• Facebook
  • Twitter
x

MARK KERRISON | Photojournalist

  • Live News Feed
  • Slideshows
  • About
    • About
    • Data Protection
    • Terms and Conditions
  • Contact
Show Navigation
Cart Lightbox Client Area

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
{ 75 images found }
twitterlinkedinfacebook

Loading ()...

  • London, UK. 12 July, 2019. A poster at a bus shelter in Finsbury Park by street art collective Protest Stencil draws attention to the Science Museum having partnered with Raytheon, a US weapons manufacturer which sells arms used by Saudi Arabia for attacks on civilian areas in Yemen, for sponsorship of its new ‘Top Secret’ exhibition. Protest Stencil last week withdrew artwork from the exhibition in protest against Raytheon’s sponsorship.
    Science-Museum-Raytheon-001.jpg
  • London, UK. 12 July, 2019. A poster at a bus shelter in Finsbury Park by street art collective Protest Stencil draws attention to the Science Museum having partnered with Raytheon, a US weapons manufacturer which sells arms used by Saudi Arabia for attacks on civilian areas in Yemen, for sponsorship of its new ‘Top Secret’ exhibition. Protest Stencil last week withdrew artwork from the exhibition in protest against Raytheon’s sponsorship.
    Science-Museum-Raytheon-002.jpg
  • London, UK. 12 July, 2019. A poster at a bus shelter in Finsbury Park by street art collective Protest Stencil draws attention to the Science Museum having partnered with Raytheon, a US weapons manufacturer which sells arms used by Saudi Arabia for attacks on civilian areas in Yemen, for sponsorship of its new ‘Top Secret’ exhibition. Protest Stencil last week withdrew artwork from the exhibition in protest against Raytheon’s sponsorship.
    Science-Museum-Raytheon-003.jpg
  • London, UK. 12 July, 2019. A poster at a bus shelter in Finsbury Park by street art collective Protest Stencil draws attention to the Science Museum having partnered with Raytheon, a US weapons manufacturer which sells arms used by Saudi Arabia for attacks on civilian areas in Yemen, for sponsorship of its new ‘Top Secret’ exhibition. Protest Stencil last week withdrew artwork from the exhibition in protest against Raytheon’s sponsorship.
    Science-Museum-Raytheon-005.jpg
  • London, UK. 12 July, 2019. A poster at a bus shelter in Finsbury Park by street art collective Protest Stencil draws attention to the Science Museum having partnered with Raytheon, a US weapons manufacturer which sells arms used by Saudi Arabia for attacks on civilian areas in Yemen, for sponsorship of its new ‘Top Secret’ exhibition. Protest Stencil last week withdrew artwork from the exhibition in protest against Raytheon’s sponsorship.
    Science-Museum-Raytheon-004.jpg
  • London, UK. 13 September, 2019. Sony Design's Affinity in Autonomy at the Victoria & Albert museum for the London Design Festival portrays the independence and free will of robotics through the random movements of an interactive robotic pendulum. It detects human presence and reflects its recognition in kinetic motion, engaging visitors seeking an emotional and physical response.
    London-Design-Festival-launch-023.jpg
  • London, UK. 13 September, 2019. Sam Jacob’s Sea Things has been installed within the grand entrance to the V&A museum as a Landmark Project for the London Design Festival. Designed to highlight the need to rethink the global plastics system, the installation features a large two-way mirrored cube suspended above visitors, with an animated motion graphic within created alongside Rory Cahill. It is intended to evoke powerful emotions in visitors, leaving them empowered with a better understanding of their role alongside technology and design to make the world a more sustainable place.
    London-Design-Festival-launch-043.jpg
  • London, UK. 13 September, 2019. Sam Jacob’s Sea Things has been installed within the grand entrance to the V&A museum as a Landmark Project for the London Design Festival. Designed to highlight the need to rethink the global plastics system, the installation features a large two-way mirrored cube suspended above visitors, with an animated motion graphic within created alongside Rory Cahill. It is intended to evoke powerful emotions in visitors, leaving them empowered with a better understanding of their role alongside technology and design to make the world a more sustainable place.
    London-Design-Festival-launch-017.jpg
  • London, UK. 13 September, 2019. Designer Sebastian Cox displays his Writer's Collection, a desk, chair and pen holder in sustainable American red oak for Amanda Nevill of the British Film Institute, at the Victoria & Albert museum during the London Design Festival launch. The design forms part of the Legacy installation.
    London-Design-Festival-launch-018.jpg
  • London, UK. 13 September, 2019. Designer Sam Jacob discusses his Sea Things installation within the grand entrance to the V&A museum for the London Design Festival. Designed to highlight the need to rethink the global plastics system, the Landmark Project installation features a large two-way mirrored cube suspended above visitors, with an animated motion graphic within created alongside Rory Cahill. It is intended to evoke powerful emotions in visitors, leaving them empowered with a better understanding of their role alongside technology and design to make the world a more sustainable place.
    London-Design-Festival-launch-046.jpg
  • London, UK. 13 September, 2019. Czech designer Rony Plesl discusses his Sacred Geometry installation at the Victoria & Albert museum at the launch of the London Design Festival. A glass installation inspired by Sacred Geometry, a universal language which organises all visible and invisible reality according to basic geometrical principles, it features three identical hexagonal glass tree trunks contrasted by a glowing forest of uranium glass which radiates green fluorescent light. It employs a groundbreaking melted-glass technology developed by Czech company Bolety being given its international premiere at the London Design Festival.
    London-Design-Festival-launch-010.jpg
  • London, UK. 13 September, 2019. Czech designer Rony Plesl discusses his Sacred Geometry installation at the Victoria & Albert museum at the launch of the London Design Festival. A glass installation inspired by Sacred Geometry, a universal language which organises all visible and invisible reality according to basic geometrical principles, it features three identical hexagonal glass tree trunks contrasted by a glowing forest of uranium glass which radiates green fluorescent light. It employs a groundbreaking melted-glass technology developed by Czech company Bolety being given its international premiere at the London Design Festival.
    London-Design-Festival-launch-027.jpg
  • London, UK. 13 September, 2019. Sony Design's Affinity in Autonomy at the Victoria & Albert museum for the London Design Festival portrays the independence and free will of robotics through the random movements of an interactive robotic pendulum. It detects human presence and reflects its recognition in kinetic motion, engaging visitors seeking an emotional and physical response.
    London-Design-Festival-launch-013.jpg
  • London, UK. 13 September, 2019. Sony Design's Affinity in Autonomy at the Victoria & Albert museum for the London Design Festival portrays the independence and free will of robotics through the random movements of an interactive robotic pendulum. It detects human presence and reflects its recognition in kinetic motion, engaging visitors seeking an emotional and physical response.
    London-Design-Festival-launch-035.jpg
  • London, UK. 13 September, 2019. Studio MICAT, There Project and Proud Studio's Non-Pavilion installation at the Victoria & Albert museum for the London Design Festival creates a space in its most minimal sense, inviting visitors to engage with the idea of ‘less’ as enrichment rather than loss and serving as a reminder of our urgent need to produce less. Using AR technology, the digital pavilions are intended to ask pertinent questions for our times.
    London-Design-Festival-launch-021.jpg
  • London, UK. 13 September, 2019. Sam Jacob’s Sea Things has been installed within the grand entrance to the V&A museum as a Landmark Project for the London Design Festival. Designed to highlight the need to rethink the global plastics system, the installation features a large two-way mirrored cube suspended above visitors, with an animated motion graphic within created alongside Rory Cahill. It is intended to evoke powerful emotions in visitors, leaving them empowered with a better understanding of their role alongside technology and design to make the world a more sustainable place.
    London-Design-Festival-launch-001.jpg
  • London, UK. 13 September, 2019. Sam Jacob’s Sea Things has been installed within the grand entrance to the V&A museum as a Landmark Project for the London Design Festival. Designed to highlight the need to rethink the global plastics system, the installation features a large two-way mirrored cube suspended above visitors, with an animated motion graphic within created alongside Rory Cahill. It is intended to evoke powerful emotions in visitors, leaving them empowered with a better understanding of their role alongside technology and design to make the world a more sustainable place.
    London-Design-Festival-launch-030.jpg
  • London, UK. 13 September, 2019. Designer Sam Jacob discusses his Sea Things installation within the grand entrance to the V&A museum for the London Design Festival. Designed to highlight the need to rethink the global plastics system, the Landmark Project installation features a large two-way mirrored cube suspended above visitors, with an animated motion graphic within created alongside Rory Cahill. It is intended to evoke powerful emotions in visitors, leaving them empowered with a better understanding of their role alongside technology and design to make the world a more sustainable place.
    London-Design-Festival-launch-024.jpg
  • London, UK. 13 September, 2019. Sam Jacob’s Sea Things has been installed within the grand entrance to the V&A museum as a Landmark Project for the London Design Festival. Designed to highlight the need to rethink the global plastics system, the installation features a large two-way mirrored cube suspended above visitors, with an animated motion graphic within created alongside Rory Cahill. It is intended to evoke powerful emotions in visitors, leaving them empowered with a better understanding of their role alongside technology and design to make the world a more sustainable place.
    London-Design-Festival-launch-011.jpg
  • London, UK. 13 September, 2019. Designer Martino Gamper displays his shelves in fumed red oak with bleached veneer for Tamara Rojo CBE, Artistic Director of the English National Ballet, at the Victoria & Albert museum during the London Design Festival launch. The design forms part of the Legacy installation.
    London-Design-Festival-launch-016.jpg
  • London, UK. 13 September, 2019. Big Chief Demond Melancon of the Young Seminole Hunters + Assemble's Black Masking Culture in the Tapestries Gallery at the Victoria & Albert museum for the London Design Festival comprises Melancon’s huge Mardi Gras Indian suits composed of intricately hand-sewn beadwork. His work draws from a broad variety of stylistic influences, addresses stereotypical representations of black people, and tells powerful stories from his experience of the African diaspora.
    London-Design-Festival-launch-009.jpg
  • London, UK. 13 September, 2019. Designer Sam Jacob discusses his Sea Things installation within the grand entrance to the V&A museum for the London Design Festival. Designed to highlight the need to rethink the global plastics system, the Landmark Project installation features a large two-way mirrored cube suspended above visitors, with an animated motion graphic within created alongside Rory Cahill. It is intended to evoke powerful emotions in visitors, leaving them empowered with a better understanding of their role alongside technology and design to make the world a more sustainable place.
    London-Design-Festival-launch-005.jpg
  • London, UK. 20 December, 2019. Cheryl Diamond prepares to close Syd’s Coffee Stall for the very last time. The mahogany coffee stall, part of east London’s history, has been run by three generations of the same family on the corner of Shoreditch High Street and Calvert Avenue since 1919 and will go on display in the new Museum of London in Smithfield in 2024.
    Syds-Coffee-Stall-closes-down-010.jpg
  • London, UK. 20 December, 2019. Cheryl Diamond serves Dave Conway, the very last customer of Syd’s Coffee Stall, which has been run by three generations of the same family on the corner of Shoreditch High Street and Calvert Avenue since 1919. The mahogany coffee stall, part of east London’s history, will go on display in the new Museum of London in Smithfield in 2024.
    Syds-Coffee-Stall-closes-down-002.jpg
  • London, UK. 20 December, 2019. Cheryl Diamond talks to Dave Conway, the very last customer of Syd’s Coffee Stall, which has been run by three generations of the same family on the corner of Shoreditch High Street and Calvert Avenue since 1919. The mahogany coffee stall, part of east London’s history, will go on display in the new Museum of London in Smithfield in 2024.
    Syds-Coffee-Stall-closes-down-005.jpg
  • London, UK. 20 December, 2019. Cheryl Diamond serves Dave Conway, the very last customer of Syd’s Coffee Stall, which has been run by three generations of the same family on the corner of Shoreditch High Street and Calvert Avenue since 1919. The mahogany coffee stall, part of east London’s history, will go on display in the new Museum of London in Smithfield in 2024.
    Syds-Coffee-Stall-closes-down-020.jpg
  • London, UK. 20 December, 2019. A sign outside Syd’s Coffee Stall, which has been run by three generations of the same family on the corner of Shoreditch High Street and Calvert Avenue since 1919, shortly before its very last customer was served. The mahogany coffee stall will go on display in the new Museum of London in Smithfield in 2024.
    Syds-Coffee-Stall-closes-down-006.jpg
  • London, UK. 20 December, 2019. Syd’s Coffee Stall, which has been run by three generations of the same family on the corner of Shoreditch High Street and Calvert Avenue since 1919, shortly before its very last customer was served. The mahogany coffee stall will go on display in the new Museum of London in Smithfield in 2024.
    Syds-Coffee-Stall-closes-down-004.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. David Tovey of the Museum of Homelessness addresses activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and other LGBT+ groups preparing to take part in a London Pride Solidarity March in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-021.jpg
  • London, UK. 29th May, 2021. A speaker addresses fellow civil rights and other activists outside the British Museum about looted artefacts contained within their collections during a Kill The Bill National Day of Action in protest against the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts (PCSC) Bill 2021.
    Kill-The-Bill-Day-of-Action-062.jpg
  • London, UK. 20 December, 2019. Jane Tothill and Syd Tothill Junior, grandchildren of Syd Tothill, pose in front of Syd’s Coffee Stall, which has been run by three generations of the same family on the corner of Shoreditch High Street and Calvert Avenue since 1919, immediately before it was closed for business. The mahogany coffee stall, which has been run by Jane Tothill for thirty years, will go on display in the new Museum of London in Smithfield in 2024.
    2019-image-selection-016.jpg
  • London, UK. 20 December, 2019. Jane Tothill and Syd Tothill Junior, grandchildren of Syd Tothill, pose in front of Syd’s Coffee Stall, which has been run by three generations of the same family on the corner of Shoreditch High Street and Calvert Avenue since 1919, immediately before it was closed for business. The mahogany coffee stall, which has been run by Jane Tothill for thirty years, will go on display in the new Museum of London in Smithfield in 2024.
    Syds-Coffee-Stall-closes-down-001.jpg
  • London, UK. 20 December, 2019. Jane Tothill and Syd Tothill Junior, grandchildren of Syd Tothill, pose in front of Syd’s Coffee Stall, which has been run by three generations of the same family on the corner of Shoreditch High Street and Calvert Avenue since 1919, immediately before it was closed for business. The mahogany coffee stall, which has been run by Jane Tothill for thirty years, will go on display in the new Museum of London in Smithfield in 2024.
    Syds-Coffee-Stall-closes-down-015.jpg
  • London, UK. 20 December, 2019. A view of Syd’s Coffee Stall, which has been run by three generations of the same family on the corner of Shoreditch High Street and Calvert Avenue since 1919, a few minutes before it closed for business. The mahogany coffee stall, part of east London’s history, will go on display in the new Museum of London in Smithfield in 2024.
    Syds-Coffee-Stall-closes-down-003.jpg
  • London, UK. 20 December, 2019. A detail of the interior of Syd’s Coffee Stall minutes before it closed for business. The mahogany coffee stall, part of east London’s history, has been run by three generations of the same family on the corner of Shoreditch High Street and Calvert Avenue since 1919 and will go on display in the new Museum of London in Smithfield in 2024.
    Syds-Coffee-Stall-closes-down-008.jpg
  • London, UK. 20 December, 2019. Cheryl Diamond prepares to close Syd’s Coffee Stall for the very last time. The mahogany coffee stall, part of east London’s history, has been run by three generations of the same family on the corner of Shoreditch High Street and Calvert Avenue since 1919 and will go on display in the new Museum of London in Smithfield in 2024.
    Syds-Coffee-Stall-closes-down-019.jpg
  • London, UK. 20 December, 2019. Cheryl Diamond points to a photograph of Syd Tothill as she prepares to close Syd’s Coffee Stall for the last time. The mahogany coffee stall, part of east London’s history, has been run by three generations of the same family on the corner of Shoreditch High Street and Calvert Avenue since 1919 and will go on display in the new Museum of London in Smithfield in 2024.
    Syds-Coffee-Stall-closes-down-011.jpg
  • London, UK. 20 December, 2019. Cheryl Diamond prepares to close Syd’s Coffee Stall, which has been run by three generations of the same family on the corner of Shoreditch High Street and Calvert Avenue since 1919. The mahogany coffee stall, part of east London’s history, will go on display in the new Museum of London in Smithfield in 2024.
    Syds-Coffee-Stall-closes-down-018.jpg
  • London, UK. 20 December, 2019. Syd’s Coffee Stall, which has been run by three generations of the same family on the corner of Shoreditch High Street and Calvert Avenue since 1919, shortly before its very last customer was served. The mahogany coffee stall will go on display in the new Museum of London in Smithfield in 2024.
    Syds-Coffee-Stall-closes-down-009.jpg
  • London, UK. 20 December, 2019. Cheryl Diamond serves Dave Conway, the very last customer of Syd’s Coffee Stall, which has been run by three generations of the same family on the corner of Shoreditch High Street and Calvert Avenue since 1919. The mahogany coffee stall, part of east London’s history, will go on display in the new Museum of London in Smithfield in 2024.
    Syds-Coffee-Stall-closes-down-007.jpg
  • London, UK. 10 November, 2019. Remembrance Sunday artwork by Protest Stencil is displayed at a bus shelter outside the Imperial War Museum. The artwork contains the text ’Stop The War on Migrants’, features a red poppy, references the government’s hostile environment policies and calls for reflection on Britain’s colonial past and present.
    Protest-Stencil-Remembrance-004.jpg
  • London, UK. 10 November, 2019. Remembrance Sunday artwork by Protest Stencil is displayed at a bus shelter outside the Imperial War Museum. The artwork contains the text ’Stop The War on Migrants’, features a red poppy, references the government’s hostile environment policies and calls for reflection on Britain’s colonial past and present.
    Protest-Stencil-Remembrance-006.jpg
  • London, UK. 10 November, 2019. Remembrance Sunday artwork by Protest Stencil is displayed at a bus shelter outside the Imperial War Museum. The artwork contains the text ’Stop The War on Migrants’, features a red poppy, references the government’s hostile environment policies and calls for reflection on Britain’s colonial past and present.
    Protest-Stencil-Remembrance-009.jpg
  • London, UK. 10 November, 2019. Remembrance Sunday artwork by Protest Stencil is displayed at a bus shelter outside the Imperial War Museum. The artwork contains the text ’Stop The War on Migrants’, features a red poppy, references the government’s hostile environment policies and calls for reflection on Britain’s colonial past and present.
    Protest-Stencil-Remembrance-005.jpg
  • London, UK. 10 November, 2019. Remembrance Sunday artwork by Protest Stencil is displayed at a bus shelter outside the Imperial War Museum. The artwork contains the text ’Stop The War on Migrants’, features a red poppy, references the government’s hostile environment policies and calls for reflection on Britain’s colonial past and present.
    Protest-Stencil-Remembrance-002.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. David Tovey of the Museum of Homelessness addresses activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and other LGBT+ groups preparing to take part in a London Pride Solidarity March in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-094.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Jon Glackin (l) of Streets Kitchen and David Tovey (r) of the Museum of Homelessness prepare to take part in a London Pride Solidarity March in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-059.jpg
  • London, UK. 20 December, 2019. Dave Conway, the final customer, takes a photograph of Syd’s Coffee Stall, which has been run by three generations of the same family on the corner of Shoreditch High Street and Calvert Avenue since 1919, shortly before it closed for business. The mahogany coffee stall, part of east London’s history, will go on display in the new Museum of London in Smithfield in 2024.
    Syds-Coffee-Stall-closes-down-017.jpg
  • London, UK. 20 December, 2019. Cheryl Diamond prepares to close Syd’s Coffee Stall for the very last time. The mahogany coffee stall, part of east London’s history, has been run by three generations of the same family on the corner of Shoreditch High Street and Calvert Avenue since 1919 and will go on display in the new Museum of London in Smithfield in 2024.
    Syds-Coffee-Stall-closes-down-012.jpg
  • London, UK. 20 December, 2019. A detail of the interior of Syd’s Coffee Stall minutes before it closed for business. The mahogany coffee stall, part of east London’s history, has been run by three generations of the same family on the corner of Shoreditch High Street and Calvert Avenue since 1919 and will go on display in the new Museum of London in Smithfield in 2024.
    Syds-Coffee-Stall-closes-down-013.jpg
  • London, UK. 20 December, 2019. Cheryl Diamond looks at a photograph of Syd Tothill with the last customer of Syd’s Coffee Stall, Dave Conway. The mahogany coffee stall, part of east London’s history, has been run by three generations of the same family on the corner of Shoreditch High Street and Calvert Avenue since 1919 and will go on display in the new Museum of London in Smithfield in 2024.
    Syds-Coffee-Stall-closes-down-016.jpg
  • London, UK. 20 December, 2019. Cheryl Diamond serves Dave Conway, the very last customer of Syd’s Coffee Stall, which has been run by three generations of the same family on the corner of Shoreditch High Street and Calvert Avenue since 1919. The mahogany coffee stall, part of east London’s history, will go on display in the new Museum of London in Smithfield in 2024.
    Syds-Coffee-Stall-closes-down-014.jpg
  • London, UK. 10 November, 2019. Remembrance Sunday artwork by Protest Stencil is displayed at a bus shelter outside the Imperial War Museum. The artwork contains the text ’Stop The War on Migrants’, features a red poppy, references the government’s hostile environment policies and calls for reflection on Britain’s colonial past and present.
    Protest-Stencil-Remembrance-007.jpg
  • Cardiff, UK. 2nd May, 2017. The Techniquest science and discovery centre is viewed across Mount Stuart graving docks close to Cardiff Bay.
    Cardiff-Bay-Docks-2017-024.jpg
  • Cardiff, UK. 2nd May, 2017. Modern apartment blocks and the Techniquest science and discovery centre (r) are viewed across Mount Stuart graving docks close to Cardiff Bay.
    Cardiff-Bay-Docks-2017-030.jpg
  • London, UK. 15th March, 2019. A man reads out the names of homeless people who have died at a vigil by campaigners against homelessness from groups including Streets Kitchen and Disabled People Against Cuts (DPAC) opposite Downing Street to commemorate 799 homeless people who have died over the last 18 months and to call for an end to the cuts to services which result in homelessness and the increasing criminalisation of those experiencing homelessness.
    No-More-Deaths-On-Our-Streets-004.jpg
  • London, UK. 15th March, 2019. Campaigners against homelessness from groups including Streets Kitchen and Disabled People Against Cuts (DPAC) hold a vigil opposite Downing Street to commemorate 799 homeless people who have died over the last 18 months and to call for an end to the cuts to services which result in homelessness and the increasing criminalisation of those experiencing homelessness. Candles honour the dead.
    No-More-Deaths-On-Our-Streets-011.jpg
  • London, UK. 15th March, 2019. Campaigners against homelessness from groups including Streets Kitchen and Disabled People Against Cuts (DPAC) hold a vigil opposite Downing Street to commemorate 799 homeless people who have died over the last 18 months and to call for an end to the cuts to services which result in homelessness and the increasing criminalisation of those experiencing homelessness. Candles honour the dead.
    No-More-Deaths-On-Our-Streets-007.jpg
  • London, UK. 15th March, 2019. Campaigners against homelessness from groups including Streets Kitchen and Disabled People Against Cuts (DPAC) hold a vigil opposite Downing Street to commemorate 799 homeless people who have died over the last 18 months and to call for an end to the cuts to services which result in homelessness and the increasing criminalisation of those experiencing homelessness. Candles honour the dead.
    No-More-Deaths-On-Our-Streets-010.jpg
  • London, UK. 15th March, 2019. Campaigners against homelessness from groups including Streets Kitchen and Disabled People Against Cuts (DPAC) hold a vigil opposite Downing Street to commemorate 799 homeless people who have died over the last 18 months and to call for an end to the cuts to services which result in homelessness and the increasing criminalisation of those experiencing homelessness.
    No-More-Deaths-On-Our-Streets-006.jpg
  • London, UK. 15th March, 2019. Campaigners against homelessness from groups including Streets Kitchen and Disabled People Against Cuts (DPAC) hold a vigil opposite Downing Street to commemorate 799 homeless people who have died over the last 18 months and to call for an end to the cuts to services which result in homelessness and the increasing criminalisation of those experiencing homelessness.
    No-More-Deaths-On-Our-Streets-012.jpg
  • London, UK. 15th March, 2019. John Glackin of Streets Kitchen addresses campaigners against homelessness from various groups and Disabled People Against Cuts (DPAC) holding a vigil opposite Downing Street to commemorate 799 homeless people who have died over the last 18 months and to call for an end to the cuts to services which result in homelessness and the increasing criminalisation of those experiencing homelessness.
    No-More-Deaths-On-Our-Streets-008.jpg
  • London, UK. 15th March, 2019. A man reads out the names of homeless people who have died at a vigil by campaigners against homelessness from groups including Streets Kitchen and Disabled People Against Cuts (DPAC) opposite Downing Street to commemorate 799 homeless people who have died over the last 18 months and to call for an end to the cuts to services which result in homelessness and the increasing criminalisation of those experiencing homelessness.
    No-More-Deaths-On-Our-Streets-002.jpg
  • London, UK. 15th March, 2019. A man reads out the names of homeless people who have died at a vigil by campaigners against homelessness from groups including Streets Kitchen and Disabled People Against Cuts (DPAC) opposite Downing Street to commemorate 799 homeless people who have died over the last 18 months and to call for an end to the cuts to services which result in homelessness and the increasing criminalisation of those experiencing homelessness.
    No-More-Deaths-On-Our-Streets-013.jpg
  • London, UK. 15th March, 2019. Campaigners against homelessness from groups including Streets Kitchen and Disabled People Against Cuts (DPAC) hold a vigil opposite Downing Street to commemorate 799 homeless people who have died over the last 18 months and to call for an end to the cuts to services which result in homelessness and the increasing criminalisation of those experiencing homelessness. Candles honour the dead.
    No-More-Deaths-On-Our-Streets-018.jpg
  • London, UK. 15th March, 2019. Campaigners against homelessness from groups including Streets Kitchen and Disabled People Against Cuts (DPAC) hold a vigil opposite Downing Street to commemorate 799 homeless people who have died over the last 18 months and to call for an end to the cuts to services which result in homelessness and the increasing criminalisation of those experiencing homelessness.
    No-More-Deaths-On-Our-Streets-016.jpg
  • London, UK. 15th March, 2019. Campaigners against homelessness from groups including Streets Kitchen and Disabled People Against Cuts (DPAC) hold a vigil opposite Downing Street to commemorate 799 homeless people who have died over the last 18 months and to call for an end to the cuts to services which result in homelessness and the increasing criminalisation of those experiencing homelessness.
    No-More-Deaths-On-Our-Streets-001.jpg
  • London, UK. 15th March, 2019. Campaigners against homelessness from groups including Streets Kitchen and Disabled People Against Cuts (DPAC) hold a vigil opposite Downing Street to commemorate 799 homeless people who have died over the last 18 months and to call for an end to the cuts to services which result in homelessness and the increasing criminalisation of those experiencing homelessness.
    No-More-Deaths-On-Our-Streets-014.jpg
  • London, UK. 15th March, 2019. Campaigners against homelessness from groups including Streets Kitchen and Disabled People Against Cuts (DPAC) hold a vigil opposite Downing Street to commemorate 799 homeless people who have died over the last 18 months and to call for an end to the cuts to services which result in homelessness and the increasing criminalisation of those experiencing homelessness.
    No-More-Deaths-On-Our-Streets-009.jpg
  • London, UK. 15th March, 2019. Campaigners against homelessness from groups including Streets Kitchen and Disabled People Against Cuts (DPAC) hold a vigil opposite Downing Street to commemorate 799 homeless people who have died over the last 18 months and to call for an end to the cuts to services which result in homelessness and the increasing criminalisation of those experiencing homelessness.
    No-More-Deaths-On-Our-Streets-003.jpg
  • London, UK. 15th March, 2019. Campaigners against homelessness from groups including Streets Kitchen and Disabled People Against Cuts (DPAC) hold a vigil opposite Downing Street to commemorate 799 homeless people who have died over the last 18 months and to call for an end to the cuts to services which result in homelessness and the increasing criminalisation of those experiencing homelessness.
    No-More-Deaths-On-Our-Streets-005.jpg
  • London, UK. 15th March, 2019. A man reads out the names of homeless people who have died at a vigil by campaigners against homelessness from groups including Streets Kitchen and Disabled People Against Cuts (DPAC) opposite Downing Street to commemorate 799 homeless people who have died over the last 18 months and to call for an end to the cuts to services which result in homelessness and the increasing criminalisation of those experiencing homelessness.
    No-More-Deaths-On-Our-Streets-015.jpg
  • London, UK. 15th March, 2019. A woman reads out the names of homeless people who have died at a vigil by campaigners against homelessness from groups including Streets Kitchen and Disabled People Against Cuts (DPAC) opposite Downing Street to commemorate 799 homeless people who have died over the last 18 months and to call for an end to the cuts to services which result in homelessness and the increasing criminalisation of those experiencing homelessness.
    No-More-Deaths-On-Our-Streets-017.jpg
  • London, UK. 29th May, 2021. A speaker addresses fellow civil rights activists outside the British Museum during a Kill The Bill National Day of Action in protest against the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts (PCSC) Bill 2021. The PCSC Bill would grant the police a range of new discretionary powers to shut down protests, including the ability to impose conditions on any protest deemed to be disruptive to the local community, wider stop and search powers and sentences of up to 10 years in prison for damaging memorials.
    Kill-The-Bill-Day-of-Action-013.jpg
  • London, UK. 29th May, 2021. Activists from civil liberties groups listen to speeches outside the British Museum during a Kill The Bill National Day of Action in protest against the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts (PCSC) Bill 2021. The PCSC Bill would grant the police a range of new discretionary powers to shut down protests, including the ability to impose conditions on any protest deemed to be disruptive to the local community, wider stop and search powers and sentences of up to 10 years in prison for damaging memorials.
    Kill-The-Bill-Day-of-Action-028.jpg