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  • CCTV camera watches men peeling the background of Canaletto's 18th century painting of the Lord Mayor's Show regatta at London Bridge railway station. The  30-metre-long work of art is positioned on a temporary wall at the recently-refurbished station entrance. The picture is a reproduction of Canaletto’s The Thames on Lord Mayor’s Day, Reproduced at this scale commuters and tourists are be able to admire the detail of the famous painting depicting the bustling activity of the Lord Mayor’s Show river procession as seen from Bankside before 1752.
    canaletto_mural01-17-09-2012_1.jpg
  • CCTV cameras watch Londoners with the background of Canaletto's 18th century painting of the Lord Mayor's Show regatta at London Bridge railway station. The  30-metre-long work of art is positioned on a temporary wall at the recently-refurbished station entrance. The picture is a reproduction of Canaletto’s The Thames on Lord Mayor’s Day, Reproduced at this scale commuters and tourists are be able to admire the detail of the famous painting depicting the bustling activity of the Lord Mayor’s Show river procession as seen from Bankside before 1752.
    thames_pageant03-07-09-2012_1_1.jpg
  • Standing in the corner of a brightly sun-lit window, a classical reproduction bust is seen in a hotel foyer in the modern town of Olympia, the birthplace of athletics and the Olympic ideal. Amid the woodland of ancient Olympia where for 1,100 continuous years, the ancients held their pagan festival of sport and debauchery. The modern games share many characteristics with its ancient counterpart. Corruption, politics and cheating interfered then as it does now and the 2004 Athens Olympiad echoed both what was great and horrid about the past.
    greek_olympiad002-20-10_2003_1.jpg
  • Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher seen on TV wagging a finger during exchanges at the dispatch box with Labour opposition. Thatcher died on April 8th 2013 after suffering a stroke while staying in the Ritz Hotel, London.
    margaret_thatcher14-03-09-2007_1.jpg
  • A heavily pregnant mother-to-be with her doting partner stands at the bus stop opposite St. Thomass Hospital, on 5th June 2019, in London, England.
    bus_journey-11-05-06-2019.jpg
  • Londoners in the street with a life-size cardboard cut-out of Queen Elizabeth stands in the entrance of a pub in the City of London ahead of a weekend of nationwide celebrations for the monarch's Diamond Jubilee. A few months before the Olympics come to London, a multi-cultural UK is gearing up for a weekend and summer of pomp and patriotic fervour as their monarch celebrates 60 years on the throne and across Britain, flags and Union Jack bunting adorn towns and villages.
    queens_jubilee25-01-06-2012.jpg
  • Londoners in the street with a life-size cardboard cut-out of Queen Elizabeth stands in the entrance of a pub in the City of London ahead of a weekend of nationwide celebrations for the monarch's Diamond Jubilee. A few months before the Olympics come to London, a multi-cultural UK is gearing up for a weekend and summer of pomp and patriotic fervour as their monarch celebrates 60 years on the throne and across Britain, flags and Union Jack bunting adorn towns and villages.
    queens_jubilee16-01-06-2012.jpg
  • A life-size cardboard cut-out of Queen Elizabeth stands in a print business window in central London, ahead of a weekend of nationwide celebrations for the monarch's Diamond Jubilee. A few months before the Olympics come to London, a multi-cultural UK is gearing up for a weekend and summer of pomp and patriotic fervour as their monarch celebrates 60 years on the throne and across Britain, flags and Union Jack bunting adorn towns and villages.
    queens_jubilee11-01-06-2012.jpg
  • Mothers sit with their babies in pushchairs on park benches in the Silesian industrial town of Zabrze. A mining town known formerly as Hindenburg until 1945, under Stalinist thought, miners were considered a “working class elite” and were rewarded with higher wages and better social benefits but after communism, Zabrze has a high rate among mother of Ovarian Cancer because of the pollution, caused by the large concentration of industry, the triangle of land between Zabrze, Chorzów, and Bytom has locally been known as 'death triangle'. Since the collapse of communism in 1989, the environmental situation has steadily been improving due the restructuring of the Silesian industry although more than 250,000 jobs have been lost in coal mining since the reintroduction of capitalism. At the same time, enterprises are enjoying enormous profits.
    misc_poland10-06-09-2007.jpg
  • White plaster or cement Goddess statuettes stand on sale on the forecourt of a garden art business in an Athens suberb, Marathonas Avenue - the original Marathon route of 490 BC. The mostly female figurines are in various poses but are all nudes and are in various gestures of a classical heroic style. Those in the foreground have their arms at the heads and moulded breasts and bodies to show the perfect female form while further to the back are male Gods placed on plinths and in recesses. The 29th modern Olympic circus came home to Greece in 2004 and the birthplace of athletics and the Olympic ideal, amid the woodland of ancient Olympia where for 1,100 continuous years, the ancients held their pagan festival of sport and debauchery.
    greek_olympiad011-23-10_2003_1.jpg
  • Fake classical Greek statues stand outside a night club in Nafplio, a former Byzantines, Frank, Venetian, and Ottoman coastal Peloponnese port town of 14,000 on the Argolic Gulf. The walls of this modern building seen near wasteland on the outskirts of town are made to look authentic but result in a false tourist style. There are three pieces of fake art that stand on well-watered grass: One of a nude Greek Goddess, a miniature lion in the middle and nearest the viewer is a naked figure of a man - muscular and classically posed as a heroic and mythical figure. Nafplio was also the first capital of independent Greece which was  destroyed in the 7th Century for its alliance with Sparta. This contemporary landscape is therefore bears no resemblance to its heritage.
    greek_olympiad010-21-10_2003_1_1.jpg
  • An unidentified father in the act of pouring coffee from a cafetiere into two metallic silver mugs in while holding his sleeping baby son in his London kitchen. The unconscious child is a few months old and the parent stands expertly holding both hot liquid and infant as if juggling pleasure and parenthood simultaneously. The sleeping child is limp in the father's arm and is dressed in the same scarlet red as the vibrant colour on the wall behind. We only see the man's upper-legs and torso but the baby is tiny against his body making the scale of both young and old. otherwise, the generic room is bare of decoration or possessions - only a drying cloth and chopping board is seen on the draining board, near plain white tiles.
    children20-30-08-2007_1.jpg
  • Teenage Fashion Model Barbie® doll introduced at the New York Toy Fair on March 9, 1959 and featuring the famous black and white bathing suit. Included in the package are reproductions of the popular Solo in the Spotlight® fashion #982 from 1960, a reproduction vintage booklet, collectible 50th anniversary cards with a reproduction vintage image and Barbie® fun facts on the other side.
    _O7F7218.jpg
  • Anti Brexit protesters outside Parliament, Westminster, London as Members of Parliament debate the European Union withdrawal bill, June 20th 2018. A protester from Bath holds a reproduction of the iconic painting The Scream by Edvard Munch.
    brex_6788.jpg
  • The statue of British Victorian philosopher John Locke by William Theed and a modern sculpture by Renzo Piano, of a full-size fibreglass reproduction of a gerberette, one of the die-cast rocker beams that cantilever from Paris Georges Pompidou building, on 10th January 2019, in London, England. British philosopher John Locke 1632 - 1704 whose effigies are by William Theed, also known as William Theed, the younger 1804 – 9 September 1891 an English sculptor whose services were extensively used by the Royal Family.
    new_art-06-10-01-2019.jpg
  • A couple and the statue of British Victorian philosopher John Locke by William Theed and a modern sculpture by Renzo Piano, of a full-size fibreglass reproduction of a gerberette, one of the die-cast rocker beams that cantilever from Paris Georges Pompidou building, on 10th January 2019, in London, England. British philosopher John Locke 1632 - 1704 whose effigies are by William Theed, also known as William Theed, the younger 1804 – 9 September 1891 an English sculptor whose services were extensively used by the Royal Family.
    new_art-02-10-01-2019.jpg
  • Mae Khram Di, a female Asian elephant and her baby Noy An at the Elephant Conservation Center (ECC) in Sayaboury province, Lao PDR. The ECC launched in association with the NGO ElefantAsia offers an innovative experience to visitors that combines conservation of the endangered Asian elephant with eco-tourism. Laos was once known as the land of a million elephants but now there are fewer than 900 living in the country. Around 470 of them are in captivity, traditionally employed by a lucrative logging industry. But captive elephants are often overworked and exhausted and as a consequence no longer breed. With only two elephants born for every ten that die, the Asian elephant, the sacred national emblem of Laos, is under serious threat of extinction. At the Elephant Conservation Center in Sayaboury province, the elephant nursery is an innovative reproduction project led by Lao mahouts and the Center.
    DSCF5129cc_1.jpg
  • Mae Khram Di, a female Asian elephant and her baby Noy An at the Elephant Conservation Center (ECC) in Sayaboury province, Lao PDR. The ECC launched in association with the NGO ElefantAsia offers an innovative experience to visitors that combines conservation of the endangered Asian elephant with eco-tourism. Laos was once known as the land of a million elephants but now there are fewer than 900 living in the country. Around 470 of them are in captivity, traditionally employed by a lucrative logging industry. But captive elephants are often overworked and exhausted and as a consequence no longer breed. With only two elephants born for every ten that die, the Asian elephant, the sacred national emblem of Laos, is under serious threat of extinction. At the Elephant Conservation Center in Sayaboury province, the elephant nursery is an innovative reproduction project led by Lao mahouts and the Center.
    DSCF5123cc_1.jpg
  • Asian elephants and their mahouts (handlers) enjoy bathing in the lake at the Elephant Conservation Center (ECC) in Sayaboury province, Lao PDR. The ECC launched in association with the NGO ElefantAsia offers an innovative experience to visitors that combines conservation of the endangered Asian elephant with eco-tourism. Laos was once known as the land of a million elephants but now there are fewer than 900 living in the country. Around 470 of them are in captivity, traditionally employed by a lucrative logging industry. But captive elephants are often overworked and exhausted and as a consequence no longer breed. With only two elephants born for every ten that die, the Asian elephant, the sacred national emblem of Laos, is under serious threat of extinction. At the Elephant Conservation Center in Sayaboury province, the elephant nursery is an innovative reproduction project led by Lao mahouts and the Center.
    A0030101cc_1.jpg
  • A mahout washes Mae Khram Di, a female Asian elephant and her baby Noy An in the lake at the Elephant Conservation Center (ECC) in Sayaboury province, Lao PDR. The ECC launched in association with the NGO ElefantAsia offers an innovative experience to visitors that combines conservation of the endangered Asian elephant with eco-tourism. Laos was once known as the land of a million elephants but now there are fewer than 900 living in the country. Around 470 of them are in captivity, traditionally employed by a lucrative logging industry. But captive elephants are often overworked and exhausted and as a consequence no longer breed. With only two elephants born for every ten that die, the Asian elephant, the sacred national emblem of Laos, is under serious threat of extinction. At the Elephant Conservation Center in Sayaboury province, the elephant nursery is an innovative reproduction project led by Lao mahouts and the Center.
    A0030088cc_1.jpg
  • Mae Khram Di, a female Asian elephant and her baby Noy An at the Elephant Conservation Center (ECC) in Sayaboury province, Lao PDR. The ECC launched in association with the NGO ElefantAsia offers an innovative experience to visitors that combines conservation of the endangered Asian elephant with eco-tourism. Laos was once known as the land of a million elephants but now there are fewer than 900 living in the country. Around 470 of them are in captivity, traditionally employed by a lucrative logging industry. But captive elephants are often overworked and exhausted and as a consequence no longer breed. With only two elephants born for every ten that die, the Asian elephant, the sacred national emblem of Laos, is under serious threat of extinction. At the Elephant Conservation Center in Sayaboury province, the elephant nursery is an innovative reproduction project led by Lao mahouts and the Center.
    A0030084cc_1.jpg
  • Mae Khram Di, a female Asian elephant and her baby Noy An at their baci ceremony at the Elephant Conservation Center (ECC) in Sayaboury province, Lao PDR. The ECC launched in association with the NGO ElefantAsia offers an innovative experience to visitors that combines conservation of the endangered Asian elephant with eco-tourism. Laos was once known as the land of a million elephants but now there are fewer than 900 living in the country. Around 470 of them are in captivity, traditionally employed by a lucrative logging industry. But captive elephants are often overworked and exhausted and as a consequence no longer breed. With only two elephants born for every ten that die, the Asian elephant, the sacred national emblem of Laos, is under serious threat of extinction. At the Elephant Conservation Center in Sayaboury province, the elephant nursery is an innovative reproduction project led by Lao mahouts and the Center. It relies on voluntary participation and aims to support mahouts involved in logging to bear the cost of breeding their elephant.
    A0030057cc_1.jpg
  • Mae Khram Di, a female Asian elephant and her baby Noy An during their baci ceremony at the Elephant Conservation Center (ECC) in Sayaboury province, Lao PDR. The ECC launched in association with the NGO ElefantAsia offers an innovative experience to visitors that combines conservation of the endangered Asian elephant with eco-tourism. Laos was once known as the land of a million elephants but now there are fewer than 900 living in the country. Around 470 of them are in captivity, traditionally employed by a lucrative logging industry. But captive elephants are often overworked and exhausted and as a consequence no longer breed. With only two elephants born for every ten that die, the Asian elephant, the sacred national emblem of Laos, is under serious threat of extinction. At the Elephant Conservation Center in Sayaboury province, the elephant nursery is an innovative reproduction project led by Lao mahouts and the Center. It relies on voluntary participation and aims to support mahouts involved in logging to bear the cost of breeding their elephant.
    A0030055cc_1.jpg
  • Noy An, a female baby Asian elephant born in January 2015 at the Elephant Conservation Center (ECC) in Sayaboury province, Lao PDR. The ECC launched in association with the NGO ElefantAsia offers an innovative experience to visitors that combines conservation of the endangered Asian elephant with eco-tourism. Laos was once known as the land of a million elephants but now there are fewer than 900 living in the country. Around 470 of them are in captivity, traditionally employed by a lucrative logging industry. But captive elephants are often overworked and exhausted and as a consequence no longer breed. With only two elephants born for every ten that die, the Asian elephant, the sacred national emblem of Laos, is under serious threat of extinction. At the Elephant Conservation Center in Sayaboury province, the elephant nursery is an innovative reproduction project led by Lao mahouts and the Center. It relies on voluntary participation and aims to support mahouts involved in logging to bear the cost of breeding their elephant.
    A0030040cc_1.jpg
  • Mae Khram Di, a female Asian elephant and her baby Noy An at the Elephant Conservation Center (ECC) in Sayaboury province, Lao PDR. The ECC launched in association with the NGO ElefantAsia offers an innovative experience to visitors that combines conservation of the endangered Asian elephant with eco-tourism. Laos was once known as the land of a million elephants but now there are fewer than 900 living in the country. Around 470 of them are in captivity, traditionally employed by a lucrative logging industry. But captive elephants are often overworked and exhausted and as a consequence no longer breed. With only two elephants born for every ten that die, the Asian elephant, the sacred national emblem of Laos, is under serious threat of extinction. At the Elephant Conservation Center in Sayaboury province, the elephant nursery is an innovative reproduction project led by Lao mahouts and the Center. It relies on voluntary participation and aims to support mahouts involved in logging to bear the cost of breeding their elephant.
    A0030039cc_1.jpg
  • A mahout (handler) with Mae Khram Di, a female Asian elephant and her baby Noy An at the Elephant Conservation Center (ECC) in Sayaboury province, Lao PDR. The ECC launched in association with the NGO ElefantAsia offers an innovative experience to visitors that combines conservation of the endangered Asian elephant with eco-tourism. Laos was once known as the land of a million elephants but now there are fewer than 900 living in the country. Around 470 of them are in captivity, traditionally employed by a lucrative logging industry. But captive elephants are often overworked and exhausted and as a consequence no longer breed. With only two elephants born for every ten that die, the Asian elephant, the sacred national emblem of Laos, is under serious threat of extinction. At the Elephant Conservation Center in Sayaboury province, the elephant nursery is an innovative reproduction project led by Lao mahouts and the Center. It relies on voluntary participation and aims to support mahouts involved in logging to bear the cost of breeding their elephant.
    A0030034cc_1.jpg
  • A tourists takes a photo in front of defaced renaissance paintings in Florence's Piazza degli Uffizi. behind her is the reproduction of a renaissance painting that now adorns a construction hoarding screen. Someone has drawn a moustache and cannabis joint in the mouth of a religious character.
    florence_italy131-23-10-2010_1.jpg
  • A reproduction of the painting called 'Portrait of Francesco I de' Medici ' which was painted by Agnolo de Cosimo Bronzino in 1551, now adorns a construction hoarding screen, with plastic blue piping in a Florence side street, the original hanging in the Uffizi. Born in Florence, he was the son of Cosimo I de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany and Eleonora di Toledo, and served as regent for his father starting in 1564. He went on to marry his Venetian mistress, Bianca Cappello, after aptly disposing of her husband, a Florentine bureaucrat. Francesco and Bianca died on the same day. Although the original death certificates mention malaria, it has been widely speculated that the couple was poisoned
    florence_italy28-22-10-2010_1.jpg
  • Real remembrance wreaths on the ground at the foot of a black and white vintage era photograph that shows the Cenotaph, currently hiding the real monument being renovated in London's Whitehall. In a landscape of false perspective and confusing juxtapositions between reality and the reproduction of the picture, we see the famous war memorial in central London. The London Cenotaph was originally a temporary structure erected for a peace parade following the end of World War I, but following an outpouring of national sentiment it was replaced by a permanent structure and designated the United Kingdom's official war memorial. Designed by Sir Edwin Lutyens, the permanent structure was built from Portland stone between 1919 and 1920. 'Cenotaph' derives from the Greek kenotaphion (empty tomb).
    cenotaph_landscape04-10-06-2013_1_1.jpg
  • Real remembrance wreaths on the ground at the foot of a black and white vintage era photograph that shows the Cenotaph, currently hiding the real monument being renovated in London's Whitehall. In a landscape of false perspective and confusing juxtapositions between reality and the reproduction of the picture, we see the famous war memorial in central London. The London Cenotaph was originally a temporary structure erected for a peace parade following the end of World War I, but following an outpouring of national sentiment it was replaced by a permanent structure and designated the United Kingdom's official war memorial. Designed by Sir Edwin Lutyens, the permanent structure was built from Portland stone between 1919 and 1920. 'Cenotaph' derives from the Greek kenotaphion (empty tomb).
    cenotaph_landscape01-10-06-2013_1_1.jpg
  • Shop selling old and reproduction signs on Portobello Road, West London.
    20100523portobello signsA.jpg
  • Antiquity 3 at Jeff Koons Now art show at Newport Street Gallery in London, England, United Kingdom. Jeff Koons is a modern American artist known for working with popular culture subjects and his reproductions of banal objects—such as balloon animals produced in stainless steel with mirror-finish surfaces. Newport Street Gallery presents exhibitions of work from Damien Hirsts art collection. Exhibitions vary between solo and group shows.
    20160530_jeff koons show_E.jpg
  • Three Ball 50/50 Tank basketballs at Jeff Koons Now art show at Newport Street Gallery in London, England, United Kingdom. Jeff Koons is a modern American artist known for working with popular culture subjects and his reproductions of banal objects—such as balloon animals produced in stainless steel with mirror-finish surfaces. Newport Street Gallery presents exhibitions of work from Damien Hirsts art collection. Exhibitions vary between solo and group shows.
    20160530_jeff koons show_D.jpg
  • Kiepenkerl  at Jeff Koons Now art show at Newport Street Gallery in London, England, United Kingdom. Kiepenkerl is a modern sculpture by Jeff Koons. It is constructed of polished cast stainless steel. Cast in 1987, it is an edition of 3. Jeff Koons is a modern American artist known for working with popular culture subjects and his reproductions of banal objects—such as balloon animals produced in stainless steel with mirror-finish surfaces. Newport Street Gallery presents exhibitions of work from Damien Hirsts art collection. Exhibitions vary between solo and group shows.
    20160530_jeff koons show_C.jpg
  • New Hoover Deluxe Floor Polisher at Jeff Koons Now art show at Newport Street Gallery in London, England, United Kingdom. Jeff Koons is a modern American artist known for working with popular culture subjects and his reproductions of banal objects—such as balloon animals produced in stainless steel with mirror-finish surfaces. Newport Street Gallery presents exhibitions of work from Damien Hirsts art collection. Exhibitions vary between solo and group shows.
    20160530_jeff koons show_B.jpg
  • Balloon Monkey Blue at Jeff Koons Now art show at Newport Street Gallery in London, England, United Kingdom. Jeff Koons is a modern American artist known for working with popular culture subjects and his reproductions of banal objects—such as balloon animals produced in stainless steel with mirror-finish surfaces. Newport Street Gallery presents exhibitions of work from Damien Hirsts art collection. Exhibitions vary between solo and group shows.
    20160530_jeff koons balloon monkey_F.jpg
  • Balloon Monkey Blue at Jeff Koons Now art show at Newport Street Gallery in London, England, United Kingdom. Jeff Koons is a modern American artist known for working with popular culture subjects and his reproductions of banal objects—such as balloon animals produced in stainless steel with mirror-finish surfaces. Newport Street Gallery presents exhibitions of work from Damien Hirsts art collection. Exhibitions vary between solo and group shows.
    20160530_jeff koons balloon monkey_E.jpg
  • Balloon Monkey Blue at Jeff Koons Now art show at Newport Street Gallery in London, England, United Kingdom. Jeff Koons is a modern American artist known for working with popular culture subjects and his reproductions of banal objects—such as balloon animals produced in stainless steel with mirror-finish surfaces. Newport Street Gallery presents exhibitions of work from Damien Hirsts art collection. Exhibitions vary between solo and group shows.
    20160530_jeff koons balloon monkey_D.jpg
  • Balloon Monkey Blue at Jeff Koons Now art show at Newport Street Gallery in London, England, United Kingdom. Jeff Koons is a modern American artist known for working with popular culture subjects and his reproductions of banal objects—such as balloon animals produced in stainless steel with mirror-finish surfaces. Newport Street Gallery presents exhibitions of work from Damien Hirsts art collection. Exhibitions vary between solo and group shows.
    20160530_jeff koons balloon monkey_B.jpg
  • Balloon Monkey Blue at Jeff Koons Now art show at Newport Street Gallery in London, England, United Kingdom. Jeff Koons is a modern American artist known for working with popular culture subjects and his reproductions of banal objects—such as balloon animals produced in stainless steel with mirror-finish surfaces. Newport Street Gallery presents exhibitions of work from Damien Hirsts art collection. Exhibitions vary between solo and group shows.
    20160530_jeff koons balloon monkey_C.jpg
  • Balloon Monkey Blue at Jeff Koons Now art show at Newport Street Gallery in London, England, United Kingdom. Jeff Koons is a modern American artist known for working with popular culture subjects and his reproductions of banal objects—such as balloon animals produced in stainless steel with mirror-finish surfaces. Newport Street Gallery presents exhibitions of work from Damien Hirsts art collection. Exhibitions vary between solo and group shows.
    20160530_jeff koons balloon monkey_A.jpg
  • Carabinieri officers mingle with crowds and patrol the darker covered galleries and streets around Florence's Piazza degli Uffizi. In front of them reproductions of renaissance painting that now adorns a construction hoarding screen. Watching for suspicious activity as well as playing cat and mouse from illegal street hawkers selling fake goods and copyrighted artwork prints, we see an incongruous landscape of classical art and urban modernity. Someone has drawn a moustache and cannabis joint in the mouth of a religious character as the two policemen keep the city secure from possible attack.
    florence_italy128-23-10-2010_1.jpg
  • Play-Doh at Jeff Koons Now art show at Newport Street Gallery in London, England, United Kingdom. Jeff Koons is a modern American artist known for working with popular culture subjects and his reproductions of banal objects—such as balloon animals produced in stainless steel with mirror-finish surfaces. Newport Street Gallery presents exhibitions of work from Damien Hirsts art collection. Exhibitions vary between solo and group shows.
    20160530_jeff koons show_F.jpg
  • New Hoover Deluxe Floor Polisher at Jeff Koons Now art show at Newport Street Gallery in London, England, United Kingdom. Jeff Koons is a modern American artist known for working with popular culture subjects and his reproductions of banal objects—such as balloon animals produced in stainless steel with mirror-finish surfaces. Newport Street Gallery presents exhibitions of work from Damien Hirsts art collection. Exhibitions vary between solo and group shows.
    20160530_jeff koons show_A.jpg
  • An adult sexual health group in discussion at the FALDA Unit near Kolkata, India. FALDA is supported by the Child In Need Institute (CINI) and its primary focus is educating youth on HIV, sexual and reproductive health issues.  They work throughout 6 local government regions and cover 65,000 youth through 120 drop in centres.
    09-cini-7191.jpg
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