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  • Performance Artist Millie Brown performs “Rainbow Body”- a site specific performance installation, where she suspends her body surrounded by crystal prisms, from the ceiling of the gallery on Dover Street for the duration of Frieze one of the busiest weeks in the captial’s art scene. Contemporary art gallery Gazelli Art House supports and presents a wide range of international artists.
    Millie Brown Gazelli art house GBPho...jpg
  • Her head is also held in place by a strap and a wire - Performance Artist Millie Brown performs “Rainbow Body”- a site specific performance installation, where she suspends her body surrounded by crystal prisms, from the ceiling of the gallery on Dover Street for the duration of Frieze one of the busiest weeks in the captial’s art scene. Contemporary art gallery Gazelli Art House supports and presents a wide range of international artists.
    Millie Brown Gazelli art house GBPho...jpg
  • Performance Artist Millie Brown performs “Rainbow Body”- a site specific performance installation, where she suspends her body surrounded by crystal prisms, from the ceiling of the gallery on Dover Street for the duration of Frieze one of the busiest weeks in the captial’s art scene. Contemporary art gallery Gazelli Art House supports and presents a wide range of international artists.
    Millie Brown Gazelli art house GBPho...jpg
  • Performance Artist Millie Brown performs “Rainbow Body”- a site specific performance installation, where she suspends her body surrounded by crystal prisms, from the ceiling of the gallery on Dover Street for the duration of Frieze one of the busiest weeks in the captial’s art scene. Contemporary art gallery Gazelli Art House supports and presents a wide range of international artists.
    Millie Brown Gazelli art house GBPho...jpg
  • Performance Artist Millie Brown Millie Brown performs “Rainbow Body”- a site specific performance installation, where she suspends her body surrounded by crystal prisms, from the ceiling of the gallery on Dover Street for the duration of Frieze one of the busiest weeks in the captial’s art scene. Contemporary art gallery Gazelli Art House supports and presents a wide range of international artists.
    Millie Brown Gazelli art house GBPho...jpg
  • Performance Artist Millie Brown Millie Brown performs “Rainbow Body”- a site specific performance installation, where she suspends her body surrounded by crystal prisms, from the ceiling of the gallery on Dover Street for the duration of Frieze one of the busiest weeks in the captial’s art scene. Contemporary art gallery Gazelli Art House supports and presents a wide range of international artists.
    Millie Brown Gazelli art house GBPho...jpg
  • Performance Artist Millie Brown Millie Brown performs “Rainbow Body”- a site specific performance installation, where she suspends her body surrounded by crystal prisms, from the ceiling of the gallery on Dover Street for the duration of Frieze one of the busiest weeks in the captial’s art scene. Contemporary art gallery Gazelli Art House supports and presents a wide range of international artists.
    Millie Brown Gazelli art house GBPho...jpg
  • Performance Artist Millie Brown Millie Brown performs “Rainbow Body”- a site specific performance installation, where she suspends her body surrounded by crystal prisms, from the ceiling of the gallery on Dover Street for the duration of Frieze one of the busiest weeks in the captial’s art scene. Contemporary art gallery Gazelli Art House supports and presents a wide range of international artists.
    Millie Brown Gazelli art house GBPho...jpg
  • Performance Artist Millie Brown Millie Brown performs “Rainbow Body”- a site specific performance installation, where she suspends her body surrounded by crystal prisms, from the ceiling of the gallery on Dover Street for the duration of Frieze one of the busiest weeks in the captial’s art scene. Contemporary art gallery Gazelli Art House supports and presents a wide range of international artists.
    Millie Brown Gazelli art house GBPho...jpg
  • Performance Artist Millie Brown Millie Brown performs “Rainbow Body”- a site specific performance installation, where she suspends her body surrounded by crystal prisms, from the ceiling of the gallery on Dover Street for the duration of Frieze one of the busiest weeks in the captial’s art scene. Contemporary art gallery Gazelli Art House supports and presents a wide range of international artists.
    Millie Brown Gazelli art house GBPho...jpg
  • Here being harnessed in in preparation - Performance Artist Millie Brown performs “Rainbow Body”- a site specific performance installation, where she suspends her body surrounded by crystal prisms, from the ceiling of the gallery on Dover Street for the duration of Frieze one of the busiest weeks in the captial’s art scene. Contemporary art gallery Gazelli Art House supports and presents a wide range of international artists.
    Millie Brown Gazelli art house GBPho...jpg
  • Performance Artist Millie Brown performs “Rainbow Body”- a site specific performance installation, where she suspends her body surrounded by crystal prisms, from the ceiling of the gallery on Dover Street for the duration of Frieze one of the busiest weeks in the captial’s art scene. Contemporary art gallery Gazelli Art House supports and presents a wide range of international artists.
    Millie Brown Gazelli art house GBPho...jpg
  • Performance Artist Millie Brown performs “Rainbow Body”- a site specific performance installation, where she suspends her body surrounded by crystal prisms, from the ceiling of the gallery on Dover Street for the duration of Frieze one of the busiest weeks in the captial’s art scene. Contemporary art gallery Gazelli Art House supports and presents a wide range of international artists.
    Millie Brown Gazelli art house GBPho...jpg
  • Performance Artist Millie Brown performs “Rainbow Body”- a site specific performance installation, where she suspends her body surrounded by crystal prisms, from the ceiling of the gallery on Dover Street for the duration of Frieze one of the busiest weeks in the captial’s art scene. Contemporary art gallery Gazelli Art House supports and presents a wide range of international artists.
    Millie Brown Gazelli art house GBPho...jpg
  • Performance Artist Millie Brown performs “Rainbow Body”- a site specific performance installation, where she suspends her body surrounded by crystal prisms, from the ceiling of the gallery on Dover Street for the duration of Frieze one of the busiest weeks in the captial’s art scene. Contemporary art gallery Gazelli Art House supports and presents a wide range of international artists.
    Millie Brown Gazelli art house GBPho...jpg
  • Her head is also held in place by a strap and a wire - Performance Artist Millie Brown performs “Rainbow Body”- a site specific performance installation, where she suspends her body surrounded by crystal prisms, from the ceiling of the gallery on Dover Street for the duration of Frieze one of the busiest weeks in the captial’s art scene. Contemporary art gallery Gazelli Art House supports and presents a wide range of international artists.
    Millie Brown Gazelli art house GBPho...jpg
  • Her head is also held in place by a strap and a wire - Performance Artist Millie Brown performs “Rainbow Body”- a site specific performance installation, where she suspends her body surrounded by crystal prisms, from the ceiling of the gallery on Dover Street for the duration of Frieze one of the busiest weeks in the captial’s art scene. Contemporary art gallery Gazelli Art House supports and presents a wide range of international artists.
    Millie Brown Gazelli art house GBPho...jpg
  • Her head is also held in place by a strap and a wire - Performance Artist Millie Brown performs “Rainbow Body”- a site specific performance installation, where she suspends her body surrounded by crystal prisms, from the ceiling of the gallery on Dover Street for the duration of Frieze one of the busiest weeks in the captial’s art scene. Contemporary art gallery Gazelli Art House supports and presents a wide range of international artists.
    Millie Brown Gazelli art house GBPho...jpg
  • Performance Artist Millie Brown performs “Rainbow Body”- a site specific performance installation, where she suspends her body surrounded by crystal prisms, from the ceiling of the gallery on Dover Street for the duration of Frieze one of the busiest weeks in the captial’s art scene. Contemporary art gallery Gazelli Art House supports and presents a wide range of international artists.
    Millie Brown Gazelli art house GBPho...jpg
  • Performance Artist Millie Brown Millie Brown performs “Rainbow Body”- a site specific performance installation, where she suspends her body surrounded by crystal prisms, from the ceiling of the gallery on Dover Street for the duration of Frieze one of the busiest weeks in the captial’s art scene. Contemporary art gallery Gazelli Art House supports and presents a wide range of international artists.
    Millie Brown Gazelli art house GBPho...jpg
  • Performance Artist Millie Brown performs “Rainbow Body”- a site specific performance installation, where she suspends her body surrounded by crystal prisms, from the ceiling of the gallery on Dover Street for the duration of Frieze one of the busiest weeks in the captial’s art scene. Contemporary art gallery Gazelli Art House supports and presents a wide range of international artists.
    Millie Brown Gazelli art house GBPho...jpg
  • Performance Artist Millie Brown performs “Rainbow Body”- a site specific performance installation, where she suspends her body surrounded by crystal prisms, from the ceiling of the gallery on Dover Street for the duration of Frieze one of the busiest weeks in the captial’s art scene. Contemporary art gallery Gazelli Art House supports and presents a wide range of international artists.
    Millie Brown Gazelli art house GBPho...jpg
  • Performance Artist Millie Brown performs “Rainbow Body”- a site specific performance installation, where she suspends her body surrounded by crystal prisms, from the ceiling of the gallery on Dover Street for the duration of Frieze one of the busiest weeks in the captial’s art scene. Contemporary art gallery Gazelli Art House supports and presents a wide range of international artists.
    Millie Brown Gazelli art house GBPho...jpg
  • Performance Artist Millie Brown performs “Rainbow Body”- a site specific performance installation, where she suspends her body surrounded by crystal prisms, from the ceiling of the gallery on Dover Street for the duration of Frieze one of the busiest weeks in the captial’s art scene. Contemporary art gallery Gazelli Art House supports and presents a wide range of international artists.
    Millie Brown Gazelli art house GBPho...jpg
  • Performance Artist Millie Brown performs “Rainbow Body”- a site specific performance installation, where she suspends her body surrounded by crystal prisms, from the ceiling of the gallery on Dover Street for the duration of Frieze one of the busiest weeks in the captial’s art scene. Contemporary art gallery Gazelli Art House supports and presents a wide range of international artists.
    Millie Brown Gazelli art house GBPho...jpg
  • Her head is also held in place by a strap and a wire - Performance Artist Millie Brown performs “Rainbow Body”- a site specific performance installation, where she suspends her body surrounded by crystal prisms, from the ceiling of the gallery on Dover Street for the duration of Frieze one of the busiest weeks in the captial’s art scene. Contemporary art gallery Gazelli Art House supports and presents a wide range of international artists.
    Millie Brown Gazelli art house GBPho...jpg
  • Performance Artist Millie Brown performs “Rainbow Body”- a site specific performance installation, where she suspends her body surrounded by crystal prisms, from the ceiling of the gallery on Dover Street for the duration of Frieze one of the busiest weeks in the captial’s art scene. Contemporary art gallery Gazelli Art House supports and presents a wide range of international artists.
    Millie Brown Gazelli art house GBPho...jpg
  • Performance Artist Millie Brown Millie Brown performs “Rainbow Body”- a site specific performance installation, where she suspends her body surrounded by crystal prisms, from the ceiling of the gallery on Dover Street for the duration of Frieze one of the busiest weeks in the captial’s art scene. Contemporary art gallery Gazelli Art House supports and presents a wide range of international artists.
    Millie Brown Gazelli art house GBPho...jpg
  • Here being harnessed in in preparation - Performance Artist Millie Brown performs “Rainbow Body”- a site specific performance installation, where she suspends her body surrounded by crystal prisms, from the ceiling of the gallery on Dover Street for the duration of Frieze one of the busiest weeks in the captial’s art scene. Contemporary art gallery Gazelli Art House supports and presents a wide range of international artists.
    Millie Brown Gazelli art house GBPho...jpg
  • Training at Circus Space, the Hoxton based training school for circus performers. Shoreditch, London, UK. Guy Bell Photography
    Circus Space GBPhotos 10.jpg
  • Training at Circus Space, the Hoxton based training school for circus performers. Shoreditch, London, UK. Guy Bell Photography
    Circus Space GBPhotos 21.jpg
  • Training at Circus Space, the Hoxton based training school for circus performers. Shoreditch, London, UK. Guy Bell Photography
    Circus Space GBPhotos 14.jpg
  • Training at Circus Space, the Hoxton based training school for circus performers. Shoreditch, London, UK. Guy Bell Photography
    Circus Space GBPhotos 03.jpg
  • Training at Circus Space, the Hoxton based training school for circus performers. Shoreditch, London, UK. Guy Bell Photography
    Circus Space GBPhotos 02.jpg
  • Training at Circus Space, the Hoxton based training school for circus performers. Shoreditch, London, UK. Guy Bell Photography
    Circus Space GBPhotos 20.jpg
  • Training at Circus Space, the Hoxton based training school for circus performers. Shoreditch, London, UK. Guy Bell Photography
    Circus Space GBPhotos 09.jpg
  • Ubu Bird, 1952, and Loch Lomond, 1948 - Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid: the UK’s first retrospective of a pioneering artist best known for her large-scale colourful canvases, fusing European approaches to abstract art with Byzantine, Islamic and Persian influences. The exhibition is at Tate Modern from 13 June – 8 October 2017.
    Fahrelnissa Zeid Tate GBPhotos 42.jpg
  • Self Portrait, 1944 - Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid: the UK’s first retrospective of a pioneering artist best known for her large-scale colourful canvases, fusing European approaches to abstract art with Byzantine, Islamic and Persian influences. The exhibition is at Tate Modern from 13 June – 8 October 2017.
    Fahrelnissa Zeid Tate GBPhotos 41.jpg
  • The Arena of the Sun, 1954 s - Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid: the UK’s first retrospective of a pioneering artist best known for her large-scale colourful canvases, fusing European approaches to abstract art with Byzantine, Islamic and Persian influences. The exhibition is at Tate Modern from 13 June – 8 October 2017.
    Fahrelnissa Zeid Tate GBPhotos 39.jpg
  • Self Portrait, 1944 - Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid: the UK’s first retrospective of a pioneering artist best known for her large-scale colourful canvases, fusing European approaches to abstract art with Byzantine, Islamic and Persian influences. The exhibition is at Tate Modern from 13 June – 8 October 2017.
    Fahrelnissa Zeid Tate GBPhotos 37.jpg
  • Untitled - Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid: the UK’s first retrospective of a pioneering artist best known for her large-scale colourful canvases, fusing European approaches to abstract art with Byzantine, Islamic and Persian influences. The exhibition is at Tate Modern from 13 June – 8 October 2017.
    Fahrelnissa Zeid Tate GBPhotos 30.jpg
  • Khalid Shoman, 1984, - Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid: the UK’s first retrospective of a pioneering artist best known for her large-scale colourful canvases, fusing European approaches to abstract art with Byzantine, Islamic and Persian influences. The exhibition is at Tate Modern from 13 June – 8 October 2017.
    Fahrelnissa Zeid Tate GBPhotos 28.jpg
  • Someone from the past, 1980 - Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid: the UK’s first retrospective of a pioneering artist best known for her large-scale colourful canvases, fusing European approaches to abstract art with Byzantine, Islamic and Persian influences. The exhibition is at Tate Modern from 13 June – 8 October 2017.
    Fahrelnissa Zeid Tate GBPhotos 23.jpg
  • Rene Barotte, 1970, and Someone from the past, 1980 - Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid: the UK’s first retrospective of a pioneering artist best known for her large-scale colourful canvases, fusing European approaches to abstract art with Byzantine, Islamic and Persian influences. The exhibition is at Tate Modern from 13 June – 8 October 2017.
    Fahrelnissa Zeid Tate GBPhotos 22.jpg
  • Someone from the past, 1980 - Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid: the UK’s first retrospective of a pioneering artist best known for her large-scale colourful canvases, fusing European approaches to abstract art with Byzantine, Islamic and Persian influences. The exhibition is at Tate Modern from 13 June – 8 October 2017.
    Fahrelnissa Zeid Tate GBPhotos 20.jpg
  • My Hell, 1951 - Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid: the UK’s first retrospective of a pioneering artist best known for her large-scale colourful canvases, fusing European approaches to abstract art with Byzantine, Islamic and Persian influences. The exhibition is at Tate Modern from 13 June – 8 October 2017.
    Fahrelnissa Zeid Tate GBPhotos 13.jpg
  • Break of the Atom and Vegetal Life, 1962  - Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid: the UK’s first retrospective of a pioneering artist best known for her large-scale colourful canvases, fusing European approaches to abstract art with Byzantine, Islamic and Persian influences. The exhibition is at Tate Modern from 13 June – 8 October 2017.
    Fahrelnissa Zeid Tate GBPhotos 11.jpg
  • My Hell, 1951 - Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid: the UK’s first retrospective of a pioneering artist best known for her large-scale colourful canvases, fusing European approaches to abstract art with Byzantine, Islamic and Persian influences. The exhibition is at Tate Modern from 13 June – 8 October 2017.
    Fahrelnissa Zeid Tate GBPhotos 10.jpg
  • Loch Lomond, 1948 - Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid: the UK’s first retrospective of a pioneering artist best known for her large-scale colourful canvases, fusing European approaches to abstract art with Byzantine, Islamic and Persian influences. The exhibition is at Tate Modern from 13 June – 8 October 2017.
    Fahrelnissa Zeid Tate GBPhotos 08.jpg
  • Loch Lomond, 1948 - Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid: the UK’s first retrospective of a pioneering artist best known for her large-scale colourful canvases, fusing European approaches to abstract art with Byzantine, Islamic and Persian influences. The exhibition is at Tate Modern from 13 June – 8 October 2017.
    Fahrelnissa Zeid Tate GBPhotos 07.jpg
  • Students put ona an end of year performance after training at Circus Space, the Hoxton based training school for circus performers. Shoreditch, London, UK. Guy Bell Photography
    Circus Space GBPhotos 40.jpg
  • Students put ona an end of year performance after training at Circus Space, the Hoxton based training school for circus performers. Shoreditch, London, UK. Guy Bell Photography
    Circus Space GBPhotos 31.jpg
  • Students put ona an end of year performance after training at Circus Space, the Hoxton based training school for circus performers. Shoreditch, London, UK. Guy Bell Photography
    Circus Space GBPhotos 26.jpg
  • Her timeline - Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid: the UK’s first retrospective of a pioneering artist best known for her large-scale colourful canvases, fusing European approaches to abstract art with Byzantine, Islamic and Persian influences. The exhibition is at Tate Modern from 13 June – 8 October 2017.
    Fahrelnissa Zeid Tate GBPhotos 45.jpg
  • Abstract Parrot, 1948, and Alice in Wonderland, 1952 - Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid: the UK’s first retrospective of a pioneering artist best known for her large-scale colourful canvases, fusing European approaches to abstract art with Byzantine, Islamic and Persian influences. The exhibition is at Tate Modern from 13 June – 8 October 2017.
    Fahrelnissa Zeid Tate GBPhotos 44.jpg
  • Alice in Wonderland, 1952 - Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid: the UK’s first retrospective of a pioneering artist best known for her large-scale colourful canvases, fusing European approaches to abstract art with Byzantine, Islamic and Persian influences. The exhibition is at Tate Modern from 13 June – 8 October 2017.
    Fahrelnissa Zeid Tate GBPhotos 43.jpg
  • Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid: the UK’s first retrospective of a pioneering artist best known for her large-scale colourful canvases, fusing European approaches to abstract art with Byzantine, Islamic and Persian influences. The exhibition is at Tate Modern from 13 June – 8 October 2017.
    Fahrelnissa Zeid Tate GBPhotos 40.jpg
  • The Arena of the Sun, 1954 s - Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid: the UK’s first retrospective of a pioneering artist best known for her large-scale colourful canvases, fusing European approaches to abstract art with Byzantine, Islamic and Persian influences. The exhibition is at Tate Modern from 13 June – 8 October 2017.
    Fahrelnissa Zeid Tate GBPhotos 38.jpg
  • My Hell, 1951 - Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid: the UK’s first retrospective of a pioneering artist best known for her large-scale colourful canvases, fusing European approaches to abstract art with Byzantine, Islamic and Persian influences. The exhibition is at Tate Modern from 13 June – 8 October 2017.
    Fahrelnissa Zeid Tate GBPhotos 36.jpg
  • London (The Fireqwork) - Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid: the UK’s first retrospective of a pioneering artist best known for her large-scale colourful canvases, fusing European approaches to abstract art with Byzantine, Islamic and Persian influences. The exhibition is at Tate Modern from 13 June – 8 October 2017.
    Fahrelnissa Zeid Tate GBPhotos 35.jpg
  • The Arena of the Sun, 1954, and Untitlded, 1950,s - Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid: the UK’s first retrospective of a pioneering artist best known for her large-scale colourful canvases, fusing European approaches to abstract art with Byzantine, Islamic and Persian influences. The exhibition is at Tate Modern from 13 June – 8 October 2017.
    Fahrelnissa Zeid Tate GBPhotos 33.jpg
  • London (The Fireqwork) - Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid: the UK’s first retrospective of a pioneering artist best known for her large-scale colourful canvases, fusing European approaches to abstract art with Byzantine, Islamic and Persian influences. The exhibition is at Tate Modern from 13 June – 8 October 2017.
    Fahrelnissa Zeid Tate GBPhotos 32.jpg
  • The Arena of the Sun, 1954, and Untitlded, 1950,s - Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid: the UK’s first retrospective of a pioneering artist best known for her large-scale colourful canvases, fusing European approaches to abstract art with Byzantine, Islamic and Persian influences. The exhibition is at Tate Modern from 13 June – 8 October 2017.
    Fahrelnissa Zeid Tate GBPhotos 31.jpg
  • Rose Larock Granoff, 1971, Rene Barotte, 1970, and Someone from the past, 1980 - Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid: the UK’s first retrospective of a pioneering artist best known for her large-scale colourful canvases, fusing European approaches to abstract art with Byzantine, Islamic and Persian influences. The exhibition is at Tate Modern from 13 June – 8 October 2017.
    Fahrelnissa Zeid Tate GBPhotos 29.jpg
  • Rose Larock Granoff, 1971, and Rene Barotte, 1970 - Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid: the UK’s first retrospective of a pioneering artist best known for her large-scale colourful canvases, fusing European approaches to abstract art with Byzantine, Islamic and Persian influences. The exhibition is at Tate Modern from 13 June – 8 October 2017.
    Fahrelnissa Zeid Tate GBPhotos 26.jpg
  • Charles Estienne, 1966, Rose Larock Granoff, 1971, and Rene Barotte, 1970 - Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid: the UK’s first retrospective of a pioneering artist best known for her large-scale colourful canvases, fusing European approaches to abstract art with Byzantine, Islamic and Persian influences. The exhibition is at Tate Modern from 13 June – 8 October 2017.
    Fahrelnissa Zeid Tate GBPhotos 25.jpg
  • Moon Drops, 1967, and other ceramincs with chicken bones - Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid: the UK’s first retrospective of a pioneering artist best known for her large-scale colourful canvases, fusing European approaches to abstract art with Byzantine, Islamic and Persian influences. The exhibition is at Tate Modern from 13 June – 8 October 2017.
    Fahrelnissa Zeid Tate GBPhotos 24.jpg
  • Someone from the past, 1980 - Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid: the UK’s first retrospective of a pioneering artist best known for her large-scale colourful canvases, fusing European approaches to abstract art with Byzantine, Islamic and Persian influences. The exhibition is at Tate Modern from 13 June – 8 October 2017.
    Fahrelnissa Zeid Tate GBPhotos 21.jpg
  • Loch Lomond, 1948 - Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid: the UK’s first retrospective of a pioneering artist best known for her large-scale colourful canvases, fusing European approaches to abstract art with Byzantine, Islamic and Persian influences. The exhibition is at Tate Modern from 13 June – 8 October 2017.
    Fahrelnissa Zeid Tate GBPhotos 19.jpg
  • Break of the Atom and Vegetal Life, 1962  - Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid: the UK’s first retrospective of a pioneering artist best known for her large-scale colourful canvases, fusing European approaches to abstract art with Byzantine, Islamic and Persian influences. The exhibition is at Tate Modern from 13 June – 8 October 2017.
    Fahrelnissa Zeid Tate GBPhotos 18.jpg
  • My Hell, 1951 - Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid: the UK’s first retrospective of a pioneering artist best known for her large-scale colourful canvases, fusing European approaches to abstract art with Byzantine, Islamic and Persian influences. The exhibition is at Tate Modern from 13 June – 8 October 2017.
    Fahrelnissa Zeid Tate GBPhotos 17.jpg
  • Break of the Atom and Vegetal Life, 1962, and My Hell, 1951 - Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid: the UK’s first retrospective of a pioneering artist best known for her large-scale colourful canvases, fusing European approaches to abstract art with Byzantine, Islamic and Persian influences. The exhibition is at Tate Modern from 13 June – 8 October 2017.
    Fahrelnissa Zeid Tate GBPhotos 16.jpg
  • Break of the Atom and Vegetal Life, 1962  - Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid: the UK’s first retrospective of a pioneering artist best known for her large-scale colourful canvases, fusing European approaches to abstract art with Byzantine, Islamic and Persian influences. The exhibition is at Tate Modern from 13 June – 8 October 2017.
    Fahrelnissa Zeid Tate GBPhotos 15.jpg
  • My Hell, 1951 - Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid: the UK’s first retrospective of a pioneering artist best known for her large-scale colourful canvases, fusing European approaches to abstract art with Byzantine, Islamic and Persian influences. The exhibition is at Tate Modern from 13 June – 8 October 2017.
    Fahrelnissa Zeid Tate GBPhotos 12.jpg
  • Ubu Bird, 1952, and Loch Lomond, 1948 - Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid: the UK’s first retrospective of a pioneering artist best known for her large-scale colourful canvases, fusing European approaches to abstract art with Byzantine, Islamic and Persian influences. The exhibition is at Tate Modern from 13 June – 8 October 2017.
    Fahrelnissa Zeid Tate GBPhotos 09.jpg
  • Three Moments in a day and a life, 1944, and Thre Ways of Living (War), 1943 - Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid: the UK’s first retrospective of a pioneering artist best known for her large-scale colourful canvases, fusing European approaches to abstract art with Byzantine, Islamic and Persian influences. The exhibition is at Tate Modern from 13 June – 8 October 2017. London 12 Jun 2017.
    Fahrelnissa Zeid Tate GBPhotos 06.jpg
  • Students put ona an end of year performance after training at Circus Space, the Hoxton based training school for circus performers. Shoreditch, London, UK. Guy Bell Photography
    Circus Space GBPhotos 42.jpg
  • Students put ona an end of year performance after training at Circus Space, the Hoxton based training school for circus performers. Shoreditch, London, UK. Guy Bell Photography
    Circus Space GBPhotos 41.jpg
  • Students put ona an end of year performance after training at Circus Space, the Hoxton based training school for circus performers. Shoreditch, London, UK. Guy Bell Photography
    Circus Space GBPhotos 32.jpg
  • Students put ona an end of year performance after training at Circus Space, the Hoxton based training school for circus performers. Shoreditch, London, UK. Guy Bell Photography
    Circus Space GBPhotos 27.jpg
  • London (The Firework) - Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid: the UK’s first retrospective of a pioneering artist best known for her large-scale colourful canvases, fusing European approaches to abstract art with Byzantine, Islamic and Persian influences. The exhibition is at Tate Modern from 13 June – 8 October 2017.
    Fahrelnissa Zeid Tate GBPhotos 34.jpg
  • Charles Estienne, 1966, Rose Larock Granoff, 1971, and Rene Barotte, 1970 - Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid: the UK’s first retrospective of a pioneering artist best known for her large-scale colourful canvases, fusing European approaches to abstract art with Byzantine, Islamic and Persian influences. The exhibition is at Tate Modern from 13 June – 8 October 2017.
    Fahrelnissa Zeid Tate GBPhotos 27.jpg
  • My Hell, 1951 - Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid: the UK’s first retrospective of a pioneering artist best known for her large-scale colourful canvases, fusing European approaches to abstract art with Byzantine, Islamic and Persian influences. The exhibition is at Tate Modern from 13 June – 8 October 2017.
    Fahrelnissa Zeid Tate GBPhotos 14.jpg
  • 'Pavillion Suspended in a Room I' by Cristina Iglesias - The new Tate Modern will open to the public on Friday 17 June. The new Switch House building is designed by architects Herzog & de Meuron, who also designed the original conversion of the Bankside Power Station in 2000.
    Tate Modern Switch Room GBPhotos 29.jpg
  • Socle du Monde 1992-3 - Mona Hatoum a new Tate Modern exhibition. It presents around 100 works from the 1980s to the present day, including early performances and video, sculpture, installation, photography and works on paper. Mona Hatoum runs from 4 May to 21 August 2016.<br />
<br />
Highlights include:  Large-scale installations that fill entire rooms, including Impenetrable 2009, a suspended square formed of hundreds of delicate rods of barbed wire which hover above the floor, and Light Sentence 1992, in which walls of wire mesh lockers and a single lightbulb cast constantly moving shadows; Hot Spot 2013, a giant globe that uses red neon to outline the contours of the continents; a kinetic sculpture in which a rotating motor-driven arm draws circular lines across a large sandpit; and Homebound 2000, an installation of kitchen utensils and furniture which buzzes with electricity
    Mona Hatoum Tate GBPhotos 62.jpg
  • Socle du Monde 1992-3 - Mona Hatoum a new Tate Modern exhibition. It presents around 100 works from the 1980s to the present day, including early performances and video, sculpture, installation, photography and works on paper. Mona Hatoum runs from 4 May to 21 August 2016.<br />
<br />
Highlights include:  Large-scale installations that fill entire rooms, including Impenetrable 2009, a suspended square formed of hundreds of delicate rods of barbed wire which hover above the floor, and Light Sentence 1992, in which walls of wire mesh lockers and a single lightbulb cast constantly moving shadows; Hot Spot 2013, a giant globe that uses red neon to outline the contours of the continents; a kinetic sculpture in which a rotating motor-driven arm draws circular lines across a large sandpit; and Homebound 2000, an installation of kitchen utensils and furniture which buzzes with electricity
    Mona Hatoum Tate GBPhotos 59.jpg
  • Jardin Suspendu 2008-10 - Mona Hatoum a new Tate Modern exhibition. It presents around 100 works from the 1980s to the present day, including early performances and video, sculpture, installation, photography and works on paper. Mona Hatoum runs from 4 May to 21 August 2016.<br />
<br />
Highlights include:  Large-scale installations that fill entire rooms, including Impenetrable 2009, a suspended square formed of hundreds of delicate rods of barbed wire which hover above the floor, and Light Sentence 1992, in which walls of wire mesh lockers and a single lightbulb cast constantly moving shadows; Hot Spot 2013, a giant globe that uses red neon to outline the contours of the continents; a kinetic sculpture in which a rotating motor-driven arm draws circular lines across a large sandpit; and Homebound 2000, an installation of kitchen utensils and furniture which buzzes with electricity
    Mona Hatoum Tate GBPhotos 54.jpg
  • Jardin Suspendu 2008-10 - Mona Hatoum a new Tate Modern exhibition. It presents around 100 works from the 1980s to the present day, including early performances and video, sculpture, installation, photography and works on paper. Mona Hatoum runs from 4 May to 21 August 2016.<br />
<br />
Highlights include:  Large-scale installations that fill entire rooms, including Impenetrable 2009, a suspended square formed of hundreds of delicate rods of barbed wire which hover above the floor, and Light Sentence 1992, in which walls of wire mesh lockers and a single lightbulb cast constantly moving shadows; Hot Spot 2013, a giant globe that uses red neon to outline the contours of the continents; a kinetic sculpture in which a rotating motor-driven arm draws circular lines across a large sandpit; and Homebound 2000, an installation of kitchen utensils and furniture which buzzes with electricity
    Mona Hatoum Tate GBPhotos 55.jpg
  • Impenetrable 2009 - Mona Hatoum a new Tate Modern exhibition. It presents around 100 works from the 1980s to the present day, including early performances and video, sculpture, installation, photography and works on paper. Mona Hatoum runs from 4 May to 21 August 2016.<br />
<br />
Highlights include:  Large-scale installations that fill entire rooms, including Impenetrable 2009, a suspended square formed of hundreds of delicate rods of barbed wire which hover above the floor, and Light Sentence 1992, in which walls of wire mesh lockers and a single lightbulb cast constantly moving shadows; Hot Spot 2013, a giant globe that uses red neon to outline the contours of the continents; a kinetic sculpture in which a rotating motor-driven arm draws circular lines across a large sandpit; and Homebound 2000, an installation of kitchen utensils and furniture which buzzes with electricity
    Mona Hatoum Tate GBPhotos 26.jpg
  • Quarters 1996 - Mona Hatoum a new Tate Modern exhibition. It presents around 100 works from the 1980s to the present day, including early performances and video, sculpture, installation, photography and works on paper. Mona Hatoum runs from 4 May to 21 August 2016.<br />
<br />
Highlights include:  Large-scale installations that fill entire rooms, including Impenetrable 2009, a suspended square formed of hundreds of delicate rods of barbed wire which hover above the floor, and Light Sentence 1992, in which walls of wire mesh lockers and a single lightbulb cast constantly moving shadows; Hot Spot 2013, a giant globe that uses red neon to outline the contours of the continents; a kinetic sculpture in which a rotating motor-driven arm draws circular lines across a large sandpit; and Homebound 2000, an installation of kitchen utensils and furniture which buzzes with electricity
    Mona Hatoum Tate GBPhotos 20.jpg
  • the filters by Christina Mackie - a three-part installation for the annual Tate Britain Commission. This invites artists to make new work in response to the grand spaces of the Duveen Galleries. These have been transformed by a composition of 12-metre-high dipped silk nets suspended over pans of semi-crystallised dye, anchored to the floor by hand cast weights. Alongside this aerial network of ropes and colourful dyed silk is a vibrant yellow sculpture and a plinth displaying chunks of raw glass.
    Tate Duveen Commission 2015 GBPhotos...jpg
  • the filters by Christina Mackie - a three-part installation for the annual Tate Britain Commission. This invites artists to make new work in response to the grand spaces of the Duveen Galleries. These have been transformed by a composition of 12-metre-high dipped silk nets suspended over pans of semi-crystallised dye, anchored to the floor by hand cast weights. Alongside this aerial network of ropes and colourful dyed silk is a vibrant yellow sculpture and a plinth displaying chunks of raw glass.
    Tate Duveen Commission 2015 GBPhotos...jpg
  • the filters by Christina Mackie - a three-part installation for the annual Tate Britain Commission. This invites artists to make new work in response to the grand spaces of the Duveen Galleries. These have been transformed by a composition of 12-metre-high dipped silk nets suspended over pans of semi-crystallised dye, anchored to the floor by hand cast weights. Alongside this aerial network of ropes and colourful dyed silk is a vibrant yellow sculpture and a plinth displaying chunks of raw glass.
    Tate Duveen Commission 2015 GBPhotos...jpg
  • Striking workers at the National gallery are campaigning against its privatisation and calling for the reinstatement of our rep and negotiator Candy Udwin who was suspended on the eve of the strike. They then marched to the Getty Images Gallery (pictured) to deliver a letter for Mark Getty, chair of the Gallery trustees. This is the second 5 day strike and picket lines are outside the gallery between 9am and 11am every morning. Channel 4 News presenter Jon Snow tweeted his support at the weekend, saying: "As a former trustee, I'm shocked that our key duty: safeguarding the art is to be done by private contractors." During the first strike week a 40,000-name petition was handed to the Department for Culture, Media and Sport. And this time almost 9,000 have now signed an online statement. The strike is supportd by the TUC and the PCS union.
    PCS National Gallery Strike GBPhotos...jpg
  • Striking workers at the National gallery are campaigning against its privatisation and calling for the reinstatement of our rep and negotiator Candy Udwin who was suspended on the eve of the strike. They then marched to the Getty Images Gallery to deliver a letter for Mark Getty, chair of the Gallery trustees. This is the second 5 day strike and picket lines are outside the gallery between 9am and 11am every morning. Channel 4 News presenter Jon Snow tweeted his support at the weekend, saying: "As a former trustee, I'm shocked that our key duty: safeguarding the art is to be done by private contractors." During the first strike week a 40,000-name petition was handed to the Department for Culture, Media and Sport. And this time almost 9,000 have now signed an online statement. The strike is supportd by the TUC and the PCS union.
    PCS National Gallery Strike GBPhotos...jpg
  • Striking workers at the National gallery are campaigning against its privatisation and calling for the reinstatement of our rep and negotiator Candy Udwin who was suspended on the eve of the strike. They then marched to the Getty Images Gallery to deliver a letter for Mark Getty, chair of the Gallery trustees. This is the second 5 day strike and picket lines are outside the gallery between 9am and 11am every morning. Channel 4 News presenter Jon Snow tweeted his support at the weekend, saying: "As a former trustee, I'm shocked that our key duty: safeguarding the art is to be done by private contractors." During the first strike week a 40,000-name petition was handed to the Department for Culture, Media and Sport. And this time almost 9,000 have now signed an online statement. The strike is supportd by the TUC and the PCS union.
    PCS National Gallery Strike GBPhotos...jpg
  • Striking workers at the National gallery are campaigning against its privatisation and calling for the reinstatement of our rep and negotiator Candy Udwin who was suspended on the eve of the strike. They then marched to the Getty Images Gallery to deliver a letter for Mark Getty, chair of the Gallery trustees. This is the second 5 day strike and picket lines are outside the gallery between 9am and 11am every morning. Channel 4 News presenter Jon Snow tweeted his support at the weekend, saying: "As a former trustee, I'm shocked that our key duty: safeguarding the art is to be done by private contractors." During the first strike week a 40,000-name petition was handed to the Department for Culture, Media and Sport. And this time almost 9,000 have now signed an online statement. The strike is supportd by the TUC and the PCS union.
    PCS National Gallery Strike GBPhotos...jpg
  • Double Space for BMW by Barber + Osgerby -<br />
Leading design duo, Edward Barber and Jay Osgerby worked with BMW to present a kinetic, silvered structure which is suspended from the ceiling of the Raphael Gallery at the V&A. The installation rotates to create a 'beguiling' reflection of the room, the art and the viewers on the ground. <br />
The London Design Festival at the V&A, South Kensington, London 12 Sept 2014.
    GB12012.jpg
  • Double Space for BMW by Barber + Osgerby -<br />
Leading design duo, Edward Barber and Jay Osgerby worked with BMW to present a kinetic, silvered structure which is suspended from the ceiling of the Raphael Gallery at the V&A. The installation rotates to create a 'beguiling' reflection of the room, the art and the viewers on the ground. <br />
The London Design Festival at the V&A, South Kensington, London 12 Sept 2014. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    VandA Design Festival GBPhotos 14.jpg
  • Double Space for BMW by Barber + Osgerby -<br />
Leading design duo, Edward Barber and Jay Osgerby (both pictured) worked with BMW to present a kinetic, silvered structure which is suspended from the ceiling of the Raphael Gallery at the V&A. The installation rotates to create a 'beguiling' reflection of the room, the art and the viewers on the ground. <br />
The London Design Festival at the V&A, South Kensington, London 12 Sept 2014. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    VandA Design Festival GBPhotos 11.jpg
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