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)
{ 146 images found }

Loading ()...

  • Mutoid waste, still alive and kicking after 25 years thanks to the continued stewardship of Joe Rush, have an apocalyptic vision, born from the chaos of rejected military and industrial scrap metal, laid foundation stones for rave, warehouse and festival culture and have brought inspiration to Glastonbury Festival for years.<br />
Glastonbury is the world's biggest greenfield festival with nearly 200,000  visiters camping in the dairy farm of Michael Evis in Somerset, UK.<br />
The first festival was in 1970 and was influenced by hippie ethics and the free festival movement. The festival retains vestiges of this tradition such as the Green Fields area which includes the Green Futures and Healing Field.
    5F3A4779_1.jpg
  • Mutoid waste, still alive and kicking after 25 years thanks to the continued stewardship of Joe Rush, have an apocalyptic vision, born from the chaos of rejected military and industrial scrap metal, laid foundation stones for rave, warehouse and festival culture and have brought inspiration to Glastonbury Festival for years.<br />
Glastonbury is the world's biggest greenfield festival with nearly 200,000  visiters camping in the dairy farm of Michael Evis in Somerset, UK.<br />
The first festival was in 1970 and was influenced by hippie ethics and the free festival movement. The festival retains vestiges of this tradition such as the Green Fields area which includes the Green Futures and Healing Field.
    5F3A3134_1_1.jpg
  • Mutoid waste, still alive and kicking after 25 years thanks to the continued stewardship of Joe Rush, have an apocalyptic vision, born from the chaos of rejected military and industrial scrap metal, laid foundation stones for rave, warehouse and festival culture and have brought inspiration to Glastonbury Festival for years.<br />
Glastonbury is the world's biggest greenfield festival with nearly 200,000  visiters camping in the dairy farm of Michael Evis in Somerset, UK.<br />
The first festival was in 1970 and was influenced by hippie ethics and the free festival movement. The festival retains vestiges of this tradition such as the Green Fields area which includes the Green Futures and Healing Field.
    5F3A3089_1.jpg
  • A pile of bricks which remains from United Nations Park, an illegal slum dwelling which has recently been destroyed by the Nepalese government in Paurakhi Basti, next to the Bagmati River in the centre of Kathmandu, Nepal.  The shacks were built with scrap plastic, wood and bricks. The settlement has poor security and lacks in clean water, electricity, sanitation and other basic services.  The government forces arrived in the middle of the night and used tear gas to displace the residents before demolishing their homes. A few shacks have been rebuilt and people continue to live here.
    Nepal-Kathmandu-UN-Park-7383_1.jpg
  • United Nations Park, An illegal slum dwelling which has recently been destroyed by the Nepalese government in  Paurakhi Basti, next to the Bagmati River in the centre of Kathmandu, Nepal.  The shacks were built with scrap plastic, wood and bricks. The settlement has poor security and lacks in clean water, electricity, sanitation and other basic services.  The government forces arrived in the middle of the night and used tear gas to displace the residents before demolishing their homes.
    Nepal-Kathmandu-UN-Park-7379_1.jpg
  • United Nations Park, a slum settlement in Paurakhi Basti, next to the Bagmati River in the centre of Kathmandu, Nepal.  The shacks are built with scrap plastic and wood.  The settlement has poor security and lacks in clean water, electricity, sanitation and other basic services.
    Nepal-Kathmandu-UN-Park-7358_1.jpg
  • Two boys pay money they have earned collecting scrap into the children’s’ bank at the Joyoti Street Project. The Joyoti Street Project is open 24 hours a day offering a place of shelter and education to more than 350 boys.  The project is run by the Child Welfare Scheme Nepal (CWSN).
    09-cwsn-5961.jpg
  • Jogger running past the closed Vinegar Yard, an urban garden normally open seven days a week, with food stalls and bars on 16th April 2020 in London, United Kingdom. Normally crowded with people London is like a ghost town as workers stay home under lockdown during the Coronavirus pandemic. The train carriage installation is by Joe Rush, famous for his scrap-metal sculptures at  the Glastonbury Festival.
    _F3A8930.jpg
  • Chinese tourists at the Tower of London sit outside eating their lunch as a flock of seagulls gathers to pick up the scraps in London, England, United Kingdom.
    20190122_chinese tourists birds_001.jpg
  • A butcher feeds scraps to the market cats at the Mercado do Bolhão, Porto, Portugal. One of the most emblematic buildings of the city with wrought iron architecture over two floors, the market dates back to 1839.
    SFE_160910_094.jpg
  • A mangled, headless, pigeon lies on the pavement on London's Piccadily in the capital. The gory corpse of the bird that has somehow been torn apart lies on the street for pedestrians to avoid as they pass-by near Bond Street. Its wing is splayed out in the shadows and a single foot sticks out in sunlight, the end of an existence on London's buildings, looking for scraps and crumbs.
    dead_pigeon01-06-03-2015_1.jpg
  • Around the Southbank, a great number of pigeons hang around visitors for scraps of food. The South Bank is a significant arts and entertainment district, and home to an endless list of activities for Londoners, visitors and tourists alike.
    20140531_south bank pigeonsA.jpg
  • Pigeons fight for food scraps thrown to them by tourists on the riverside walkway. The South Bank is a significant arts and entertainment district, and home to an endless list of activities for Londoners, visitors and tourists alike.
    20140514_south bank pigeons_E.jpg
  • Pigeon waiting for scraps outside McDonalds fast food restaurant. The South Bank is a significant arts and entertainment district, and home to an endless list of activities for Londoners, visitors and tourists alike.
    20140410_south bank mcdonalds_A.jpg
  • A detail of rotting vegetables in a garden compost bin. A detail of organic vegetable and fruit matter decomposing inside a home garden composting bin. We look down on to the natural waste as a close-up of the vegetables and fruit scraps that have been thrown away by a city householder in south London. Local authorities encourage the use of compost bins in back gardens (yards) and the proliferation of these efficient containers mean that their residue can be returned to the soil without the expense of transport to landfill. The rotting matter of carrot skins etc. will eventually become a nutritious feed for new plants - and so the cycle goes on.
    compost_detail01-21-01-2014.jpg
  • The image of a once-famous stag who used to be fed by tourists and the owner of the Oasis cafe on the A82 on Rannoch Moor but shot many times with an air gun by juvenile New Year revellers. Looking out onto the moors it roamed in life, the deer named Big Boy by locals had an insatiable appetite for scraps from outdoor snack bar owner MacDonald and his customers, the stag inched ever closer to the migrant humanity alongside the road. So locally famous did he become that one Hogmanay, the beast was shot several times by air gun-toting juveniles and is now a tragic, posthumous print on the same tourist cafe trailer. Now holidaymakers, unaware of the animal's life and death near this spot, merely stop to photograph the scenery in the hope of seeing the nearby herd that Big Boy ruled over.
    rannoch_stag04-07-08-2010-1.jpg
  • A detail of organic vegetable and fruit matter decomposing inside a home garden composting bin. We look down on to the natural waste as a close-up of the vegetables and fruit scraps that have been thrown away by a city householder in south London. Local authorities encourage the use of compost bins in back gardens (yards) and the proliferation of these efficient containers mean that their residue can be returned to the soil without the expense of transport to landfill. The rotting matter of banana skins, onions and potato peelings will eventually become a nutritious feed for new plants - and so the cycle goes on.
    compost_detail2-27-May-2011_1.jpg
  • A detail of organic vegetable and fruit matter decomposing inside a home garden composting bin. We look down on to the natural waste as a close-up of the vegetables and fruit scraps that have been thrown away by a city householder in south London. Local authorities encourage the use of compost bins in back gardens (yards) and the proliferation of these efficient containers mean that their residue can be returned to the soil without the expense of transport to landfill. The rotting matter of banana skins, onions and potato peelings will eventually become a nutritious feed for new plants - and so the cycle goes on.
    compost_detail1-27-May-2011_1.jpg
  • Students marching in London against the proposed scapping of Education Maintenance Allowance(EMA) which costs the government £500b / year. The maximum EMA a stucent can get is £30.00/week and to many students this is essential monies to make it through their studies. Several hundreds of students marched noisily but peacefully from Picadilly Circus to Parliament Square by Westminster in London. The Government won the vote and on the night of Jan 19th the EMA was scrapped.
    IMG_9850_1.jpg
  • Sea gulls diving for scraps thrown off the boat where Richard is pulling in and emptying lobster pots.<br />
Sustainable fishing methods and small scale fisher men syndicates are now common along the British coast. In Christchurch Bay a small band of fisher men catch their fish, lobsters, cuttlefish and crabs from small boats. They all fish according to the latest environmenttal guidance to keep their fishing as sustainable as possible. They then sell their catch as a syndicate to big export companies or fish shops in cities like London.
    IMG_2057_1.jpg
  • Queue of people waiting for the bank to open at 9.30am on the Holloway Road during the coronavirus pandemic on the 24th April 2020 in London, United Kingdom. Only two customers are allowed in a NatWest branch at a time and once inside, people are asked to stand in marked areas on the floor to make sure they are social distancing. <br />
Britains banking sector scrapped billions of pounds in shareholder dividends and share buybacks after the Bank of England requested the move to boost liquidity and help cope with the coronavirus crisis.
    _E6A0169.jpg
  • As City businessmen walk past during their lunch hour, a homeless man searches through a bin for scraps of discarded food, on 16th June 1994, in the City of London, England.
    city26-16-06-1994.jpg
  • Motley group of pigeons scraping a life on the street in Berwick Street in Soho, London, United Kingdom. As local street food traders close up for the day food scraps mix with soap in a drain and all these scraps are eaten up by the birds.
    20190703_soho pigeons_007.jpg
  • Motley group of pigeons scraping a life on the street in Berwick Street in Soho, London, United Kingdom. As local street food traders close up for the day food scraps mix with soap in a drain and all these scraps are eaten up by the birds.
    20190703_soho pigeons_006.jpg
  • Motley group of pigeons scraping a life on the street in Berwick Street in Soho, London, United Kingdom. As local street food traders close up for the day food scraps mix with soap in a drain and all these scraps are eaten up by the birds.
    20190703_soho pigeons_005.jpg
  • Motley group of pigeons scraping a life on the street in Berwick Street in Soho, London, United Kingdom. As local street food traders close up for the day food scraps mix with soap in a drain and all these scraps are eaten up by the birds.
    20190703_soho pigeons_004.jpg
  • A visitor to Budapest zoo reaches out with food scraps to a captive elephant, whose enclosure has sharp spikes around its moat, on 13th June 1990, in Budapest, Hungary.
    budapest_elephant-13-06-1990.jpg
  • A park shaper scraps snow from a jump for the Laax Open on 17th January 2017 in Laax, Switzerland. The Laax Open is a FIS Snowboarding World Championship event in Laax.
    LaaxOpenD3-SS-08231_1.jpg
  • The landlady of a typical British seaside Bed and Breakfast sits outside wearing her apron while a tame seagull waits for regular titbit scraps that she feeds the gull and its female partner, on 14th July 2017, at Scarborough, North Yorkshire, England.
    bridlington-10-14-07-2017.jpg
  • Symetrical pigeons pecking at scraps of feed at lunctime in a small park in London, England, United Kingdom.
    20160505_pigeons_A.jpg
  • Pedestrians walk around a mangled, headless, pigeon lies on the pavement on London's Piccadily. The gory corpse of the bird that has somehow been torn apart lies on the street for pedestrians to avoid as they pass-by near Bond Street. Its wing is splayed out in the shadows and a single foot sticks out in sunlight, the end of an existence on London's buildings, looking for scraps and crumbs.
    dead_pigeon02-06-03-2015_1.jpg
  • Pigeons fight for food scraps thrown to them by tourists on the riverside walkway. The South Bank is a significant arts and entertainment district, and home to an endless list of activities for Londoners, visitors and tourists alike.
    20140514_south bank pigeons_D.jpg
  • Pigeons fight for food scraps thrown to them by tourists on the riverside walkway. The South Bank is a significant arts and entertainment district, and home to an endless list of activities for Londoners, visitors and tourists alike.
    20140514_south bank pigeons_B.jpg
  • Pigeons fight for food scraps thrown to them by tourists on the riverside walkway. The South Bank is a significant arts and entertainment district, and home to an endless list of activities for Londoners, visitors and tourists alike.
    20140514_south bank pigeons_A.jpg
  • Sunlit street corner and pigeon in the City of London. Two pigeons fight over scraps on the pavement of the narrow, medieval lane. A woman worker carries shopping as she passes through a pool of sunlight, lit by sunshine coming over adacent buildings. Corporate offices of banks, investment companies and insurance companies are here in the heart of the capital's financial district, founded by the Romans in 43AD.
    city_street01-07-02-2014.jpg
  • The image of a once-famous stag who used to be fed by tourists and the owner of the Oasis cafe on the A82 on Rannoch Moor but shot many times with an air gun by juvenile New Year revellers. Looking out onto the moors it roamed in life, the deer named Big Boy by locals had an insatiable appetite for scraps from outdoor snack bar owner MacDonald and his customers, the stag inched ever closer to the migrant humanity alongside the road. So locally famous did he become that one Hogmanay, the beast was shot several times by air gun-toting juveniles and is now a tragic, posthumous print on the same tourist cafe trailer. Now holidaymakers, unaware of the animal's life and death near this spot, merely stop to photograph the scenery in the hope of seeing the nearby herd that Big Boy ruled over.
    rannoch_stag01-07-08-2010-1.jpg
  • Students marching in London against the proposed scapping of Education Maintenance Allowance(EMA) which costs the government £500b / year. The maximum EMA a stucent can get is £30.00/week and to many students this is essential monies to make it through their studies. Several hundreds of students marched noisily but peacefully from Picadilly Circus to Parliament Square by Westminster in London. The Government won the vote and on the night of Jan 19th the EMA was scrapped.<br />
A future student and protester joining in on the student demonstration in Parliament Square, mobbed by media.
    IMG_9939_1.jpg
  • Students marching in London against the proposed scapping of Education Maintenance Allowance(EMA) which costs the government £500b / year. The maximum EMA a stucent can get is £30.00/week and to many students this is essential monies to make it through their studies. Several hundreds of students marched noisily but peacefully from Picadilly Circus to Parliament Square by Westminster in London. The Government won the vote and on the night of Jan 19th the EMA was scrapped.<br />
A future student and protester joining in on the student demonstration in Parliament Square, mobbed by media.
    IMG_9932_1.jpg
  • Students marching in London against the proposed scapping of Education Maintenance Allowance(EMA) which costs the government £500b / year. The maximum EMA a stucent can get is £30.00/week and to many students this is essential monies to make it through their studies. Several hundreds of students marched noisily but peacefully from Picadilly Circus to Parliament Square by Westminster in London. The Government won the vote and on the night of Jan 19th the EMA was scrapped.<br />
A future student and protester joining in on the student demonstration in Parliament Square.
    IMG_9877_1.jpg
  • Students marching in London against the proposed scapping of Education Maintenance Allowance(EMA) which costs the government £500b / year. The maximum EMA a stucent can get is £30.00/week and to many students this is essential monies to make it through their studies. Several hundreds of students marched noisily but peacefully from Picadilly Circus to Parliament Square by Westminster in London. The Government won the vote and on the night of Jan 19th the EMA was scrapped.
    IMG_9761_2.jpg
  • Life in the slums by the  railway tracks in Tejgaon. Homes are build closely to the tracks leading in and out of one of Dhaka's main train stations and life is goes on as in any othr part of Dhaka in spite of the dangerous proximity to the live tracks and trains passing at regular intervals. Youths looking through rubbishin search of useful scraps.
    IMG_2869_1.jpg
  • Students marching in London against the proposed scapping of Education Maintenance Allowance(EMA) which costs the government £500b / year. The maximum EMA a stucent can get is £30.00/week and to many students this is essential monies to make it through their studies. Several hundreds of students marched noisily but peacefully from Picadilly Circus to Parliament Square by Westminster in London. The Government won the vote and on the night of Jan 19th the EMA was scrapped..A future student and protester joining in on the student demonstration in Parliament Square, mobbed by media.
    IMG_9939.jpg
  • Students marching in London against the proposed scapping of Education Maintenance Allowance(EMA) which costs the government £500b / year. The maximum EMA a stucent can get is £30.00/week and to many students this is essential monies to make it through their studies. Several hundreds of students marched noisily but peacefully from Picadilly Circus to Parliament Square by Westminster in London. The Government won the vote and on the night of Jan 19th the EMA was scrapped..A future student and protester joining in on the student demonstration in Parliament Square, mobbed by media.
    IMG_9932.jpg
  • Students marching in London against the proposed scapping of Education Maintenance Allowance(EMA) which costs the government £500b / year. The maximum EMA a stucent can get is £30.00/week and to many students this is essential monies to make it through their studies. Several hundreds of students marched noisily but peacefully from Picadilly Circus to Parliament Square by Westminster in London. The Government won the vote and on the night of Jan 19th the EMA was scrapped..A future student and protester joining in on the student demonstration in Parliament Square.
    IMG_9877.jpg
  • Students marching in London against the proposed scapping of Education Maintenance Allowance(EMA) which costs the government £500b / year. The maximum EMA a stucent can get is £30.00/week and to many students this is essential monies to make it through their studies. Several hundreds of students marched noisily but peacefully from Picadilly Circus to Parliament Square by Westminster in London. The Government won the vote and on the night of Jan 19th the EMA was scrapped.
    IMG_9850.jpg
  • Students marching in London against the proposed scapping of Education Maintenance Allowance(EMA) which costs the government £500b / year. The maximum EMA a stucent can get is £30.00/week and to many students this is essential monies to make it through their studies. Several hundreds of students marched noisily but peacefully from Picadilly Circus to Parliament Square by Westminster in London. The Government won the vote and on the night of Jan 19th the EMA was scrapped.
    IMG_9761.jpg
Prev
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x

In Pictures

  • About
  • Contact
  • Join In Pictures
  • Archive
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area