Barabas. Tate Britain, London, UK.
    GB3662.jpg
  • New Skin for an old ceremony, 2011 by Douglas White (pictured) - Saatchi Gallery’s autumn show ICONOCLASTS: Art out of the Mainstream opens on 27th September 2017. It comes exactly 20 years after Charles Saatchi’s exhibition Sensation which launched the careers of the Young British artists. ICONOCLASTS explores the work of 13 ground breaking British and international artists whose image-making practice is unorthodox.
    Saatchi Iconoclasts GBPhotos 46.jpg
  • LUCIAN FREUD (1922-2011)<br />
Naked Portrait on a Red Sofa<br />
Painted in 1989-1991<br />
Estimate: $20,000,000-30,000,000 - Christie’s showcases  the London Post-War and Contemporary Art Evening Sale in October, alongside an exceptional selection of works from the  New York sales in November of Impressionist, Modern, Post-War And  Contemporary Art. The works will be on view to the public from Saturday 10 October to Saturday 17 October at Christie’s King Street. The highlight is  Amedeo Modigliani’s, ‘Nu couché (Reclining  Nude)’, painted in 1917-18, which has an estimate in the region of $100 million.
    GB23609.jpg
  • AMEDEO MODIGLIANI (1884-1920)<br />
Nu couché<br />
Painted in 1917-1918<br />
Estimate on Request (in the region of $100 million) and LUCIAN FREUD (1922-2011)<br />
Naked Portrait on a Red Sofa<br />
Painted in 1989-1991<br />
Estimate: $20,000,000-30,000,000 - Christie’s showcases  the London Post-War and Contemporary Art Evening Sale in October, alongside an exceptional selection of works from the  New York sales in November of Impressionist, Modern, Post-War And  Contemporary Art. The works will be on view to the public from Saturday 10 October to Saturday 17 October at Christie’s King Street. The highlight is  Amedeo Modigliani’s, ‘Nu couché (Reclining  Nude)’, painted in 1917-18, which has an estimate in the region of $100 million.
    GB23608.jpg
  • AMEDEO MODIGLIANI (1884-1920)<br />
Nu couché<br />
Painted in 1917-1918<br />
Estimate on Request (in the region of $100 million) and LUCIAN FREUD (1922-2011)<br />
Naked Portrait on a Red Sofa<br />
Painted in 1989-1991<br />
Estimate: $20,000,000-30,000,000 - Christie’s showcases  the London Post-War and Contemporary Art Evening Sale in October, alongside an exceptional selection of works from the  New York sales in November of Impressionist, Modern, Post-War And  Contemporary Art. The works will be on view to the public from Saturday 10 October to Saturday 17 October at Christie’s King Street. The highlight is  Amedeo Modigliani’s, ‘Nu couché (Reclining  Nude)’, painted in 1917-18, which has an estimate in the region of $100 million.
    GB23605.jpg
  • LUCIAN FREUD (1922-2011)<br />
Naked Portrait on a Red Sofa<br />
Painted in 1989-1991<br />
Estimate: $20,000,000-30,000,000 - Christie’s showcases  the London Post-War and Contemporary Art Evening Sale in October, alongside an exceptional selection of works from the  New York sales in November of Impressionist, Modern, Post-War And  Contemporary Art. The works will be on view to the public from Saturday 10 October to Saturday 17 October at Christie’s King Street. The highlight is  Amedeo Modigliani’s, ‘Nu couché (Reclining  Nude)’, painted in 1917-18, which has an estimate in the region of $100 million.
    GB23603.jpg
  • LUCIAN FREUD (1922-2011)<br />
The Brigadier<br />
Painted in 2003-2004.<br />
Estimate: $25,000,000-35,000,000 - Christie’s showcases  the London Post-War and Contemporary Art Evening Sale in October, alongside an exceptional selection of works from the  New York sales in November of Impressionist, Modern, Post-War And  Contemporary Art. The works will be on view to the public from Saturday 10 October to Saturday 17 October at Christie’s King Street. The highlight is  Amedeo Modigliani’s, ‘Nu couché (Reclining  Nude)’, painted in 1917-18, which has an estimate in the region of $100 million.
    GB23590.jpg
  • LUCIAN FREUD (1922-2011)<br />
The Brigadier<br />
Painted in 2003-2004.<br />
Estimate: $25,000,000-35,000,000 - Christie’s showcases  the London Post-War and Contemporary Art Evening Sale in October, alongside an exceptional selection of works from the  New York sales in November of Impressionist, Modern, Post-War And  Contemporary Art. The works will be on view to the public from Saturday 10 October to Saturday 17 October at Christie’s King Street. The highlight is  Amedeo Modigliani’s, ‘Nu couché (Reclining  Nude)’, painted in 1917-18, which has an estimate in the region of $100 million.
    GB23589.jpg
  • LUCIAN FREUD (1922-2011)<br />
The Brigadier<br />
Painted in 2003-2004.<br />
Estimate: $25,000,000-35,000,000 - Christie’s showcases  the London Post-War and Contemporary Art Evening Sale in October, alongside an exceptional selection of works from the  New York sales in November of Impressionist, Modern, Post-War And  Contemporary Art. The works will be on view to the public from Saturday 10 October to Saturday 17 October at Christie’s King Street. The highlight is  Amedeo Modigliani’s, ‘Nu couché (Reclining  Nude)’, painted in 1917-18, which has an estimate in the region of $100 million.
    GB23526.jpg
  • AMEDEO MODIGLIANI (1884-1920)<br />
Nu couché<br />
Painted in 1917-1918<br />
Estimate on Request (in the region of $100 million) and LUCIAN FREUD (1922-2011)<br />
Naked Portrait on a Red Sofa<br />
Painted in 1989-1991<br />
Estimate: $20,000,000-30,000,000 - Christie’s showcases  the London Post-War and Contemporary Art Evening Sale in October, alongside an exceptional selection of works from the  New York sales in November of Impressionist, Modern, Post-War And  Contemporary Art. The works will be on view to the public from Saturday 10 October to Saturday 17 October at Christie’s King Street. The highlight is  Amedeo Modigliani’s, ‘Nu couché (Reclining  Nude)’, painted in 1917-18, which has an estimate in the region of $100 million.
    GB23614.jpg
  • AMEDEO MODIGLIANI (1884-1920)<br />
Nu couché<br />
Painted in 1917-1918<br />
Estimate on Request (in the region of $100 million) and LUCIAN FREUD (1922-2011)<br />
Naked Portrait on a Red Sofa<br />
Painted in 1989-1991<br />
Estimate: $20,000,000-30,000,000 - Christie’s showcases  the London Post-War and Contemporary Art Evening Sale in October, alongside an exceptional selection of works from the  New York sales in November of Impressionist, Modern, Post-War And  Contemporary Art. The works will be on view to the public from Saturday 10 October to Saturday 17 October at Christie’s King Street. The highlight is  Amedeo Modigliani’s, ‘Nu couché (Reclining  Nude)’, painted in 1917-18, which has an estimate in the region of $100 million.
    GB23532.jpg
  • LUCIAN FREUD (1922-2011)<br />
Naked Portrait on a Red Sofa<br />
Painted in 1989-1991<br />
Estimate: $20,000,000-30,000,000 - Christie’s showcases  the London Post-War and Contemporary Art Evening Sale in October, alongside an exceptional selection of works from the  New York sales in November of Impressionist, Modern, Post-War And  Contemporary Art. The works will be on view to the public from Saturday 10 October to Saturday 17 October at Christie’s King Street. The highlight is  Amedeo Modigliani’s, ‘Nu couché (Reclining  Nude)’, painted in 1917-18, which has an estimate in the region of $100 million.
    GB23604.jpg
  • LUCIAN FREUD (1922-2011)<br />
The Brigadier<br />
Painted in 2003-2004.<br />
Estimate: $25,000,000-35,000,000 - Christie’s showcases  the London Post-War and Contemporary Art Evening Sale in October, alongside an exceptional selection of works from the  New York sales in November of Impressionist, Modern, Post-War And  Contemporary Art. The works will be on view to the public from Saturday 10 October to Saturday 17 October at Christie’s King Street. The highlight is  Amedeo Modigliani’s, ‘Nu couché (Reclining  Nude)’, painted in 1917-18, which has an estimate in the region of $100 million.
    GB23524.jpg
  • Gustav Falk (1926-2011) Original illustration for Jardin des Modes. Drawing on Style: Four Decades of Elegance - an exhibition of original vintage fashion illustrations from Post War 1940s through to the 1970s organized by GRAY M.C.A, leading specialists in Fashion Illustration.  It includes more than 40 original works by some of the leading illustrators of the time from Britain, Europe and America including René Bouché, René Gruau and Carl Erickson for publications including Vogue as well as advertising work for L'Oreal and other famous names in Haute Couture.  There are also a selection of original designs by designers including Dior, Biba & Zandra Rhodes. Coinciding with London Fashion Week, the exhibition runs from Thursday 11th - Tuesday 16th September 2014 with prices from £300-£10,000. Gallery 8, St James’s, London. 10 Sept 2014. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    Drawing on Style 34.jpg
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x

GBPhotos

  • Portfolio
  • Africa visit Diary
  • About
    • The Service
    • Mini Biog
  • Contact
  • Client Home Page
  • Client Tools
    • Your Galleries
    • Your Lightbox