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GFDL: PHOTOS - LONDON GALLERIES & ART
Back to index of GFD material. Text of GFDL licence here


 


White Cube gallery, St James's
Copyright © www.stuckism.com.
Released under GFDL. GFDL applies to this file only, not the original image.
The moral right of the author is asserted. Apply for other permission or higher file size.


White Cube gallery, St James's
Copyright © www.stuckism.com.
Released under GFDL. GFDL applies to this file only, not the original image.
The moral right of the author is asserted. Apply for other permission or higher file size.


An installation being installed in Hoxton Square, London, September 2004, by the White Cube gallery. The gallery is in the background.
Copyright © www.stuckism.com.
Released under GFDL. GFDL applies to this file only, not the original image.
The moral right of the author is asserted. Apply for other permission or higher file size.


An installation being installed in Hoxton Square, London, September 2004, by the White Cube gallery. The gallery is in the background.
Copyright © www.stuckism.com.
Released under GFDL. GFDL applies to this file only, not the original image.
The moral right of the author is asserted. Apply for other permission or higher file size.


An installation being installed in Hoxton Square, London, September 2004, by the White Cube gallery. The gallery is in the background.
Copyright © www.stuckism.com.
Released under GFDL. GFDL applies to this file only, not the original image.
The moral right of the author is asserted. Apply for other permission or higher file size.


NB GFDL release applies to the photo, not the artwork shown.
This does not apply to other photos unless specifically stated.

"Death", 2003, by Jake and Dinos Chapman (detail)
Exhibited in The Turner Prize 2003. Photo taken at the official press launch. No restriction specified on use of images.

Copyright © www.stuckism.com.
Released under GFDL. GFDL applies to this file only, not the original image.
The moral right of the author is asserted. Apply for other permission or higher file size.


NB GFDL release applies to the photo, not the artwork shown.
This does not apply to other photos unless specifically stated.

"Death", 2003, by Jake and Dinos Chapman (detail)
Exhibited in The Turner Prize 2003. Photo taken at the official press launch. No restriction specified on use of images.

Copyright © www.stuckism.com.
Released under GFDL. GFDL applies to this file only, not the original image.
The moral right of the author is asserted. Apply for other permission or higher file size.


NB GFDL release applies to the photo, not the artwork shown.
This does not apply to other photos unless specifically stated.

"preserve ‘beauty’" by Anya Gallaccio, 1991-2003, 2,000 red gerberas, glass, fixings (detail)
Exhibited in The Turner Prize 2003. Photo taken at the official press launch. No restriction specified on use of images.
Copyright © www.stuckism.com.
Released under GFDL. GFDL applies to this file only, not the original image.
The moral right of the author is asserted. Apply for other permission or higher file size.


NB GFDL release applies to the photo, not theartwork shown.

"preserve ‘beauty’" by Anya Gallaccio, 1991-2003, 2,000 red gerberas, glass, fixings
Exhibited in The Turner Prize 2003. Photo taken at the official press launch. No restriction specified on use of images.
Copyright © www.stuckism.com.
Released under GFDL. GFDL applies to this file only, not the original image.
The moral right of the author is asserted. Apply for other permission or higher file size.


NB GFDL release applies to the photo, not the artwork shown.

"because I could not stop" by Anya Gallaccio , 2000
Exhibited in The Turner Prize 2003. Photo taken at the official press launch. No restriction specified on use of images.
Copyright © www.stuckism.com.
Released under GFDL. GFDL applies to this file only, not the original image.
The moral right of the author is asserted. Apply for other permission or higher file size.


Statue of John Everett Millais (1829-1896) by Thomas Brock (1847-1922) at the back of Tate Britain.
John Everett Millais, a Pre-Raphaelite painter, was elected President of the Royal Academy, but died shortly after in 1896. The Prince of Wales (later to be King Edward VII) chaired a memorial committee and commissioned the statue, which was installed in 1905 at the front of the gallery on its east side. Sir Norman Reid, Tate director, tried in the early 1960s to have it replaced and considered it "positively harmful", but was frustrated in this by the Ministry of Works, which owned the statue. English Heritage succeeded the Ministry in ownership, which it transferred to the Tate in 1996. In 2000, when Sir Nicholas Serota was the Tate director, the statue was moved to the rear of the building next to the bicycle racks. Info from Tate website (apart from the bicycle racks bit).
Copyright © www.stuckism.com.
Released under GFDL. GFDL applies to this file only, not the original image.
The moral right of the author is asserted. Apply for other permission or higher file size.


Statue of John Everett Millais (1829-1896) by Thomas Brock (1847-1922) at the back of Tate Britain.
John Everett Millais, a Pre-Raphaelite painter, was elected President of the Royal Academy, but died shortly after in 1896. The Prince of Wales (later to be King Edward VII) chaired a memorial committee and commissioned the statue, which was installed in 1905 at the front of the gallery on its east side. Sir Norman Reid, Tate director, tried in the early 1960s to have it replaced and considered it "positively harmful", but was frustrated in this by the Ministry of Works, which owned the statue. English Heritage succeeded the Ministry in ownership, which it transferred to the Tate in 1996. In 2000, when Sir Nicholas Serota was the Tate director, the statue was moved to the rear of the building next to the bicycle racks. Info from Tate website (apart from the bicycle racks bit).
Copyright © www.stuckism.com.
Released under GFDL. GFDL applies to this file only, not the original image.
The moral right of the author is asserted. Apply for other permission or higher file size.


Statue of John Everett Millais (1829-1896) by Thomas Brock (1847-1922) at the back of Tate Britain.
John Everett Millais, a Pre-Raphaelite painter, was elected President of the Royal Academy, but died shortly after in 1896. The Prince of Wales (later to be King Edward VII) chaired a memorial committee and commissioned the statue, which was installed in 1905 at the front of the gallery on its east side. Sir Norman Reid, Tate director, tried in the early 1960s to have it replaced and considered it "positively harmful", but was frustrated in this by the Ministry of Works, which owned the statue. English Heritage succeeded the Ministry in ownership, which it transferred to the Tate in 1996. In 2000, when Sir Nicholas Serota was the Tate director, the statue was moved to the rear of the building next to the bicycle racks. Info from Tate website (apart from the bicycle racks bit).
Copyright © www.stuckism.com.
Released under GFDL. GFDL applies to this file only, not the original image.
The moral right of the author is asserted. Apply for other permission or higher file size.


Side wall of Tate Britain on Atterbury Street showing World War 2 bomb damage
Copyright © www.stuckism.com.
Released under GFDL. GFDL applies to this file only, not the original image.
The moral right of the author is asserted. Apply for other permission or higher file size.


Side wall of Tate Britain on Atterbury Street showing World War 2 bomb damage
Copyright © www.stuckism.com.
Released under GFDL. GFDL applies to this file only, not the original image.
The moral right of the author is asserted. Apply for other permission or higher file size.


Tate Britain front entrance
Copyright © www.stuckism.com.
Released under GFDL. GFDL applies to this file only, not the original image.
The moral right of the author is asserted. Apply for other permission or higher file size.


Arlington Gallery, Parkway, Camden, London (now renamed Novas Gallery), during Gina Bold's show, "Born to Be Bold", 9 February - 11 March 2007.
Copyright © www.stuckism.com.
Released under GFDL. GFDL applies to this file only, not the original image.
The moral right of the author is asserted. Apply for other permission or higher file size.


Arlington Gallery, Parkway, Camden, London (now renamed Novas Gallery), during Gina Bold's show, "Born to Be Bold", 9 February - 11 March 2007.
Copyright © www.stuckism.com.
Released under GFDL. GFDL applies to this file only, not the original image.
The moral right of the author is asserted. Apply for other permission or higher file size.


The Aquarium L-13 gallery, Farringdon Road, London.
Copyright © www.stuckism.com.
Released under GFDL. GFDL applies to this file only, not the original image.
The moral right of the author is asserted. Apply for other permission or higher file size.