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  • People on the streets interract with a large red plant pot in the City of London, UK. This situation creates a weird scale to this street scene.
    20150119_large red plant pot_A_1.jpg
  • People on the streets interract with a large red plant pot in the City of London, UK. This situation creates a weird scale to this street scene.
    20141017_red plant pot_D.jpg
  • People on the streets interract with a large red plant pot in the City of London, UK. This situation creates a weird scale to this street scene.
    20141017_red plant pot_C.jpg
  • People on the streets interract with a large red plant pot in the City of London, UK. This situation creates a weird scale to this street scene a sa street cleaner passes.
    20141017_red plant pot_B.jpg
  • People on the streets interract with a large red plant pot in the City of London, UK. This situation creates a weird scale to this street scene.
    20150119_large red plant pot_B_1.jpg
  • People on the streets interract with a large red plant pot in the City of London, UK. This situation creates a weird scale to this street scene a sa street cleaner passes.
    20141017_red plant pot_A.jpg
  • Giant red plant pot containing Marigolds in London, England, United Kingdom.
    20160802_red plant pot_001.jpg
  • People on the streets interract with a large red plant pot in the City of London, UK. This situation creates a weird scale to this street scene.
    20150717_red plant pot_A.jpg
  • A large road pot hole on the edge of a drainage grate in Hackney, London, United Kingdom.  The responsibility for maintaining safe road surfaces lies with the local authorities, such as Hackney Council.
    13-Road-Potholes-6506_1.jpg
  • A woman holds a handmade pot made using a wheel in the specialist pottery village of Ban Chan, 3 km from the heritage city of Luang Prabang. In Ban Chan age old traditions and methods continue to be used for producing pottery both for local use and commercial markets.
    A0028366cc_1.jpg
  • Making a ceramic pot using a wheel in the specialist pottery village of Ban Chan, 3 km from the heritage city of Luang Prabang, where age old traditions and methods continue to be used for producing pottery both for local use and commercial markets.
    A0028362cc_1.jpg
  • Making a ceramic pot using a wheel in the specialist pottery village of Ban Chan, 3 km from the heritage city of Luang Prabang, where age old traditions and methods continue to be used for producing pottery both for local use and commercial markets.
    A0028344cc_1.jpg
  • Making a ceramic pot using a wheel in the specialist pottery village of Ban Chan, 3 km from the heritage city of Luang Prabang, where age old traditions and methods continue to be used for producing pottery both for local use and commercial markets.
    A0028337cc_1.jpg
  • Turkish coffee pot on the counter at the Gold Star cafe, Cairo, Egypt
    SFE_130125_058_1_1.jpg
  • A curry cooking in a pot at Babu Shahi Bawarchi, New Delhi, India<br />
The famous but modest takeaway housed in the grounds of a shrine is famous for its biryani and whose owners ancestors served as chief cooks under the Moghul Emperor, Shah Jahan
    SFE_110917_133_1.jpg
  • A Hindu Cham woman makes a ceramic pot using a traditional method in the famous pottery village of Bau Truc in Central Vietnam. Cham potters do not use a wheel to make pots, instead clay is pressed into shape using the hands. Layers of clay are added to the original piece and the potter moves around the object, pressing the clay into the desired shape. They are then put directly in the sun and completely bone dried, making them ready to be fired. Firing is done in an open pit with temperatures going up to 800 degree Celcius. The pots are arranged together and covered with layers of rice straw, which is set on fire.
    A0027764cc_1.jpg
  • Making a ceramic pot using a wheel in the specialist pottery village of Ban Chan, 3 km from the heritage city of Luang Prabang, where age old traditions and methods continue to be used for producing pottery both for local use and commercial markets.
    A0028363cc_1.jpg
  • Making a ceramic pot using a wheel in the specialist pottery village of Ban Chan, 3 km from the heritage city of Luang Prabang, where age old traditions and methods continue to be used for producing pottery both for local use and commercial markets.
    A0028354cc_1.jpg
  • Making a ceramic pot using a wheel in the specialist pottery village of Ban Chan, 3 km from the heritage city of Luang Prabang, where age old traditions and methods continue to be used for producing pottery both for local use and commercial markets.
    A0028340cc_1.jpg
  • A young sea gull sits and rests on a chimney pot in Grassmarket on a back drop of the old part of  Edinburgh near the casttle.
    IMG_6597_1.jpg
  • A pot of sauce at Babu Shahi Bawarchi, New Delhi, India<br />
The famous but modest takeaway housed in the grounds of a shrine is famous for its biryani and whose owners ancestors served as chief cooks under the Moghul Emperor, Shah Jahan
    SFE_110917_103_1.jpg
  • A pot of sauce at Babu Shahi Bawarchi, New Delhi, India<br />
The famous but modest takeaway housed in the grounds of a shrine is famous for its biryani and whose owners ancestors served as chief cooks under the Moghul Emperor, Shah Jahan
    SFE_110917_101_1.jpg
  • A curry cooking in a pot at Babu Shahi Bawarchi, New Delhi, India<br />
The famous but modest takeaway housed in the grounds of a shrine is famous for its biryani and whose owners ancestors served as chief cooks under the Moghul Emperor, Shah Jahan
    SFE_110917_010_1.jpg
  • A man asleep beneath a pot plant hung from a wall, Old Delhi, India
    33_SFE_070329_0018_1.jpg
  • A Dongria Kondh Tribal woman carries a pot of water on her head in front of the Vedanta plant, Lanjigargh, Orissa, India. The Dongria Kondh are a protected 'Scheduled' Caste of Original (aboriginal) people that practice animism and live a settled rural life. Their deity is a mountain from which a mining company, Vedanta is seeking to extract bauxite which will largely destroy the mountain and the Kondh's traditional way of life.
    SFE_070301_0298.jpg
  • A man from funkyyukka.co.uk delivers a potted plant to a London restaurant and bar. The city delivery arrives in a green pot with strong handles that is clearly taking the weight of this heavy vegetation although we can see the Yukka is still young and not fully developed. Although this plant is destined to occupy a corner of an office or restaurant, the Yucca is a genus of perennial shrubs and trees in the agave family, Agavaceae. Its 40-50 species are notable for their rosettes of evergreen, tough, sword-shaped leaves and large terminal panicles of white or whitish flowers. They are native to the hot and dry (arid) parts of North America, Central America, South America, and the Caribbean
    carrying_yucca01-15-03-2011_1.jpg
  • A Hindu Cham woman makes a ceramic pot using a traditional method in the famous pottery village of Bau Truc in Central Vietnam. Cham potters do not use a wheel to make pots, instead clay is pressed into shape using the hands. Layers of clay are added to the original piece and the potter moves around the object, pressing the clay into the desired shape. They are then put directly in the sun and completely bone dried, making them ready to be fired. Firing is done in an open pit with temperatures going up to 800 degree Celcius. The pots are arranged together and covered with layers of rice straw, which is set on fire.
    A0027765cc_1.jpg
  • A young sea gull sits and rests on a chimney pot in Grassmarket on a back drop of the old part of  Edinburgh near the casttle.
    IMG_6604_1.jpg
  • Closed down and boarded up pub in Covent Garden tests some new colour scemes by painting tests pot squares on its boarded up windows on 25th June 2020 in London, England, United Kingdom. As the July deadline approaces and government will relax its lockdown rules further, the West End remains quiet, while some non-essential shops are allowed to open with individual shops setting up social distancing systems.
    20200625_covid london pub test paint...jpg
  • Closed down and boarded up pub in Covent Garden tests some new colour scemes by painting tests pot squares on its boarded up windows on 25th June 2020 in London, England, United Kingdom. As the July deadline approaces and government will relax its lockdown rules further, the West End remains quiet, while some non-essential shops are allowed to open with individual shops setting up social distancing systems.
    20200625_covid london pub test paint...jpg
  • Closed down and boarded up pub in Covent Garden tests some new colour scemes by painting tests pot squares on its boarded up windows on 25th June 2020 in London, England, United Kingdom. As the July deadline approaces and government will relax its lockdown rules further, the West End remains quiet, while some non-essential shops are allowed to open with individual shops setting up social distancing systems.
    20200625_covid london pub test paint...jpg
  • Hand making a clay pot in Kyauk Daing pottery village on the banks of Inle Lake on 21st January 2016 in Shan State, Myanmar
    DSCF3388cc_1_1.jpg
  • Hand making a clay pot in Kyauk Daing pottery village on the banks of Inle Lake on 21st January 2016 in Shan State, Myanmar
    DSCF3391_1_1.jpg
  • A young boy wearing a necklace and catapult, walks home after collecting water in a large metal cooking pot. Some leaves protect his head from the weight of his load. Ajiep, Bahr el Ghazal, Sudan.
    ss8.jpg
  • It is tea 4 o'clock and time for cream tea at the Westbury hotel in central London. Served by a waiter who pours from a silver pot into china cups, three ladies enjoy the afternoon after a day's shopping in nearby shopping streets. The decor is classically dark English wood and the tablecloth is crisply white with a scones with jam and sponges.
    tea_time-01-05-1989_1_1.jpg
  • Kitchen staff lift off a large pot in the kitchen area of Graissa Road primary school. Their wages are paid by AFCIC (Action for children in conflict). The majority of the 800 pupils are from the Kiandutu slum and many rely on this one meal a day.
    11-afcic-9137.jpg
  • The large pot that is used for cooking for the feeding program at St Patrick’s primary school in Thika, Kenya. The kitchen was built by AFCIC (Action for children in conflict) and cooks wages are paid by AFCIC.  75% of the pupils are from the Kiandutu slum and the school run a feeding program helping over 250 children. For some children this in the only meal they will get a day.
    11-afcic-8999.jpg
  • Closed down and boarded up pub in Covent Garden tests some new colour scemes by painting tests pot squares on its boarded up windows on 25th June 2020 in London, England, United Kingdom. As the July deadline approaces and government will relax its lockdown rules further, the West End remains quiet, while some non-essential shops are allowed to open with individual shops setting up social distancing systems.
    20200625_covid london pub test paint...jpg
  • Closed down and boarded up pub in Covent Garden tests some new colour scemes by painting tests pot squares on its boarded up windows on 25th June 2020 in London, England, United Kingdom. As the July deadline approaces and government will relax its lockdown rules further, the West End remains quiet, while some non-essential shops are allowed to open with individual shops setting up social distancing systems.
    20200625_covid london pub test paint...jpg
  • Hand making a clay pot in Kyauk Daing pottery village on the banks of Inle Lake on 21st January 2016 in Shan State, Myanmar
    DSCF3393cc_1_1.jpg
  • Hand making a clay pot in Kyauk Daing pottery village on the banks of Inle Lake on 21st January 2016 in Shan State, Myanmar
    DSCF3385cc_1_1.jpg
  • Two small hands of a young child pats earth around a seedling they have just planted in a large flower pot.
    UK-Education-Primary-School-8782.jpg
  • Two young beautiful blonde girls (5-6) plant small green seedings in a large flower pot outdoors in the the playground of South Farnborough Infant School, Hampshire, UK. The adult hand of their teacher passes them the next seedling to be planted.
    UK-Education-Primary-School-8763.jpg
  • Women removing fired ceramic pots and barbeques in Duc Binh, a Hindu Cham village in Binh Thuan province, Central Vietnam. Firing is done in an open pit with temperatures going up to 800 degree Celcius. The pots are arranged together and covered with layers of rice straw, which is set on fire.
    A0027452cc_1.jpg
  • Firing hand-made ceramic pots and barbeques in Duc Binh, a Hindu Cham village in Binh Thuan province, Central Vietnam. They are then put directly in the sun and completely bone dried, making them ready to be fired. Firing is done in an open pit with temperatures going up to 800 degree Celcius. The pots are arranged together and covered with layers of rice straw, which is set on fire.
    A0027425cc_1.jpg
  • Yellow-painted square surrounds a dying potted plant in a central London street. The detail is of angles and lines, of bright colour in a landscape of otherwise drab shades of grey. Someone has clearly decided that the potted plant is a danger to the unwary who might trip up. The yellow is then, a warning to the dangers of pavement hazards.
    yellow_square02-27-03-2015_1.jpg
  • Yellow-painted square surrounds a dying potted plant in a central London street. The detail is of angles and lines, of bright colour in a landscape of otherwise drab shades of grey. Someone has clearly decided that the potted plant is a danger to the unwary who might trip up. The yellow is then, a warning to the dangers of pavement hazards.
    yellow_square01-27-03-2015_1.jpg
  • Handmade pots drying in the specialist pottery village of Ban Chan, 3 km from the heritage city of Luang Prabang, where age old traditions and methods continue to be used for producing pottery both for local use and commercial markets
    A0028333cc_1.jpg
  • Handmade pots drying in the specialist pottery village of Ban Chan, 3 km from the heritage city of Luang Prabang, where age old traditions and methods continue to be used for producing pottery both for local use and commercial markets
    A0028332cc_1.jpg
  • Sunflowers and other potted plants grow outside a Victorian-era cottage on Maidenstone Hill in Greenwich, on 6th July 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_Greenwich-02-05-07-2020.jpg
  • Interior shot of a London office. The potted plant has become synonymous with office interiors to the point where it now a cliché. From the series Desk Job, a project which explores globalisation through office life around the World.
    479B_glaxokline8_604_1.jpg
  • Pheng prepares an indigo dye bath in traditional ceramic pots for dyeing cotton skeins in the Tai Lue village of Ban Viengkao, Sayaboury province, Lao PDR. Indigo dye is made from the fresh leaves and stem of the indigo plant which are fermented and then mixed with limestone to turn it the distinctive blue colour. One of the most ethnically diverse countries in Southeast Asia, Laos has 49 officially recognised ethnic groups although there are many more self-identified and sub groups. These groups are distinguished by their own customs, beliefs and rituals.
    A0029159cc_1.jpg
  • Pheng dyeing homegrown cotton in an indigo dye bath in traditional ceramic pots in the Tai Lue village of Ban Viengkao, Sayaboury province, Lao PDR. Indigo dye is made from the fresh leaves and stem of the indigo plant which are fermented and then mixed with limestone to turn it the distinctive blue colour. One of the most ethnically diverse countries in Southeast Asia, Laos has 49 officially recognised ethnic groups although there are many more self-identified and sub groups. These groups are distinguished by their own customs, beliefs and rituals.
    A0029157cc_1.jpg
  • A Hindu Cham potter in the famous pottery village of Bau Truc in Central Vietnam. Cham potters do not use a wheel to make pots, instead clay is pressed into shape using the hands. Layers of clay are added to the original piece and the potter moves around the object, pressing the clay into the desired shape. They are then put directly in the sun and completely bone dried, making them ready to be fired. Firing is done in an open pit with temperatures going up to 800 degree Celcius. The pots are arranged together and covered with layers of rice straw, which is set on fire.
    DSCF3597cc_1.jpg
  • Pots of spice at Babu Shahi Bawarchi, New Delhi, India
    SFE_111110_289_1.jpg
  • Pots of spice at Babu Shahi Bawarchi, New Delhi, India
    SFE_111110_278_1.jpg
  • Pots of rice at Babu Shahi Bawarchi, New Delhi, India
    SFE_111110_264_1.jpg
  • Pots of chat (street food snacks) at the Ashok Chat Corner in Chawri Bazaar, Old Delhi India
    SFE_111109_268_1.jpg
  • A woman carrying water pots past the cenotaphs of the Maharajahs at the Royal Gaitor (Gatore ki Chhatryan), Jaipur, India
    SFE_111029_106_1.jpg
  • Empty pots at Babu Shahi Bawarchi, New Delhi, India<br />
The famous but modest takeaway housed in the grounds of a shrine is famous for its biryani and whose owners ancestors served as chief cooks under the Moghul Emperor, Shah Jahan
    SFE_110917_190_1.jpg
  • Pots of curry at Babu Shahi Bawarchi, New Delhi, India<br />
The famous but modest takeaway housed in the grounds of a shrine is famous for its biryani and whose owners ancestors served as chief cooks under the Moghul Emperor, Shah Jahan
    SFE_110917_181_1.jpg
  • Spoons and pots of biryani at Babu Shahi Bawarchi, New Delhi, India<br />
The famous but modest takeaway housed in the grounds of a shrine is famous for its biryani and whose owners ancestors served as chief cooks under the Moghul Emperor, Shah Jahan
    SFE_110917_001_1.jpg
  • Pheng prepares an indigo dye bath in traditional ceramic pots for dyeing cotton fabric in the Tai Lue village of Ban Viengkao, Sayaboury province, Lao PDR. Indigo dye is made from the fresh leaves and stem of the indigo plant which are fermented and then mixed with limestone to turn it the distinctive blue colour. One of the most ethnically diverse countries in Southeast Asia, Laos has 49 officially recognised ethnic groups although there are many more self-identified and sub groups. These groups are distinguished by their own customs, beliefs and rituals.
    A0029154cc_1.jpg
  • Empty pots at Babu Shahi Bawarchi, New Delhi, India<br />
The famous but modest takeaway housed in the grounds of a shrine is famous for its biryani and whose owners ancestors served as chief cooks under the Moghul Emperor, Shah Jahan
    SFE_110917_120_1.jpg
  • Spice pots at the Parawthe Wala restaurant in Old Delhi, India<br />
Gali Paranthe Wali or Paranthe wali Gali means the the street of fried bread and name of a narrow street in Chandni Chowk Old Delhi, noted for its series of shops selling paratha. The parantha is an Indian fried bread, folded and filled with fillings and then fried
    SFE_111109_114_1.jpg
  • Skinned rabbit about to be cooked, 20th September 2009, Lagrasse, France.
    IMG_8396_1.jpg
  • A malnourished child stands in front  of a Buffalo plane delivering food aid. Ajiep, Bahr el Ghazal, Sudan. The famine in Sudan in 1998 was a humanitarian disaster caused mainly by human rights abuses, as well as drought and the failure of the international community to react to the famine risk with adequate speed. The worst affected area was Bahr El Ghazal in southwestern Sudan. In this region over 70,000 people died during the famine.
    ss1.jpg
  • Skinned rabbit about to be cooked, 20th September 2009, Lagrasse, France.
    IMG_8403_1.jpg
  • Seedlings in a greenhouse at Cherry Hill Nurseries, Brandsby, North Yorkshire, UK. The village of Brandsby is situated in the Howardian Hills AONB, a landscape with well-wooded rolling countryside, patchwork of arable and pasture fields, scenic villages and historic country houses with classic parkland landscapes.
    105-16_1_1.jpg
  • Cooks preparing the midday meal in the Golden Temple's Langer (Kitchen) which serves up to 40.000 free meals a day. During the key Sikh religious festivities up to 500.000 meals can be served every day in Sikhisms holiest of places. Seen here stirring a vast vat of lentil soup. The Langar is manned by volunteers, given that according to their teachings "charity" is central to their way of life and therefore offering your time, energy or funds is a way of saying thanks to God  through good deeds. Amritsar, Punjab, India.
    20071218_india_0286_1.jpg
  • Cooks preparing the midday meal in the Golden Temple's Langer (Kitchen) which serves up to 40.000 free meals a day. During the key Sikh religious festivities up to 500.000 meals can be served every day in Sikhisms holiest of places. Seen here stirring a vast vat of lentil soup. The Langar is manned by volunteers, given that according to their teachings "charity" is central to their way of life and therefore offering your time, energy or funds is a way of saying thanks to God  through good deeds. Amritsar, Punjab, India.
    20071218_india_0277_1.jpg
  • Cooks preparing the midday meal in the Golden Temple's Langer (Kitchen) which serves up to 40.000 free meals a day. During the key Sikh religious festivities up to 500.000 meals can be served every day in Sikhisms holiest of places. Seen here stirring a vast vat of lentil soup. The Langar is manned by volunteers, given that according to their teachings "charity" is central to their way of life and therefore offering your time, energy or funds is a way of saying thanks to God  through good deeds. Amritsar, Punjab, India.
    20071218_india_0109_1.jpg
  • A woman dhurrie  (carpet) weavers prepares wool for the dying process in a small family run business, Salawas, Rajasthan, India
    20071129_india_0378_1.jpg
  • Cooks at the Golden Temple's Langar, begin the day in prayer before they start the intense day's activities of prepariing food for thousands of pilgrims which will visit the holiest of Gudwara's of the Sikh religion, Amritsar, Punjab, India.
    20071219_india_0068_1.jpg
  • Cooks preparing the midday meal in the Golden Temple's Langer (Kitchen) which serves up to 40.000 free meals a day. During the key Sikh religious festivities up to 500.000 meals can be served every day in Sikhisms holiest of places. Seen here stirring a vast vat of lentil soup. The Langar is manned by volunteers, given that according to their teachings "charity" is central to their way of life and therefore offering your time, energy or funds is a way of saying thanks to God  through good deeds. Amritsar, Punjab, India.
    20071218_india_0273_1.jpg
  • Cooks preparing the midday meal in the Golden Temple's Langer (Kitchen) which serves up to 40.000 free meals a day. During the key Sikh religious festivities up to 500.000 meals can be served every day in Sikhisms holiest of places. Seen here stirring a vast vat of lentil soup. The Langar is manned by volunteers, given that according to their teachings "charity" is central to their way of life and therefore offering your time, energy or funds is a way of saying thanks to God  through good deeds. Amritsar, Punjab, India.
    20071218_india_0121_1.jpg
  • Seedlings growing in the prisoner run greenhouse at HMP Downview. HM Prison Downview is a women's closed category prison. Downview is located on the outskirts of Banstead in Surrey, England. The prison is operated by Her Majesty's Prison Service. Downview Prison holds adult Sentenced Female prisoners and convicted and remanded female juveniles. The prison holds approximately 50% foreign nationals. Downview is divided into 4 Wings, A,B,C,D (D wing is a resettlement Wing), and the Juvenile Unit. All wings have single cell accommodation with in-cell electricity. The prison offers vocational training courses and NVQs for inmates. The resettlement wing provides opportunities for inmates to work and receive education outside the prison.
    08-downview_8177_1.jpg
  • Ceramic Cuban flags, artworks hanging on a wall in an artists studio.
    _MG_8360_1.jpg
  • Police officers on duty including Commander Salah Mohamed, Islamiedin second Lieutenant and Abdullah second Lieutenant. They are not permitted to talk to the press. <br />
<br />
One of the main problems for the police force, is overcoming corruption. Just before this photograph was taken a man pulled over and handed six rolls of toilet paper to the commander. The police hadn’t been paid for two months, so from the very smallest amounts to much larger sums, corruption is a way of getting by.<br />
<br />
Experienced fixer, Zia Haidary elaborates: “If he had not been paid for two months, why is he still doing his job? He was fooling around, doing nothing then stopping people and cashing in on the bribes. My neighbour was arrested, he is a drug dealer. The police found 6kg of heroin and an AK47 in his house. The next day he is out of police custody -  How? It is corrupt.  The police here are uneducated boys who cannot find work. If you ask them to write their name, they can’t do it –they’re just really good at shooting.”
    afghan_03_1.jpg
  • Mary Njeri and Jennifer Karimi are the cooks at St Patrick’s primary school in Thika, Kenya.  The kitchen was built by AFCIC (Action for children in conflict) and Mary and Jennifer’s wages are paid by AFCIC.  75% of the pupils are from the Kiandutu slum and the school run a feeding program helping over 250 children.
    11-afcic-8929.jpg
  • Joe straining potatoes in the kitchens of Cookes' Eel, Pie and mash shop in Hoxton, London, UKEel, pie and mash shops are a traditional but dying business. Changing tastes and the scarcity of the eel has meant that the number of shops selling this traditional working class food has declined to just a handful mostly in east London. The shops were originally owned by one or two families with the earliest recorded, Manze's on Tower Bridge Road being the oldest surviving dating from 1908. Generally eels are sold cold and jellied and the meat pie and mash potato covered in a green sauce called liquor.
    SFE_110628_196_1.jpg
  • Vadivelu, 75, stirs the rice in the kitchen at the Tamaraikulum Elders village, Tamil Nadu, India
    34__SFE_110216_199_1.jpg
  • Tea for two at the Blue Sky Cafe on the 23rd June 2017 in Cromer in North Norfolk, United Kingdom
    SMP03110.jpg
  • The kitchen at 269 Leigham Court Road sheltered housing on 13th June 2016 in South London, United Kingdom. 269 Leigham Court Road was designed by architect Kate Macintosh, and brutalist in design. In May 2015, residents campaigned to Historic England and the building was awarded Grade II listing. In June 2016, the council announced plans to regenerate the estate, rather than rebuild.
    SMP_5023.jpg
  • Typical office furniture photographed at an office In Connecticut , July 2007. From the series Desk Job, a project which explores globalisation through office life around the World.
    northeast_utilities2_1.jpg
  • Marina Schönebeck, 48, administrator, has been working in her  position since 1986. The card  on her desk translates as heroine  photographed in a local government finance office in Berlin , taken on the 28th of February 2008.<br />
 From the series Desk Job, a project which explores globalisation through office life around the World.
    deskjob-38_1.jpg
  • A sign reading: …just keep your nerves! photographed at the office of   Berliner Kurier, in  Berlin on the 28th of February 2008. From the series Desk Job, a project which explores globalisation through office life around the World.
    deskjob-41_1.jpg
  • Interiors shots at a commodity  broking firm in London. From the series Desk Job, a project which explores globalisation through office life around the World.
    610sucdens_17_207_1.jpg
  • Desk at a commodity and futures brokers firm in London. From the series Desk Job, a project which explores globalisation through office life around the World.
    610sucdens_8_207_1.jpg
  • IT problems : Clifton Hammond manager  and Nur de Bruyn, team leader try to get to the bottom of it. From the series Desk Job, a project which explores globalisation through office life around the World.
    609_3isoloutions_7_307_1.jpg
  • office furniture in a Moscow Office. From the series Desk Job, a project which explores globalisation through office life around the World.
    484Moscow_Business20_804_1.jpg
  • Meeting room at a Glaxo Smith Kline, a health care company in Brentford.  From the series Desk Job, a project which explores globalisation through office life around the World.
    479B_glaxokline9_604_1.jpg
  • A ceramic drinking water container in a Buddhist temple in Insein in the suburbs of Yangon in Myanmar on 17th May 2016
    DSCF9894cc_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a woman in her workshop in Kyauk Daing pottery village on the banks of Inle Lake on 21st January 2016 in Shan State, Myanmar
    DSCF3407cc_1_1.jpg
  • A malnourished child shields his ears from the noise of a Buffalo plane delivering food aid. Ajiep, Bahr el Ghazal, Sudan. The famine in Sudan in 1998 was a humanitarian disaster caused mainly by human rights abuses, as well as drought and the failure of the international community to react to the famine risk with adequate speed. The worst affected area was Bahr El Ghazal in southwestern Sudan. In this region over 70,000 people died during the famine.
    JMA-10126062.jpg
  • Local Cuban artist in his studio posing for a portrait with his sculptures, Cuban flag in the background, Havana.
    _MG_8387_1.jpg
  • A Cuban potter in his studio working under a lamp, making ceramic bowls, Havana.
    _MG_8328_1.jpg
  • Japanese entrepreneur, Tetsuro Hama with sushi chef and old friend, Kaoru Yamamoto at his 'So' restaurant business, Soho, London. Hama is the owner of So plus a north London car dealership. He arrived from Japan in 1973, looking for business opportunities before starting a hotel in a Bayswater backstreet. He then went into the restaurant industry, soon earning the respect of employees and customers for affordable and tasty sushi. <br />
From the chapter entitled 'The Price of Happiness' and from the book 'Risk Wise: Nine Everyday Adventures' by Polly Morland (Allianz, The School of Life, Profile Books, 2014).
    tetsuro_hama42-22-07-2014_1.jpg
  • Japanese entrepreneur, Tetsuro Hama with sushi chef and old friend, Kaoru Yamamoto at his 'So' restaurant business, Soho, London. Hama is the owner of So plus a north London car dealership. He arrived from Japan in 1973, looking for business opportunities before starting a hotel in a Bayswater backstreet. He then went into the restaurant industry, soon earning the respect of employees and customers for affordable and tasty sushi. <br />
From the chapter entitled 'The Price of Happiness' and from the book 'Risk Wise: Nine Everyday Adventures' by Polly Morland (Allianz, The School of Life, Profile Books, 2014).
    tetsuro_hama22-22-07-2014_1.jpg
  • Japanese entrepreneur, Tetsuro Hama with sushi chef and old friend, Kaoru Yamamoto at his 'So' restaurant business, Soho, London. Hama is the owner of So plus a north London car dealership. He arrived from Japan in 1973, looking for business opportunities before starting a hotel in a Bayswater backstreet. He then went into the restaurant industry, soon earning the respect of employees and customers for affordable and tasty sushi. <br />
From the chapter entitled 'The Price of Happiness' and from the book 'Risk Wise: Nine Everyday Adventures' by Polly Morland (Allianz, The School of Life, Profile Books, 2014).
    tetsuro_hama14-22-07-2014_1.jpg
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