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  • Adam Broomberg and Oliver Chanarin - People in Trouble, Laughing Pushed to the Ground. Conflict, Time, Photography, a new exhibition at the Tate Modern - showcasing the unique ways photographers look back at moments of conflict, from the seconds after a bomb is detonated to 100 years after a war has ended. It includes: renowned photographers Don McCullin, Kikuji Kawada and Taryn Simon; Luc Delahaye’s large-scale image of the US bombing of Taliban positions in Afghanistan, showing a cloud of smoke rising from the battlefield; Hiromi Tsuchida’s large-scale photograph of a watch stopped at the moment the atomic bomb fell on Hiroshima in 1945; The Archive of Modern Conflict’s colourful and chaotic new installation, bringing together war-related images and objects from around the world and across the past 100 years; and Chloe Dewe Mathews’s haunting landscapes photographed at dawn, showing the places where British soldiers were executed for desertion and cowardice in the First World War. The show runs from 26 November 2014 – 15 March 2015. Tate Modern, London, UK 25 Nov 2014.
    Tate War Photos GBPhotos 27.jpg
  • Shell Shocked by Don McCullin. Conflict, Time, Photography, a new exhibition at the Tate Modern - showcasing the unique ways photographers look back at moments of conflict, from the seconds after a bomb is detonated to 100 years after a war has ended. It includes: renowned photographers Don McCullin, Kikuji Kawada and Taryn Simon; Luc Delahaye’s large-scale image of the US bombing of Taliban positions in Afghanistan, showing a cloud of smoke rising from the battlefield; Hiromi Tsuchida’s large-scale photograph of a watch stopped at the moment the atomic bomb fell on Hiroshima in 1945; The Archive of Modern Conflict’s colourful and chaotic new installation, bringing together war-related images and objects from around the world and across the past 100 years; and Chloe Dewe Mathews’s haunting landscapes photographed at dawn, showing the places where British soldiers were executed for desertion and cowardice in the First World War. The show runs from 26 November 2014 – 15 March 2015. Tate Modern, London, UK 25 Nov 2014.
    Tate War Photos GBPhotos 26.jpg
  • istory by Hrair Sarkissian bsed on archives of resettlement, 95 years later. Conflict, Time, Photography, a new exhibition at the Tate Modern - showcasing the unique ways photographers look back at moments of conflict, from the seconds after a bomb is detonated to 100 years after a war has ended. It includes: renowned photographers Don McCullin, Kikuji Kawada and Taryn Simon; Luc Delahaye’s large-scale image of the US bombing of Taliban positions in Afghanistan, showing a cloud of smoke rising from the battlefield; Hiromi Tsuchida’s large-scale photograph of a watch stopped at the moment the atomic bomb fell on Hiroshima in 1945; The Archive of Modern Conflict’s colourful and chaotic new installation, bringing together war-related images and objects from around the world and across the past 100 years; and Chloe Dewe Mathews’s haunting landscapes photographed at dawn, showing the places where British soldiers were executed for desertion and cowardice in the First World War. The show runs from 26 November 2014 – 15 March 2015. Tate Modern, London, UK 25 Nov 2014.
    Tate War Photos GBPhotos 16.jpg
  • Shell Shocked by Don McCullin. Conflict, Time, Photography, a new exhibition at the Tate Modern - showcasing the unique ways photographers look back at moments of conflict, from the seconds after a bomb is detonated to 100 years after a war has ended. It includes: renowned photographers Don McCullin, Kikuji Kawada and Taryn Simon; Luc Delahaye’s large-scale image of the US bombing of Taliban positions in Afghanistan, showing a cloud of smoke rising from the battlefield; Hiromi Tsuchida’s large-scale photograph of a watch stopped at the moment the atomic bomb fell on Hiroshima in 1945; The Archive of Modern Conflict’s colourful and chaotic new installation, bringing together war-related images and objects from around the world and across the past 100 years; and Chloe Dewe Mathews’s haunting landscapes photographed at dawn, showing the places where British soldiers were executed for desertion and cowardice in the First World War. The show runs from 26 November 2014 – 15 March 2015. Tate Modern, London, UK 25 Nov 2014.
    Tate War Photos GBPhotos 02.jpg
  • Shell Shocked by Don McCullin. Conflict, Time, Photography, a new exhibition at the Tate Modern - showcasing the unique ways photographers look back at moments of conflict, from the seconds after a bomb is detonated to 100 years after a war has ended. It includes: renowned photographers Don McCullin, Kikuji Kawada and Taryn Simon; Luc Delahaye’s large-scale image of the US bombing of Taliban positions in Afghanistan, showing a cloud of smoke rising from the battlefield; Hiromi Tsuchida’s large-scale photograph of a watch stopped at the moment the atomic bomb fell on Hiroshima in 1945; The Archive of Modern Conflict’s colourful and chaotic new installation, bringing together war-related images and objects from around the world and across the past 100 years; and Chloe Dewe Mathews’s haunting landscapes photographed at dawn, showing the places where British soldiers were executed for desertion and cowardice in the First World War. The show runs from 26 November 2014 – 15 March 2015. Tate Modern, London, UK 25 Nov 2014.
    Tate War Photos GBPhotos 28.jpg
  • Shell Shocked by Don McCullin. Conflict, Time, Photography, a new exhibition at the Tate Modern - showcasing the unique ways photographers look back at moments of conflict, from the seconds after a bomb is detonated to 100 years after a war has ended. It includes: renowned photographers Don McCullin, Kikuji Kawada and Taryn Simon; Luc Delahaye’s large-scale image of the US bombing of Taliban positions in Afghanistan, showing a cloud of smoke rising from the battlefield; Hiromi Tsuchida’s large-scale photograph of a watch stopped at the moment the atomic bomb fell on Hiroshima in 1945; The Archive of Modern Conflict’s colourful and chaotic new installation, bringing together war-related images and objects from around the world and across the past 100 years; and Chloe Dewe Mathews’s haunting landscapes photographed at dawn, showing the places where British soldiers were executed for desertion and cowardice in the First World War. The show runs from 26 November 2014 – 15 March 2015. Tate Modern, London, UK 25 Nov 2014.
    Tate War Photos GBPhotos 25.jpg
  • Simon Norfolk's images. Conflict, Time, Photography, a new exhibition at the Tate Modern - showcasing the unique ways photographers look back at moments of conflict, from the seconds after a bomb is detonated to 100 years after a war has ended. It includes: renowned photographers Don McCullin, Kikuji Kawada and Taryn Simon; Luc Delahaye’s large-scale image of the US bombing of Taliban positions in Afghanistan, showing a cloud of smoke rising from the battlefield; Hiromi Tsuchida’s large-scale photograph of a watch stopped at the moment the atomic bomb fell on Hiroshima in 1945; The Archive of Modern Conflict’s colourful and chaotic new installation, bringing together war-related images and objects from around the world and across the past 100 years; and Chloe Dewe Mathews’s haunting landscapes photographed at dawn, showing the places where British soldiers were executed for desertion and cowardice in the First World War. The show runs from 26 November 2014 – 15 March 2015. Tate Modern, London, UK 25 Nov 2014.
    Tate War Photos GBPhotos 24.jpg
  • Sophie Ristelhueber’s aerial views of the desert landscape of Kuwait after the first Gulf War.  Conflict, Time, Photography, a new exhibition at the Tate Modern - showcasing the unique ways photographers look back at moments of conflict, from the seconds after a bomb is detonated to 100 years after a war has ended. It includes: renowned photographers Don McCullin, Kikuji Kawada and Taryn Simon; Luc Delahaye’s large-scale image of the US bombing of Taliban positions in Afghanistan, showing a cloud of smoke rising from the battlefield; Hiromi Tsuchida’s large-scale photograph of a watch stopped at the moment the atomic bomb fell on Hiroshima in 1945; The Archive of Modern Conflict’s colourful and chaotic new installation, bringing together war-related images and objects from around the world and across the past 100 years; and Chloe Dewe Mathews’s haunting landscapes photographed at dawn, showing the places where British soldiers were executed for desertion and cowardice in the First World War. The show runs from 26 November 2014 – 15 March 2015. Tate Modern, London, UK 25 Nov 2014.
    Tate War Photos GBPhotos 21.jpg
  • Hiromi Tsuchida’s  watch stopped at the moment the atomic bomb fell on Hiroshima. Conflict, Time, Photography, a new exhibition at the Tate Modern - showcasing the unique ways photographers look back at moments of conflict, from the seconds after a bomb is detonated to 100 years after a war has ended. It includes: renowned photographers Don McCullin, Kikuji Kawada and Taryn Simon; Luc Delahaye’s large-scale image of the US bombing of Taliban positions in Afghanistan, showing a cloud of smoke rising from the battlefield; Hiromi Tsuchida’s large-scale photograph of a watch stopped at the moment the atomic bomb fell on Hiroshima in 1945; The Archive of Modern Conflict’s colourful and chaotic new installation, bringing together war-related images and objects from around the world and across the past 100 years; and Chloe Dewe Mathews’s haunting landscapes photographed at dawn, showing the places where British soldiers were executed for desertion and cowardice in the First World War. The show runs from 26 November 2014 – 15 March 2015. Tate Modern, London, UK 25 Nov 2014.
    Tate War Photos GBPhotos 20.jpg
  • Shell Shocked by Don McCullin. Conflict, Time, Photography, a new exhibition at the Tate Modern - showcasing the unique ways photographers look back at moments of conflict, from the seconds after a bomb is detonated to 100 years after a war has ended. It includes: renowned photographers Don McCullin, Kikuji Kawada and Taryn Simon; Luc Delahaye’s large-scale image of the US bombing of Taliban positions in Afghanistan, showing a cloud of smoke rising from the battlefield; Hiromi Tsuchida’s large-scale photograph of a watch stopped at the moment the atomic bomb fell on Hiroshima in 1945; The Archive of Modern Conflict’s colourful and chaotic new installation, bringing together war-related images and objects from around the world and across the past 100 years; and Chloe Dewe Mathews’s haunting landscapes photographed at dawn, showing the places where British soldiers were executed for desertion and cowardice in the First World War. The show runs from 26 November 2014 – 15 March 2015. Tate Modern, London, UK 25 Nov 2014.
    Tate War Photos GBPhotos 19.jpg
  • Sophie Ristelhueber’s aerial views of the desert landscape of Kuwait after the first Gulf War.  Conflict, Time, Photography, a new exhibition at the Tate Modern - showcasing the unique ways photographers look back at moments of conflict, from the seconds after a bomb is detonated to 100 years after a war has ended. It includes: renowned photographers Don McCullin, Kikuji Kawada and Taryn Simon; Luc Delahaye’s large-scale image of the US bombing of Taliban positions in Afghanistan, showing a cloud of smoke rising from the battlefield; Hiromi Tsuchida’s large-scale photograph of a watch stopped at the moment the atomic bomb fell on Hiroshima in 1945; The Archive of Modern Conflict’s colourful and chaotic new installation, bringing together war-related images and objects from around the world and across the past 100 years; and Chloe Dewe Mathews’s haunting landscapes photographed at dawn, showing the places where British soldiers were executed for desertion and cowardice in the First World War. The show runs from 26 November 2014 – 15 March 2015. Tate Modern, London, UK 25 Nov 2014.
    Tate War Photos GBPhotos 18.jpg
  • The Map a set of images from the photobook shows the effects of the atomic bomb still visible when Kikuji Kawada shot them 15 years later.  Conflict, Time, Photography, a new exhibition at the Tate Modern - showcasing the unique ways photographers look back at moments of conflict, from the seconds after a bomb is detonated to 100 years after a war has ended. It includes: renowned photographers Don McCullin, Kikuji Kawada and Taryn Simon; Luc Delahaye’s large-scale image of the US bombing of Taliban positions in Afghanistan, showing a cloud of smoke rising from the battlefield; Hiromi Tsuchida’s large-scale photograph of a watch stopped at the moment the atomic bomb fell on Hiroshima in 1945; The Archive of Modern Conflict’s colourful and chaotic new installation, bringing together war-related images and objects from around the world and across the past 100 years; and Chloe Dewe Mathews’s haunting landscapes photographed at dawn, showing the places where British soldiers were executed for desertion and cowardice in the First World War. The show runs from 26 November 2014 – 15 March 2015. Tate Modern, London, UK 25 Nov 2014.
    Tate War Photos GBPhotos 17.jpg
  • The Map a set of images from the photobook shows the effects of the atomic bomb still visible when Kikuji Kawada shot them 15 years later.  Conflict, Time, Photography, a new exhibition at the Tate Modern - showcasing the unique ways photographers look back at moments of conflict, from the seconds after a bomb is detonated to 100 years after a war has ended. It includes: renowned photographers Don McCullin, Kikuji Kawada and Taryn Simon; Luc Delahaye’s large-scale image of the US bombing of Taliban positions in Afghanistan, showing a cloud of smoke rising from the battlefield; Hiromi Tsuchida’s large-scale photograph of a watch stopped at the moment the atomic bomb fell on Hiroshima in 1945; The Archive of Modern Conflict’s colourful and chaotic new installation, bringing together war-related images and objects from around the world and across the past 100 years; and Chloe Dewe Mathews’s haunting landscapes photographed at dawn, showing the places where British soldiers were executed for desertion and cowardice in the First World War. The show runs from 26 November 2014 – 15 March 2015. Tate Modern, London, UK 25 Nov 2014.
    Tate War Photos GBPhotos 15.jpg
  • istory by Hrair Sarkissian bsed on archives of resettlement, 95 years later. Conflict, Time, Photography, a new exhibition at the Tate Modern - showcasing the unique ways photographers look back at moments of conflict, from the seconds after a bomb is detonated to 100 years after a war has ended. It includes: renowned photographers Don McCullin, Kikuji Kawada and Taryn Simon; Luc Delahaye’s large-scale image of the US bombing of Taliban positions in Afghanistan, showing a cloud of smoke rising from the battlefield; Hiromi Tsuchida’s large-scale photograph of a watch stopped at the moment the atomic bomb fell on Hiroshima in 1945; The Archive of Modern Conflict’s colourful and chaotic new installation, bringing together war-related images and objects from around the world and across the past 100 years; and Chloe Dewe Mathews’s haunting landscapes photographed at dawn, showing the places where British soldiers were executed for desertion and cowardice in the First World War. The show runs from 26 November 2014 – 15 March 2015. Tate Modern, London, UK 25 Nov 2014.
    Tate War Photos GBPhotos 14.jpg
  • The Map a set of images from the photobook shows the effects of the atomic bomb still visible when Kikuji Kawada shot them 15 years later.  Conflict, Time, Photography, a new exhibition at the Tate Modern - showcasing the unique ways photographers look back at moments of conflict, from the seconds after a bomb is detonated to 100 years after a war has ended. It includes: renowned photographers Don McCullin, Kikuji Kawada and Taryn Simon; Luc Delahaye’s large-scale image of the US bombing of Taliban positions in Afghanistan, showing a cloud of smoke rising from the battlefield; Hiromi Tsuchida’s large-scale photograph of a watch stopped at the moment the atomic bomb fell on Hiroshima in 1945; The Archive of Modern Conflict’s colourful and chaotic new installation, bringing together war-related images and objects from around the world and across the past 100 years; and Chloe Dewe Mathews’s haunting landscapes photographed at dawn, showing the places where British soldiers were executed for desertion and cowardice in the First World War. The show runs from 26 November 2014 – 15 March 2015. Tate Modern, London, UK 25 Nov 2014.
    Tate War Photos GBPhotos 13.jpg
  • Chloe Dewe Mathews’s landscapes of places where British soldiers were executed for desertion. Conflict, Time, Photography, a new exhibition at the Tate Modern - showcasing the unique ways photographers look back at moments of conflict, from the seconds after a bomb is detonated to 100 years after a war has ended. It includes: renowned photographers Don McCullin, Kikuji Kawada and Taryn Simon; Luc Delahaye’s large-scale image of the US bombing of Taliban positions in Afghanistan, showing a cloud of smoke rising from the battlefield; Hiromi Tsuchida’s large-scale photograph of a watch stopped at the moment the atomic bomb fell on Hiroshima in 1945; The Archive of Modern Conflict’s colourful and chaotic new installation, bringing together war-related images and objects from around the world and across the past 100 years; and Chloe Dewe Mathews’s haunting landscapes photographed at dawn, showing the places where British soldiers were executed for desertion and cowardice in the First World War. The show runs from 26 November 2014 – 15 March 2015. Tate Modern, London, UK 25 Nov 2014.
    Tate War Photos GBPhotos 12.jpg
  • Shell Shocked by Don McCullin. Conflict, Time, Photography, a new exhibition at the Tate Modern - showcasing the unique ways photographers look back at moments of conflict, from the seconds after a bomb is detonated to 100 years after a war has ended. It includes: renowned photographers Don McCullin, Kikuji Kawada and Taryn Simon; Luc Delahaye’s large-scale image of the US bombing of Taliban positions in Afghanistan, showing a cloud of smoke rising from the battlefield; Hiromi Tsuchida’s large-scale photograph of a watch stopped at the moment the atomic bomb fell on Hiroshima in 1945; The Archive of Modern Conflict’s colourful and chaotic new installation, bringing together war-related images and objects from around the world and across the past 100 years; and Chloe Dewe Mathews’s haunting landscapes photographed at dawn, showing the places where British soldiers were executed for desertion and cowardice in the First World War. The show runs from 26 November 2014 – 15 March 2015. Tate Modern, London, UK 25 Nov 2014.
    Tate War Photos GBPhotos 11.jpg
  • Shell Shocked by Don McCullin. Conflict, Time, Photography, a new exhibition at the Tate Modern - showcasing the unique ways photographers look back at moments of conflict, from the seconds after a bomb is detonated to 100 years after a war has ended. It includes: renowned photographers Don McCullin, Kikuji Kawada and Taryn Simon; Luc Delahaye’s large-scale image of the US bombing of Taliban positions in Afghanistan, showing a cloud of smoke rising from the battlefield; Hiromi Tsuchida’s large-scale photograph of a watch stopped at the moment the atomic bomb fell on Hiroshima in 1945; The Archive of Modern Conflict’s colourful and chaotic new installation, bringing together war-related images and objects from around the world and across the past 100 years; and Chloe Dewe Mathews’s haunting landscapes photographed at dawn, showing the places where British soldiers were executed for desertion and cowardice in the First World War. The show runs from 26 November 2014 – 15 March 2015. Tate Modern, London, UK 25 Nov 2014.
    Tate War Photos GBPhotos 10.jpg
  • The Archive of Modern Conflict, installation. Conflict, Time, Photography, a new exhibition at the Tate Modern - showcasing the unique ways photographers look back at moments of conflict, from the seconds after a bomb is detonated to 100 years after a war has ended. It includes: renowned photographers Don McCullin, Kikuji Kawada and Taryn Simon; Luc Delahaye’s large-scale image of the US bombing of Taliban positions in Afghanistan, showing a cloud of smoke rising from the battlefield; Hiromi Tsuchida’s large-scale photograph of a watch stopped at the moment the atomic bomb fell on Hiroshima in 1945; The Archive of Modern Conflict’s colourful and chaotic new installation, bringing together war-related images and objects from around the world and across the past 100 years; and Chloe Dewe Mathews’s haunting landscapes photographed at dawn, showing the places where British soldiers were executed for desertion and cowardice in the First World War. The show runs from 26 November 2014 – 15 March 2015. Tate Modern, London, UK 25 Nov 2014.
    Tate War Photos GBPhotos 07.jpg
  • Sophie Ristelhueber’s aerial views of the desert landscape of Kuwait after the first Gulf War.  Conflict, Time, Photography, a new exhibition at the Tate Modern - showcasing the unique ways photographers look back at moments of conflict, from the seconds after a bomb is detonated to 100 years after a war has ended. It includes: renowned photographers Don McCullin, Kikuji Kawada and Taryn Simon; Luc Delahaye’s large-scale image of the US bombing of Taliban positions in Afghanistan, showing a cloud of smoke rising from the battlefield; Hiromi Tsuchida’s large-scale photograph of a watch stopped at the moment the atomic bomb fell on Hiroshima in 1945; The Archive of Modern Conflict’s colourful and chaotic new installation, bringing together war-related images and objects from around the world and across the past 100 years; and Chloe Dewe Mathews’s haunting landscapes photographed at dawn, showing the places where British soldiers were executed for desertion and cowardice in the First World War. The show runs from 26 November 2014 – 15 March 2015. Tate Modern, London, UK 25 Nov 2014.
    Tate War Photos GBPhotos 08.jpg
  • The Archive of Modern Conflict, installation. Conflict, Time, Photography, a new exhibition at the Tate Modern - showcasing the unique ways photographers look back at moments of conflict, from the seconds after a bomb is detonated to 100 years after a war has ended. It includes: renowned photographers Don McCullin, Kikuji Kawada and Taryn Simon; Luc Delahaye’s large-scale image of the US bombing of Taliban positions in Afghanistan, showing a cloud of smoke rising from the battlefield; Hiromi Tsuchida’s large-scale photograph of a watch stopped at the moment the atomic bomb fell on Hiroshima in 1945; The Archive of Modern Conflict’s colourful and chaotic new installation, bringing together war-related images and objects from around the world and across the past 100 years; and Chloe Dewe Mathews’s haunting landscapes photographed at dawn, showing the places where British soldiers were executed for desertion and cowardice in the First World War. The show runs from 26 November 2014 – 15 March 2015. Tate Modern, London, UK 25 Nov 2014.
    Tate War Photos GBPhotos 06.jpg
  • The Map a set of images from the photobook shows the effects of the atomic bomb still visible when Kikuji Kawada shot them 15 years later.  Conflict, Time, Photography, a new exhibition at the Tate Modern - showcasing the unique ways photographers look back at moments of conflict, from the seconds after a bomb is detonated to 100 years after a war has ended. It includes: renowned photographers Don McCullin, Kikuji Kawada and Taryn Simon; Luc Delahaye’s large-scale image of the US bombing of Taliban positions in Afghanistan, showing a cloud of smoke rising from the battlefield; Hiromi Tsuchida’s large-scale photograph of a watch stopped at the moment the atomic bomb fell on Hiroshima in 1945; The Archive of Modern Conflict’s colourful and chaotic new installation, bringing together war-related images and objects from around the world and across the past 100 years; and Chloe Dewe Mathews’s haunting landscapes photographed at dawn, showing the places where British soldiers were executed for desertion and cowardice in the First World War. The show runs from 26 November 2014 – 15 March 2015. Tate Modern, London, UK 25 Nov 2014.
    Tate War Photos GBPhotos 05.jpg
  • istory by Hrair Sarkissian bsed on archives of resettlement, 95 years later. Conflict, Time, Photography, a new exhibition at the Tate Modern - showcasing the unique ways photographers look back at moments of conflict, from the seconds after a bomb is detonated to 100 years after a war has ended. It includes: renowned photographers Don McCullin, Kikuji Kawada and Taryn Simon; Luc Delahaye’s large-scale image of the US bombing of Taliban positions in Afghanistan, showing a cloud of smoke rising from the battlefield; Hiromi Tsuchida’s large-scale photograph of a watch stopped at the moment the atomic bomb fell on Hiroshima in 1945; The Archive of Modern Conflict’s colourful and chaotic new installation, bringing together war-related images and objects from around the world and across the past 100 years; and Chloe Dewe Mathews’s haunting landscapes photographed at dawn, showing the places where British soldiers were executed for desertion and cowardice in the First World War. The show runs from 26 November 2014 – 15 March 2015. Tate Modern, London, UK 25 Nov 2014.
    Tate War Photos GBPhotos 03.jpg
  • istory by Hrair Sarkissian bsed on archives of resettlement, 95 years later. Conflict, Time, Photography, a new exhibition at the Tate Modern - showcasing the unique ways photographers look back at moments of conflict, from the seconds after a bomb is detonated to 100 years after a war has ended. It includes: renowned photographers Don McCullin, Kikuji Kawada and Taryn Simon; Luc Delahaye’s large-scale image of the US bombing of Taliban positions in Afghanistan, showing a cloud of smoke rising from the battlefield; Hiromi Tsuchida’s large-scale photograph of a watch stopped at the moment the atomic bomb fell on Hiroshima in 1945; The Archive of Modern Conflict’s colourful and chaotic new installation, bringing together war-related images and objects from around the world and across the past 100 years; and Chloe Dewe Mathews’s haunting landscapes photographed at dawn, showing the places where British soldiers were executed for desertion and cowardice in the First World War. The show runs from 26 November 2014 – 15 March 2015. Tate Modern, London, UK 25 Nov 2014.
    Tate War Photos GBPhotos 01.jpg
  • The Map a set of images from the photobook shows the effects of the atomic bomb still visible when Kikuji Kawada shot them 15 years later.  Conflict, Time, Photography, a new exhibition at the Tate Modern - showcasing the unique ways photographers look back at moments of conflict, from the seconds after a bomb is detonated to 100 years after a war has ended. It includes: renowned photographers Don McCullin, Kikuji Kawada and Taryn Simon; Luc Delahaye’s large-scale image of the US bombing of Taliban positions in Afghanistan, showing a cloud of smoke rising from the battlefield; Hiromi Tsuchida’s large-scale photograph of a watch stopped at the moment the atomic bomb fell on Hiroshima in 1945; The Archive of Modern Conflict’s colourful and chaotic new installation, bringing together war-related images and objects from around the world and across the past 100 years; and Chloe Dewe Mathews’s haunting landscapes photographed at dawn, showing the places where British soldiers were executed for desertion and cowardice in the First World War. The show runs from 26 November 2014 – 15 March 2015. Tate Modern, London, UK 25 Nov 2014.
    Tate War Photos GBPhotos 23.jpg
  • Adam Broomberg and Oliver Chanarin - People in Trouble, Laughing Pushed to the Ground. Conflict, Time, Photography, a new exhibition at the Tate Modern - showcasing the unique ways photographers look back at moments of conflict, from the seconds after a bomb is detonated to 100 years after a war has ended. It includes: renowned photographers Don McCullin, Kikuji Kawada and Taryn Simon; Luc Delahaye’s large-scale image of the US bombing of Taliban positions in Afghanistan, showing a cloud of smoke rising from the battlefield; Hiromi Tsuchida’s large-scale photograph of a watch stopped at the moment the atomic bomb fell on Hiroshima in 1945; The Archive of Modern Conflict’s colourful and chaotic new installation, bringing together war-related images and objects from around the world and across the past 100 years; and Chloe Dewe Mathews’s haunting landscapes photographed at dawn, showing the places where British soldiers were executed for desertion and cowardice in the First World War. The show runs from 26 November 2014 – 15 March 2015. Tate Modern, London, UK 25 Nov 2014.
    Tate War Photos GBPhotos 22.jpg
  • Work on the Ukraine by Stephen Shore, 67 Years after WW2. Conflict, Time, Photography, a new exhibition at the Tate Modern - showcasing the unique ways photographers look back at moments of conflict, from the seconds after a bomb is detonated to 100 years after a war has ended. It includes: renowned photographers Don McCullin, Kikuji Kawada and Taryn Simon; Luc Delahaye’s large-scale image of the US bombing of Taliban positions in Afghanistan, showing a cloud of smoke rising from the battlefield; Hiromi Tsuchida’s large-scale photograph of a watch stopped at the moment the atomic bomb fell on Hiroshima in 1945; The Archive of Modern Conflict’s colourful and chaotic new installation, bringing together war-related images and objects from around the world and across the past 100 years; and Chloe Dewe Mathews’s haunting landscapes photographed at dawn, showing the places where British soldiers were executed for desertion and cowardice in the First World War. The show runs from 26 November 2014 – 15 March 2015. Tate Modern, London, UK 25 Nov 2014.
    Tate War Photos GBPhotos 09.jpg
  • The Archive of Modern Conflict, installation. Conflict, Time, Photography, a new exhibition at the Tate Modern - showcasing the unique ways photographers look back at moments of conflict, from the seconds after a bomb is detonated to 100 years after a war has ended. It includes: renowned photographers Don McCullin, Kikuji Kawada and Taryn Simon; Luc Delahaye’s large-scale image of the US bombing of Taliban positions in Afghanistan, showing a cloud of smoke rising from the battlefield; Hiromi Tsuchida’s large-scale photograph of a watch stopped at the moment the atomic bomb fell on Hiroshima in 1945; The Archive of Modern Conflict’s colourful and chaotic new installation, bringing together war-related images and objects from around the world and across the past 100 years; and Chloe Dewe Mathews’s haunting landscapes photographed at dawn, showing the places where British soldiers were executed for desertion and cowardice in the First World War. The show runs from 26 November 2014 – 15 March 2015. Tate Modern, London, UK 25 Nov 2014.
    Tate War Photos GBPhotos 04.jpg
  • David Guetta plays the final set afte Nicki Minaj is delayed - Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • David Guetta plays the final set afte Nicki Minaj is delayed - Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • David Guetta plays the final set afte Nicki Minaj is delayed - Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • David Guetta plays the final set afte Nicki Minaj is delayed - Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • David Guetta plays the final set afte Nicki Minaj is delayed - Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • David Guetta plays the final set afte Nicki Minaj is delayed - Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • David Guetta plays the final set afte Nicki Minaj is delayed - Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • Jessie J plays the Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • Jessie J plays the Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • Jaden (pictured) and Willow Smith play the Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • Jaden (pictured) and Willow Smith play the Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • Jada Pinkett Smith awaits Jaden and Willow Smith - Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • Clean Bandit plays the Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • Clean Bandit plays the Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • Arrested Development play the Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • Arrested Development play the Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • Wretch 32 plays the Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • Wretch 32 plays the Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • David Guetta plays the final set afte Nicki Minaj is delayed - Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • David Guetta plays the final set afte Nicki Minaj is delayed - Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • David Guetta plays the final set afte Nicki Minaj is delayed - Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • David Guetta plays the final set afte Nicki Minaj is delayed - Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • Jessie J plays the Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • Jessie J plays the Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • Jessie J plays the Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • Jaden and Willow  (pictured) Smith play the Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • Jaden and Willow  (pictured) Smith play the Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • Jaden and Willow Smith play the Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • Clean Bandit plays the Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • Clean Bandit plays the Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • Clean Bandit plays the Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • Clean Bandit plays the Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • Clean Bandit plays the Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • Arrested Development play the Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • Charli XcX plays the Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • Charli XcX plays the Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • Charli XcX plays the Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • Charli XcX plays the Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • Wretch 32 plays the Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • Wretch 32 plays the Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • Jaden (pictured) and Willow Smith play the Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • Wireless festival, Finsbury Park, London, UK
    New Look Wireless Festival GBPhotos ...jpg
  • Queen’s Park Union flag project - Eight leading designers have reinterpreted and redesigned the Union Jack for a project which imagines how the UK’s flag could look. Set in place on the day of the Scottish Referendum, when the Union flag could be forced to change.  From Michiko Koshino’s exploding, flame-shaped flag to Tim Dixon’s shards, Georgina Goodman’s ‘heel’s and Ron Arad’s kinetic ‘spinning flag’, the flags represent a possible future look to the nation’s flag. The Flag Project has been coordinated by Bill Amberg, designer based in Lonsdale Rd. The imagined new designs have been made up in Kvadrat material and will be on display within Lonsdale Road from 18 – 21 September as part of the London Design Festival. Kilburn, London, UK 18 Sept 2014.
    Queens Park Union Jacks GBPhotos 19.jpg
  • Queen’s Park Union flag project - Eight leading designers have reinterpreted and redesigned the Union Jack for a project which imagines how the UK’s flag could look. Set in place on the day of the Scottish Referendum, when the Union flag could be forced to change.  From Michiko Koshino’s exploding, flame-shaped flag to Tim Dixon’s shards, Georgina Goodman’s ‘heel’s and Ron Arad’s kinetic ‘spinning flag’, the flags represent a possible future look to the nation’s flag. The Flag Project has been coordinated by Bill Amberg, designer based in Lonsdale Rd. The imagined new designs have been made up in Kvadrat material and will be on display within Lonsdale Road from 18 – 21 September as part of the London Design Festival. Kilburn, London, UK 18 Sept 2014.
    Queens Park Union Jacks GBPhotos 15.jpg
  • Queen’s Park Union flag project - Eight leading designers have reinterpreted and redesigned the Union Jack for a project which imagines how the UK’s flag could look. Set in place on the day of the Scottish Referendum, when the Union flag could be forced to change.  From Michiko Koshino’s exploding, flame-shaped flag to Tim Dixon’s shards, Georgina Goodman’s ‘heel’s and Ron Arad’s kinetic ‘spinning flag’, the flags represent a possible future look to the nation’s flag. The Flag Project has been coordinated by Bill Amberg, designer based in Lonsdale Rd. The imagined new designs have been made up in Kvadrat material and will be on display within Lonsdale Road from 18 – 21 September as part of the London Design Festival. Kilburn, London, UK 18 Sept 2014.
    Queens Park Union Jacks GBPhotos 11.jpg
  • Queen’s Park Union flag project - Eight leading designers have reinterpreted and redesigned the Union Jack for a project which imagines how the UK’s flag could look. Set in place on the day of the Scottish Referendum, when the Union flag could be forced to change.  From Michiko Koshino’s exploding, flame-shaped flag to Tim Dixon’s shards, Georgina Goodman’s ‘heel’s and Ron Arad’s kinetic ‘spinning flag’, the flags represent a possible future look to the nation’s flag. The Flag Project has been coordinated by Bill Amberg, designer based in Lonsdale Rd. The imagined new designs have been made up in Kvadrat material and will be on display within Lonsdale Road from 18 – 21 September as part of the London Design Festival. Kilburn, London, UK 18 Sept 2014.
    Queens Park Union Jacks GBPhotos 09.jpg
  • Queen’s Park Union flag project - Eight leading designers have reinterpreted and redesigned the Union Jack for a project which imagines how the UK’s flag could look. Set in place on the day of the Scottish Referendum, when the Union flag could be forced to change.  From Michiko Koshino’s exploding, flame-shaped flag to Tim Dixon’s shards, Georgina Goodman’s ‘heel’s and Ron Arad’s kinetic ‘spinning flag’, the flags represent a possible future look to the nation’s flag. The Flag Project has been coordinated by Bill Amberg, designer based in Lonsdale Rd. The imagined new designs have been made up in Kvadrat material and will be on display within Lonsdale Road from 18 – 21 September as part of the London Design Festival. Kilburn, London, UK 18 Sept 2014.
    Queens Park Union Jacks GBPhotos 08.jpg
  • Queen’s Park Union flag project - Eight leading designers have reinterpreted and redesigned the Union Jack for a project which imagines how the UK’s flag could look. Set in place on the day of the Scottish Referendum, when the Union flag could be forced to change.  From Michiko Koshino’s exploding, flame-shaped flag to Tim Dixon’s shards, Georgina Goodman’s ‘heel’s and Ron Arad’s kinetic ‘spinning flag’, the flags represent a possible future look to the nation’s flag. The Flag Project has been coordinated by Bill Amberg, designer based in Lonsdale Rd. The imagined new designs have been made up in Kvadrat material and will be on display within Lonsdale Road from 18 – 21 September as part of the London Design Festival. Kilburn, London, UK 18 Sept 2014.
    Queens Park Union Jacks GBPhotos 05.jpg
  • Queen’s Park Union flag project - Eight leading designers have reinterpreted and redesigned the Union Jack for a project which imagines how the UK’s flag could look. Set in place on the day of the Scottish Referendum, when the Union flag could be forced to change.  From Michiko Koshino’s exploding, flame-shaped flag to Tim Dixon’s shards, Georgina Goodman’s ‘heel’s and Ron Arad’s kinetic ‘spinning flag’, the flags represent a possible future look to the nation’s flag. The Flag Project has been coordinated by Bill Amberg, designer based in Lonsdale Rd. The imagined new designs have been made up in Kvadrat material and will be on display within Lonsdale Road from 18 – 21 September as part of the London Design Festival. Kilburn, London, UK 18 Sept 2014.
    Queens Park Union Jacks GBPhotos 06.jpg
  • Queen’s Park Union flag project - Eight leading designers have reinterpreted and redesigned the Union Jack for a project which imagines how the UK’s flag could look. Set in place on the day of the Scottish Referendum, when the Union flag could be forced to change.  From Michiko Koshino’s exploding, flame-shaped flag to Tim Dixon’s shards, Georgina Goodman’s ‘heel’s and Ron Arad’s kinetic ‘spinning flag’, the flags represent a possible future look to the nation’s flag. The Flag Project has been coordinated by Bill Amberg, designer based in Lonsdale Rd. The imagined new designs have been made up in Kvadrat material and will be on display within Lonsdale Road from 18 – 21 September as part of the London Design Festival. Kilburn, London, UK 18 Sept 2014.
    Queens Park Union Jacks GBPhotos 04.jpg
  • Queen’s Park Union flag project - Eight leading designers have reinterpreted and redesigned the Union Jack for a project which imagines how the UK’s flag could look. Set in place on the day of the Scottish Referendum, when the Union flag could be forced to change.  From Michiko Koshino’s exploding, flame-shaped flag to Tim Dixon’s shards, Georgina Goodman’s ‘heel’s and Ron Arad’s kinetic ‘spinning flag’, the flags represent a possible future look to the nation’s flag. The Flag Project has been coordinated by Bill Amberg, designer based in Lonsdale Rd. The imagined new designs have been made up in Kvadrat material and will be on display within Lonsdale Road from 18 – 21 September as part of the London Design Festival. Kilburn, London, UK 18 Sept 2014.
    Queens Park Union Jacks GBPhotos 02.jpg
  • Queen’s Park Union flag project - Eight leading designers have reinterpreted and redesigned the Union Jack for a project which imagines how the UK’s flag could look. Set in place on the day of the Scottish Referendum, when the Union flag could be forced to change.  From Michiko Koshino’s exploding, flame-shaped flag to Tim Dixon’s shards, Georgina Goodman’s ‘heel’s and Ron Arad’s kinetic ‘spinning flag’, the flags represent a possible future look to the nation’s flag. The Flag Project has been coordinated by Bill Amberg, designer based in Lonsdale Rd. The imagined new designs have been made up in Kvadrat material and will be on display within Lonsdale Road from 18 – 21 September as part of the London Design Festival. Kilburn, London, UK 18 Sept 2014.
    Queens Park Union Jacks GBPhotos 01.jpg
  • Queen’s Park Union flag project - Eight leading designers have reinterpreted and redesigned the Union Jack for a project which imagines how the UK’s flag could look. Set in place on the day of the Scottish Referendum, when the Union flag could be forced to change.  From Michiko Koshino’s exploding, flame-shaped flag to Tim Dixon’s shards, Georgina Goodman’s ‘heel’s and Ron Arad’s kinetic ‘spinning flag’, the flags represent a possible future look to the nation’s flag. The Flag Project has been coordinated by Bill Amberg, designer based in Lonsdale Rd. The imagined new designs have been made up in Kvadrat material and will be on display within Lonsdale Road from 18 – 21 September as part of the London Design Festival. Kilburn, London, UK 18 Sept 2014.
    Queens Park Union Jacks GBPhotos 18.jpg
  • Queen’s Park Union flag project - Eight leading designers have reinterpreted and redesigned the Union Jack for a project which imagines how the UK’s flag could look. Set in place on the day of the Scottish Referendum, when the Union flag could be forced to change.  From Michiko Koshino’s exploding, flame-shaped flag to Tim Dixon’s shards, Georgina Goodman’s ‘heel’s and Ron Arad’s kinetic ‘spinning flag’, the flags represent a possible future look to the nation’s flag. The Flag Project has been coordinated by Bill Amberg, designer based in Lonsdale Rd. The imagined new designs have been made up in Kvadrat material and will be on display within Lonsdale Road from 18 – 21 September as part of the London Design Festival. Kilburn, London, UK 18 Sept 2014.
    Queens Park Union Jacks GBPhotos 17.jpg
  • Queen’s Park Union flag project - Eight leading designers have reinterpreted and redesigned the Union Jack for a project which imagines how the UK’s flag could look. Set in place on the day of the Scottish Referendum, when the Union flag could be forced to change.  From Michiko Koshino’s exploding, flame-shaped flag to Tim Dixon’s shards, Georgina Goodman’s ‘heel’s and Ron Arad’s kinetic ‘spinning flag’, the flags represent a possible future look to the nation’s flag. The Flag Project has been coordinated by Bill Amberg, designer based in Lonsdale Rd. The imagined new designs have been made up in Kvadrat material and will be on display within Lonsdale Road from 18 – 21 September as part of the London Design Festival. Kilburn, London, UK 18 Sept 2014.
    Queens Park Union Jacks GBPhotos 16.jpg
  • Queen’s Park Union flag project - Eight leading designers have reinterpreted and redesigned the Union Jack for a project which imagines how the UK’s flag could look. Set in place on the day of the Scottish Referendum, when the Union flag could be forced to change.  From Michiko Koshino’s exploding, flame-shaped flag to Tim Dixon’s shards, Georgina Goodman’s ‘heel’s and Ron Arad’s kinetic ‘spinning flag’, the flags represent a possible future look to the nation’s flag. The Flag Project has been coordinated by Bill Amberg, designer based in Lonsdale Rd. The imagined new designs have been made up in Kvadrat material and will be on display within Lonsdale Road from 18 – 21 September as part of the London Design Festival. Kilburn, London, UK 18 Sept 2014.
    Queens Park Union Jacks GBPhotos 14.jpg
  • Queen’s Park Union flag project - Eight leading designers have reinterpreted and redesigned the Union Jack for a project which imagines how the UK’s flag could look. Set in place on the day of the Scottish Referendum, when the Union flag could be forced to change.  From Michiko Koshino’s exploding, flame-shaped flag to Tim Dixon’s shards, Georgina Goodman’s ‘heel’s and Ron Arad’s kinetic ‘spinning flag’, the flags represent a possible future look to the nation’s flag. The Flag Project has been coordinated by Bill Amberg, designer based in Lonsdale Rd. The imagined new designs have been made up in Kvadrat material and will be on display within Lonsdale Road from 18 – 21 September as part of the London Design Festival. Kilburn, London, UK 18 Sept 2014.
    Queens Park Union Jacks GBPhotos 12.jpg
  • Queen’s Park Union flag project - Eight leading designers have reinterpreted and redesigned the Union Jack for a project which imagines how the UK’s flag could look. Set in place on the day of the Scottish Referendum, when the Union flag could be forced to change.  From Michiko Koshino’s exploding, flame-shaped flag to Tim Dixon’s shards, Georgina Goodman’s ‘heel’s and Ron Arad’s kinetic ‘spinning flag’, the flags represent a possible future look to the nation’s flag. The Flag Project has been coordinated by Bill Amberg, designer based in Lonsdale Rd. The imagined new designs have been made up in Kvadrat material and will be on display within Lonsdale Road from 18 – 21 September as part of the London Design Festival. Kilburn, London, UK 18 Sept 2014.
    Queens Park Union Jacks GBPhotos 13.jpg
  • Queen’s Park Union flag project - Eight leading designers have reinterpreted and redesigned the Union Jack for a project which imagines how the UK’s flag could look. Set in place on the day of the Scottish Referendum, when the Union flag could be forced to change.  From Michiko Koshino’s exploding, flame-shaped flag to Tim Dixon’s shards, Georgina Goodman’s ‘heel’s and Ron Arad’s kinetic ‘spinning flag’, the flags represent a possible future look to the nation’s flag. The Flag Project has been coordinated by Bill Amberg, designer based in Lonsdale Rd. The imagined new designs have been made up in Kvadrat material and will be on display within Lonsdale Road from 18 – 21 September as part of the London Design Festival. Kilburn, London, UK 18 Sept 2014.
    Queens Park Union Jacks GBPhotos 10.jpg
  • Queen’s Park Union flag project - Eight leading designers have reinterpreted and redesigned the Union Jack for a project which imagines how the UK’s flag could look. Set in place on the day of the Scottish Referendum, when the Union flag could be forced to change.  From Michiko Koshino’s exploding, flame-shaped flag to Tim Dixon’s shards, Georgina Goodman’s ‘heel’s and Ron Arad’s kinetic ‘spinning flag’, the flags represent a possible future look to the nation’s flag. The Flag Project has been coordinated by Bill Amberg, designer based in Lonsdale Rd. The imagined new designs have been made up in Kvadrat material and will be on display within Lonsdale Road from 18 – 21 September as part of the London Design Festival. Kilburn, London, UK 18 Sept 2014.
    Queens Park Union Jacks GBPhotos 07.jpg
  • Queen’s Park Union flag project - Eight leading designers have reinterpreted and redesigned the Union Jack for a project which imagines how the UK’s flag could look. Set in place on the day of the Scottish Referendum, when the Union flag could be forced to change.  From Michiko Koshino’s exploding, flame-shaped flag to Tim Dixon’s shards, Georgina Goodman’s ‘heel’s and Ron Arad’s kinetic ‘spinning flag’, the flags represent a possible future look to the nation’s flag. The Flag Project has been coordinated by Bill Amberg, designer based in Lonsdale Rd. The imagined new designs have been made up in Kvadrat material and will be on display within Lonsdale Road from 18 – 21 September as part of the London Design Festival. Kilburn, London, UK 18 Sept 2014.
    Queens Park Union Jacks GBPhotos 03.jpg
  • VIsitors look down as The Rt Hon Maria Miller MP, the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport, Euisun Chung, vice chairman, Hyundai and Nicholas Serota, Director, Tate announce a new 11 year sponsorship deal with Hyundai for the newly reopened Turbine Hall. The announcement coincides with the completion of a new, high level, bridge across the space joining it to the new wing, which will open to the public in 2016. The Tate Modern, London, UK 20 January 2014.
    GB9059.jpg
  • Pose 2015 Look 2016 - Antony Gormley,  Fit, a new exhibition of work in the South Galleries of White Cube Bermondsey. The piece is divided into 15 discrete chambers to create a series of dramatic physiological encounters in the form of a labyrinth.
    Gormley Fit white Cube GBPhotos 70.jpg
  • Look 2016 - Antony Gormley,  Fit, a new exhibition of work in the South Galleries of White Cube Bermondsey. The piece is divided into 15 discrete chambers to create a series of dramatic physiological encounters in the form of a labyrinth.
    Gormley Fit white Cube GBPhotos 19.jpg
  • Block 2015 and Look 2016 - Antony Gormley,  Fit, a new exhibition of work in the South Galleries of White Cube Bermondsey. The piece is divided into 15 discrete chambers to create a series of dramatic physiological encounters in the form of a labyrinth.
    Gormley Fit white Cube GBPhotos 14.jpg
  • Collection of toy robots, 1950-1970. As a toy, the robot became an international phenomenon. These robots from Japan and the USA demonstrate how<br />
quickly ideas about what robots should look like were created and spread around the world. Incl - Robert the Robot, 1955, Ideal, USA.and Super astronaut robot 1970's, Japan - The Science Museum’s new Robots exhibition, opening in February 2017, will explore this very human obsession to recreate ourselves, revealing the remarkable 500-year story of humanoid robots. Featuring a unique collection of over 100 robots, from a 16th-century mechanical monk to robots from science fiction and modern-day research labs, this exhibition will enable visitors to discover the cultural, historical and technological context of humanoid robots. Visitors will be able to interact with some of the 12 working robots on display. Among many other highlights will be an articulated iron manikin from the 1500s, Cygan, a 2.4m tall 1950s robot with a glamorous past, and one of the first walking bipedal robots
    Robots Science Museum GBPhotos 02.jpg
  • Nick Waplington/Alexander McQueen: Working Process at Tate Britain. This new exhibition presents the result of a unique collaboration between acclaimed fashion designer Alexander McQueen (1969-2010) and artist Nick Waplington (b 1965). It provides a behind-the-scenes look into one of fashion’s most celebrated names, capturing the creative journey - from sketch to catwalk - of McQueen’s seminal collection, Horn of Plenty. Highlights include: a number of large scale images taken by Nick Waplington during his access to Alexander McQueen’s studio - these feature Alexander McQueen alongside Anna Wintour, Philip Treacy, Sarah Burton and other members of his team; and these are interspersed by images of recyled rubbish to mirror the recycling of patterns and fabrics from previous designs in the collection. The exhibition runs from 10 March – 17 May 2015
    Tate Waplington McQueen GBPhotos 01.jpg
  • Nick Waplington/Alexander McQueen: Working Process at Tate Britain. This new exhibition presents the result of a unique collaboration between acclaimed fashion designer Alexander McQueen (1969-2010) and artist Nick Waplington (b 1965). It provides a behind-the-scenes look into one of fashion’s most celebrated names, capturing the creative journey - from sketch to catwalk - of McQueen’s seminal collection, Horn of Plenty. Highlights include: a number of large scale images taken by Nick Waplington during his access to Alexander McQueen’s studio - these feature Alexander McQueen alongside Anna Wintour, Philip Treacy, Sarah Burton and other members of his team; and these are interspersed by images of recyled rubbish to mirror the recycling of patterns and fabrics from previous designs in the collection. The exhibition runs from 10 March – 17 May 2015
    Tate Waplington McQueen GBPhotos 25.jpg
  • Nick Waplington/Alexander McQueen: Working Process at Tate Britain. This new exhibition presents the result of a unique collaboration between acclaimed fashion designer Alexander McQueen (1969-2010) and artist Nick Waplington (b 1965). It provides a behind-the-scenes look into one of fashion’s most celebrated names, capturing the creative journey - from sketch to catwalk - of McQueen’s seminal collection, Horn of Plenty. Highlights include: a number of large scale images taken by Nick Waplington during his access to Alexander McQueen’s studio - these feature Alexander McQueen alongside Anna Wintour, Philip Treacy, Sarah Burton and other members of his team; and these are interspersed by images of recyled rubbish to mirror the recycling of patterns and fabrics from previous designs in the collection. The exhibition runs from 10 March – 17 May 2015
    Tate Waplington McQueen GBPhotos 22.jpg
  • Nick Waplington/Alexander McQueen: Working Process at Tate Britain. This new exhibition presents the result of a unique collaboration between acclaimed fashion designer Alexander McQueen (1969-2010) and artist Nick Waplington (b 1965). It provides a behind-the-scenes look into one of fashion’s most celebrated names, capturing the creative journey - from sketch to catwalk - of McQueen’s seminal collection, Horn of Plenty. Highlights include: a number of large scale images taken by Nick Waplington during his access to Alexander McQueen’s studio - these feature Alexander McQueen alongside Anna Wintour, Philip Treacy, Sarah Burton and other members of his team; and these are interspersed by images of recyled rubbish to mirror the recycling of patterns and fabrics from previous designs in the collection. The exhibition runs from 10 March – 17 May 2015
    Tate Waplington McQueen GBPhotos 23.jpg
  • Nick Waplington/Alexander McQueen: Working Process at Tate Britain. This new exhibition presents the result of a unique collaboration between acclaimed fashion designer Alexander McQueen (1969-2010) and artist Nick Waplington (b 1965). It provides a behind-the-scenes look into one of fashion’s most celebrated names, capturing the creative journey - from sketch to catwalk - of McQueen’s seminal collection, Horn of Plenty. Highlights include: a number of large scale images taken by Nick Waplington during his access to Alexander McQueen’s studio - these feature Alexander McQueen alongside Anna Wintour, Philip Treacy, Sarah Burton and other members of his team; and these are interspersed by images of recyled rubbish to mirror the recycling of patterns and fabrics from previous designs in the collection. The exhibition runs from 10 March – 17 May 2015
    Tate Waplington McQueen GBPhotos 19.jpg
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