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  • Beneath the sculpture by Turner Prize-winning artist Mark Wallinger entitled The World Turned Upside Down, new graduates straight after their graduation ceremonies meet family and friends outside the London School of Economics LSE, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England. The World Turned Upside Down is a large political globe, four metres in diameter, with nation states and borders outlined but with the simple and revolutionary twist of being inverted. Most of the landmasses now lie in the ‘bottom’ hemisphere with the countries and cities re-labelled for this new orientation.
    LSE_graduates-24-22-07-2019.jpg
  • Beneath the sculpture by Turner Prize-winning artist Mark Wallinger entitled The World Turned Upside Down, new graduates straight after their graduation ceremonies meet family and friends outside the London School of Economics LSE, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England. The World Turned Upside Down is a large political globe, four metres in diameter, with nation states and borders outlined but with the simple and revolutionary twist of being inverted. Most of the landmasses now lie in the ‘bottom’ hemisphere with the countries and cities re-labelled for this new orientation.
    LSE_graduates-02-22-07-2019.jpg
  • Beneath the sculpture by Turner Prize-winning artist Mark Wallinger entitled The World Turned Upside Down, new graduates straight after their graduation ceremonies meet family and friends outside the London School of Economics LSE, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England. The World Turned Upside Down is a large political globe, four metres in diameter, with nation states and borders outlined but with the simple and revolutionary twist of being inverted. Most of the landmasses now lie in the ‘bottom’ hemisphere with the countries and cities re-labelled for this new orientation.
    LSE_graduates-20-22-07-2019.jpg
  • Beneath the sculpture by Turner Prize-winning artist Mark Wallinger entitled The World Turned Upside Down, new graduates straight after their graduation ceremonies meet family and friends outside the London School of Economics LSE, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England. The World Turned Upside Down is a large political globe, four metres in diameter, with nation states and borders outlined but with the simple and revolutionary twist of being inverted. Most of the landmasses now lie in the ‘bottom’ hemisphere with the countries and cities re-labelled for this new orientation.
    LSE_graduates-22-22-07-2019.jpg
  • Beneath the sculpture by Turner Prize-winning artist Mark Wallinger entitled The World Turned Upside Down, new graduates straight after their graduation ceremonies meet family and friends outside the London School of Economics LSE, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England. The World Turned Upside Down is a large political globe, four metres in diameter, with nation states and borders outlined but with the simple and revolutionary twist of being inverted. Most of the landmasses now lie in the ‘bottom’ hemisphere with the countries and cities re-labelled for this new orientation.
    LSE_graduates-03-22-07-2019.jpg
  • Beneath the sculpture by Turner Prize-winning artist Mark Wallinger entitled The World Turned Upside Down, new graduates straight after their graduation ceremonies meet family and friends outside the London School of Economics LSE, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England. The World Turned Upside Down is a large political globe, four metres in diameter, with nation states and borders outlined but with the simple and revolutionary twist of being inverted. Most of the landmasses now lie in the ‘bottom’ hemisphere with the countries and cities re-labelled for this new orientation.
    LSE_graduates-26-22-07-2019.jpg
  • Beneath the sculpture by Turner Prize-winning artist Mark Wallinger entitled The World Turned Upside Down, new graduates straight after their graduation ceremonies meet family and friends outside the London School of Economics LSE, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England. The World Turned Upside Down is a large political globe, four metres in diameter, with nation states and borders outlined but with the simple and revolutionary twist of being inverted. Most of the landmasses now lie in the ‘bottom’ hemisphere with the countries and cities re-labelled for this new orientation.
    LSE_graduates-31-22-07-2019.jpg
  • Beneath the sculpture by Turner Prize-winning artist Mark Wallinger entitled The World Turned Upside Down, new graduates straight after their graduation ceremonies meet family and friends outside the London School of Economics LSE, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England. The World Turned Upside Down is a large political globe, four metres in diameter, with nation states and borders outlined but with the simple and revolutionary twist of being inverted. Most of the landmasses now lie in the ‘bottom’ hemisphere with the countries and cities re-labelled for this new orientation.
    LSE_graduates-23-22-07-2019.jpg
  • Commuters and upside down GO construction traffic sign in a busy London rush-hour street. Walking past a stack of worksite equipment, two women with red umbrella and raincoat maketheir way on a typical spring day on a central London street. The green sign stands upright near red lines denoting a Red Route, a main route in and out of the City, the capital's financial heart and oldest district founded by the Romans in AD43.
    go_sign02-01-05-2014.jpg
  • Upside down street art head betwen two roads which flyover the Hertford Canal in East London, UK.
    20141220_graffiti head_A.jpg
  • Upside down horseshoe on a house door, 27th December 2016, Lagrasse, France. According to this superstition, the ends-pointing-down display simply means that the good luck is able to flow out and surround the home.
    A0005043_1.jpg
  • The shoes of a woman upside down during pole dancing class held at a central London pub.
    04-pole_3092.jpg
  • Parkour runner shows urban acrobatic skills flying upside down. The South Bank is a significant arts and entertainment district, and home to an endless list of activities for Londoners, visitors and tourists alike.
    20140322_south bank parkour_J.jpg
  • Interior of Tate Britain gallery with upside down suspended Christmas tree in London, England, United Kingdom.
    20161211_tate britain_002.jpg
  • Parkour runner shows urban acrobatic skills flying upside down. The South Bank is a significant arts and entertainment district, and home to an endless list of activities for Londoners, visitors and tourists alike.
    20140322_south bank parkour_N.jpg
  • WonderWorks, an amusement park for the mind with 35,000 square feet of edu-tainment on 6th March 2020 in Panama City, Florida, United States. This once top-secret laboratory was located in the Bermuda triangle. An experiment gone awry lifted the laboratory carrying it to Front Beach Road in Panama City Beach where it landed upside down.
    _E6A7613.jpg
  • Interior of Tate Britain gallery with upside down suspended Christmas tree in London, England, United Kingdom.
    20161211_tate britain_001.jpg
  • Parkour runner shows urban acrobatic skills flying upside down. The South Bank is a significant arts and entertainment district, and home to an endless list of activities for Londoners, visitors and tourists alike.
    20140322_south bank parkour_M.jpg
  • An upside down man remains balanced on his head in a public park - one in a sequence of four - on 19th July 2017, in Ruskin Park, south London borough of Lambeth, England.
    handstand_man-03-19-07-2017.jpg
  • Parkour runner shows urban acrobatic skills flying upside down. The South Bank is a significant arts and entertainment district, and home to an endless list of activities for Londoners, visitors and tourists alike.
    20140322_south bank parkour_L.jpg
  • Parkour runner shows urban acrobatic skills flying upside down. The South Bank is a significant arts and entertainment district, and home to an endless list of activities for Londoners, visitors and tourists alike.
    20140322_south bank parkour_I.jpg
  • A Closed Footpath sign fallen into a hole during pavement works in the south London borough of Lewisham. A blue plastic barrier inexpertly blocks the broken paving stones at a pedestrian crossing in Brockley in south London. And we notice the upside down sign telling the public that the pathway is closed, dangerous to use and evidence of disruption to the inform or users of wheelchairs or childrens' buggies. Comically, the notice is itself, falling down the hole.
    closed_footpath03-08-05-2015_1.jpg
  • Hanging goose at Sarah Leggitt's Lochbuie estate cottage, a former Smithy with livestock on the Isle of Mull, Scotland. Hanging upside down, the goose has recently been killed for the family to eat in a day or two. Its feathers have been plucked from its body leaving only the wings. Sarah and her husband moved from southern England 6 years ago to work for the Lochbuie Estate and the old Smithy is provided to them as living accommodation. Lochbuie is a settlement on the island of Mull in Scotland about 22 kilometres (14 mi) west of Craignure. The name is from the Scottish Gaelic Locha Buidhe, meaning "yellow loch". http://lochbuie.com/Lochbuie
    isle_of_mull42-18-11-2011_1.jpg
  • Admirers and a pet dog look at their reflections in artist Anish Kapoor's artwork called the C-Curve, part of his Turning the World Upside Down is seen at the Serpentine Gallery. The Royal Parks and the Serpentine Gallery presented a major exhibition of large- scale outdoor sculptures by acclaimed London-based artist Anish Kapoor in Kensington Gardens. The free exhibition showcased a series of major recent works never before shown together in London. Constructed from highly reflective stainless steel, the giant curved mirror surfaces will create illusory distortions of the surroundings and will be visible across large distances, creating new vistas in this famous and much-loved setting. The sculptures were sited to contrast and reflect the changing colours, foliage and weather in Kensington Gardens.
    c_curve_kapoor02-11-10-2010 12-43-43...jpg
  • Horse breaker gaucho, Martin Hardoy in the early stages of breaking in a horse through non violent methods. A method he developed over many years of working with horses.
    cp_arg_0024_1.jpg
  • During the UKs Coronavirus lockdown, the May Bank Holiday brought warm temperatures for Londoners who stayed late to exercise, young women practice yoga in Ruskin Park, in Lambeth, on 24th May 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_ruskin-01-22-05-2020.jpg
  • In the marbled atrium where the tickets can be bought for the cinema, hangs David Cerny’s sculpture called Kun, an equestrian sculpture of  St Wenceslas in Wenceslas Square in Lucerna Gallery, on 19th March, 2018, in Prague, the Czech Republic. Lucerna is the most elegant of Nove Mesto’s many shopping arcades runs through the art-nouveau Lucerna Palace 1920, between Stepanska and Vodickova streets. The complex was designed by Vaclav Havel grandfather of the former president, and is still partially owned by the family. It includes theatres, a cinema, shops, a rock club and several cafes and restaurants. Here St Wenceslas sits astride a horse that is decidedly dead; it’s safe to assume this is a reference to Vaclav Klaus, president of the Czech Republic from 2003 to 2013.
    prague-180-19-03-2018.jpg
  • In the marbled atrium where the tickets can be bought for the cinema, hangs David Cerny’s sculpture called Kun, an equestrian sculpture of  St Wenceslas in Wenceslas Square in Lucerna Gallery, on 19th March, 2018, in Prague, the Czech Republic. Lucerna is the most elegant of Nove Mesto’s many shopping arcades runs through the art-nouveau Lucerna Palace 1920, between Stepanska and Vodickova streets. The complex was designed by Vaclav Havel grandfather of the former president, and is still partially owned by the family. It includes theatres, a cinema, shops, a rock club and several cafes and restaurants. Here St Wenceslas sits astride a horse that is decidedly dead; it’s safe to assume this is a reference to Vaclav Klaus, president of the Czech Republic from 2003 to 2013.
    prague-184-19-03-2018.jpg
  • Visitors ponder the installation of artist Fiona Banner's fighter jet art work 'Harrier and Jaguar' which is exhibited in the north Duveens gallery at Tate Britain, London. This Sepecat Jaguar aircraft was once in service with the Royal Air Force (RAF). It's serial number was XZ118 and its first  was in 1976 and its last in 2006. Its insertion into the gallery was by dismantling the fuselage and re-assembling in situ. Its nose points a few inches from the ground and we see it's now empty cockpit. Banner's art is concerned with flying machines of war that flow low over her as a child in Wales. They may be machines of war but also have the personalities of hanging or submissive birds or beasts, nudes or totems, provoking the idea of body and machine in intimate confrontation. The show runs 28 June 2010 – 3 January 2011.
    tate_jaguar03-29-06-2010_1.jpg
  • Visitors ponder the installation of artist Fiona Banner's fighter jet art work 'Harrier and Jaguar' which is exhibited in the north Duveens gallery at Tate Britain, London. This Sepecat Jaguar aircraft was once in service with the Royal Air Force (RAF). It's serial number was XZ118 and its first  was in 1976 and its last in 2006. Its insertion into the gallery was by dismantling the fuselage and re-assembling in situ. Its nose points a few inches from the ground and we see it's now empty cockpit. Banner's art is concerned with flying machines of war that flow low over her as a child in Wales. They may be machines of war but also have the personalities of hanging or submissive birds or beasts, nudes or totems, provoking the idea of body and machine in intimate confrontation. The show runs 28 June 2010 – 3 January 2011.
    tate_jaguar01-29-06-2010_1_1.jpg
  • A Capoeirista performs a backflip during his Capoeira practice on Leblon beach in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
    SFE_070901_0090_1.jpg
  • The face of a street art mural and mirrored passers-by, on 9th February 2017, in Shoreditch, London, England.
    shoreditch_art-02-09-02-2017.jpg
  • City workers walk past an upside down building site Banksmans lollipop sign that usually tells road-users to allow for turning construction traffic, on Sun Street near Liverpool Street Station in the City of London, the capitals financial district - aka the Square Mile, on 8th August, in London, England.
    british_people-19-08-08-2019.jpg
  • A building site Banksmans lollipop sign that usually tells road-users to allow for turning construction traffic, is tied upside down on to a post in the street on Sun Street near Liverpool Street Station in the City of London, the capitals financial district - aka the Square Mile, on 8th August, in London, England.
    british_people-18-08-08-2019.jpg
  • A disused boat now serving as a shed for a local fisherman sits upside down on the beach on Holy Island, on 27th September 2017, on Lindisfarne Island, Northumberland, England. Local fishermen on Holy Island considered it a sin to send boats to the junkyard. They instead found a way to transform their old herring boats into perfect little storage sheds for their nets, tools, and other equipment. The Holy Island of Lindisfarne, also known simply as Holy Island, is an island off the northeast coast of England. Holy Island has a recorded history from the 6th century AD; it was an important centre of Celtic and Anglo-saxon Christianity. After the Viking invasions and the Norman conquest of England, a priory was reestablished.
    lindisfarne-23-27-09-2017.jpg
  • The clean-up begins the morning after the Poll Tax riot,  on 1st April 1990, in Charing Cross Road, London, England. Angry crowds, demonstrating against Margaret Thatchers local authority tax, stormed the Whitehall area and then Londons West End, setting fire to a construction site and cars, looting stores up Charing Cross Road and St Martins Lane. The anti-poll tax rally in central London erupted into the worst riots seen in the city for a century. Forty-five police officers were among the 113 people injured as well as 20 police horses. 340 people were arrested.
    poll_tax_riot04-01-04-1990.jpg
  • A bird of prey hangs from electrical wires after being killed by a local pigeon farmer, whose birds he is trying to protect at Dahkla Oasis, Western Desert, Egypt. Most birds including flamingos, stalks, cranes and all large birds of prey are protected under Egyptian law. The Western Desert covers an area of some 700,000 km2, thereby accounting for around two-thirds of Egypt's total land area. Dakhla Oasis is one of the seven oases of Egypt's Western Desert (part of the Libyan Desert).
    egypt468-08-03-2016_1.jpg
  • Gustav Metzger and Marina Abramovic in conversation with Hans Ulrich Obrist, July 2007, Manchester, United Kingdom. The talks followed the opening of Flailing Trees in Manchester, - a sculpture by Gustav Metzger. <br />
Flailing Trees is a piece of art where 21 willow trees has been up-rooted and put upside down into concrete, symbolising a world turned upside down by global warming.
    IMG_5045_1.jpg
  • Gustav Metzger and Marina Abramovic in conversation with Hans Ulrich Obrist, July 2007, Manchester, United Kingdom. The talks followed the opening of Flailing Trees in Manchester, - a sculpture by Gustav Metzger. <br />
Flailing Trees is a piece of art where 21 willow trees has been up-rooted and put upside down into concrete, symbolising a world turned upside down by global warming.
    IMG_5067_1.jpg
  • Flailing Trees by night, July 2007, in Manchester, United Kingdom. <br />
<br />
Flailing Trees is a piece of art by Gustav Metzger where 21 willow trees has been up-rooted and put upside down into concrete, symbolising a world turned upside down by global warming.
    IMG_8188_1.jpg
  • Gustav Metzger and Marina Abramovic in conversation with Hans Ulrich Obrist, July 2007, Manchester, United Kingdom. The talks followed the opening of Flailing Trees in Manchester, - a sculpture by Gustav Metzger. <br />
Flailing Trees is a piece of art where 21 willow trees has been up-rooted and put upside down into concrete, symbolising a world turned upside down by global warming.
    IMG_5060_1.jpg
  • Gustav Metzger talks about Flailing Trees Manchester Art Festival with Hans Ulrich Obrist and a gathering of listeners at the opening of Flailing Trees, July 2007, in Manchester, United Kingdom. <br />
<br />
Flailing Trees is a piece of art by Gustav Metzger where 21 willow trees has been up-rooted and put upside down into concrete, symbolising a world turned upside down by global warming.
    IMG_5009_1.jpg
  • Gustav Metzger in conversation with a passer-by at the opening of Flailing Trees, July 2007, in Manchester, United Kingdom. <br />
<br />
Flailing Trees is a piece of art by Gustav Metzger where 21 willow trees has been up-rooted and put upside down into concrete, symbolising a world turned upside down by global warming.
    IMG_7795_1.jpg
  • Gustav Metzger seen reflected in between the up side down willow trees at the opening of Flailing Trees, July 2007, in Manchester, United Kingdom. <br />
<br />
Flailing Trees is a piece of art by Gustav Metzger where 21 willow trees has been up-rooted and put upside down into concrete, symbolising a world turned upside down by global warming.
    IMG_7983_1.jpg
  • Flailing Trees, July 2007, in Manchester, United Kingdom. <br />
<br />
Flailing Trees is a piece of art by Gustav Metzger where 21 willow trees has been up-rooted and put upside down into concrete, symbolising a world turned upside down by global warming.
    IMG_7813_1.jpg
  • Gustav Metzger and Marina Abramovic in conversation with Hans Ulrich Obrist, July 2007, Manchester, United Kingdom. The talks followed the opening of Flailing Trees in Manchester, - a sculpture by Gustav Metzger. <br />
Flailing Trees is a piece of art where 21 willow trees has been up-rooted and put upside down into concrete, symbolising a world turned upside down by global warming.
    IMG_5066_1.jpg
  • A disused boat now serving as a shed for a local fisherman sits upside down on the beach on Holy Island, on 27th September 2017, on Lindisfarne Island, Northumberland, England. Local fishermen on Holy Island considered it a sin to send boats to the junkyard. They instead found a way to transform their old herring boats into perfect little storage sheds for their nets, tools, and other equipment. The Holy Island of Lindisfarne, also known simply as Holy Island, is an island off the northeast coast of England. Holy Island has a recorded history from the 6th century AD; it was an important centre of Celtic and Anglo-saxon Christianity. After the Viking invasions and the Norman conquest of England, a priory was reestablished.
    lindesfarne-26-27-06-2019.jpg
  • The stars and stripes upside down with the Trump Baby, a six metre high inflatable blimp flying above Westminster prior to protests against the state visit of US President Donald Trump on 4th June 2019 in London, United Kingdom. Organisers Together Against Trump which is a collaboration between the Stop Trump Coalition and Stand Up To Trump, have organised a carnival of resistance, a national demonstration to protest against President Trump’s policies and politics during his official UK visit.
    20190604_trump baby state visit_001.jpg
  • Pedestrians avoid a noodle and sauce takeaway, dropped and discarded on the pavement during lunch-hour in the capitals financial district, on 4th February 2020, in the City of London, England. The lunchtime meal was being carried along the street when its heat and moisture made it drop through the bottom of a paper bag, turning it upside down and lying perfectly on the pavement as city workers emerged from their offices. Those who saw it in time stepped over the greasy obstacle but the distracted mostly by walking with phones to ears, stepped in it and helping spread it across the pavement.
    pavement_noodles-45-04-02-2020.jpg
  • Pedestrians avoid a noodle and sauce takeaway, dropped and discarded on the pavement during lunch-hour in the capitals financial district, on 4th February 2020, in the City of London, England. The lunchtime meal was being carried along the street when its heat and moisture made it drop through the bottom of a paper bag, turning it upside down and lying perfectly on the pavement as city workers emerged from their offices. Those who saw it in time stepped over the greasy obstacle but the distracted mostly by walking with phones to ears, stepped in it and helping spread it across the pavement.
    pavement_noodles-32-04-02-2020.jpg
  • The stars and stripes upside down with the Trump Baby, a six metre high inflatable blimp flying above Westminster prior to protests against the state visit of US President Donald Trump on 4th June 2019 in London, United Kingdom. Organisers Together Against Trump which is a collaboration between the Stop Trump Coalition and Stand Up To Trump, have organised a carnival of resistance, a national demonstration to protest against President Trump’s policies and politics during his official UK visit.
    20190604_trump baby state visit_029.jpg
  • The stars and stripes upside down with the Trump Baby, a six metre high inflatable blimp flying above Westminster prior to protests against the state visit of US President Donald Trump on 4th June 2019 in London, United Kingdom. Organisers Together Against Trump which is a collaboration between the Stop Trump Coalition and Stand Up To Trump, have organised a carnival of resistance, a national demonstration to protest against President Trump’s policies and politics during his official UK visit.
    20190604_trump baby state visit_026.jpg
  • The stars and stripes upside down with the Trump Baby, a six metre high inflatable blimp flying above Westminster prior to protests against the state visit of US President Donald Trump on 4th June 2019 in London, United Kingdom. Organisers Together Against Trump which is a collaboration between the Stop Trump Coalition and Stand Up To Trump, have organised a carnival of resistance, a national demonstration to protest against President Trump’s policies and politics during his official UK visit.
    20190604_trump baby state visit_025.jpg
  • The stars and stripes upside down with the Trump Baby, a six metre high inflatable blimp flying above Westminster prior to protests against the state visit of US President Donald Trump on 4th June 2019 in London, United Kingdom. Organisers Together Against Trump which is a collaboration between the Stop Trump Coalition and Stand Up To Trump, have organised a carnival of resistance, a national demonstration to protest against President Trump’s policies and politics during his official UK visit.
    20190604_trump baby state visit_006.jpg
  • Two men smoke cigarettes in a London restaurant in the era of public, indoor smoking. The two friends have finished their long lunch and sit back to enjoy the after meal experience of inhaling the smoke, their faces showing the pleasures of an otherwise addiction to the tobacco filled cigarette. This is the upside though and The smoking ban came into effect  in England on 1st July 2007; in Scotland on 26 March 2006; in Wales on 2 April 2007 and in Northern Ireland on 30 April 2007. But publicans and breweries reported a drop in sales to the smoking ban, their lowest level since the 1930s.
    smoking_men01-16-07-2002_1.jpg
  • A swan sedately paddles past artist Anish Kapoor's artwork called Sky Mirror, part of his Turning the World Upside Down show in Kensington Gardens. The Royal Parks and the Serpentine Gallery presented a major exhibition of large-scale outdoor sculptures by acclaimed London-based artist Anish Kapoor in Kensington Gardens. The free exhibition showcased a series of major recent works never before shown together in London. Constructed from highly reflective stainless steel, the giant curved mirror surfaces will create illusory distortions of the surroundings and will be visible across large distances, creating new vistas in this famous and much-loved setting. The sculptures were sited to contrast and reflect the changing colours, foliage and weather in Kensington Gardens.
    sky_mirror01-11-10-2010-1 12-43-43_1.jpg
  • Formula 1 car is suspendid upside down in the information area of The Science Museum, London. The Science Museum was founded in 1857 with objects shown at the Great Exhibition of 1851. Today the Museum is world renowned for its historic collections, awe-inspiring galleries and inspirational exhibitions.
    20100610science museumAK.jpg
  • Mexican Papantla Flyers perform a pre-Hispanic ritual dedicated to their sun god, a leap from a 90 foot pole, on 15th May 1996, the Tulum ruins, Yucatan, Mexico. Dressed in their native costumes these men lash themselves to this towering pole with a leather bindings and soar off into space backwards and upside down in the ultimate leap of faith. The Papantla Flyers are Totonac Indians performing an ancient fertility ceremony. As they slowly descend to earth, the 13 revolutions made by the four flyers equal the 52-year span of the Aztec century. They represent earth, water, fire and air and the interweaving of these four elements symbolizes the creation of new life. A fifth man is left on top, dancing on this tiny nine-inch platform while simultaneously playing both a pre-Columbian flute and drum.
    mesican_leap-15-05-1996.jpg
  • The stars and stripes upside down with the Trump Baby, a six metre high inflatable blimp flying above Westminster prior to protests against the state visit of US President Donald Trump on 4th June 2019 in London, United Kingdom. Organisers Together Against Trump which is a collaboration between the Stop Trump Coalition and Stand Up To Trump, have organised a carnival of resistance, a national demonstration to protest against President Trump’s policies and politics during his official UK visit.
    20190604_trump baby state visit_024.jpg
  • An upside down map of the world puzzle. Citizen Climate Summit in Montreuil. A host of organisations, small NGOs, political art events and food stalls set the scene for discussions and debates on climate change as an alternative to the offical COP21 in Bourget.  The official climate talks in Paris is on and the pressure to come up with a sustainable legally binding is high. In the aftermath of recent terrorist attacks public demonstrations have been banned during the 2 weeks of climate talks
    AB9A9447_1.jpg
  • The stars and stripes upside down with the Trump Baby, a six metre high inflatable blimp flying above Westminster prior to protests against the state visit of US President Donald Trump on 4th June 2019 in London, United Kingdom. Organisers Together Against Trump which is a collaboration between the Stop Trump Coalition and Stand Up To Trump, have organised a carnival of resistance, a national demonstration to protest against President Trump’s policies and politics during his official UK visit.
    20190604_trump baby state visit_027.jpg
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