A series of portraits of visitors and traders of the Classic Car Bootsale at King’s Cross, London, in April 2016. Kodak Ektar film, medium format.
A series of portraits of visitors and traders of the Classic Car Bootsale at King’s Cross, London, in April 2016. Kodak Ektar film, medium format.
A series of quick portraits taken at the Classic Car Bootsale at Southbank, London, 2015. Medium format film.
A series of photographs of the annual London Tweed Run, taken in 2014 with a legendary Rolleiflex 3.5F camera on a black and white film.
So in the sunny (though rather chilly for such an occasion) Saturday londoners and capital’s visitors alike got a special treat – a good bunch of bike riders, mostly fully naked, strolling down the busy streets of London. Brave and ideologically committed men (mostly) and women, and just plain exbitionists raising the awareness of world’s oil dependency. And just having good time being free of that universal limitation of modern society, ie clothes.
Not necessary family friendly (depending how you look at that), it raised lots of eyebrows, but at the same time was met with lots of smiles and got very positive and cheerful response from the passers-by. Definitely made my day. See you guys again next year.
London sci-fi festival kicked off this Saturday with a mini parade, and I had a chance to catch a glimpse of it.
Back in my hometown, and it’s a nice sunny morning, the snow is just gone (almost), and I am for a run in the park nearby. And there they are. The giants. The Watchmen. Looking over small, insignificant people. Above them. Big. Strong. Confident. Numb. Watching them. But “who watches the watchmen”?