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)
{ 32 images found }

Loading ()...

  • Henham Park, Suffolk, 20 July 2019. The Dermot O'Leary show for BBC Radio 2 is broadcast from the BBC Introducing stage in the woods. The 2019 Latitude Festival.
    Latitude 19 GBPhotos 076.jpg
  • Henham Park, Suffolk, 20 July 2019. The Dermot O'Leary show for BBC Radio 2 is broadcast from the BBC Introducing stage in the woods. The 2019 Latitude Festival.
    Latitude 19 GBPhotos 074.jpg
  • Henham Park, Suffolk, 20 July 2019. The new Poet Laureate Simon Armitage - The Dermot O'Leary show for BBC Radio 2 is broadcast from the BBC Introducing stage in the woods. The 2019 Latitude Festival.
    Latitude 19 GBPhotos 072.jpg
  • Henham Park, Suffolk, 20 July 2019. writer Richard Curtis talks about his new film Yesterday, which was partly filmed at the festival last year - The Dermot O'Leary show for BBC Radio 2 is broadcast from the BBC Introducing stage in the woods. The 2019 Latitude Festival.
    Latitude 19 GBPhotos 071.jpg
  • Henham Park, Suffolk, 20 July 2019. writer Richard Curtis talks about his new film Yesterday, which was partly filmed at the festival last year - The Dermot O'Leary show for BBC Radio 2 is broadcast from the BBC Introducing stage in the woods. The 2019 Latitude Festival.
    Latitude 19 GBPhotos 068.jpg
  • Henham Park, Suffolk, 20 July 2019. The Dermot O'Leary show for BBC Radio 2 is broadcast from the BBC Introducing stage in the woods. The 2019 Latitude Festival.
    Latitude 19 GBPhotos 067.jpg
  • Henham Park, Suffolk, 20 July 2019. The Dermot O'Leary show for BBC Radio 2 is broadcast from the BBC Introducing stage in the woods. The 2019 Latitude Festival.
    Latitude 19 GBPhotos 066.jpg
  • Henham Park, Suffolk, 20 July 2019. British astronaut Helen Sharman - The Dermot O'Leary show for BBC Radio 2 is broadcast from the BBC Introducing stage in the woods. The 2019 Latitude Festival.
    Latitude 19 GBPhotos 065.jpg
  • Henham Park, Suffolk, 20 July 2019. The Dermot O'Leary show for BBC Radio 2 is broadcast from the BBC Introducing stage in the woods. The 2019 Latitude Festival.
    Latitude 19 GBPhotos 075.jpg
  • Henham Park, Suffolk, 20 July 2019. Live music from Ben Folds - The Dermot O'Leary show for BBC Radio 2 is broadcast from the BBC Introducing stage in the woods. The 2019 Latitude Festival.
    Latitude 19 GBPhotos 064.jpg
  • Henham Park, Suffolk, 20 July 2019. The Dermot O'Leary show for BBC Radio 2 is broadcast from the BBC Introducing stage in the woods. The 2019 Latitude Festival.
    Latitude 19 GBPhotos 063.jpg
  • Henham Park, Suffolk, 20 July 2019. The Dermot O'Leary show for BBC Radio 2 is broadcast from the BBC Introducing stage in the woods. The 2019 Latitude Festival.
    Latitude 19 GBPhotos 062.jpg
  • Henham Park, Suffolk, 20 July 2019. The Dermot O'Leary show for BBC Radio 2 is broadcast from the BBC Introducing stage in the woods. The 2019 Latitude Festival.
    Latitude 19 GBPhotos 073.jpg
  • Humanoid robot, ‘Cygan’, built Dr Piero Fiorito, Italy,<br />
1957. Cygan’s builder was a keen aero-modeller, and he<br />
designed the robot, weighing almost 500kg and driven by<br />
13 electric motors, to be operated by radio control. Cygan’s early career was glamorous. He danced,<br />
performed at shows, and crushed cans for delighted<br />
onlookers. But as his career waned, he found himself<br />
rusting out of doors, before being saved and returned to<br />
his original, working condition - 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 31.jpg
  • Humanoid robot, ‘Cygan’, built Dr Piero Fiorito, Italy,<br />
1957. Cygan’s builder was a keen aero-modeller, and he<br />
designed the robot, weighing almost 500kg and driven by<br />
13 electric motors, to be operated by radio control. Cygan’s early career was glamorous. He danced,<br />
performed at shows, and crushed cans for delighted<br />
onlookers. But as his career waned, he found himself<br />
rusting out of doors, before being saved and returned to<br />
his original, working condition - 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 21.jpg
  • Humanoid robot, ‘Cygan’, built Dr Piero Fiorito, Italy,<br />
1957. Cygan’s builder was a keen aero-modeller, and he<br />
designed the robot, weighing almost 500kg and driven by<br />
13 electric motors, to be operated by radio control. Cygan’s early career was glamorous. He danced,<br />
performed at shows, and crushed cans for delighted<br />
onlookers. But as his career waned, he found himself<br />
rusting out of doors, before being saved and returned to<br />
his original, working condition - 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 20.jpg
  • Humanoid robot, ‘Cygan’, built Dr Piero Fiorito, Italy,<br />
1957. Cygan’s builder was a keen aero-modeller, and he<br />
designed the robot, weighing almost 500kg and driven by<br />
13 electric motors, to be operated by radio control. Cygan’s early career was glamorous. He danced,<br />
performed at shows, and crushed cans for delighted<br />
onlookers. But as his career waned, he found himself<br />
rusting out of doors, before being saved and returned to<br />
his original, working condition - 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 19.jpg
  • Humanoid robot, ‘Cygan’, built Dr Piero Fiorito, Italy,<br />
1957. Cygan’s builder was a keen aero-modeller, and he<br />
designed the robot, weighing almost 500kg and driven by<br />
13 electric motors, to be operated by radio control. Cygan’s early career was glamorous. He danced,<br />
performed at shows, and crushed cans for delighted<br />
onlookers. But as his career waned, he found himself<br />
rusting out of doors, before being saved and returned to<br />
his original, working condition - 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 16.jpg
  • Humanoid robot, ‘Cygan’, built Dr Piero Fiorito, Italy,<br />
1957. Cygan’s builder was a keen aero-modeller, and he<br />
designed the robot, weighing almost 500kg and driven by<br />
13 electric motors, to be operated by radio control. Cygan’s early career was glamorous. He danced,<br />
performed at shows, and crushed cans for delighted<br />
onlookers. But as his career waned, he found himself<br />
rusting out of doors, before being saved and returned to<br />
his original, working condition - 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 09.jpg
  • Humanoid robot, ‘Cygan’, built Dr Piero Fiorito, Italy,<br />
1957. Cygan’s builder was a keen aero-modeller, and he<br />
designed the robot, weighing almost 500kg and driven by<br />
13 electric motors, to be operated by radio control. Cygan’s early career was glamorous. He danced,<br />
performed at shows, and crushed cans for delighted<br />
onlookers. But as his career waned, he found himself<br />
rusting out of doors, before being saved and returned to<br />
his original, working condition - 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 06.jpg
  • Humanoid robot, ‘Cygan’, built Dr Piero Fiorito, Italy,<br />
1957. Cygan’s builder was a keen aero-modeller, and he<br />
designed the robot, weighing almost 500kg and driven by<br />
13 electric motors, to be operated by radio control. Cygan’s early career was glamorous. He danced,<br />
performed at shows, and crushed cans for delighted<br />
onlookers. But as his career waned, he found himself<br />
rusting out of doors, before being saved and returned to<br />
his original, working condition - 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 04.jpg
  • Humanoid robot, ‘Cygan’, built Dr Piero Fiorito, Italy,<br />
1957. Cygan’s builder was a keen aero-modeller, and he<br />
designed the robot, weighing almost 500kg and driven by<br />
13 electric motors, to be operated by radio control. Cygan’s early career was glamorous. He danced,<br />
performed at shows, and crushed cans for delighted<br />
onlookers. But as his career waned, he found himself<br />
rusting out of doors, before being saved and returned to<br />
his original, working condition - 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 01.jpg
  • Humanoid robot, ‘Cygan’, built Dr Piero Fiorito, Italy,<br />
1957. Cygan’s builder was a keen aero-modeller, and he<br />
designed the robot, weighing almost 500kg and driven by<br />
13 electric motors, to be operated by radio control. Cygan’s early career was glamorous. He danced,<br />
performed at shows, and crushed cans for delighted<br />
onlookers. But as his career waned, he found himself<br />
rusting out of doors, before being saved and returned to<br />
his original, working condition - 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 22.jpg
  • Humanoid robot, ‘Cygan’, built Dr Piero Fiorito, Italy,<br />
1957. Cygan’s builder was a keen aero-modeller, and he<br />
designed the robot, weighing almost 500kg and driven by<br />
13 electric motors, to be operated by radio control. Cygan’s early career was glamorous. He danced,<br />
performed at shows, and crushed cans for delighted<br />
onlookers. But as his career waned, he found himself<br />
rusting out of doors, before being saved and returned to<br />
his original, working condition - 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 18.jpg
  • Humanoid robot, ‘Cygan’, built Dr Piero Fiorito, Italy,<br />
1957. Cygan’s builder was a keen aero-modeller, and he<br />
designed the robot, weighing almost 500kg and driven by<br />
13 electric motors, to be operated by radio control. Cygan’s early career was glamorous. He danced,<br />
performed at shows, and crushed cans for delighted<br />
onlookers. But as his career waned, he found himself<br />
rusting out of doors, before being saved and returned to<br />
his original, working condition - 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 17.jpg
  • Humanoid robot, ‘Cygan’, built Dr Piero Fiorito, Italy,<br />
1957. Cygan’s builder was a keen aero-modeller, and he<br />
designed the robot, weighing almost 500kg and driven by<br />
13 electric motors, to be operated by radio control. Cygan’s early career was glamorous. He danced,<br />
performed at shows, and crushed cans for delighted<br />
onlookers. But as his career waned, he found himself<br />
rusting out of doors, before being saved and returned to<br />
his original, working condition - 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 12.jpg
  • Humanoid robot, ‘Cygan’, built Dr Piero Fiorito, Italy,<br />
1957. Cygan’s builder was a keen aero-modeller, and he<br />
designed the robot, weighing almost 500kg and driven by<br />
13 electric motors, to be operated by radio control. Cygan’s early career was glamorous. He danced,<br />
performed at shows, and crushed cans for delighted<br />
onlookers. But as his career waned, he found himself<br />
rusting out of doors, before being saved and returned to<br />
his original, working condition - 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 10.jpg
  • Humanoid robot, ‘Cygan’, built Dr Piero Fiorito, Italy,<br />
1957. Cygan’s builder was a keen aero-modeller, and he<br />
designed the robot, weighing almost 500kg and driven by<br />
13 electric motors, to be operated by radio control. Cygan’s early career was glamorous. He danced,<br />
performed at shows, and crushed cans for delighted<br />
onlookers. But as his career waned, he found himself<br />
rusting out of doors, before being saved and returned to<br />
his original, working condition - 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 08.jpg
  • Humanoid robot, ‘Cygan’, built Dr Piero Fiorito, Italy,<br />
1957. Cygan’s builder was a keen aero-modeller, and he<br />
designed the robot, weighing almost 500kg and driven by<br />
13 electric motors, to be operated by radio control. Cygan’s early career was glamorous. He danced,<br />
performed at shows, and crushed cans for delighted<br />
onlookers. But as his career waned, he found himself<br />
rusting out of doors, before being saved and returned to<br />
his original, working condition - 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 07.jpg
  • Humanoid robot, ‘Cygan’, built Dr Piero Fiorito, Italy,<br />
1957. Cygan’s builder was a keen aero-modeller, and he<br />
designed the robot, weighing almost 500kg and driven by<br />
13 electric motors, to be operated by radio control. Cygan’s early career was glamorous. He danced,<br />
performed at shows, and crushed cans for delighted<br />
onlookers. But as his career waned, he found himself<br />
rusting out of doors, before being saved and returned to<br />
his original, working condition - 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 03.jpg
  • Humanoid robot, ‘Cygan’, built Dr Piero Fiorito, Italy,<br />
1957. Cygan’s builder was a keen aero-modeller, and he<br />
designed the robot, weighing almost 500kg and driven by<br />
13 electric motors, to be operated by radio control. Cygan’s early career was glamorous. He danced,<br />
performed at shows, and crushed cans for delighted<br />
onlookers. But as his career waned, he found himself<br />
rusting out of doors, before being saved and returned to<br />
his original, working condition - 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 30.jpg
  • Humanoid robot, ‘Cygan’, built Dr Piero Fiorito, Italy,<br />
1957. Cygan’s builder was a keen aero-modeller, and he<br />
designed the robot, weighing almost 500kg and driven by<br />
13 electric motors, to be operated by radio control. Cygan’s early career was glamorous. He danced,<br />
performed at shows, and crushed cans for delighted<br />
onlookers. But as his career waned, he found himself<br />
rusting out of doors, before being saved and returned to<br />
his original, working condition - 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 05.jpg
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x

GBPhotos

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