Show Navigation

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
{ 155 images found }

Loading ()...

  • 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 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
  • Inflated Star and Wooden Star, 2014 - a new large-scale sculpture by Frank Stella Hon RA, one of the most important living American artists (b. 1936), in the courtyard of the Royal Academy on Wednesday 18 February 2015. Standing at 7 metres tall and over 8 metres wide, it is the first time his work has been exhibited in the UK. The work will be on display until the 17 May 2015. The complex sculpture has been fabricated from aluminium and teakwood. Stella was made an Honorary Royal Academician in 1993 and his work can be found in prestigious international collections. He has been the subject of several retrospectives in the United States, Europe, and Japan, and will have a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in autumn 2015.
    Fran Stella RA GBPhotos 35.jpg
  • Inflated Star and Wooden Star, 2014 - a new large-scale sculpture by Frank Stella Hon RA, one of the most important living American artists (b. 1936), in the courtyard of the Royal Academy on Wednesday 18 February 2015. Standing at 7 metres tall and over 8 metres wide, it is the first time his work has been exhibited in the UK. The work will be on display until the 17 May 2015. The complex sculpture has been fabricated from aluminium and teakwood. Stella was made an Honorary Royal Academician in 1993 and his work can be found in prestigious international collections. He has been the subject of several retrospectives in the United States, Europe, and Japan, and will have a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in autumn 2015.
    Fran Stella RA GBPhotos 33.jpg
  • Inflated Star and Wooden Star, 2014 - a new large-scale sculpture by Frank Stella Hon RA, one of the most important living American artists (b. 1936), in the courtyard of the Royal Academy on Wednesday 18 February 2015. Standing at 7 metres tall and over 8 metres wide, it is the first time his work has been exhibited in the UK. The work will be on display until the 17 May 2015. The complex sculpture has been fabricated from aluminium and teakwood. Stella was made an Honorary Royal Academician in 1993 and his work can be found in prestigious international collections. He has been the subject of several retrospectives in the United States, Europe, and Japan, and will have a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in autumn 2015.
    Fran Stella RA GBPhotos 34.jpg
  • Inflated Star and Wooden Star, 2014 - a new large-scale sculpture by Frank Stella Hon RA, one of the most important living American artists (b. 1936), in the courtyard of the Royal Academy on Wednesday 18 February 2015. Standing at 7 metres tall and over 8 metres wide, it is the first time his work has been exhibited in the UK. The work will be on display until the 17 May 2015. The complex sculpture has been fabricated from aluminium and teakwood. Stella was made an Honorary Royal Academician in 1993 and his work can be found in prestigious international collections. He has been the subject of several retrospectives in the United States, Europe, and Japan, and will have a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in autumn 2015.
    Fran Stella RA GBPhotos 29.jpg
  • Inflated Star and Wooden Star, 2014 - a new large-scale sculpture by Frank Stella Hon RA, one of the most important living American artists (b. 1936), in the courtyard of the Royal Academy on Wednesday 18 February 2015. Standing at 7 metres tall and over 8 metres wide, it is the first time his work has been exhibited in the UK. The work will be on display until the 17 May 2015. The complex sculpture has been fabricated from aluminium and teakwood. Stella was made an Honorary Royal Academician in 1993 and his work can be found in prestigious international collections. He has been the subject of several retrospectives in the United States, Europe, and Japan, and will have a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in autumn 2015.
    Fran Stella RA GBPhotos 27.jpg
  • Inflated Star and Wooden Star, 2014 - a new large-scale sculpture by Frank Stella Hon RA, one of the most important living American artists (b. 1936), in the courtyard of the Royal Academy on Wednesday 18 February 2015. Standing at 7 metres tall and over 8 metres wide, it is the first time his work has been exhibited in the UK. The work will be on display until the 17 May 2015. The complex sculpture has been fabricated from aluminium and teakwood. Stella was made an Honorary Royal Academician in 1993 and his work can be found in prestigious international collections. He has been the subject of several retrospectives in the United States, Europe, and Japan, and will have a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in autumn 2015.
    Fran Stella RA GBPhotos 25.jpg
  • Inflated Star and Wooden Star, 2014 - a new large-scale sculpture by Frank Stella Hon RA, one of the most important living American artists (b. 1936), in the courtyard of the Royal Academy on Wednesday 18 February 2015. Standing at 7 metres tall and over 8 metres wide, it is the first time his work has been exhibited in the UK. The work will be on display until the 17 May 2015. The complex sculpture has been fabricated from aluminium and teakwood. Stella was made an Honorary Royal Academician in 1993 and his work can be found in prestigious international collections. He has been the subject of several retrospectives in the United States, Europe, and Japan, and will have a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in autumn 2015.
    Fran Stella RA GBPhotos 23.jpg
  • Inflated Star and Wooden Star, 2014 - a new large-scale sculpture by Frank Stella Hon RA, one of the most important living American artists (b. 1936), in the courtyard of the Royal Academy on Wednesday 18 February 2015. Standing at 7 metres tall and over 8 metres wide, it is the first time his work has been exhibited in the UK. The work will be on display until the 17 May 2015. The complex sculpture has been fabricated from aluminium and teakwood. Stella was made an Honorary Royal Academician in 1993 and his work can be found in prestigious international collections. He has been the subject of several retrospectives in the United States, Europe, and Japan, and will have a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in autumn 2015.
    Fran Stella RA GBPhotos 24.jpg
  • Inflated Star and Wooden Star, 2014 - a new large-scale sculpture by Frank Stella Hon RA, one of the most important living American artists (b. 1936), in the courtyard of the Royal Academy on Wednesday 18 February 2015. Standing at 7 metres tall and over 8 metres wide, it is the first time his work has been exhibited in the UK. The work will be on display until the 17 May 2015. The complex sculpture has been fabricated from aluminium and teakwood. Stella was made an Honorary Royal Academician in 1993 and his work can be found in prestigious international collections. He has been the subject of several retrospectives in the United States, Europe, and Japan, and will have a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in autumn 2015.
    Fran Stella RA GBPhotos 22.jpg
  • Inflated Star and Wooden Star, 2014 - a new large-scale sculpture by Frank Stella Hon RA, one of the most important living American artists (b. 1936), in the courtyard of the Royal Academy on Wednesday 18 February 2015. Standing at 7 metres tall and over 8 metres wide, it is the first time his work has been exhibited in the UK. The work will be on display until the 17 May 2015. The complex sculpture has been fabricated from aluminium and teakwood. Stella was made an Honorary Royal Academician in 1993 and his work can be found in prestigious international collections. He has been the subject of several retrospectives in the United States, Europe, and Japan, and will have a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in autumn 2015.
    Fran Stella RA GBPhotos 18.jpg
  • Inflated Star and Wooden Star, 2014 - a new large-scale sculpture by Frank Stella Hon RA, one of the most important living American artists (b. 1936), in the courtyard of the Royal Academy on Wednesday 18 February 2015. Standing at 7 metres tall and over 8 metres wide, it is the first time his work has been exhibited in the UK. The work will be on display until the 17 May 2015. The complex sculpture has been fabricated from aluminium and teakwood. Stella was made an Honorary Royal Academician in 1993 and his work can be found in prestigious international collections. He has been the subject of several retrospectives in the United States, Europe, and Japan, and will have a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in autumn 2015.
    Fran Stella RA GBPhotos 16.jpg
  • Inflated Star and Wooden Star, 2014 - a new large-scale sculpture by Frank Stella Hon RA, one of the most important living American artists (b. 1936), in the courtyard of the Royal Academy on Wednesday 18 February 2015. Standing at 7 metres tall and over 8 metres wide, it is the first time his work has been exhibited in the UK. The work will be on display until the 17 May 2015. The complex sculpture has been fabricated from aluminium and teakwood. Stella was made an Honorary Royal Academician in 1993 and his work can be found in prestigious international collections. He has been the subject of several retrospectives in the United States, Europe, and Japan, and will have a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in autumn 2015.
    Fran Stella RA GBPhotos 13.jpg
  • Inflated Star and Wooden Star, 2014 - a new large-scale sculpture by Frank Stella Hon RA, one of the most important living American artists (b. 1936), in the courtyard of the Royal Academy on Wednesday 18 February 2015. Standing at 7 metres tall and over 8 metres wide, it is the first time his work has been exhibited in the UK. The work will be on display until the 17 May 2015. The complex sculpture has been fabricated from aluminium and teakwood. Stella was made an Honorary Royal Academician in 1993 and his work can be found in prestigious international collections. He has been the subject of several retrospectives in the United States, Europe, and Japan, and will have a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in autumn 2015.
    Fran Stella RA GBPhotos 11.jpg
  • Inflated Star and Wooden Star, 2014 - a new large-scale sculpture by Frank Stella Hon RA, one of the most important living American artists (b. 1936), in the courtyard of the Royal Academy on Wednesday 18 February 2015. Standing at 7 metres tall and over 8 metres wide, it is the first time his work has been exhibited in the UK. The work will be on display until the 17 May 2015. The complex sculpture has been fabricated from aluminium and teakwood. Stella was made an Honorary Royal Academician in 1993 and his work can be found in prestigious international collections. He has been the subject of several retrospectives in the United States, Europe, and Japan, and will have a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in autumn 2015.
    Fran Stella RA GBPhotos 12.jpg
  • Inflated Star and Wooden Star, 2014 - a new large-scale sculpture by Frank Stella Hon RA, one of the most important living American artists (b. 1936), in the courtyard of the Royal Academy on Wednesday 18 February 2015. Standing at 7 metres tall and over 8 metres wide, it is the first time his work has been exhibited in the UK. The work will be on display until the 17 May 2015. The complex sculpture has been fabricated from aluminium and teakwood. Stella was made an Honorary Royal Academician in 1993 and his work can be found in prestigious international collections. He has been the subject of several retrospectives in the United States, Europe, and Japan, and will have a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in autumn 2015.
    Fran Stella RA GBPhotos 10.jpg
  • Inflated Star and Wooden Star, 2014 - a new large-scale sculpture by Frank Stella Hon RA, one of the most important living American artists (b. 1936), in the courtyard of the Royal Academy on Wednesday 18 February 2015. Standing at 7 metres tall and over 8 metres wide, it is the first time his work has been exhibited in the UK. The work will be on display until the 17 May 2015. The complex sculpture has been fabricated from aluminium and teakwood. Stella was made an Honorary Royal Academician in 1993 and his work can be found in prestigious international collections. He has been the subject of several retrospectives in the United States, Europe, and Japan, and will have a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in autumn 2015.
    Fran Stella RA GBPhotos 09.jpg
  • Inflated Star and Wooden Star, 2014 - a new large-scale sculpture by Frank Stella Hon RA, one of the most important living American artists (b. 1936), in the courtyard of the Royal Academy on Wednesday 18 February 2015. Standing at 7 metres tall and over 8 metres wide, it is the first time his work has been exhibited in the UK. The work will be on display until the 17 May 2015. The complex sculpture has been fabricated from aluminium and teakwood. Stella was made an Honorary Royal Academician in 1993 and his work can be found in prestigious international collections. He has been the subject of several retrospectives in the United States, Europe, and Japan, and will have a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in autumn 2015.
    Fran Stella RA GBPhotos 08.jpg
  • London Landmarks - The Royal Academy, as seen in Anish Kapoors work in the courtyard, London,
    London Lanscape 02_1.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 (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 (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 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 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 03.jpg
  • Inflated Star and Wooden Star, 2014 - a new large-scale sculpture by Frank Stella Hon RA, one of the most important living American artists (b. 1936), in the courtyard of the Royal Academy on Wednesday 18 February 2015. Standing at 7 metres tall and over 8 metres wide, it is the first time his work has been exhibited in the UK. The work will be on display until the 17 May 2015. The complex sculpture has been fabricated from aluminium and teakwood. Stella was made an Honorary Royal Academician in 1993 and his work can be found in prestigious international collections. He has been the subject of several retrospectives in the United States, Europe, and Japan, and will have a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in autumn 2015.
    Fran Stella RA GBPhotos 36.jpg
  • Inflated Star and Wooden Star, 2014 - a new large-scale sculpture by Frank Stella Hon RA, one of the most important living American artists (b. 1936), in the courtyard of the Royal Academy on Wednesday 18 February 2015. Standing at 7 metres tall and over 8 metres wide, it is the first time his work has been exhibited in the UK. The work will be on display until the 17 May 2015. The complex sculpture has been fabricated from aluminium and teakwood. Stella was made an Honorary Royal Academician in 1993 and his work can be found in prestigious international collections. He has been the subject of several retrospectives in the United States, Europe, and Japan, and will have a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in autumn 2015.
    Fran Stella RA GBPhotos 32.jpg
  • Inflated Star and Wooden Star, 2014 - a new large-scale sculpture by Frank Stella Hon RA, one of the most important living American artists (b. 1936), in the courtyard of the Royal Academy on Wednesday 18 February 2015. Standing at 7 metres tall and over 8 metres wide, it is the first time his work has been exhibited in the UK. The work will be on display until the 17 May 2015. The complex sculpture has been fabricated from aluminium and teakwood. Stella was made an Honorary Royal Academician in 1993 and his work can be found in prestigious international collections. He has been the subject of several retrospectives in the United States, Europe, and Japan, and will have a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in autumn 2015.
    Fran Stella RA GBPhotos 31.jpg
  • Inflated Star and Wooden Star, 2014 - a new large-scale sculpture by Frank Stella Hon RA, one of the most important living American artists (b. 1936), in the courtyard of the Royal Academy on Wednesday 18 February 2015. Standing at 7 metres tall and over 8 metres wide, it is the first time his work has been exhibited in the UK. The work will be on display until the 17 May 2015. The complex sculpture has been fabricated from aluminium and teakwood. Stella was made an Honorary Royal Academician in 1993 and his work can be found in prestigious international collections. He has been the subject of several retrospectives in the United States, Europe, and Japan, and will have a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in autumn 2015.
    Fran Stella RA GBPhotos 30.jpg
  • Inflated Star and Wooden Star, 2014 - a new large-scale sculpture by Frank Stella Hon RA, one of the most important living American artists (b. 1936), in the courtyard of the Royal Academy on Wednesday 18 February 2015. Standing at 7 metres tall and over 8 metres wide, it is the first time his work has been exhibited in the UK. The work will be on display until the 17 May 2015. The complex sculpture has been fabricated from aluminium and teakwood. Stella was made an Honorary Royal Academician in 1993 and his work can be found in prestigious international collections. He has been the subject of several retrospectives in the United States, Europe, and Japan, and will have a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in autumn 2015.
    Fran Stella RA GBPhotos 28.jpg
  • Inflated Star and Wooden Star, 2014 - a new large-scale sculpture by Frank Stella Hon RA, one of the most important living American artists (b. 1936), in the courtyard of the Royal Academy on Wednesday 18 February 2015. Standing at 7 metres tall and over 8 metres wide, it is the first time his work has been exhibited in the UK. The work will be on display until the 17 May 2015. The complex sculpture has been fabricated from aluminium and teakwood. Stella was made an Honorary Royal Academician in 1993 and his work can be found in prestigious international collections. He has been the subject of several retrospectives in the United States, Europe, and Japan, and will have a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in autumn 2015.
    Fran Stella RA GBPhotos 26.jpg
  • Inflated Star and Wooden Star, 2014 - a new large-scale sculpture by Frank Stella Hon RA, one of the most important living American artists (b. 1936), in the courtyard of the Royal Academy on Wednesday 18 February 2015. Standing at 7 metres tall and over 8 metres wide, it is the first time his work has been exhibited in the UK. The work will be on display until the 17 May 2015. The complex sculpture has been fabricated from aluminium and teakwood. Stella was made an Honorary Royal Academician in 1993 and his work can be found in prestigious international collections. He has been the subject of several retrospectives in the United States, Europe, and Japan, and will have a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in autumn 2015.
    Fran Stella RA GBPhotos 21.jpg
  • Inflated Star and Wooden Star, 2014 - a new large-scale sculpture by Frank Stella Hon RA, one of the most important living American artists (b. 1936), in the courtyard of the Royal Academy on Wednesday 18 February 2015. Standing at 7 metres tall and over 8 metres wide, it is the first time his work has been exhibited in the UK. The work will be on display until the 17 May 2015. The complex sculpture has been fabricated from aluminium and teakwood. Stella was made an Honorary Royal Academician in 1993 and his work can be found in prestigious international collections. He has been the subject of several retrospectives in the United States, Europe, and Japan, and will have a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in autumn 2015.
    Fran Stella RA GBPhotos 20.jpg
  • Inflated Star and Wooden Star, 2014 - a new large-scale sculpture by Frank Stella Hon RA, one of the most important living American artists (b. 1936), in the courtyard of the Royal Academy on Wednesday 18 February 2015. Standing at 7 metres tall and over 8 metres wide, it is the first time his work has been exhibited in the UK. The work will be on display until the 17 May 2015. The complex sculpture has been fabricated from aluminium and teakwood. Stella was made an Honorary Royal Academician in 1993 and his work can be found in prestigious international collections. He has been the subject of several retrospectives in the United States, Europe, and Japan, and will have a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in autumn 2015.
    Fran Stella RA GBPhotos 17.jpg
  • Inflated Star and Wooden Star, 2014 - a new large-scale sculpture by Frank Stella Hon RA, one of the most important living American artists (b. 1936), in the courtyard of the Royal Academy on Wednesday 18 February 2015. Standing at 7 metres tall and over 8 metres wide, it is the first time his work has been exhibited in the UK. The work will be on display until the 17 May 2015. The complex sculpture has been fabricated from aluminium and teakwood. Stella was made an Honorary Royal Academician in 1993 and his work can be found in prestigious international collections. He has been the subject of several retrospectives in the United States, Europe, and Japan, and will have a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in autumn 2015.
    Fran Stella RA GBPhotos 15.jpg
  • Inflated Star and Wooden Star, 2014 - a new large-scale sculpture by Frank Stella Hon RA, one of the most important living American artists (b. 1936), in the courtyard of the Royal Academy on Wednesday 18 February 2015. Standing at 7 metres tall and over 8 metres wide, it is the first time his work has been exhibited in the UK. The work will be on display until the 17 May 2015. The complex sculpture has been fabricated from aluminium and teakwood. Stella was made an Honorary Royal Academician in 1993 and his work can be found in prestigious international collections. He has been the subject of several retrospectives in the United States, Europe, and Japan, and will have a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in autumn 2015.
    Fran Stella RA GBPhotos 14.jpg
  • Inflated Star and Wooden Star, 2014 - a new large-scale sculpture by Frank Stella Hon RA, one of the most important living American artists (b. 1936), in the courtyard of the Royal Academy on Wednesday 18 February 2015. Standing at 7 metres tall and over 8 metres wide, it is the first time his work has been exhibited in the UK. The work will be on display until the 17 May 2015. The complex sculpture has been fabricated from aluminium and teakwood. Stella was made an Honorary Royal Academician in 1993 and his work can be found in prestigious international collections. He has been the subject of several retrospectives in the United States, Europe, and Japan, and will have a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in autumn 2015.
    Fran Stella RA GBPhotos 07.jpg
  • Inflated Star and Wooden Star, 2014 - a new large-scale sculpture by Frank Stella Hon RA, one of the most important living American artists (b. 1936), in the courtyard of the Royal Academy on Wednesday 18 February 2015. Standing at 7 metres tall and over 8 metres wide, it is the first time his work has been exhibited in the UK. The work will be on display until the 17 May 2015. The complex sculpture has been fabricated from aluminium and teakwood. Stella was made an Honorary Royal Academician in 1993 and his work can be found in prestigious international collections. He has been the subject of several retrospectives in the United States, Europe, and Japan, and will have a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in autumn 2015.
    Fran Stella RA GBPhotos 05.jpg
  • Inflated Star and Wooden Star, 2014 - a new large-scale sculpture by Frank Stella Hon RA, one of the most important living American artists (b. 1936), in the courtyard of the Royal Academy on Wednesday 18 February 2015. Standing at 7 metres tall and over 8 metres wide, it is the first time his work has been exhibited in the UK. The work will be on display until the 17 May 2015. The complex sculpture has been fabricated from aluminium and teakwood. Stella was made an Honorary Royal Academician in 1993 and his work can be found in prestigious international collections. He has been the subject of several retrospectives in the United States, Europe, and Japan, and will have a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in autumn 2015.
    Fran Stella RA GBPhotos 04.jpg
  • Inflated Star and Wooden Star, 2014 - a new large-scale sculpture by Frank Stella Hon RA, one of the most important living American artists (b. 1936), in the courtyard of the Royal Academy on Wednesday 18 February 2015. Standing at 7 metres tall and over 8 metres wide, it is the first time his work has been exhibited in the UK. The work will be on display until the 17 May 2015. The complex sculpture has been fabricated from aluminium and teakwood. Stella was made an Honorary Royal Academician in 1993 and his work can be found in prestigious international collections. He has been the subject of several retrospectives in the United States, Europe, and Japan, and will have a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in autumn 2015.
    Fran Stella RA GBPhotos 03.jpg
  • Inflated Star and Wooden Star, 2014 - a new large-scale sculpture by Frank Stella Hon RA, one of the most important living American artists (b. 1936), in the courtyard of the Royal Academy on Wednesday 18 February 2015. Standing at 7 metres tall and over 8 metres wide, it is the first time his work has been exhibited in the UK. The work will be on display until the 17 May 2015. The complex sculpture has been fabricated from aluminium and teakwood. Stella was made an Honorary Royal Academician in 1993 and his work can be found in prestigious international collections. He has been the subject of several retrospectives in the United States, Europe, and Japan, and will have a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in autumn 2015.
    Fran Stella RA GBPhotos 01.jpg
  • Inflated Star and Wooden Star, 2014 - a new large-scale sculpture by Frank Stella Hon RA, one of the most important living American artists (b. 1936), in the courtyard of the Royal Academy on Wednesday 18 February 2015. Standing at 7 metres tall and over 8 metres wide, it is the first time his work has been exhibited in the UK. The work will be on display until the 17 May 2015. The complex sculpture has been fabricated from aluminium and teakwood. Stella was made an Honorary Royal Academician in 1993 and his work can be found in prestigious international collections. He has been the subject of several retrospectives in the United States, Europe, and Japan, and will have a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in autumn 2015.
    Fran Stella RA GBPhotos 02.jpg
  • Inflated Star and Wooden Star, 2014 - a new large-scale sculpture by Frank Stella Hon RA, one of the most important living American artists (b. 1936), in the courtyard of the Royal Academy on Wednesday 18 February 2015. Standing at 7 metres tall and over 8 metres wide, it is the first time his work has been exhibited in the UK. The work will be on display until the 17 May 2015. The complex sculpture has been fabricated from aluminium and teakwood. Stella was made an Honorary Royal Academician in 1993 and his work can be found in prestigious international collections. He has been the subject of several retrospectives in the United States, Europe, and Japan, and will have a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in autumn 2015.
    Fran Stella RA GBPhotos 19.jpg
  • Inflated Star and Wooden Star, 2014 - a new large-scale sculpture by Frank Stella Hon RA, one of the most important living American artists (b. 1936), in the courtyard of the Royal Academy on Wednesday 18 February 2015. Standing at 7 metres tall and over 8 metres wide, it is the first time his work has been exhibited in the UK. The work will be on display until the 17 May 2015. The complex sculpture has been fabricated from aluminium and teakwood. Stella was made an Honorary Royal Academician in 1993 and his work can be found in prestigious international collections. He has been the subject of several retrospectives in the United States, Europe, and Japan, and will have a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in autumn 2015.
    Fran Stella RA GBPhotos 06.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
  • For her fine art degree show, at Chelsea College of Art, a sailor and artist re-lives a solo transatlantic yacht race by being marooned next to the Tate for 28 days. Investigating solitude, she has no physical contact with the outside world and spends her time trimming sails and making sculptures by stringing her waste together.
    Bell_Guy04Ab.jpg
  • The Emporer arrives on his charriot - Gladiators gather on the site of London’s only performers that worked on Ridley Scott's Gladiator film will clash on the spot where gladiators battled 2,000 years ago in the courtyard of the Guildhall. Ten public evening and matinee performances will take place on selected dates between 8 and 16 August. Full information and tickets at www.museumoflondon.org.uk<br />
<br />
<br />
Hidden for centuries, the ancient remains of London’s Roman amphitheatre were discovered by archaeologists in 1988. They are open for viewing all year. The Gladiator Games are performed by Britannia, renowned for its work on the Ridley Scott film, Gladiator. Each performance is the result of research into events in the 1st century A.D., using images drawn from Roman coins, paintings, sculpture and mosaics.
    Gladiators Guildhall GBPhotos 32.jpg
  • Heatherwick’s London 2012 Cauldron goes on display in a purpose built Museum of London gallery - The Cauldron, designed by the Heatherwick Studio, for the London 2012 Olympic Games included 204 unique copper elements, each alight and representing every competing nation. They were arranged in a concentric formation at the tips of slender mechanised steel stems. Slowly pivoting sequentially, they converged to form the Cauldron.<br />
 <br />
In the courtyard of the museum, a bespoke new pavilion has been specially built by Stage One - the creative engineers behind the London 2012 Cauldron. The exhibition has been designed by the creative consultants, Drinkall Dean. On show are two sections of the Cauldron – including the original steel stems and test versions of the copper elements.  One section presents the Cauldron in an upright position, as it was for the majority of both Games. The other is the Cauldron in an open formation, as if frozen at that climactic defining moment of the opening Olympic ceremony. The room pens Friday 25 July 2014.
    Olympic Cauldron Museum of London 12.jpg
  • Symphony for my Beloved Daughter, 2018, by Anish Kapoor towers above the statue with traditional garland of flowers in teh courtyard - Royal Academy celebrates its 250th Summer Exhibition, and to mark this momentous occasion, the exhibition is co-ordinated by Grayson Perry RA.
    GB52383.jpg
  • Symphony for my Beloved Daughter, 2018, by Anish Kapoor towers above the statue with traditional garland of flowers in teh courtyard - Royal Academy celebrates its 250th Summer Exhibition, and to mark this momentous occasion, the exhibition is co-ordinated by Grayson Perry RA.
    GB52381.jpg
  • LOVE MOTION by<br />
Rhys Coren in the<br />
Royal Academy Courtyard - Lumiere London is a light festival that takes place over four evenings, from Thursday 18 to Sunday 21 January 2018. It showcases the capital’s architecture and streets, with more than 50 works created by leading UK and international artists. The free outdoor festival returns to London for the second time following the success of the first edition in January 2016, which attracted an estimated 1.3 million visits. The 2018 edition has an expanded footprint extending north to south, from King’s Cross, through Fitzrovia, Mayfair, and London’s West End, to Trafalgar Square, Westminster, Victoria, South Bank and Waterloo. Lumiere is produced by Artichoke, the UK’s leading producer of outdoor art events.
    Lumiere London GBPhotos 50.jpg
  • A Yinka Shonibare six metre high colourful wind sculpture in the RA Courtyard - The Royal Academy’s 249th Summer Exhibition - co-ordinated by Eileen Cooper RA. The hanging committee will consist of Royal Academicians Ann Christopher, Gus Cummins, Bill Jacklin, Fiona Rae, Rebecca Salter and Yinka Shonibare (with show branding based on his work). This year, the Architecture Gallery will be curated by Farshid Moussavi RA. The exhibition is open to the public 13 June – 20 August 2017. London 07 June 2017.
    RA Summer Exhibition GBPhotos 01.jpg
  • A Yinka Shonibare six metre high colourful wind sculpture in the RA Courtyard - The Royal Academy’s 249th Summer Exhibition - co-ordinated by Eileen Cooper RA. The hanging committee will consist of Royal Academicians Ann Christopher, Gus Cummins, Bill Jacklin, Fiona Rae, Rebecca Salter and Yinka Shonibare (with show branding based on his work). This year, the Architecture Gallery will be curated by Farshid Moussavi RA. The exhibition is open to the public 13 June – 20 August 2017. London 07 June 2017.
    RA Summer Exhibition GBPhotos 02.jpg
  • A Yinka Shonibare six metre high colourful wind sculpture in the RA Courtyard - The Royal Academy’s 249th Summer Exhibition - co-ordinated by Eileen Cooper RA. The hanging committee will consist of Royal Academicians Ann Christopher, Gus Cummins, Bill Jacklin, Fiona Rae, Rebecca Salter and Yinka Shonibare (with show branding based on his work). This year, the Architecture Gallery will be curated by Farshid Moussavi RA. The exhibition is open to the public 13 June – 20 August 2017. London 07 June 2017.
    RA Summer Exhibition GBPhotos 63.jpg
  • A fight ends in execution by a slit throat (with fake blood sack!) - Gladiators gather on the site of London’s only performers that worked on Ridley Scott's Gladiator film will clash on the spot where gladiators battled 2,000 years ago in the courtyard of the Guildhall. Ten public evening and matinee performances will take place on selected dates between 8 and 16 August. Full information and tickets at www.museumoflondon.org.uk<br />
<br />
<br />
Hidden for centuries, the ancient remains of London’s Roman amphitheatre were discovered by archaeologists in 1988. They are open for viewing all year. The Gladiator Games are performed by Britannia, renowned for its work on the Ridley Scott film, Gladiator. Each performance is the result of research into events in the 1st century A.D., using images drawn from Roman coins, paintings, sculpture and mosaics.
    Gladiators Guildhall GBPhotos 42.jpg
  • A fight ends in execution by a slit throat (with fake blood sack!) - Gladiators gather on the site of London’s only performers that worked on Ridley Scott's Gladiator film will clash on the spot where gladiators battled 2,000 years ago in the courtyard of the Guildhall. Ten public evening and matinee performances will take place on selected dates between 8 and 16 August. Full information and tickets at www.museumoflondon.org.uk<br />
<br />
<br />
Hidden for centuries, the ancient remains of London’s Roman amphitheatre were discovered by archaeologists in 1988. They are open for viewing all year. The Gladiator Games are performed by Britannia, renowned for its work on the Ridley Scott film, Gladiator. Each performance is the result of research into events in the 1st century A.D., using images drawn from Roman coins, paintings, sculpture and mosaics.
    Gladiators Guildhall GBPhotos 41.jpg
  • A fight ends in execution by a slit throat (with fake blood sack!) - Gladiators gather on the site of London’s only performers that worked on Ridley Scott's Gladiator film will clash on the spot where gladiators battled 2,000 years ago in the courtyard of the Guildhall. Ten public evening and matinee performances will take place on selected dates between 8 and 16 August. Full information and tickets at www.museumoflondon.org.uk<br />
<br />
<br />
Hidden for centuries, the ancient remains of London’s Roman amphitheatre were discovered by archaeologists in 1988. They are open for viewing all year. The Gladiator Games are performed by Britannia, renowned for its work on the Ridley Scott film, Gladiator. Each performance is the result of research into events in the 1st century A.D., using images drawn from Roman coins, paintings, sculpture and mosaics.
    Gladiators Guildhall GBPhotos 39.jpg
  • A fight ends in execution by a slit throat (with fake blood sack!) - Gladiators gather on the site of London’s only performers that worked on Ridley Scott's Gladiator film will clash on the spot where gladiators battled 2,000 years ago in the courtyard of the Guildhall. Ten public evening and matinee performances will take place on selected dates between 8 and 16 August. Full information and tickets at www.museumoflondon.org.uk<br />
<br />
<br />
Hidden for centuries, the ancient remains of London’s Roman amphitheatre were discovered by archaeologists in 1988. They are open for viewing all year. The Gladiator Games are performed by Britannia, renowned for its work on the Ridley Scott film, Gladiator. Each performance is the result of research into events in the 1st century A.D., using images drawn from Roman coins, paintings, sculpture and mosaics.
    Gladiators Guildhall GBPhotos 38.jpg
  • A fight ends in execution by a slit throat (with fake blood sack!) - Gladiators gather on the site of London’s only performers that worked on Ridley Scott's Gladiator film will clash on the spot where gladiators battled 2,000 years ago in the courtyard of the Guildhall. Ten public evening and matinee performances will take place on selected dates between 8 and 16 August. Full information and tickets at www.museumoflondon.org.uk<br />
<br />
<br />
Hidden for centuries, the ancient remains of London’s Roman amphitheatre were discovered by archaeologists in 1988. They are open for viewing all year. The Gladiator Games are performed by Britannia, renowned for its work on the Ridley Scott film, Gladiator. Each performance is the result of research into events in the 1st century A.D., using images drawn from Roman coins, paintings, sculpture and mosaics.
    Gladiators Guildhall GBPhotos 36.jpg
  • Gladiators arrive and salute the crowd and the Emporeron the site of London’s only performers that worked on Ridley Scott's Gladiator film will clash on the spot where gladiators battled 2,000 years ago in the courtyard of the Guildhall. Ten public evening and matinee performances will take place on selected dates between 8 and 16 August. Full information and tickets at www.museumoflondon.org.uk<br />
<br />
<br />
Hidden for centuries, the ancient remains of London’s Roman amphitheatre were discovered by archaeologists in 1988. They are open for viewing all year. The Gladiator Games are performed by Britannia, renowned for its work on the Ridley Scott film, Gladiator. Each performance is the result of research into events in the 1st century A.D., using images drawn from Roman coins, paintings, sculpture and mosaics.
    Gladiators Guildhall GBPhotos 35.jpg
  • Guarding the Royal box - Gladiators gather on the site of London’s only performers that worked on Ridley Scott's Gladiator film will clash on the spot where gladiators battled 2,000 years ago in the courtyard of the Guildhall. Ten public evening and matinee performances will take place on selected dates between 8 and 16 August. Full information and tickets at www.museumoflondon.org.uk<br />
<br />
<br />
Hidden for centuries, the ancient remains of London’s Roman amphitheatre were discovered by archaeologists in 1988. They are open for viewing all year. The Gladiator Games are performed by Britannia, renowned for its work on the Ridley Scott film, Gladiator. Each performance is the result of research into events in the 1st century A.D., using images drawn from Roman coins, paintings, sculpture and mosaics.
    Gladiators Guildhall GBPhotos 34.jpg
  • The Emporer arrives on his charriot - Gladiators gather on the site of London’s only performers that worked on Ridley Scott's Gladiator film will clash on the spot where gladiators battled 2,000 years ago in the courtyard of the Guildhall. Ten public evening and matinee performances will take place on selected dates between 8 and 16 August. Full information and tickets at www.museumoflondon.org.uk<br />
<br />
<br />
Hidden for centuries, the ancient remains of London’s Roman amphitheatre were discovered by archaeologists in 1988. They are open for viewing all year. The Gladiator Games are performed by Britannia, renowned for its work on the Ridley Scott film, Gladiator. Each performance is the result of research into events in the 1st century A.D., using images drawn from Roman coins, paintings, sculpture and mosaics.
    Gladiators Guildhall GBPhotos 31.jpg
  • The Emporer arrives on his charriot - Gladiators gather on the site of London’s only performers that worked on Ridley Scott's Gladiator film will clash on the spot where gladiators battled 2,000 years ago in the courtyard of the Guildhall. Ten public evening and matinee performances will take place on selected dates between 8 and 16 August. Full information and tickets at www.museumoflondon.org.uk<br />
<br />
<br />
Hidden for centuries, the ancient remains of London’s Roman amphitheatre were discovered by archaeologists in 1988. They are open for viewing all year. The Gladiator Games are performed by Britannia, renowned for its work on the Ridley Scott film, Gladiator. Each performance is the result of research into events in the 1st century A.D., using images drawn from Roman coins, paintings, sculpture and mosaics.
    Gladiators Guildhall GBPhotos 29.jpg
  • The Emporer arrives on his charriot - Gladiators gather on the site of London’s only performers that worked on Ridley Scott's Gladiator film will clash on the spot where gladiators battled 2,000 years ago in the courtyard of the Guildhall. Ten public evening and matinee performances will take place on selected dates between 8 and 16 August. Full information and tickets at www.museumoflondon.org.uk<br />
<br />
<br />
Hidden for centuries, the ancient remains of London’s Roman amphitheatre were discovered by archaeologists in 1988. They are open for viewing all year. The Gladiator Games are performed by Britannia, renowned for its work on the Ridley Scott film, Gladiator. Each performance is the result of research into events in the 1st century A.D., using images drawn from Roman coins, paintings, sculpture and mosaics.
    Gladiators Guildhall GBPhotos 28.jpg
  • A legionary officer stands guard at the gates - Gladiators gather on the site of London’s only performers that worked on Ridley Scott's Gladiator film will clash on the spot where gladiators battled 2,000 years ago in the courtyard of the Guildhall. Ten public evening and matinee performances will take place on selected dates between 8 and 16 August. Full information and tickets at www.museumoflondon.org.uk<br />
<br />
<br />
Hidden for centuries, the ancient remains of London’s Roman amphitheatre were discovered by archaeologists in 1988. They are open for viewing all year. The Gladiator Games are performed by Britannia, renowned for its work on the Ridley Scott film, Gladiator. Each performance is the result of research into events in the 1st century A.D., using images drawn from Roman coins, paintings, sculpture and mosaics.
    Gladiators Guildhall GBPhotos 26.jpg
  • A batavian slave girl Aronwryn Roha (Elizabeth Webster, 18) in front of a tapestry of the empire - Gladiators gather on the site of London’s only performers that worked on Ridley Scott's Gladiator film will clash on the spot where gladiators battled 2,000 years ago in the courtyard of the Guildhall. Ten public evening and matinee performances will take place on selected dates between 8 and 16 August. Full information and tickets at www.museumoflondon.org.uk<br />
<br />
<br />
Hidden for centuries, the ancient remains of London’s Roman amphitheatre were discovered by archaeologists in 1988. They are open for viewing all year. The Gladiator Games are performed by Britannia, renowned for its work on the Ridley Scott film, Gladiator. Each performance is the result of research into events in the 1st century A.D., using images drawn from Roman coins, paintings, sculpture and mosaics.
    Gladiators Guildhall GBPhotos 24.jpg
  • A batavian slave girl Aronwryn Roha (Elizabeth Webster, 18) in front of a tapestry of the empire - Gladiators gather on the site of London’s only performers that worked on Ridley Scott's Gladiator film will clash on the spot where gladiators battled 2,000 years ago in the courtyard of the Guildhall. Ten public evening and matinee performances will take place on selected dates between 8 and 16 August. Full information and tickets at www.museumoflondon.org.uk<br />
<br />
<br />
Hidden for centuries, the ancient remains of London’s Roman amphitheatre were discovered by archaeologists in 1988. They are open for viewing all year. The Gladiator Games are performed by Britannia, renowned for its work on the Ridley Scott film, Gladiator. Each performance is the result of research into events in the 1st century A.D., using images drawn from Roman coins, paintings, sculpture and mosaics.
    Gladiators Guildhall GBPhotos 23.jpg
  • Gladiators gather on the site of London’s only performers that worked on Ridley Scott's Gladiator film will clash on the spot where gladiators battled 2,000 years ago in the courtyard of the Guildhall. Ten public evening and matinee performances will take place on selected dates between 8 and 16 August. Full information and tickets at www.museumoflondon.org.uk<br />
<br />
<br />
Hidden for centuries, the ancient remains of London’s Roman amphitheatre were discovered by archaeologists in 1988. They are open for viewing all year. The Gladiator Games are performed by Britannia, renowned for its work on the Ridley Scott film, Gladiator. Each performance is the result of research into events in the 1st century A.D., using images drawn from Roman coins, paintings, sculpture and mosaics.
    Gladiators Guildhall GBPhotos 21.jpg
  • A Retiarius with trident and net fights a Secutor - Gladiators gather on the site of London’s only performers that worked on Ridley Scott's Gladiator film will clash on the spot where gladiators battled 2,000 years ago in the courtyard of the Guildhall. Ten public evening and matinee performances will take place on selected dates between 8 and 16 August. Full information and tickets at www.museumoflondon.org.uk<br />
<br />
<br />
Hidden for centuries, the ancient remains of London’s Roman amphitheatre were discovered by archaeologists in 1988. They are open for viewing all year. The Gladiator Games are performed by Britannia, renowned for its work on the Ridley Scott film, Gladiator. Each performance is the result of research into events in the 1st century A.D., using images drawn from Roman coins, paintings, sculpture and mosaics.
    Gladiators Guildhall GBPhotos 19.jpg
  • A Retiarius with trident and net fights a Secutor - Gladiators gather on the site of London’s only performers that worked on Ridley Scott's Gladiator film will clash on the spot where gladiators battled 2,000 years ago in the courtyard of the Guildhall. Ten public evening and matinee performances will take place on selected dates between 8 and 16 August. Full information and tickets at www.museumoflondon.org.uk<br />
<br />
<br />
Hidden for centuries, the ancient remains of London’s Roman amphitheatre were discovered by archaeologists in 1988. They are open for viewing all year. The Gladiator Games are performed by Britannia, renowned for its work on the Ridley Scott film, Gladiator. Each performance is the result of research into events in the 1st century A.D., using images drawn from Roman coins, paintings, sculpture and mosaics.
    Gladiators Guildhall GBPhotos 18.jpg
  • The death blow - Gladiators gather on the site of London’s only performers that worked on Ridley Scott's Gladiator film will clash on the spot where gladiators battled 2,000 years ago in the courtyard of the Guildhall. Ten public evening and matinee performances will take place on selected dates between 8 and 16 August. Full information and tickets at www.museumoflondon.org.uk<br />
<br />
<br />
Hidden for centuries, the ancient remains of London’s Roman amphitheatre were discovered by archaeologists in 1988. They are open for viewing all year. The Gladiator Games are performed by Britannia, renowned for its work on the Ridley Scott film, Gladiator. Each performance is the result of research into events in the 1st century A.D., using images drawn from Roman coins, paintings, sculpture and mosaics.
    Gladiators Guildhall GBPhotos 17.jpg
  • The death blow - Gladiators gather on the site of London’s only performers that worked on Ridley Scott's Gladiator film will clash on the spot where gladiators battled 2,000 years ago in the courtyard of the Guildhall. Ten public evening and matinee performances will take place on selected dates between 8 and 16 August. Full information and tickets at www.museumoflondon.org.uk<br />
<br />
<br />
Hidden for centuries, the ancient remains of London’s Roman amphitheatre were discovered by archaeologists in 1988. They are open for viewing all year. The Gladiator Games are performed by Britannia, renowned for its work on the Ridley Scott film, Gladiator. Each performance is the result of research into events in the 1st century A.D., using images drawn from Roman coins, paintings, sculpture and mosaics.
    Gladiators Guildhall GBPhotos 16.jpg
  • Gladiators gather on the site of London’s only performers that worked on Ridley Scott's Gladiator film will clash on the spot where gladiators battled 2,000 years ago in the courtyard of the Guildhall. Ten public evening and matinee performances will take place on selected dates between 8 and 16 August. Full information and tickets at www.museumoflondon.org.uk<br />
<br />
<br />
Hidden for centuries, the ancient remains of London’s Roman amphitheatre were discovered by archaeologists in 1988. They are open for viewing all year. The Gladiator Games are performed by Britannia, renowned for its work on the Ridley Scott film, Gladiator. Each performance is the result of research into events in the 1st century A.D., using images drawn from Roman coins, paintings, sculpture and mosaics.
    Gladiators Guildhall GBPhotos 15.jpg
  • Gladiators gather on the site of London’s only performers that worked on Ridley Scott's Gladiator film will clash on the spot where gladiators battled 2,000 years ago in the courtyard of the Guildhall. Ten public evening and matinee performances will take place on selected dates between 8 and 16 August. Full information and tickets at www.museumoflondon.org.uk<br />
<br />
<br />
Hidden for centuries, the ancient remains of London’s Roman amphitheatre were discovered by archaeologists in 1988. They are open for viewing all year. The Gladiator Games are performed by Britannia, renowned for its work on the Ridley Scott film, Gladiator. Each performance is the result of research into events in the 1st century A.D., using images drawn from Roman coins, paintings, sculpture and mosaics.
    Gladiators Guildhall GBPhotos 14.jpg
  • A Retiarius with trident and net fights a Secutor - Gladiators gather on the site of London’s only performers that worked on Ridley Scott's Gladiator film will clash on the spot where gladiators battled 2,000 years ago in the courtyard of the Guildhall. Ten public evening and matinee performances will take place on selected dates between 8 and 16 August. Full information and tickets at www.museumoflondon.org.uk<br />
<br />
<br />
Hidden for centuries, the ancient remains of London’s Roman amphitheatre were discovered by archaeologists in 1988. They are open for viewing all year. The Gladiator Games are performed by Britannia, renowned for its work on the Ridley Scott film, Gladiator. Each performance is the result of research into events in the 1st century A.D., using images drawn from Roman coins, paintings, sculpture and mosaics.
    Gladiators Guildhall GBPhotos 12.jpg
  • A Retiarius with trident and net fights a Secutor - Gladiators gather on the site of London’s only performers that worked on Ridley Scott's Gladiator film will clash on the spot where gladiators battled 2,000 years ago in the courtyard of the Guildhall. Ten public evening and matinee performances will take place on selected dates between 8 and 16 August. Full information and tickets at www.museumoflondon.org.uk<br />
<br />
<br />
Hidden for centuries, the ancient remains of London’s Roman amphitheatre were discovered by archaeologists in 1988. They are open for viewing all year. The Gladiator Games are performed by Britannia, renowned for its work on the Ridley Scott film, Gladiator. Each performance is the result of research into events in the 1st century A.D., using images drawn from Roman coins, paintings, sculpture and mosaics.
    Gladiators Guildhall GBPhotos 10.jpg
  • A Secuter - ladiators gather on the site of London’s only performers that worked on Ridley Scott's Gladiator film will clash on the spot where gladiators battled 2,000 years ago in the courtyard of the Guildhall. Ten public evening and matinee performances will take place on selected dates between 8 and 16 August. Full information and tickets at www.museumoflondon.org.uk<br />
<br />
<br />
Hidden for centuries, the ancient remains of London’s Roman amphitheatre were discovered by archaeologists in 1988. They are open for viewing all year. The Gladiator Games are performed by Britannia, renowned for its work on the Ridley Scott film, Gladiator. Each performance is the result of research into events in the 1st century A.D., using images drawn from Roman coins, paintings, sculpture and mosaics.
    Gladiators Guildhall GBPhotos 09.jpg
  • Gladiators gather on the site of London’s only performers that worked on Ridley Scott's Gladiator film will clash on the spot where gladiators battled 2,000 years ago in the courtyard of the Guildhall. Ten public evening and matinee performances will take place on selected dates between 8 and 16 August. Full information and tickets at www.museumoflondon.org.uk<br />
<br />
<br />
Hidden for centuries, the ancient remains of London’s Roman amphitheatre were discovered by archaeologists in 1988. They are open for viewing all year. The Gladiator Games are performed by Britannia, renowned for its work on the Ridley Scott film, Gladiator. Each performance is the result of research into events in the 1st century A.D., using images drawn from Roman coins, paintings, sculpture and mosaics.
    Gladiators Guildhall GBPhotos 08.jpg
  • Gladiators gather on the site of London’s only performers that worked on Ridley Scott's Gladiator film will clash on the spot where gladiators battled 2,000 years ago in the courtyard of the Guildhall. Ten public evening and matinee performances will take place on selected dates between 8 and 16 August. Full information and tickets at www.museumoflondon.org.uk<br />
<br />
<br />
Hidden for centuries, the ancient remains of London’s Roman amphitheatre were discovered by archaeologists in 1988. They are open for viewing all year. The Gladiator Games are performed by Britannia, renowned for its work on the Ridley Scott film, Gladiator. Each performance is the result of research into events in the 1st century A.D., using images drawn from Roman coins, paintings, sculpture and mosaics.
    Gladiators Guildhall GBPhotos 07.jpg
  • A Centurion of the Emporers bodyguard - Gladiators gather on the site of London’s only performers that worked on Ridley Scott's Gladiator film will clash on the spot where gladiators battled 2,000 years ago in the courtyard of the Guildhall. Ten public evening and matinee performances will take place on selected dates between 8 and 16 August. Full information and tickets at www.museumoflondon.org.uk<br />
<br />
<br />
Hidden for centuries, the ancient remains of London’s Roman amphitheatre were discovered by archaeologists in 1988. They are open for viewing all year. The Gladiator Games are performed by Britannia, renowned for its work on the Ridley Scott film, Gladiator. Each performance is the result of research into events in the 1st century A.D., using images drawn from Roman coins, paintings, sculpture and mosaics.
    Gladiators Guildhall GBPhotos 05.jpg
  • Gladiators gather on the site of London’s only performers that worked on Ridley Scott's Gladiator film will clash on the spot where gladiators battled 2,000 years ago in the courtyard of the Guildhall. Ten public evening and matinee performances will take place on selected dates between 8 and 16 August. Full information and tickets at www.museumoflondon.org.uk<br />
<br />
<br />
Hidden for centuries, the ancient remains of London’s Roman amphitheatre were discovered by archaeologists in 1988. They are open for viewing all year. The Gladiator Games are performed by Britannia, renowned for its work on the Ridley Scott film, Gladiator. Each performance is the result of research into events in the 1st century A.D., using images drawn from Roman coins, paintings, sculpture and mosaics.
    Gladiators Guildhall GBPhotos 01.jpg
  • The wooden formers for the individual petals - The Cauldron, designed by the Heatherwick Studio, for the London 2012 Olympic Games included 204 unique copper elements, each alight and representing every competing nation. They were arranged in a concentric formation at the tips of slender mechanised steel stems. Slowly pivoting sequentially, they converged to form the Cauldron.<br />
 <br />
In the courtyard of the museum, a bespoke new pavilion has been specially built by Stage One - the creative engineers behind the London 2012 Cauldron. The exhibition has been designed by the creative consultants, Drinkall Dean. On show are two sections of the Cauldron – including the original steel stems and test versions of the copper elements.  One section presents the Cauldron in an upright position, as it was for the majority of both Games. The other is the Cauldron in an open formation, as if frozen at that climactic defining moment of the opening Olympic ceremony. The room pens Friday 25 July 2014.
    Olympic Cauldron Museum of London 58.jpg
  • The wooden formers for the individual petals  are dispalyed on the wall - The Cauldron, designed by the Heatherwick Studio, for the London 2012 Olympic Games included 204 unique copper elements, each alight and representing every competing nation. They were arranged in a concentric formation at the tips of slender mechanised steel stems. Slowly pivoting sequentially, they converged to form the Cauldron.<br />
 <br />
In the courtyard of the museum, a bespoke new pavilion has been specially built by Stage One - the creative engineers behind the London 2012 Cauldron. The exhibition has been designed by the creative consultants, Drinkall Dean. On show are two sections of the Cauldron – including the original steel stems and test versions of the copper elements.  One section presents the Cauldron in an upright position, as it was for the majority of both Games. The other is the Cauldron in an open formation, as if frozen at that climactic defining moment of the opening Olympic ceremony. The room pens Friday 25 July 2014.
    Olympic Cauldron Museum of London 60.jpg
  • The wooden formers for the individual petals  are dispalyed on the wall - The Cauldron, designed by the Heatherwick Studio, for the London 2012 Olympic Games included 204 unique copper elements, each alight and representing every competing nation. They were arranged in a concentric formation at the tips of slender mechanised steel stems. Slowly pivoting sequentially, they converged to form the Cauldron.<br />
 <br />
In the courtyard of the museum, a bespoke new pavilion has been specially built by Stage One - the creative engineers behind the London 2012 Cauldron. The exhibition has been designed by the creative consultants, Drinkall Dean. On show are two sections of the Cauldron – including the original steel stems and test versions of the copper elements.  One section presents the Cauldron in an upright position, as it was for the majority of both Games. The other is the Cauldron in an open formation, as if frozen at that climactic defining moment of the opening Olympic ceremony. The room pens Friday 25 July 2014.
    Olympic Cauldron Museum of London 59.jpg
  • Heatherwick’s London 2012 Cauldron goes on display in a purpose built Museum of London gallery - The Cauldron, designed by the Heatherwick Studio, for the London 2012 Olympic Games included 204 unique copper elements, each alight and representing every competing nation. They were arranged in a concentric formation at the tips of slender mechanised steel stems. Slowly pivoting sequentially, they converged to form the Cauldron.<br />
 <br />
In the courtyard of the museum, a bespoke new pavilion has been specially built by Stage One - the creative engineers behind the London 2012 Cauldron. The exhibition has been designed by the creative consultants, Drinkall Dean. On show are two sections of the Cauldron – including the original steel stems and test versions of the copper elements.  One section presents the Cauldron in an upright position, as it was for the majority of both Games. The other is the Cauldron in an open formation, as if frozen at that climactic defining moment of the opening Olympic ceremony. The room pens Friday 25 July 2014.
    Olympic Cauldron Museum of London 57.jpg
  • Elpie Psalti (a Greek National and project manager for the Museum) holds the first trial petal - The Cauldron, designed by the Heatherwick Studio, for the London 2012 Olympic Games included 204 unique copper elements, each alight and representing every competing nation. They were arranged in a concentric formation at the tips of slender mechanised steel stems. Slowly pivoting sequentially, they converged to form the Cauldron.<br />
 <br />
In the courtyard of the museum, a bespoke new pavilion has been specially built by Stage One - the creative engineers behind the London 2012 Cauldron. The exhibition has been designed by the creative consultants, Drinkall Dean. On show are two sections of the Cauldron – including the original steel stems and test versions of the copper elements.  One section presents the Cauldron in an upright position, as it was for the majority of both Games. The other is the Cauldron in an open formation, as if frozen at that climactic defining moment of the opening Olympic ceremony. The room pens Friday 25 July 2014.
    Olympic Cauldron Museum of London 55.jpg
  • Elpie Psalti (a Greek National and project manager for the Museum) holds the first trial petal - The Cauldron, designed by the Heatherwick Studio, for the London 2012 Olympic Games included 204 unique copper elements, each alight and representing every competing nation. They were arranged in a concentric formation at the tips of slender mechanised steel stems. Slowly pivoting sequentially, they converged to form the Cauldron.<br />
 <br />
In the courtyard of the museum, a bespoke new pavilion has been specially built by Stage One - the creative engineers behind the London 2012 Cauldron. The exhibition has been designed by the creative consultants, Drinkall Dean. On show are two sections of the Cauldron – including the original steel stems and test versions of the copper elements.  One section presents the Cauldron in an upright position, as it was for the majority of both Games. The other is the Cauldron in an open formation, as if frozen at that climactic defining moment of the opening Olympic ceremony. The room pens Friday 25 July 2014.
    Olympic Cauldron Museum of London 53.jpg
  • Heatherwick’s London 2012 Cauldron goes on display in a purpose built Museum of London gallery - The Cauldron, designed by the Heatherwick Studio, for the London 2012 Olympic Games included 204 unique copper elements, each alight and representing every competing nation. They were arranged in a concentric formation at the tips of slender mechanised steel stems. Slowly pivoting sequentially, they converged to form the Cauldron.<br />
 <br />
In the courtyard of the museum, a bespoke new pavilion has been specially built by Stage One - the creative engineers behind the London 2012 Cauldron. The exhibition has been designed by the creative consultants, Drinkall Dean. On show are two sections of the Cauldron – including the original steel stems and test versions of the copper elements.  One section presents the Cauldron in an upright position, as it was for the majority of both Games. The other is the Cauldron in an open formation, as if frozen at that climactic defining moment of the opening Olympic ceremony. The room pens Friday 25 July 2014.
    Olympic Cauldron Museum of London 51.jpg
  • Heatherwick’s London 2012 Cauldron goes on display in a purpose built Museum of London gallery - The Cauldron, designed by the Heatherwick Studio, for the London 2012 Olympic Games included 204 unique copper elements, each alight and representing every competing nation. They were arranged in a concentric formation at the tips of slender mechanised steel stems. Slowly pivoting sequentially, they converged to form the Cauldron.<br />
 <br />
In the courtyard of the museum, a bespoke new pavilion has been specially built by Stage One - the creative engineers behind the London 2012 Cauldron. The exhibition has been designed by the creative consultants, Drinkall Dean. On show are two sections of the Cauldron – including the original steel stems and test versions of the copper elements.  One section presents the Cauldron in an upright position, as it was for the majority of both Games. The other is the Cauldron in an open formation, as if frozen at that climactic defining moment of the opening Olympic ceremony. The room pens Friday 25 July 2014.
    Olympic Cauldron Museum of London 50.jpg
  • Heatherwick’s London 2012 Cauldron goes on display in a purpose built Museum of London gallery - The Cauldron, designed by the Heatherwick Studio, for the London 2012 Olympic Games included 204 unique copper elements, each alight and representing every competing nation. They were arranged in a concentric formation at the tips of slender mechanised steel stems. Slowly pivoting sequentially, they converged to form the Cauldron.<br />
 <br />
In the courtyard of the museum, a bespoke new pavilion has been specially built by Stage One - the creative engineers behind the London 2012 Cauldron. The exhibition has been designed by the creative consultants, Drinkall Dean. On show are two sections of the Cauldron – including the original steel stems and test versions of the copper elements.  One section presents the Cauldron in an upright position, as it was for the majority of both Games. The other is the Cauldron in an open formation, as if frozen at that climactic defining moment of the opening Olympic ceremony. The room pens Friday 25 July 2014.
    Olympic Cauldron Museum of London 49.jpg
  • Heatherwick’s London 2012 Cauldron goes on display in a purpose built Museum of London gallery - The Cauldron, designed by the Heatherwick Studio, for the London 2012 Olympic Games included 204 unique copper elements, each alight and representing every competing nation. They were arranged in a concentric formation at the tips of slender mechanised steel stems. Slowly pivoting sequentially, they converged to form the Cauldron.<br />
 <br />
In the courtyard of the museum, a bespoke new pavilion has been specially built by Stage One - the creative engineers behind the London 2012 Cauldron. The exhibition has been designed by the creative consultants, Drinkall Dean. On show are two sections of the Cauldron – including the original steel stems and test versions of the copper elements.  One section presents the Cauldron in an upright position, as it was for the majority of both Games. The other is the Cauldron in an open formation, as if frozen at that climactic defining moment of the opening Olympic ceremony. The room pens Friday 25 July 2014.
    Olympic Cauldron Museum of London 46.jpg
  • The wooden formers for the individual petals  are dispalyed on the wall - The Cauldron, designed by the Heatherwick Studio, for the London 2012 Olympic Games included 204 unique copper elements, each alight and representing every competing nation. They were arranged in a concentric formation at the tips of slender mechanised steel stems. Slowly pivoting sequentially, they converged to form the Cauldron.<br />
 <br />
In the courtyard of the museum, a bespoke new pavilion has been specially built by Stage One - the creative engineers behind the London 2012 Cauldron. The exhibition has been designed by the creative consultants, Drinkall Dean. On show are two sections of the Cauldron – including the original steel stems and test versions of the copper elements.  One section presents the Cauldron in an upright position, as it was for the majority of both Games. The other is the Cauldron in an open formation, as if frozen at that climactic defining moment of the opening Olympic ceremony. The room pens Friday 25 July 2014.
    Olympic Cauldron Museum of London 45.jpg
  • The wooden formers for the individual petals - The Cauldron, designed by the Heatherwick Studio, for the London 2012 Olympic Games included 204 unique copper elements, each alight and representing every competing nation. They were arranged in a concentric formation at the tips of slender mechanised steel stems. Slowly pivoting sequentially, they converged to form the Cauldron.<br />
 <br />
In the courtyard of the museum, a bespoke new pavilion has been specially built by Stage One - the creative engineers behind the London 2012 Cauldron. The exhibition has been designed by the creative consultants, Drinkall Dean. On show are two sections of the Cauldron – including the original steel stems and test versions of the copper elements.  One section presents the Cauldron in an upright position, as it was for the majority of both Games. The other is the Cauldron in an open formation, as if frozen at that climactic defining moment of the opening Olympic ceremony. The room pens Friday 25 July 2014.
    Olympic Cauldron Museum of London 44.jpg
  • Heatherwick’s London 2012 Cauldron goes on display in a purpose built Museum of London gallery - The Cauldron, designed by the Heatherwick Studio, for the London 2012 Olympic Games included 204 unique copper elements, each alight and representing every competing nation. They were arranged in a concentric formation at the tips of slender mechanised steel stems. Slowly pivoting sequentially, they converged to form the Cauldron.<br />
 <br />
In the courtyard of the museum, a bespoke new pavilion has been specially built by Stage One - the creative engineers behind the London 2012 Cauldron. The exhibition has been designed by the creative consultants, Drinkall Dean. On show are two sections of the Cauldron – including the original steel stems and test versions of the copper elements.  One section presents the Cauldron in an upright position, as it was for the majority of both Games. The other is the Cauldron in an open formation, as if frozen at that climactic defining moment of the opening Olympic ceremony. The room pens Friday 25 July 2014.
    Olympic Cauldron Museum of London 43.jpg
  • Heatherwick’s London 2012 Cauldron goes on display in a purpose built Museum of London gallery - The Cauldron, designed by the Heatherwick Studio (he is pictured on teh video screen), for the London 2012 Olympic Games included 204 unique copper elements, each alight and representing every competing nation. They were arranged in a concentric formation at the tips of slender mechanised steel stems. Slowly pivoting sequentially, they converged to form the Cauldron.<br />
 <br />
In the courtyard of the museum, a bespoke new pavilion has been specially built by Stage One - the creative engineers behind the London 2012 Cauldron. The exhibition has been designed by the creative consultants, Drinkall Dean. On show are two sections of the Cauldron – including the original steel stems and test versions of the copper elements.  One section presents the Cauldron in an upright position, as it was for the majority of both Games. The other is the Cauldron in an open formation, as if frozen at that climactic defining moment of the opening Olympic ceremony. The room pens Friday 25 July 2014.
    Olympic Cauldron Museum of London 42.jpg
Next
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x

GBPhotos

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