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  • The looted seating area in the Palace of Culture theatre.
    Pripyat_QL-06.tif
  • From the series “Pripyat: 21 Years After Chernobyl”, 2007. 21 years after the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant exploded these images of Pripyat capture a memory of three traumas: the invisible radiation, the visible looting and the gradual collapse of a ghost town. 1st place International Photography Awards, Architecture Category, 2012. Signed and editioned prints available at 42x42 & 90x90cm.
    Palace of Culture Theatre, Pripyat G..2007
  • Arthur’s Seat and Edinburgh from Gosford Bay at dusk II, East Lothian, Scotland.
    East-Lothian-Print-Collection-21.jpg
  • Waiting for sunrise. Arthur's Seat, Edinburgh, Scotland.
    Edinburgh-Print-Collection-05.jpg
  • Waiting for sunrise. Arthur's Seat, Edinburgh, Scotland.
    363-Edinburgh-Musselburgh-67.jpg
  • Sunrise from Arthur's Seat, Edinburgh, Scotland.
    363-Edinburgh-Musselburgh-04.jpg
  • Waiting for sunrise. Arthur's Seat, Edinburgh, Scotland.
    363-Edinburgh-Musselburgh-01.jpg
  • Arthur’s Seat and Edinburgh from Gosford Bay at dusk II, East Lothian, Scotland.
    364-Musselburgh-GullanePoint-23.jpg
  • Arthur’s Seat and Edinburgh from Gosford Bay at dusk III, East Lothian, Scotland.
    364-Musselburgh-GullanePoint-09.jpg
  • Arthur’s Seat and Edinburgh from Gosford Bay at dusk II, East Lothian, Scotland.
    364-Musselburgh-GullanePoint-07.jpg
  • Arthur’s Seat and Portobello from Musselburgh I, East Lothian, Scotland.
    364-Musselburgh-GullanePoint-01.jpg
  • Arthur’s Seat and Portobello from Musselburgh II, East Lothian, Scotland.
    364-Musselburgh-GullanePoint-03.jpg
  • Edinburgh and Arthur's Seat from Leven, Fife, Scotland.
    359-StMonans-Buckhaven-27.jpg
  • Dunrobin Castle I, the family seat of the Earl of Sutherland and the Clan Sutherland, Dunrobin's origins lie in the Middle Ages, but most of the present building and the gardens were added by Architect Sir Charles Barry between 1835 and 1850. Sutherland, Scotland.
    Sutherland-East-Print-Collection-02.jpg
  • A sheltered seat by Loch Duich, Scotland.
    279-Totaig-ArdelvePoint-10.jpg
  • Window seat, Caernarfon castle, Gwynedd.
    137-Caernarfon-Bangor-04.jpg
  • Seat at Trelissick Gardens , Cornwall.
    063-Truro-GreenwoodQuay-09.jpg
  • Arthur’s Seat and Edinburgh from Gosford Bay at dusk II, East Lothian, Scotland.
    East-Lothian-Print-Collection-14.jpg
  • Waiting for sunrise. Arthur's Seat, Edinburgh, Scotland.
    Edinburgh-Print-Collection-18.jpg
  • Arthur's Seat at dawn, Edinburgh, Scotland.
    363-Edinburgh-Musselburgh-68.jpg
  • Mayfield Salisbury Parish Church from Arthur's Seat, Edinburgh, Scotland.
    363-Edinburgh-Musselburgh-19.jpg
  • Arthur's Seat rising above the city, Edinburgh, Scotland.
    363-Edinburgh-Musselburgh-15.jpg
  • Frosty rooftops from Arthur's Seat, Edinburgh, Scotland.
    363-Edinburgh-Musselburgh-12.jpg
  • From Arthur's Seat, Edinburgh, Scotland.
    363-Edinburgh-Musselburgh-09.jpg
  • Arthur's Seat at dawn, Edinburgh, Scotland.
    363-Edinburgh-Musselburgh-02.jpg
  • Portobello from Arthur's Seat at dawn, Edinburgh, Scotland.
    363-Edinburgh-Musselburgh-03.jpg
  • Arthur’s Seat and Edinburgh from Gosford Bay at dusk III, East Lothian, Scotland.
    364-Musselburgh-GullanePoint-24.jpg
  • Arthur’s Seat and Portobello from Musselburgh I, East Lothian, Scotland.
    364-Musselburgh-GullanePoint-22.jpg
  • Arthur’s Seat and Edinburgh from Gosford Bay at dusk I, East Lothian, Scotland.
    364-Musselburgh-GullanePoint-05.jpg
  • Edinburgh and Arthur's Seat from Leven, Fife, Scotland.
    359-StMonans-Buckhaven-32.jpg
  • Dunrobin Castle I, the family seat of the Earl of Sutherland and the Clan Sutherland, Dunrobin's origins lie in the Middle Ages, but most of the present building and the gardens were added by Architect Sir Charles Barry between 1835 and 1850. Sutherland, Scotland.
    327-Lothmore-Dornoch-17.jpg
  • I’m frequently delighted by finding picnic benches is remote and scenic locations since entering Scotland. A seat and a table can seem like the untimate in civilisation after a few days wild camping. This one near in Carradale overlooks Arran and Kilbrannan Sound.
    223-CoilleRubhaDhuibh-Carradale-05.jpg
  • Seat, Winspit Quarry, Dorset.
    033-Swanage-Lulworth-12.jpg
  • Throne Hall, Royal Palace, Phnom Penh, Cambodia. The Khmer name for the Throne Hall is Preah Thineang Dheva Vinnichayyeaah meaning the "Sacred Seat of Judgement." The Throne Hall is where the king's confidants, generals and royal officials once carried out their duties. It is still in use today as a place for religious and royal ceremonies (such ascoronations and royal weddings) as well as a meeting place for guests of the King. The cross-shaped building is crowned with three spires. The central, 59 meter spire is topped with the white, four-faced head of Brahma. Inside the Throne Hall contains a royal throne and busts of Cambodians kings of the past.This Throne Hall is the second to be built on this site. The first was constructed of wood in 1869-1870 under King Norodom. That Throne Hall was demolished in 1915. The present building was constructed in 1917 and inaugurated by King Sisowath in 1919. The building is 30x60 meters and topped by a 59-meter spire
    Royal-Palace-Phnom-Penh-5.jpg
  • Throne Hall, Royal Palace, Phnom Penh, Cambodia. The Khmer name for the Throne Hall is Preah Thineang Dheva Vinnichayyeaah meaning the "Sacred Seat of Judgement." The Throne Hall is where the king's confidants, generals and royal officials once carried out their duties. It is still in use today as a place for religious and royal ceremonies (such ascoronations and royal weddings) as well as a meeting place for guests of the King. The cross-shaped building is crowned with three spires. The central, 59 meter spire is topped with the white, four-faced head of Brahma. Inside the Throne Hall contains a royal throne and busts of Cambodians kings of the past.This Throne Hall is the second to be built on this site. The first was constructed of wood in 1869-1870 under King Norodom. That Throne Hall was demolished in 1915. The present building was constructed in 1917 and inaugurated by King Sisowath in 1919. The building is 30x60 meters and topped by a 59-meter spire
    Royal-Palace-Phnom-Penh-6.jpg
  • Throne Hall, Royal Palace, Phnom Penh, Cambodia. The Khmer name for the Throne Hall is Preah Thineang Dheva Vinnichayyeaah meaning the "Sacred Seat of Judgement." The Throne Hall is where the king's confidants, generals and royal officials once carried out their duties. It is still in use today as a place for religious and royal ceremonies (such ascoronations and royal weddings) as well as a meeting place for guests of the King. The cross-shaped building is crowned with three spires. The central, 59 meter spire is topped with the white, four-faced head of Brahma. Inside the Throne Hall contains a royal throne and busts of Cambodians kings of the past.This Throne Hall is the second to be built on this site. The first was constructed of wood in 1869-1870 under King Norodom. That Throne Hall was demolished in 1915. The present building was constructed in 1917 and inaugurated by King Sisowath in 1919. The building is 30x60 meters and topped by a 59-meter spire
    Royal-Palace-Phnom-Penh-4.jpg
  • Throne Hall, Royal Palace, Phnom Penh, Cambodia. The Khmer name for the Throne Hall is Preah Thineang Dheva Vinnichayyeaah meaning the "Sacred Seat of Judgement." The Throne Hall is where the king's confidants, generals and royal officials once carried out their duties. It is still in use today as a place for religious and royal ceremonies (such ascoronations and royal weddings) as well as a meeting place for guests of the King. The cross-shaped building is crowned with three spires. The central, 59 meter spire is topped with the white, four-faced head of Brahma. Inside the Throne Hall contains a royal throne and busts of Cambodians kings of the past.This Throne Hall is the second to be built on this site. The first was constructed of wood in 1869-1870 under King Norodom. That Throne Hall was demolished in 1915. The present building was constructed in 1917 and inaugurated by King Sisowath in 1919. The building is 30x60 meters and topped by a 59-meter spire
    Royal-Palace-Phnom-Penh-3.jpg
  • Throne Hall, Royal Palace, Phnom Penh, Cambodia. The Khmer name for the Throne Hall is Preah Thineang Dheva Vinnichayyeaah meaning the "Sacred Seat of Judgement." The Throne Hall is where the king's confidants, generals and royal officials once carried out their duties. It is still in use today as a place for religious and royal ceremonies (such ascoronations and royal weddings) as well as a meeting place for guests of the King. The cross-shaped building is crowned with three spires. The central, 59 meter spire is topped with the white, four-faced head of Brahma. Inside the Throne Hall contains a royal throne and busts of Cambodians kings of the past.This Throne Hall is the second to be built on this site. The first was constructed of wood in 1869-1870 under King Norodom. That Throne Hall was demolished in 1915. The present building was constructed in 1917 and inaugurated by King Sisowath in 1919. The building is 30x60 meters and topped by a 59-meter spire
    Royal-Palace-Phnom-Penh-1.jpg
  • Ministry of Interior and Administrative Reform and the The Memorial of Rebirth , Revolution Square, Bucharest. The building is the  former Central Committee of the Romanian Communist Party (from where Nicolae Ceauşescu and his wife fled by helicopter on December 22, 1989). In 1990, the building became the seat of the Senate and since 2006 it houses the Ministry of Interior and Administrative Reform. The Memorial of Rebirth (Memorialul Renaşterii in Romanian) is a memorial in Bucharest, Romania that commemorates the struggles and victims of the Romanian Revolution of 1989, which overthrew Communism. The memorial complex was inaugurated in August 2005 in Revolution Square, where Romania's Communist-era dictator, Nicolae Ceauşescu, was publicly overthrown in December 1989.
    Bucharest-Architecture-30.jpg
  • Throne Hall, Royal Palace, Phnom Penh, Cambodia. The Khmer name for the Throne Hall is Preah Thineang Dheva Vinnichayyeaah meaning the "Sacred Seat of Judgement." The Throne Hall is where the king's confidants, generals and royal officials once carried out their duties. It is still in use today as a place for religious and royal ceremonies (such ascoronations and royal weddings) as well as a meeting place for guests of the King. The cross-shaped building is crowned with three spires. The central, 59 meter spire is topped with the white, four-faced head of Brahma. Inside the Throne Hall contains a royal throne and busts of Cambodians kings of the past.This Throne Hall is the second to be built on this site. The first was constructed of wood in 1869-1870 under King Norodom. That Throne Hall was demolished in 1915. The present building was constructed in 1917 and inaugurated by King Sisowath in 1919. The building is 30x60 meters and topped by a 59-meter spire
    Royal-Palace-Phnom-Penh-2.jpg
  • Castle Sinclair Girnigoe, It is considered to be one of the earliest seats of Clan Sinclair. It comprises the ruins of two castles: the 15th-century Castle Girnigoe; and the early 17th-century Castle Sinclair. Caithness, Scotland.
    323-Freswick-Wick-31.jpg
  • Election Aftermath. Nicola Sturgeon, leader of the SNP after her landslide victory in Scotland, winning 56 out of 59 seats. Chatham Big Screen on the old pumping station at Chatham Waterfront.
    006-Chatham-Swale-01.jpg
  • Built in 1998 by Rchom Ju, Rchom Ek, Rchom Uek, Ksor Ul, and Ksor Ka-ro (Giarai Arap group), from Mrong Ngo village, Ia Ka commune, Chu Pa district, Gia Lai province. The most prominent decorations on the Giarai tomb are large wooden sculptures carved from tree trunks using adzes, cutlasses and knives. Carvings of sexually-explicit men and women and pregnant women symbolise fertility and birth. Other carvings of seated children (often placed at the four corners), animals, and everyday people are the 'servants' of the dead in the afterlife. Broken or inverted serving dishes, bottles, cups and trays, and wooden models of tools are placed inside the tomb to provide the deceased with the necessities they will need in the other world. The tomb's wooden roof is covered with a tightly plaited bamboo matting. Men join together to embellish this with delicate, curvilinear designs painted with natural red pigments. Crowning the roof is an intricately carved openwork panel depicting the rituals that accompany the tomb and its abandonment ceremony. Once the ceremony is concluded, the tomb will be abandoned to fall to pieces.
    Vietnamese-Museum-of-Ethnology-22.jpg
  • Stone seats and steps in the theatre at Palmyra, Syria. Ancient city in the desert that fell into disuse after the 16th century.
    Palmyra-Syria-043.jpg
  • Stone seats and steps in the theatre at Palmyra, Syria. Ancient city in the desert that fell into disuse after the 16th century.
    Palmyra-Syria-042.jpg
  • Seated viewers in front of Formal Session of the StateCouncil on May 7, 1901, in honour of the 100th Anniversary of Its Founding by Ilya Yefimovich Repin, 1903, oil on canvas, State Russian Museum. St. Petersburg, Russia, 2007
    Drawing-Parallels-Quintin-Lake-Page-...jpg
  • The Amphitheatre of Pompeii is the oldest surviving Roman amphitheatre. It hosted gladiatorial games and other events. Seating was divided into three distinct social groupings and protection from the sun was provided by velaria suspended above the crowd from the top of the arena. The amphitheatre was buried by the eruption of Vesuvius (visible behind) in 79 AD. Pompeii, Italy, 2001
    Drawing-Parallels-Quintin-Lake-Page-...jpg
  • Built in 1998 by Rchom Ju, Rchom Ek, Rchom Uek, Ksor Ul, and Ksor Ka-ro (Giarai Arap group), from Mrong Ngo village, Ia Ka commune, Chu Pa district, Gia Lai province. The most prominent decorations on the Giarai tomb are large wooden sculptures carved from tree trunks using adzes, cutlasses and knives. Carvings of sexually-explicit men and women and pregnant women symbolise fertility and birth. Other carvings of seated children (often placed at the four corners), animals, and everyday people are the 'servants' of the dead in the afterlife. Broken or inverted serving dishes, bottles, cups and trays, and wooden models of tools are placed inside the tomb to provide the deceased with the necessities they will need in the other world. The tomb's wooden roof is covered with a tightly plaited bamboo matting. Men join together to embellish this with delicate, curvilinear designs painted with natural red pigments. Crowning the roof is an intricately carved openwork panel depicting the rituals that accompany the tomb and its abandonment ceremony. Once the ceremony is concluded, the tomb will be abandoned to fall to pieces.
    Vietnamese-Museum-of-Ethnology-21.jpg
  • Pick Up Sticks Enterprises, Studio & Workshop of Architect & Artist Christopher Dukes, Kingsford, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
    Pick-Up-Sticks-Enterprises-Christoph...jpg
  • Seating, planting and lighting outside Bessemer building on a sunny day
    BGS028_QL-04.tif
  • Built in 1998 by Rchom Ju, Rchom Ek, Rchom Uek, Ksor Ul, and Ksor Ka-ro (Giarai Arap group), from Mrong Ngo village, Ia Ka commune, Chu Pa district, Gia Lai province. The most prominent decorations on the Giarai tomb are large wooden sculptures carved from tree trunks using adzes, cutlasses and knives. Carvings of sexually-explicit men and women and pregnant women symbolise fertility and birth. Other carvings of seated children (often placed at the four corners), animals, and everyday people are the 'servants' of the dead in the afterlife. Broken or inverted serving dishes, bottles, cups and trays, and wooden models of tools are placed inside the tomb to provide the deceased with the necessities they will need in the other world. The tomb's wooden roof is covered with a tightly plaited bamboo matting. Men join together to embellish this with delicate, curvilinear designs painted with natural red pigments. Crowning the roof is an intricately carved openwork panel depicting the rituals that accompany the tomb and its abandonment ceremony. Once the ceremony is concluded, the tomb will be abandoned to fall to pieces.
    Vietnamese-Museum-of-Ethnology-23.jpg
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