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  • A wide landscape of flooding in an inner-city road junction. A burst water main closed the otherwise busy junction of Half Moon Lane and Dulwich Road in the south London area of Herne Hill. At about 5am, emergency crews were called when water inundated local homes and businesses, forcing residents to evacuate their properties and leave before electricity supplies were shut down.
    SE24_burst_water_main23-07-08-2013.jpg
  • A wide landscape of flooding in an inner-city road junction. A burst water main closed the otherwise busy junction of Half Moon Lane and Dulwich Road in the south London area of Herne Hill. At about 5am, emergency crews were called when water inundated local homes and businesses, forcing residents to evacuate their properties and leave before electricity supplies were shut down.
    SE24_burst_water_main03-07-08-2013.jpg
  • A wide landscape of flooding in an inner-city road junction. A burst water main closed the otherwise busy junction of Half Moon Lane and Dulwich Road in the south London area of Herne Hill. At about 5am, emergency crews were called when water inundated local homes and businesses, forcing residents to evacuate their properties and leave before electricity supplies were shut down.
    SE24_burst_water_main02-07-08-2013.jpg
  • A Thames Water employee at the scene of an empty road due to a cracked road surface of tarmac, weeks after disastrous flooding in nearby Herne Hill, south London. Denmark Hill has been closed in both directions due to another burst water main in multiple locations across the road (A215) between the junctions of Champion Hill and Champion Park in south London. Water is seen running towards Kings College Hospital, 200m downhill and Denmark Hill is a major thoroughfare for the hospital's Accident & Amergency (A&E) department and used by ambulances and emergency traffic throughout the day and night.
    burst_water_mane16-06-09-2013_1_1.jpg
  • Londoners pass-by and look at the cracked road surface of tarmac, weeks after disastrous flooding in nearby Herne Hill, south London. Denmark Hill has been closed in both directions due to another burst water main in multiple locations across the road (A215) between the junctions of Champion Hill and Champion Park in south London. Water is seen running towards Kings College Hospital, 200m downhill and Denmark Hill is a major thoroughfare for the hospital's Accident & Amergency (A&E) department and used by ambulances and emergency traffic throughout the day and night.
    burst_water_mane05-06-09-2013_1_1.jpg
  • A Thames Water employee at the scene of an empty road due to a cracked road surface of tarmac, weeks after disastrous flooding in nearby Herne Hill, south London. Denmark Hill has been closed in both directions due to another burst water main in multiple locations across the road (A215) between the junctions of Champion Hill and Champion Park in south London. Water is seen running towards Kings College Hospital, 200m downhill and Denmark Hill is a major thoroughfare for the hospital's Accident & Amergency (A&E) department and used by ambulances and emergency traffic throughout the day and night.
    burst_water_mane08-06-09-2013_1_1.jpg
  • An empty road due to a cracked road surface of tarmac, weeks after disastrous flooding in nearby Herne Hill, south London. Denmark Hill has been closed in both directions due to another burst water main in multiple locations across the road (A215) between the junctions of Champion Hill and Champion Park in south London. Water is seen running towards Kings College Hospital, 200m downhill and Denmark Hill is a major thoroughfare for the hospital's Accident & Amergency (A&E) department and used by ambulances and emergency traffic throughout the day and night.
    burst_water_mane01-06-09-2013_1_1.jpg
  • Local vehicles belonging to local businesses in deep water after a burst water main closed the otherwise busy junction of Half Moon Lane and Dulwich Road in the south London area of Herne Hill. At about 5am, emergency crews were called when water inundated local homes and businesses, forcing residents to evacuate their properties and leave before electricity supplies were shut down.
    SE24_burst_water_main10-07-08-2013.jpg
  • A wide landscape of flooding in an inner-city road junction. A burst water main closed the otherwise busy junction of Half Moon Lane and Dulwich Road in the south London area of Herne Hill. At about 5am, emergency crews were called when water inundated local homes and businesses, forcing residents to evacuate their properties and leave before electricity supplies were shut down.
    SE24_burst_water_main04-07-08-2013.jpg
  • A Thames Water employee at the scene of an empty road due to a cracked road surface of tarmac, weeks after disastrous flooding in nearby Herne Hill, south London. Denmark Hill has been closed in both directions due to another burst water main in multiple locations across the road (A215) between the junctions of Champion Hill and Champion Park in south London. Water is seen running towards Kings College Hospital, 200m downhill and Denmark Hill is a major thoroughfare for the hospital's Accident & Amergency (A&E) department and used by ambulances and emergency traffic throughout the day and night.
    burst_water_mane12-06-09-2013_1_1.jpg
  • An empty road due to a cracked road surface of tarmac, weeks after disastrous flooding in nearby Herne Hill, south London. Denmark Hill has been closed in both directions due to another burst water main in multiple locations across the road (A215) between the junctions of Champion Hill and Champion Park in south London. Water is seen running towards Kings College Hospital, 200m downhill and Denmark Hill is a major thoroughfare for the hospital's Accident & Amergency (A&E) department and used by ambulances and emergency traffic throughout the day and night.
    burst_water_mane07-06-09-2013_1_1.jpg
  • An empty road due to a cracked road surface of tarmac, weeks after disastrous flooding in nearby Herne Hill, south London. Denmark Hill has been closed in both directions due to another burst water main in multiple locations across the road (A215) between the junctions of Champion Hill and Champion Park in south London. Water is seen running towards Kings College Hospital, 200m downhill and Denmark Hill is a major thoroughfare for the hospital's Accident & Amergency (A&E) department and used by ambulances and emergency traffic throughout the day and night.
    burst_water_mane02-06-09-2013_1_1.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 2nd March 2013. Burst water main causes flooding disruption in central London. Water flowing down a drain.
    20130302burst water main london_S.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 2nd March 2013. Burst water main causes flooding disruption in central London. Cars and other vehicles pass through the deep water gathering on Piccadilly.
    20130302burst water main london_O.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 2nd March 2013. Burst water main causes flooding disruption in central London. Cars and other vehicles pass through the deep water gathering on Piccadilly.
    20130302burst water main london_L.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 2nd March 2013. Burst water main causes flooding disruption in central London. Cars and other vehicles pass through the deep water gathering on Piccadilly.
    20130302burst water main london_M.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 2nd March 2013. Burst water main causes flooding disruption in central London. Emergency services on hand at the scene on Piccadilly.
    20130302burst water main london_H.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 2nd March 2013. Burst water main causes flooding disruption in central London. People run through the flowing water running onto Piccadilly.
    20130302burst water main london_E.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 2nd March 2013. Burst water main causes flooding disruption in central London. Emergency services on hand at the scene on Piccadilly.
    20130302burst water main london_J.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 2nd March 2013. Burst water main causes flooding disruption in central London. Cars and other vehicles pass through the deep water gathering on Piccadilly.
    20130302burst water main london_D.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 2nd March 2013. Burst water main causes flooding disruption in central London. Emergency services on hand at the scene on Piccadilly.
    20130302burst water main london_I.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 2nd March 2013. Burst water main causes flooding disruption in central London. Emergency services on hand at the scene on Piccadilly.
    20130302burst water main london_G.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 2nd March 2013. Burst water main causes flooding disruption in central London. Here in Regent Street is where the source of the problem.
    20130302burst water main london_C.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 2nd March 2013. Burst water main causes flooding disruption in central London. Here in Regent Street is where the source of the problem.
    20130302burst water main london_B.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 2nd March 2013. Burst water main causes flooding disruption in central London. Here in Regent Street is where the source of the problem.
    20130302burst water main london_A.jpg
  • Waters subside leaving a mess of silt and stones after a Thames Water main water main burst on 25th October 2016, Camberwell New Road, Southwark, London. Thames Water officials, inspectors and police inspect the damage to the A202 Camberwell New Road now closed to traffic after the overnight event.
    camberwell_flood-06-25-10-2016.jpg
  • Waters subside leaving a mess of silt and stones after a Thames Water main water main burst on 25th October 2016, Camberwell New Road, Southwark, London. Thames Water officials, inspectors and police inspect the damage to the A202 Camberwell New Road now closed to traffic after the overnight event.
    camberwell_flood-02-25-10-2016.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 2nd March 2013. Burst water main causes flooding disruption in central London. Cars and other vehicles pass through the deep water gathering on Piccadilly.
    20130302burst water main london_N.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 2nd March 2013. Burst water main causes flooding disruption in central London. Water flowing down a drain.
    20130302burst water main london_R.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 2nd March 2013. Burst water main causes flooding disruption in central London. Water flowing down a drain on Piccadilly.
    20130302burst water main london_P.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 2nd March 2013. Burst water main causes flooding disruption in central London. Water flowing down a drain.
    20130302burst water main london_Q.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 2nd March 2013. Burst water main causes flooding disruption in central London. Emergency services on hand at the scene on Piccadilly.
    20130302burst water main london_K.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 2nd March 2013. Burst water main causes flooding disruption in central London. People run through the flowing water running onto Piccadilly.
    20130302burst water main london_F.jpg
  • Waters subside leaving a mess of silt and stones after a Thames Water main water main burst on 25th October 2016, Camberwell New Road, Southwark, London. Thames Water officials, inspectors and police inspect the damage to the A202 Camberwell New Road now closed to traffic after the overnight event.
    camberwell_flood-03-25-10-2016.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_6393_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_6378_1 1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_6367_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_6350_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_6327_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_1150_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_6387_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_6381_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_6370_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_6360_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_6349_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_6346_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_6339_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_6331_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_6320_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_6292_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_1225_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_1161_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_1159_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_1147_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_1145_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_6318_1.jpg
  • Pedestrians and traffic negotiate a road where a water man has burst at a crossing near Haus Khas, New Delhi, India
    SFE_141010_302.jpg
  • Flamingo inflatable swimming aid burst on the bank of the river Orbeau on 28th August 2007 in Lagrasse, France. Discarded plastic toys are both an eyesaw and an ecological problem.
    _E6A0057.jpg
  • Mother Louise Irwin-Ryan with her daughter Georgia (11, wearing a pink Lolita dress) and son Kiefer (8, wearing a red Liverpool Football Club kit) spending a day out together in Camden Town, North London. The kids here both decide to play on the side of the road trying to burst giant bubbles. Louise is on various benefits to help support her family income, and housing, although recent government changes to benefits may affect her family drastically, possibly meaning they may have to move out of London. Louise Ryan was born on the Wirral peninsula in 1970.  She moved to London with her family in 1980.  Having lived in both Manchester and Ireland, she now lives permanently in North London with her husband and two children. Through the years Louise has battled to recover from a serious motorcycle accident in 1992 and has recently been diagnosed with Bipolar Affective Disorder. (Photo by Mike Kemp/For The Washington Post)
    11062011family on benefits camdenP.jpg
  • ‘Can’t you hear the future weeping? Our love must save the world’, a statement by writer Ben Okri was revealed in a live art piece by eco Artists Ackroyd & Harvey on 25th July 2021 floating in the Thames in front of Tate Modern, London, United Kingdom. Conceived as a message to us all, the artists were calling yet again for us to act in the face of our climate crisis. In the temporary ‘greenhouse’ of Tate, the seeds burst into life with the added dimension of Okri’s clarion call to use active love to inspire the change we need. Stencilled letters, blocking the light, then removed, created the message within the grass. For the final act, in a solemn ritual, the grass banner was rolled up, carried out by volunteer performers and floated on the Thames. Visible from up high, floating on the tidal river, the luminescent yellow letters stood out boldly from the rich green of the grass. At the end of the day the banner was dismantled and the grass art distributed to anyone who wanted to continue to grow the words.
    _51A9678.jpg
  • ‘Can’t you hear the future weeping? Our love must save the world’, a statement by writer Ben Okri was revealed in a live art piece by eco Artists Ackroyd & Harvey on 25th July 2021 floating in the Thames in front of Tate Modern, London, United Kingdom. Conceived as a message to us all, the artists were calling yet again for us to act in the face of our climate crisis. In the temporary ‘greenhouse’ of Tate, the seeds burst into life with the added dimension of Okri’s clarion call to use active love to inspire the change we need. Stencilled letters, blocking the light, then removed, created the message within the grass. For the final act, in a solemn ritual, the grass banner was rolled up, carried out by volunteer performers and floated on the Thames. Visible from up high, floating on the tidal river, the luminescent yellow letters stood out boldly from the rich green of the grass. At the end of the day the banner was dismantled and the grass art distributed to anyone who wanted to continue to grow the words.
    _51A9674.jpg
  • Ben Okri, reading a poem for Extinction Rebellion on 25th July 2021 outside Tate Modern, London, United Kingdom. The lines ‘Can’t you hear the future weeping? Our love must save the world’ is a statement by the writer which was revealed in a live art piece by eco Artists Ackroyd & Harvey conceived as a message to us all, the artists were calling yet again for us to act in the face of our climate crisis. In the temporary ‘greenhouse’ of Tate, the seeds burst into life with the added dimension of Okri’s clarion call to use active love to inspire the change we need. Stencilled letters, blocking the light, then removed, created the message within the grass. For the final act, in a solemn ritual, the grass banner was rolled up, carried out by volunteer performers and floated on the Thames. Visible from up high, floating on the tidal river, the luminescent yellow letters stood out boldly from the rich green of the grass. At the end of the day the banner was dismantled and the grass art distributed to anyone who wanted to continue to grow the words.
    _51A9668.jpg
  • ‘Can’t you hear the future weeping? Our love must save the world’, a statement by writer Ben Okri was revealed in a live art piece by eco Artists Ackroyd & Harvey on 25th July 2021 floating in the Thames in front of Tate Modern, London, United Kingdom. Conceived as a message to us all, the artists were calling yet again for us to act in the face of our climate crisis. In the temporary ‘greenhouse’ of Tate, the seeds burst into life with the added dimension of Okri’s clarion call to use active love to inspire the change we need. Stencilled letters, blocking the light, then removed, created the message within the grass. For the final act, in a solemn ritual, the grass banner was rolled up, carried out by volunteer performers and floated on the Thames. Visible from up high, floating on the tidal river, the luminescent yellow letters stood out boldly from the rich green of the grass. At the end of the day the banner was dismantled and the grass art distributed to anyone who wanted to continue to grow the words.
    _51A9655.jpg
  • ‘Can’t you hear the future weeping? Our love must save the world’, a statement by writer Ben Okri was revealed in a live art piece by eco Artists Ackroyd & Harvey on 25th July 2021 floating in the Thames in front of Tate Modern, London, United Kingdom. Conceived as a message to us all, the artists were calling yet again for us to act in the face of our climate crisis. In the temporary ‘greenhouse’ of Tate, the seeds burst into life with the added dimension of Okri’s clarion call to use active love to inspire the change we need. Stencilled letters, blocking the light, then removed, created the message within the grass. For the final act, in a solemn ritual, the grass banner was rolled up, carried out by volunteer performers and floated on the Thames. Visible from up high, floating on the tidal river, the luminescent yellow letters stood out boldly from the rich green of the grass. At the end of the day the banner was dismantled and the grass art distributed to anyone who wanted to continue to grow the words.
    _51A9615.jpg
  • ‘Can’t you hear the future weeping? Our love must save the world’ a statement on grass by writer Ben Okri revealed in a live art piece by eco Artists Ackroyd & Harvey on 25th July 2021 in Tate Modern, London, United Kingdom. Conceived as a message to us all, the artists were calling yet again for us to act in the face of our climate crisis. In the temporary ‘greenhouse’ of Tate, the seeds burst into life with the added dimension of Okri’s clarion call to use active love to inspire the change we need. Stencilled letters, blocking the light, then removed, created the message within the grass. For the final act, in a solemn ritual, the grass banner was rolled up, carried out by volunteer performers and floated on the Thames. Visible from up high, floating on the tidal river, the luminescent yellow letters stood out boldly from the rich green of the grass. At the end of the day the banner was dismantled and the grass art distributed to anyone who wanted to continue to grow the words.
    _51A9375.jpg
  • Ben Okri dancing with his daughter Mirabella, ‘Can’t you hear the future weeping? Our love must save the world’ is a statement by the writer Ben Okri which was revealed in a live art piece by eco Artists Ackroyd & Harvey on 25th July 2021 in the Turbine Hall of Tate Modern, London, United Kingdom. Conceived as a message to us all, the artists were calling yet again for us to act in the face of our climate crisis. In the temporary ‘greenhouse’ of Tate, the seeds burst into life with the added dimension of Okri’s clarion call to use active love to inspire the change we need. Stencilled letters, blocking the light, then removed, created the message within the grass. For the final act, in a solemn ritual, the grass banner was rolled up, carried out by volunteer performers and floated on the Thames. Visible from up high, floating on the tidal river, the luminescent yellow letters stood out boldly from the rich green of the grass. At the end of the day the banner was dismantled and the grass art distributed to anyone who wanted to continue to grow the words.
    _51A9351.jpg
  • Ben Okri with his daughter Mirabella, ‘Can’t you hear the future weeping? Our love must save the world’ is a statement by the writer Ben Okri which was revealed in a live art piece by eco Artists Ackroyd & Harvey on 25th July 2021 in the Turbine Hall of Tate Modern, London, United Kingdom. Conceived as a message to us all, the artists were calling yet again for us to act in the face of our climate crisis. In the temporary ‘greenhouse’ of Tate, the seeds burst into life with the added dimension of Okri’s clarion call to use active love to inspire the change we need. Stencilled letters, blocking the light, then removed, created the message within the grass. For the final act, in a solemn ritual, the grass banner was rolled up, carried out by volunteer performers and floated on the Thames. Visible from up high, floating on the tidal river, the luminescent yellow letters stood out boldly from the rich green of the grass. At the end of the day the banner was dismantled and the grass art distributed to anyone who wanted to continue to grow the words.
    _51A9359.jpg
  • LONDON, ENGLAND, UK, JUNE 11TH 2011. Mother Louise Irwin-Ryan with her daughter Georgia (11, wearing a pink Lolita dress) and son Kiefer (8, wearing a red Liverpool Football Club kit) spending a day out together in Camden Town, North London. The kids here both decide to play on the side of the road trying to burst giant bubbles. Louise is on various benefits to help support her family income, and housing, although recent government changed to benefits may affect her family drastically, possibly meaning they may have to move out of London. Louise Ryan was born on the Wirral peninsula in 1970.  She moved to London with her family in 1980.  Having lived in both Manchester and Ireland, she now lives permanently in North London with her husband and two children. Through the years Louise has battled to recover from a serious motorcycle accident in 1992 and has recently been diagnosed with Bipolar Affective Disorder. (Photo by Mike Kemp/For The Washington Post)
    11062011family on benefits camdenQ.jpg
  • LONDON, ENGLAND, UK, JUNE 11TH 2011. Mother Louise Irwin-Ryan with her daughter Georgia (11, wearing a pink Lolita dress) and son Kiefer (8, wearing a red Liverpool Football Club kit) spending a day out together in Camden Town, North London. The kids here both decide to play on the side of the road trying to burst giant bubbles. Louise is on various benefits to help support her family income, and housing, although recent government changed to benefits may affect her family drastically, possibly meaning they may have to move out of London. Louise Ryan was born on the Wirral peninsula in 1970.  She moved to London with her family in 1980.  Having lived in both Manchester and Ireland, she now lives permanently in North London with her husband and two children. Through the years Louise has battled to recover from a serious motorcycle accident in 1992 and has recently been diagnosed with Bipolar Affective Disorder. (Photo by Mike Kemp/For The Washington Post)
    11062011family on benefits camdenN.jpg
  • Looking eastwards downriver from Waterloo Bridge to the Southbank and the City of London, a burst of sunlight shines across river traffic, from the top of the One Blackfriars skyscraper, on 4th March 2019, in London England.
    thames_skyline-05-04-03-2019.jpg
  • Looking eastwards downriver from Waterloo Bridge to the Southbank and the City of London, a burst of sunlight shines across river traffic, from the top of the One Blackfriars skyscraper, on 4th March 2019, in London England.
    thames_skyline-04-04-03-2019.jpg
  • Helen McKendry, eldest daughter of Jean McConville who was abducted and murdered by the IRA in 1972. For thirty years until 2003 she searched for her mother's body and has cmpaigned to this day for her killers to be brought to justice. Jean McConville's body was finally discovered in 2003 on Shelling Beach.<br />
<br />
Jean was a protestant married to a Catholic. The family had been forced to flee Protestant East Belfast by loyalists in 1969 and had moved to the Divis flats on the Falls Road. On December the 6th, Jean McConville was playing bingo, when she was informed her daughter Helen was in hospital. Two men she had never seen before ushered her to a waiting car. At 2am the police came to the house and took Helen Helen to the Albert Street barracks. There she found her mother badly bruised, hair pulled from her head and her coat and shoes missing. She had been abducted, iterrogated, and  had managed to escape from her captors. After returning home and sleeping for the afternoon, Helen went out for less than half an hour to buy fish and chips for the evening meal, to discover that while her mother was taking a bath, 12 men wearing masks had burst into the house and taken Jeran McConville.
    7549_10_1.jpg
  • Brent Hoberman together with Martha Lane Fox, founded Lastminute.com in 1998, an online travel and gift business that floated at the peak of the dot-com bubble and managed to survive the subsequent burst of the bubble.
    _O7F2164.jpg
  • Ben Okri, Damon Albarn and artists Ackroyd & Harvey on 25th July 2021 outside Tate Modern, London, United Kingdom. ‘Can’t you hear the future weeping? Our love must save the world’ is a statement by writer Ben Okri which was revealed in a live art piece by eco Artists Ackroyd & Harvey conceived as a message to us all, the artists were calling yet again for us to act in the face of our climate crisis. In the temporary ‘greenhouse’ of Tate, the seeds burst into life with the added dimension of Okri’s clarion call to use active love to inspire the change we need. Stencilled letters, blocking the light, then removed, created the message within the grass. For the final act, in a solemn ritual, the grass banner was rolled up, carried out by volunteer performers and floated on the Thames. Visible from up high, floating on the tidal river, the luminescent yellow letters stood out boldly from the rich green of the grass. At the end of the day the banner was dismantled and the grass art distributed to anyone who wanted to continue to grow the words.
    _51A9748.jpg
  • Damon Albarn singing for Extinction Rebelion with Mirabella Okri on 25th July 2021 outside Tate Modern, London, United Kingdom. ‘Can’t you hear the future weeping? Our love must save the world’ is a statement by writer Ben Okri which was revealed in a live art piece by eco Artists Ackroyd & Harvey conceived as a message to us all, the artists were calling yet again for us to act in the face of our climate crisis. In the temporary ‘greenhouse’ of Tate, the seeds burst into life with the added dimension of Okri’s clarion call to use active love to inspire the change we need. Stencilled letters, blocking the light, then removed, created the message within the grass. For the final act, in a solemn ritual, the grass banner was rolled up, carried out by volunteer performers and floated on the Thames. Visible from up high, floating on the tidal river, the luminescent yellow letters stood out boldly from the rich green of the grass. At the end of the day the banner was dismantled and the grass art distributed to anyone who wanted to continue to grow the words.
    _51A9734.jpg
  • A ritual carrying the grass banner, ‘Can’t you hear the future weeping? Our love must save the world’ a statement by writer Ben Okri revealed in a live art piece by eco Artists Ackroyd & Harvey on 25th July 2021 in Tate Modern, London, United Kingdom. Conceived as a message to us all, the artists were calling yet again for us to act in the face of our climate crisis. In the temporary ‘greenhouse’ of Tate, the seeds burst into life with the added dimension of Okri’s clarion call to use active love to inspire the change we need. Stencilled letters, blocking the light, then removed, created the message within the grass. For the final act, in a solemn ritual, the grass banner was rolled up, carried out by volunteer performers and floated on the Thames. Visible from up high, floating on the tidal river, the luminescent yellow letters stood out boldly from the rich green of the grass. At the end of the day the banner was dismantled and the grass art distributed to anyone who wanted to continue to grow the words.
    _51A9417.jpg
  • Mother Louise Irwin-Ryan with her daughter Georgia (11, wearing a pink Lolita dress) and son Kiefer (8, wearing a red Liverpool Football Club kit) spending a day out together in Camden Town, North London. The kids here both decide to play on the side of the road trying to burst giant bubbles. Louise is on various benefits to help support her family income, and housing, although recent government changes to benefits may affect her family drastically, possibly meaning they may have to move out of London. Louise Ryan was born on the Wirral peninsula in 1970.  She moved to London with her family in 1980.  Having lived in both Manchester and Ireland, she now lives permanently in North London with her husband and two children. Through the years Louise has battled to recover from a serious motorcycle accident in 1992 and has recently been diagnosed with Bipolar Affective Disorder. (Photo by Mike Kemp/For The Washington Post)
    11062011family on benefits camdenM.jpg
  • LONDON, ENGLAND, UK, JUNE 11TH 2011. Mother Louise Irwin-Ryan with her daughter Georgia (11, wearing a pink Lolita dress) and son Kiefer (8, wearing a red Liverpool Football Club kit) spending a day out together in Camden Town, North London. The kids here both decide to play on the side of the road trying to burst giant bubbles. Louise is on various benefits to help support her family income, and housing, although recent government changed to benefits may affect her family drastically, possibly meaning they may have to move out of London. Louise Ryan was born on the Wirral peninsula in 1970.  She moved to London with her family in 1980.  Having lived in both Manchester and Ireland, she now lives permanently in North London with her husband and two children. Through the years Louise has battled to recover from a serious motorcycle accident in 1992 and has recently been diagnosed with Bipolar Affective Disorder. (Photo by Mike Kemp/For The Washington Post)
    11062011family on benefits camdenO.jpg
  • A cyclist pedals through an Autumnal park. Surrounded by autumn leaves, brown and yellow in afternoon sunlight, the man cycles through sunlight during a burst of afternoon sunshine in Ruskin Park in the London borough of Lambeth. In the background are Edwardian period homes on Finsen Road, SE24.
    autumn_park07-28-10-2015_1.jpg
  • Brent Hoberman together with Martha Lane Fox, founded Lastminute.com in 1998, an online travel and gift business that floated at the peak of the dot-com bubble and managed to survive the subsequent burst of the bubble.Hoberman founded another VC-backed internet startup, mydeco.com, an online interiors site.
    _O7F2124.jpg
  • Leather Pool at Lower Geyser Basin, west Yellowstone National Park. The Lower Geyser Basin possess a large variety of thermal features, including mud pots, geysers, pools, springs, and fumaroles. Great Fountain Geyser is one of the grand geysers in the Lower Geyser Basin. It erupts from a large, terraced platform with massive bursts exploding up to 150 feet high. White Dome Geyser does not have spectacular eruptive displays, but it does have one of the largest pink and white streaked cones in the Park.
    2007_08_07_Lower Geyser Basin_O.jpg
  • Silex Spring at Lower Geyser Basin, west Yellowstone National Park. The Lower Geyser Basin possess a large variety of thermal features, including mud pots, geysers, pools, springs, and fumaroles. Great Fountain Geyser is one of the grand geysers in the Lower Geyser Basin. It erupts from a large, terraced platform with massive bursts exploding up to 150 feet high. White Dome Geyser does not have spectacular eruptive displays, but it does have one of the largest pink and white streaked cones in the Park.
    2007_08_07_Lower Geyser Basin_G.jpg
  • Dead trees in the waters of the Lower Geyser Basin, west Yellowstone National Park. The Lower Geyser Basin possess a large variety of thermal features, including mud pots, geysers, pools, springs, and fumaroles. Great Fountain Geyser is one of the grand geysers in the Lower Geyser Basin. It erupts from a large, terraced platform with massive bursts exploding up to 150 feet high. White Dome Geyser does not have spectacular eruptive displays, but it does have one of the largest pink and white streaked cones in the Park.
    2007_08_07_Lower Geyser Basin_A.jpg
  • Reaching high above his head, a young four year-old boy waves a hoop drenched in a soapy solution that creates large bubbles trailing in the air at a camp site in Heerde, Gelderland, in the Netherlands. We look up at the lad between tall trees during his summer holidays as he arcs the rod loaded with a thin film of soap water, creating a thin film of iridescence on its surface. But moments after it forms, it bursts. From a personal documentary project entitled "Next of Kin" about the photographer's two children's early years spent in parallel universes. Model released.
    ella+sam30-16-08_2002_1.jpg
  • Crowd celebrates the miraculous liquification of St Genaro's blood which happens three times a year. A sample of the Saint's blood was saved after his execution by the emperor Diocietian who persecuted fellow Christians. The miracle of the liquificationis reputed to protect the population from unexpected lava bursts from Vesuvius.
    7699_17_1_1.jpg
  • A woman during Confession, Naples Cathedral, Naples, Italy, during for the announcement of the miraclulous liquifaction of St Genaro's blood. A sample of the Saint's blood was saved after his execution by the emperor Diocietian who persecuted fellow Christians. The miracle of the liquificationis reputed to protect the population from unexpected lava bursts from Vesuvius.
    7702_28a_1_1.jpg
  • Crowd waits for the miraculous liquification of St Genaro's blood which happens three times a year.  A sample of the Saint's blood was saved after his execution by the emperor Diocietian who persecuted fellow Christians. The miracle of the liquificationis reputed to protect the population from unexpected lava bursts from Vesuvius.
    7702_5_20_1_1.jpg
  • Priest holds up the ampule of liquified blood of Saint Genaro before blessing one of his parishoners. The miracle of St Genaro, Naples Cathedral. Italy. A sample of the Saint's blood was saved after his execution by the emperor Diocietian who persecuted fellow Christians. The miracle of the liquificationis reputed to protect the population from unexpected lava bursts from Vesuvius.
    7698_8_1_1.jpg
  • Priest blesses woman with phial of St Genaro's liquified blood. The miracle of St Genaro, Naples Cathedral. Italy. A sample of the Saint's blood was saved after his execution by the emperor Diocietian who persecuted fellow Christians. The miracle of the liquificationis reputed to protect the population from unexpected lava bursts from Vesuvius.
    7696_2_6_1_1.jpg
  • Crowds wait outside the Cathedral for the announcement of the miraclulous liquifaction of St Genaro's blood. A sample of the Saint's blood was saved after his execution by the emperor Diocietian who persecuted fellow Christians. The miracle of the liquificationis reputed to protect the population from unexpected lava bursts from Vesuvius.
    7694_6_26_1_1.jpg
  • Crowds wait outside the Cathedral for the announcement of the miraclulous liquifaction of St Genaro's blood. A sample of the Saint's blood was saved after his execution by the emperor Diocietian who persecuted fellow Christians. The miracle of the liquificationis reputed to protect the population from unexpected lava bursts from Vesuvius.
    7694_4_19_1_1.jpg
  • The crowning glory of the Block9 field is the brand new London Underground. A sinister, decaying tower block with a blazing tube train bursting from the top, this towering venue showcases the cream of London's sound system underground, Glastonbury Festival 2010.
    _MG_3572.jpg
  • Lower Geyser Basin, west Yellowstone National Park. The Lower Geyser Basin possess a large variety of thermal features, including mud pots, geysers, pools, springs, and fumaroles. Great Fountain Geyser is one of the grand geysers in the Lower Geyser Basin. It erupts from a large, terraced platform with massive bursts exploding up to 150 feet high. White Dome Geyser does not have spectacular eruptive displays, but it does have one of the largest pink and white streaked cones in the Park.
    2007_08_07_Lower Geyser Basin_E.jpg
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