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  • Genesis in Platinum and exhibition of large prints by Sebastiao Salgado. The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 42.jpg
  • Genesis in Platinum and exhibition of large prints by Sebastiao Salgado. The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 41.jpg
  • Genesis in Platinum and exhibition of large prints by Sebastiao Salgado. The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 40.jpg
  • Genesis in Platinum and exhibition of large prints by Sebastiao Salgado. The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 38.jpg
  • Genesis in Platinum and exhibition of large prints by Sebastiao Salgado. The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 36.jpg
  • Martin Parr chats at Work by Perdro Meyer and Ackroyd and Harvey - Beneath the Surface - an exhibition of images from the V&A, which will continue after the end of Photo London. The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 34.jpg
  • Work by David Kronig - Beneath the Surface - an exhibition of images from the V&A, which will continue after the end of Photo London. The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 33.jpg
  • Veronica in Bloom, 1840, by Fox Talbot (£300K) at the James Hyman Gallery - The most expensive work in the show. The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 30.jpg
  • Gustave Le Gray 1820-1884 (Left and R £250k each) and Fox Talbot (2nd R, £300K) at the James Hyman Gallery - The most expensive work in the show. The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 29.jpg
  • Punta Tegge Diptych, Sardegna, by Massimo Vitali in the Grimaldi Gavin Gallery.  The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 26.jpg
  • The sales effort goes on in the reflection of work by Goldschmied & Chiari in the Grimaldi Gavin Gallery.  The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 25.jpg
  • The New World by Lara Baladi in the Grimaldi Gavin Gallery.  The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 21.jpg
  • Work by Peter Beard  in the Camera Works Gallery.  The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 19.jpg
  • Work by William Eggleston in the Rose Gallery.  The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 16.jpg
  • Work by William Eggleston in the Rose Gallery.  The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 15.jpg
  • Specially commissioned for Photo London, an installation by Rut Blees Luxemburg (pictured) in the courtyard of Somerset House, London. The piece involes 10 lightbox cubes and framed lights which show ‘an urban love story overlaid with text by philosopher Alexander Garcia Duttmann’. The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 13.jpg
  • Specially commissioned for Photo London, an installation by Rut Blees Luxemburg in the courtyard of Somerset House, London. The piece involes 10 lightbox cubes and framed lights which show ‘an urban love story overlaid with text by philosopher Alexander Garcia Duttmann’. The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 10.jpg
  • Specially commissioned for Photo London, an installation by Rut Blees Luxemburg (pictured) in the courtyard of Somerset House, London. The piece involes 10 lightbox cubes and framed lights which show ‘an urban love story overlaid with text by philosopher Alexander Garcia Duttmann’. The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 09.jpg
  • Specially commissioned for Photo London, an installation by Rut Blees Luxemburg (pictured) in the courtyard of Somerset House, London. The piece involes 10 lightbox cubes and framed lights which show ‘an urban love story overlaid with text by philosopher Alexander Garcia Duttmann’. The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 07.jpg
  • Specially commissioned for Photo London, an installation by Rut Blees Luxemburg in the courtyard of Somerset House, London. The piece involes 10 lightbox cubes and framed lights which show ‘an urban love story overlaid with text by philosopher Alexander Garcia Duttmann’. The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 05.jpg
  • Specially commissioned for Photo London, an installation by Rut Blees Luxemburg in the courtyard of Somerset House, London. The piece involes 10 lightbox cubes and framed lights which show ‘an urban love story overlaid with text by philosopher Alexander Garcia Duttmann’. The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 04.jpg
  • Specially commissioned for Photo London, an installation by Rut Blees Luxemburg in the courtyard of Somerset House, London. The piece involes 10 lightbox cubes and framed lights which show ‘an urban love story overlaid with text by philosopher Alexander Garcia Duttmann’. The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 02.jpg
  • Bentley are the VIP transport partners. The piece involes 10 lightbox cubes and framed lights which show ‘an urban love story overlaid with text by philosopher Alexander Garcia Duttmann’. The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 01.jpg
  • Genesis in Platinum and exhibition of large prints by Sebastiao Salgado. The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 39.jpg
  • Sandy Nairne looks at Genesis in Platinum and exhibition of large prints by Sebastiao Salgado. The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 37.jpg
  • Beneath the Surface - an exhibition of images from the V&A, which will continue after the end of Photo London. The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 35.jpg
  • Fllod Drean by Arthur Tress (R) - Beneath the Surface - an exhibition of images from the V&A, which will continue after the end of Photo London. The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 32.jpg
  • Work by Gustave Le Gray 1820-1884 (£250k) at the James Hyman Gallery - The most expensive work in the show. The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 31.jpg
  • Kate Moss by Steven Klein (and other celebrity images) in the Camera Work Gallery. The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 28.jpg
  • Kate Moss by Steven Klein (and other celebrity images) in the Camera Work Gallery. The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 27.jpg
  • The sales effort goes on in the reflection of work by Goldschmied & Chiari and Karen Knorr (Finding Refuge, R)in the Grimaldi Gavin Gallery.  The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 24.jpg
  • Visitors mount the ornate spiral staircase to move between galleries. The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 23.jpg
  • Work by Goldschmied & Chiari in the Grimaldi Gavin Gallery.  The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 22.jpg
  • Work by Nobuyoshi Araki and Kenro Izu in the 'in camera galerie'.  The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 20.jpg
  • David Bowie by Brian Duffy in the Camera Works Gallery.  The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 18.jpg
  • Final Preparations in the Ben Brown Fine Arts Gallery.  The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 17.jpg
  • Lydia Goldblatt, London based photographer, with her work in the The Wapping Bankside Project.  The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 14.jpg
  • Specially commissioned for Photo London, an installation by Rut Blees Luxemburg (pictured) in the courtyard of Somerset House, London. The piece involes 10 lightbox cubes and framed lights which show ‘an urban love story overlaid with text by philosopher Alexander Garcia Duttmann’. The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 12.jpg
  • Specially commissioned for Photo London, an installation by Rut Blees Luxemburg (pictured) in the courtyard of Somerset House, London. The piece involes 10 lightbox cubes and framed lights which show ‘an urban love story overlaid with text by philosopher Alexander Garcia Duttmann’. The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 11.jpg
  • Specially commissioned for Photo London, an installation by Rut Blees Luxemburg (pictured) in the courtyard of Somerset House, London. The piece involes 10 lightbox cubes and framed lights which show ‘an urban love story overlaid with text by philosopher Alexander Garcia Duttmann’. The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 08.jpg
  • Specially commissioned for Photo London, an installation by Rut Blees Luxemburg in the courtyard of Somerset House, London. The piece involes 10 lightbox cubes and framed lights which show ‘an urban love story overlaid with text by philosopher Alexander Garcia Duttmann’. The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 06.jpg
  • Specially commissioned for Photo London, an installation by Rut Blees Luxemburg in the courtyard of Somerset House, London. The piece involes 10 lightbox cubes and framed lights which show ‘an urban love story overlaid with text by philosopher Alexander Garcia Duttmann’. The inaugural edition of Photo London - London’s first international photography fair, it aims to harness the growing audience for photography in the city and nurture a new generation of collectors. Photo London is produced by the consultancy and curatorial organisation Candlestar, known for their work with Condé Nast and the Prix Pictet photography award and touring exhibition. Photo London’s public programme is supported by the LUMA Foundation.
    Photo London GBPhotos 03.jpg
  • Poor man’s picture gallery: Victorian Art and Stereoscopic Photography at the Tate Britain - a rare collection of Victorian stereographic photographs. Lent by Astronomer and Queen guitarist Dr Brian May (pictured). This is the first display in a major British art gallery devoted to the nineteenth-century craze of three-dimensional photography. It is also accompanied by a book launch with viewer to see the 3-d images. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    Brian May Tate Britain GBPhotos 17.jpg
  • Poor man’s picture gallery: Victorian Art and Stereoscopic Photography at the Tate Britain - a rare collection of Victorian stereographic photographs. Lent by Astronomer and Queen guitarist Dr Brian May. This is the first display in a major British art gallery devoted to the nineteenth-century craze of three-dimensional photography. It is also accompanied by a book launch with viewer to see the 3-d images. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    Brian May Tate Britain GBPhotos 16.jpg
  • Poor man’s picture gallery: Victorian Art and Stereoscopic Photography at the Tate Britain - a rare collection of Victorian stereographic photographs. Lent by Astronomer and Queen guitarist Dr Brian May. This is the first display in a major British art gallery devoted to the nineteenth-century craze of three-dimensional photography. It is also accompanied by a book launch with viewer to see the 3-d images. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    Brian May Tate Britain GBPhotos 14.jpg
  • Poor man’s picture gallery: Victorian Art and Stereoscopic Photography at the Tate Britain - a rare collection of Victorian stereographic photographs. Lent by Astronomer and Queen guitarist Dr Brian May (pictured). This is the first display in a major British art gallery devoted to the nineteenth-century craze of three-dimensional photography. It is also accompanied by a book launch with viewer to see the 3-d images. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    Brian May Tate Britain GBPhotos 12.jpg
  • Poor man’s picture gallery: Victorian Art and Stereoscopic Photography at the Tate Britain - a rare collection of Victorian stereographic photographs. Lent by Astronomer and Queen guitarist Dr Brian May (pictured). This is the first display in a major British art gallery devoted to the nineteenth-century craze of three-dimensional photography. It is also accompanied by a book launch with viewer to see the 3-d images. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    Brian May Tate Britain GBPhotos 13.jpg
  • Poor man’s picture gallery: Victorian Art and Stereoscopic Photography at the Tate Britain - a rare collection of Victorian stereographic photographs. Lent by Astronomer and Queen guitarist Dr Brian May (pictured - here with Hearts are Trumps by Michael Burr, based on th work by Millais, behind). This is the first display in a major British art gallery devoted to the nineteenth-century craze of three-dimensional photography. It is also accompanied by a book launch with viewer to see the 3-d images. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    Brian May Tate Britain GBPhotos 10.jpg
  • Poor man’s picture gallery: Victorian Art and Stereoscopic Photography at the Tate Britain - a rare collection of Victorian stereographic photographs. Lent by Astronomer and Queen guitarist Dr Brian May (pictured - here with Hearts are Trumps by Michael Burr, based on th work by Millais, behind). This is the first display in a major British art gallery devoted to the nineteenth-century craze of three-dimensional photography. It is also accompanied by a book launch with viewer to see the 3-d images. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    Brian May Tate Britain GBPhotos 08.jpg
  • Poor man’s picture gallery: Victorian Art and Stereoscopic Photography at the Tate Britain - a rare collection of Victorian stereographic photographs. Lent by Astronomer and Queen guitarist Dr Brian May (pictured with Chatterron by Henry Wallis). This is the first display in a major British art gallery devoted to the nineteenth-century craze of three-dimensional photography. It is also accompanied by a book launch with viewer to see the 3-d images. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    Brian May Tate Britain GBPhotos 06.jpg
  • Poor man’s picture gallery: Victorian Art and Stereoscopic Photography at the Tate Britain - a rare collection of Victorian stereographic photographs - here Hearts are Trumps by Michael Burr, based on th work by Millais. Lent by Astronomer and Queen guitarist Dr Brian May. This is the first display in a major British art gallery devoted to the nineteenth-century craze of three-dimensional photography. It is also accompanied by a book launch with viewer to see the 3-d images. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    Brian May Tate Britain GBPhotos 04.jpg
  • Poor man’s picture gallery: Victorian Art and Stereoscopic Photography at the Tate Britain - a rare collection of Victorian stereographic photographs - here Hearts are Trumps by Michael Burr, based on th work by Millais. Lent by Astronomer and Queen guitarist Dr Brian May. This is the first display in a major British art gallery devoted to the nineteenth-century craze of three-dimensional photography. It is also accompanied by a book launch with viewer to see the 3-d images. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    Brian May Tate Britain GBPhotos 01.jpg
  • Poor man’s picture gallery: Victorian Art and Stereoscopic Photography at the Tate Britain - a rare collection of Victorian stereographic photographs - here Hearts are Trumps by Michael Burr, based on th work by Millais. Lent by Astronomer and Queen guitarist Dr Brian May. This is the first display in a major British art gallery devoted to the nineteenth-century craze of three-dimensional photography. It is also accompanied by a book launch with viewer to see the 3-d images. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    Brian May Tate Britain GBPhotos 02.jpg
  • Poor man’s picture gallery: Victorian Art and Stereoscopic Photography at the Tate Britain - a rare collection of Victorian stereographic photographs - here Chatterron by Henry Wallis. Lent by Astronomer and Queen guitarist Dr Brian May. This is the first display in a major British art gallery devoted to the nineteenth-century craze of three-dimensional photography. It is also accompanied by a book launch with viewer to see the 3-d images. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    Brian May Tate Britain GBPhotos 15.jpg
  • Poor man’s picture gallery: Victorian Art and Stereoscopic Photography at the Tate Britain - a rare collection of Victorian stereographic photographs. Lent by Astronomer and Queen guitarist Dr Brian May (pictured - here with Hearts are Trumps by Michael Burr, based on th work by Millais, behind). This is the first display in a major British art gallery devoted to the nineteenth-century craze of three-dimensional photography. It is also accompanied by a book launch with viewer to see the 3-d images. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    Brian May Tate Britain GBPhotos 11.jpg
  • Poor man’s picture gallery: Victorian Art and Stereoscopic Photography at the Tate Britain - a rare collection of Victorian stereographic photographs. Lent by Astronomer and Queen guitarist Dr Brian May (pictured - here with Hearts are Trumps by Michael Burr, based on th work by Millais, behind). This is the first display in a major British art gallery devoted to the nineteenth-century craze of three-dimensional photography. It is also accompanied by a book launch with viewer to see the 3-d images. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    Brian May Tate Britain GBPhotos 09.jpg
  • Poor man’s picture gallery: Victorian Art and Stereoscopic Photography at the Tate Britain - a rare collection of Victorian stereographic photographs. Lent by Astronomer and Queen guitarist Dr Brian May (pictured - here with Hearts are Trumps by Michael Burr, based on th work by Millais, behind). This is the first display in a major British art gallery devoted to the nineteenth-century craze of three-dimensional photography. It is also accompanied by a book launch with viewer to see the 3-d images. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    Brian May Tate Britain GBPhotos 07.jpg
  • Poor man’s picture gallery: Victorian Art and Stereoscopic Photography at the Tate Britain - a rare collection of Victorian stereographic photographs - here Hearts are Trumps by Michael Burr, based on th work by Millais. Lent by Astronomer and Queen guitarist Dr Brian May. This is the first display in a major British art gallery devoted to the nineteenth-century craze of three-dimensional photography. It is also accompanied by a book launch with viewer to see the 3-d images. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    Brian May Tate Britain GBPhotos 05.jpg
  • Poor man’s picture gallery: Victorian Art and Stereoscopic Photography at the Tate Britain - a rare collection of Victorian stereographic photographs - here Hearts are Trumps by Michael Burr, based on th work by Millais. Lent by Astronomer and Queen guitarist Dr Brian May. This is the first display in a major British art gallery devoted to the nineteenth-century craze of three-dimensional photography. It is also accompanied by a book launch with viewer to see the 3-d images. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    Brian May Tate Britain GBPhotos 03.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
  • 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
  • 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 16.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
  • 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 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 01.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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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 06.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
  • 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
  • Photo London, an international photography event befitting in its third edition, Along with the selection of the world’s leading galleries showing at the Fair, Photo London presents the Discovery section for the most exciting emerging galleries and artists. There is also a Public Programme bringing together special exhibitions and talks. The event runs until 21 May. London 17 May 2017.
    Photo London Times.jpg
  • Visitors arrive on a rainy afternoon - Photo London, an international photography event in its third edition, Along with the selection of the world’s leading galleries showing at the Fair, Photo London presents the Discovery section for the most exciting emerging galleries and artists. There is also a Public Programme bringing together special exhibitions and talks. The event runs until 21 May. London 17 May 2017.
    Photo London GBPhotos 45.jpg
  • Visitors arrive on a rainy afternoon - Photo London, an international photography event in its third edition, Along with the selection of the world’s leading galleries showing at the Fair, Photo London presents the Discovery section for the most exciting emerging galleries and artists. There is also a Public Programme bringing together special exhibitions and talks. The event runs until 21 May. London 17 May 2017.
    Photo London GBPhotos 44.jpg
  • Road Of Bones by Jacob Aue Sobol in the Leica Gallery - Photo London, an international photography event in its third edition, Along with the selection of the world’s leading galleries showing at the Fair, Photo London presents the Discovery section for the most exciting emerging galleries and artists. There is also a Public Programme bringing together special exhibitions and talks. The event runs until 21 May. London 17 May 2017.
    Photo London GBPhotos 43.jpg
  • Road Of Bones by Jacob Aue Sobol in the Leica Gallery - Photo London, an international photography event in its third edition, Along with the selection of the world’s leading galleries showing at the Fair, Photo London presents the Discovery section for the most exciting emerging galleries and artists. There is also a Public Programme bringing together special exhibitions and talks. The event runs until 21 May. London 17 May 2017.
    Photo London GBPhotos 42.jpg
  • Road Of Bones by Jacob Aue Sobol in the Leica Gallery - Photo London, an international photography event in its third edition, Along with the selection of the world’s leading galleries showing at the Fair, Photo London presents the Discovery section for the most exciting emerging galleries and artists. There is also a Public Programme bringing together special exhibitions and talks. The event runs until 21 May. London 17 May 2017.
    Photo London GBPhotos 41.jpg
  • Road Of Bones by Jacob Aue Sobol in the Leica Gallery - Photo London, an international photography event in its third edition, Along with the selection of the world’s leading galleries showing at the Fair, Photo London presents the Discovery section for the most exciting emerging galleries and artists. There is also a Public Programme bringing together special exhibitions and talks. The event runs until 21 May. London 17 May 2017.
    Photo London GBPhotos 40.jpg
  • Road Of Bones by Jacob Aue Sobol in the Leica Gallery - Photo London, an international photography event in its third edition, Along with the selection of the world’s leading galleries showing at the Fair, Photo London presents the Discovery section for the most exciting emerging galleries and artists. There is also a Public Programme bringing together special exhibitions and talks. The event runs until 21 May. London 17 May 2017.
    Photo London GBPhotos 38.jpg
  • Omo River Series by Isabel Munoz in Blanca Berlin - Photo London, an international photography event in its third edition, Along with the selection of the world’s leading galleries showing at the Fair, Photo London presents the Discovery section for the most exciting emerging galleries and artists. There is also a Public Programme bringing together special exhibitions and talks. The event runs until 21 May. London 17 May 2017.
    Photo London GBPhotos 36.jpg
  • Omo River Series by Isabel Munoz in Blanca Berlin - Photo London, an international photography event in its third edition, Along with the selection of the world’s leading galleries showing at the Fair, Photo London presents the Discovery section for the most exciting emerging galleries and artists. There is also a Public Programme bringing together special exhibitions and talks. The event runs until 21 May. London 17 May 2017.
    Photo London GBPhotos 35.jpg
  • Omo River Series by Isabel Munoz in Blanca Berlin - Photo London, an international photography event in its third edition, Along with the selection of the world’s leading galleries showing at the Fair, Photo London presents the Discovery section for the most exciting emerging galleries and artists. There is also a Public Programme bringing together special exhibitions and talks. The event runs until 21 May. London 17 May 2017.
    Photo London GBPhotos 33.jpg
  • Twin Palms #26 in the Polka Gallery - Photo London, an international photography event in its third edition, Along with the selection of the world’s leading galleries showing at the Fair, Photo London presents the Discovery section for the most exciting emerging galleries and artists. There is also a Public Programme bringing together special exhibitions and talks. The event runs until 21 May. London 17 May 2017.
    Photo London GBPhotos 32.jpg
  • Twin Palms #26 and #1 in the Polka Gallery - Photo London, an international photography event in its third edition, Along with the selection of the world’s leading galleries showing at the Fair, Photo London presents the Discovery section for the most exciting emerging galleries and artists. There is also a Public Programme bringing together special exhibitions and talks. The event runs until 21 May. London 17 May 2017.
    Photo London GBPhotos 31.jpg
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