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  • Standing with a mother and child and in a recreation of the Oval Office, the waxwork figure of the 44th President of the United States, Barack Obama stands in London’s Madame Tussauds waxwork museum on the day of his inauguration. Long before the actual election took place, models of both Obama and political opponent, John McCain were researched from thousands of photographs and 500 body measurements and prepared from clay, taking 20 dedicated sculptors 4 months to prepare. Only the eventual victor was completed using wax and real organic hair. On Obama’s inauguration day, US citizens were allowed free entry to the museum which is now Britain’s most visited tourist attraction.
    obama_inauguration04-20-01_2009.jpg
  • Standing in a recreation of the Oval Office, the waxwork figure of the 44th President of the United States, Barack Obama stands in London’s Madame Tussauds waxwork museum on the day of his inauguration. Long before the actual election took place, models of both Obama and political opponent, John McCain were researched from thousands of photographs and 500 body measurements and prepared from clay, taking 20 dedicated sculptors 4 months to prepare. On the eventual victor was completed using wax and real organic hair. Only Obama’s inauguration day, US citizens were allowed free entry to the museum which is now Britain’s most visited tourist attraction.
    obama_inauguration01-20-01_2009.jpg
  • A lone musician kneels to play the tuba within an oval aperture in the art installation sculpture known as Colourscape on Clapham Common, South London, England. Created by an outside overhead sun shining through a collection of large, inflatable PVC domes, the man walks slowly through tunnels, enticing customers to ecperience vivid colour while emitting eerie sound from voices, brass and string instruments. Designed by Simon Desorgher & Lawrence Casserley, Colourscape celebrated its 10th year of installation in Clapham in 2004. Colourscape's charitable Trust, Nettlefold Arts, was founded in 1988, with the purpose of presenting contemporary music, related arts and educational events, in innovative ways.
    colourscape03-15-12-2007 _1.jpg
  • A lone musician kneels to play the tuba within an oval aperture in the art installation sculpture known as Colourscape on Clapham Common, South London, England. Created by an outside overhead sun shining through a collection of large, inflatable PVC domes, the man walks slowly through tunnels, enticing customers to ecperience vivid colour while emitting eerie sound from voices, brass and string instruments. Designed by Simon Desorgher & Lawrence Casserley, Colourscape celebrated its 10th year of installation in Clapham in 2004. Colourscape's charitable Trust, Nettlefold Arts, was founded in 1988, with the purpose of presenting contemporary music, related arts and educational events, in innovative ways.
    colourscape01-15-12-2007 _1.jpg
  • A lady concentrates in a cluttered office unit beneath corporate artwork in Ernst & Young's Norman Foster-designed building. The oval-shaped picture depicts an esasperated-looking female rolling her eyes to the ceiling while her contemporary below stares down at her laptop surrounded by the paraphernalia of her accounting London job. Dressed in an open-neck shirt and wearing glasses, the woman at work is busy and preoccupied with the job in hand of auditing a company's accounts. Despite all the 385,000 square feet in the European headquarters on the River Thames, there is no spare space in this tiny office that she shares with another employee. The Fine Art has been supplied by Anderson O'Day and E & Y have invested in 500,000 Pounds of office art for their 114,000 employees in 700 locations across 140 countries around the world.
    ernst+young249-09-08-2007_1.jpg
  • A white liquid spillage outside an audio retailer, on 28th February 2017, in London, England.
    shop_oval-03-27-02-2017.jpg
  • As child visitors negotiate their way through a hole, a musician plays the tuba within the art installation sculpture known as Colourscape on Clapham Common, South London, England. Created by an outside overhead sun shining through a collection of large, inflatable PVC domes, the man and other visitors wear coloured capes and walk slowly through tunnels, enticing customers to ecperience vivid colour while emitting eerie sound from voices, brass and string instruments. Designed by Simon Desorgher & Lawrence Casserley, Colourscape celebrated its 10th year of installation in Clapham in 2004. Colourscape's charitable Trust, Nettlefold Arts, was founded in 1988, with the purpose of presenting contemporary music, related arts and educational events, in innovative ways.
    colourscape02-15-12-2007 _1.jpg
  • Empty rigid-design gas holders architecture at the Oval, South London. The steel frames are seen against an afternoon sky at Oval, in south London - their strengthening architecture showing how the gasometer design has been an effective method storing gas for a hundred years. The Oval Gasholders at The Oval cricket ground, in spite of no longer being used, are now a grade 2 listed structure. Typical volumes for large gasholders are about 50,000 cubic metres, with 60 metre diameter structures. Gasholders tend to be used nowadays for balancing purposes (making sure gas pipes can be operated within a safe range of pressures) rather than for actually storing gas for later use.
    gas_holders01-30-11-2014_1.jpg
  • Fine examples of early 19th century Georgian Regency terraced housing on the Camberwell New Road, south London. A cyclist passes-by on his way north towards the Oval. Clean brickwork and window pedament arches show the pre-Victorian era building style. Camberwell New Road is part of the A202. It goes from Camberwell to Kennington Oval. It was a turnpike road authorized by Act of Parliament in 1818, just after the construction in 1816 of the first Vauxhall Bridge, which it leads to, thus providing a second route from Camberwell to central London. Camberwell New Road is the longest Georgian Road in England.
    camberwell_housing02-27-03-2012_1.jpg
  • Gentlemen fans of cricket enjoy drinks and a day out during e test match at the Oval, on 21st August 1999, at the Oval ground, south London, England.
    cricket_people-21-08-1999.jpg
  • Gentlemen fans of cricket enjoy drinks and a day out during e test match at the Oval, on 21st August 1999, at the Oval ground, south London, England.
    cricket_people-21-08-1999_2.jpg
  • Gentlemen fans of cricket enjoy drinks and a day out during e test match at the Oval, on 21st August 1999, at the Oval ground, south London, England.
    cricket_people-21-08-1999_1.jpg
  • Fine examples of early 19th century Georgian Regency terraced housing on the Camberwell New Road, south London. A cyclist passes-by on his way north towards the Oval. Clean brickwork and window pedament arches show the pre-Victorian era building style. Camberwell New Road is part of the A202. It goes from Camberwell to Kennington Oval. It was a turnpike road authorized by Act of Parliament in 1818, just after the construction in 1816 of the first Vauxhall Bridge, which it leads to, thus providing a second route from Camberwell to central London. Camberwell New Road is the longest Georgian Road in England.
    camberwell_housing01-27-03-2012_1.jpg
  • Railings made from World War 2 stretchers on the 24th September 2019 in London in the United Kingdom. The WW2 stretchers were once used to carry thousands of wounded civilians in the Blitz. The so-called stretcher fences can be found on estates in Peckham, Brixton, Deptford, Oval and East London.
    D_WW2_Stretchers-1044567.jpg
  • View from the top deck of a London bus, of outdoor drinkers siting on benches and raising theor glasses for a toast, outside a bar near Oval in south London, on 23rd May 2019, in London, England.
    bus_journey-16-23-05-2019.jpg
  • Railings made from World War 2 stretchers on the 24th September 2019 in London in the United Kingdom. The WW2 stretchers were once used to carry thousands of wounded civilians in the Blitz. The so-called stretcher fences can be found on estates in Peckham, Brixton, Deptford, Oval and East London.
    D_WW2_Stretchers-1044538.jpg
  • A cricket fan enjoys a pint and a day out during the test match between England and New Zealand on 21st August 1999, at the Oval ground, south London, England.
    cricket_people-21-08-1999_4.jpg
  • Gentlemen fans of cricket enjoy drinks and a day out during the test match between England and New Zealand on 21st August 1999, at the Oval ground, south London, England.
    cricket_people-21-08-1999_3.jpg
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