manuel cohen

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  • Odissey, by Robert Koening, 19 March, 20 juillet 2012 at the entrance of the Crypt of St Martin in the Fields, London, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen. Odissey consist of 40 monumental figures, each 2.5m tall carved in the village of Dominikowice in the foothills of the Carpathian Mountains in South East Poland. Odissey is undertaking a spititual journey following the journey of the artist's mother in 1942 from her home village in Poland, through Krakow, the Nazi slave labour camps in Germany during the second World War and on to the UK. Odissey confront us with important issues of migration both forced and voluntary nd bears witness to the stories of the journey that migrants make.
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  • Sawdust and wood shavings, detail, in the studio of Eleanor Lakelin, wood sculptor, at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Eleanor makes pieces which celebrate the natural shapes and eccentricities of wood, using lathing, chiseling and carving techniques to make vessels which expose the patterns and gnarls within the natural forms. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 1st June 2019 by Manuel Cohen
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  • Moulded black leather hemispheres on the workbench in the studio of Fflur Owen, a leatherworker who makes leather sculptures and objects inspired by nature, at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 31st May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
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  • Sculpture of moulded black leather with white leather spots, detail, in the studio of Fflur Owen, a leatherworker who makes leather sculptures and objects inspired by nature, at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 31st May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_066.jpg
  • Found objects to be used as moulds or inspiration, in the studio of Adele Brereton, jeweller and silversmith, at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Adele makes work inspired by found objects, often hammering the metal into or around found or man-made shapes to create one-off pieces. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 31st May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
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  • Shelves and spools of thread in the studio of Poppy Fuller Abbot, a weaver and textile artist, at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Poppy creates abstract textile designs often inspired by magic, and has an experimental approach, using sustainable paper yarn and natural dyes in her textiles. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 31st May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_142.jpg
  • Adele Brereton, jeweller and silversmith, seen in a mirror reflection at work hammering metal in her studio at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Adele makes work inspired by found objects, often hammering the metal into or around found or man-made shapes to create one-off pieces. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 31st May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_127.jpg
  • Poppy Fuller Abbot, a weaver and textile artist, at work in her studio at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Poppy creates abstract textile designs often inspired by magic, and has an experimental approach, using sustainable paper yarn and natural dyes in her textiles. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 31st May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_147.jpg
  • Emily Kidson, a jewellery designer who works with wood, laminate and silver to create colourful pieces, at work in her studio at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Emily is inspired by urban architectural forms and cuts and finishes each piece by hand. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 31st May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_182.jpg
  • The Sherlock Holmes Museum, 221B Baker Street, opened in 1990 where Sherlock Holmes and Doctor Watson were reported to have resided as tenants of Mrs Hudson, London, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Red AEC (Associated Equipment Company), double-decker bus of London Transport, London, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Red RCL (Routemaster Coach Long), double-decker bus of London Transport, London, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Platform, sign, railway track and brick wall, FINCHLEY ROAD tube station, 1879, Jubilee Line, London, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Detail of Life Guard, Household Cavalry regiment, Horse Guards building, 1751 - 1753, by John Vardy and William Kent, London, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • The Sherlock Holmes Museum, 221B Baker Street, opened in 1990 where Sherlock Holmes and Doctor Watson were reported to have resided as tenants of Mrs Hudson, London, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • The Sherlock Holmes Museum, 221B Baker Street, opened in 1990 where Sherlock Holmes and Doctor Watson were reported to have resided as tenants of Mrs Hudson, London, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Sherlock Holmes, "The Great Detective", bronze statue, 1999, John Doubleday, commissioned by Sherlock Holmes Society of London, Baker Street, silhouetted against an opaque morning light, London, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • London Victorian pub Ship & Shovell, Craven Passage, Charing Cross, London, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Red telephone boxes at the entrance of Smithfield or London Central Markets, 19th century, London, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Red telephone boxes at the entrance of Smithfield or London Central Markets, 19th century, London, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Row of half-scooters uses as seats, main entrance to Camden Town markets, open-air and indoor markets, London, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Open air areas with stalls and customers, Candem Town markets, open-air and indoor markets, London, UK. The wall poster showing a lion with the Union Jack is the emblematic picture of "Camden World Famous Market". Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • High Street, Camden Town atmosphere, focussed view of a Tattoo and Piercing red advert held by a young man with the crowd and shops in the background, London, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Red telephone boxes, designed by Sir Giles Gilbert Scott (1880 - 1960), preserved as a tourist attraction near Covent Garden, London, UK, beneath a rainy day. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Piccadilly Circus at dusk beneath a rainy day, London, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • London rush hour, traffic jam with London buses waiting in line, at dusk, beneath a rainy sky, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • A woman with bicycle stops at the corner of Bethnal Green Road in London, UK to look at a monumental B&W spray paint graffiti of a rat on Huntingdon Estate buidling wall. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • London cabs, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Let's Adore And Endure Each Other (detail), spray paint graffiti mural in Great Eastern Street, London, UK. A Policeman and a police woman are passing through the woman scary eyes in the painting. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Big Ben, 1858, clock tower of Palace of Westminster or Houses of Parliament, London, UK, 1840-60, by Sir Charles Barry and Augustus Pugin, seen from Westminster Bridge, road and foot traffic bridge, 1862, Thomas Page and Charles Barry. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Big Ben and Palace of Westminster, 1858, clock tower of Palace of Westminster or Houses of Parliament, London, UK, 1840-60, by Sir Charles Barry and Augustus Pugin, seen from Westminster Bridge, road and foot traffic bridge, 1862, Thomas Page and Charles Barry. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Austin Mini parked in front of a "Spice" coffee shop and a colorful spray paint graffiti building showing a figure of the Front Populaire (Popular Front) in Miro's style and "Aidez Espana" written, Notting Hill, London, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Fancy cooking aprons displayed at Covent Garden Market, London, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Old Truman Brewery (former Black Eagle Brewery), 18th century, Brick Lane, Spitalfields area, London, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Spray graffiti painter Inkfetish (nickname), working on a small building of Brick Lane, London, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Spray graffiti painter Inkfetish (nickname), working on a small building of Brick Lane, London, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Pedestrians passing through brick walls with horseshoe arch and window and with colorful spray paint graffitis, Shoreditch, London, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Pedestrians passing through brick walls with horseshoe arch and window and with colorful spray paint graffitis, Shoreditch, London, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Anti-monarchist's sign, Shoreditch, London, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Red car, red London Bus passing through the TEA building, Shoreditch, London, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Spray paint mural depicting liberalism, Shoreditch, London, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Allegorical B&W spray paint mural about air pollution beside painted shutters, Rivington Street, Shoreditch, Bethnal Green district, London, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • John Betjeman, larger-than-lifesize bronze statue, 2007, Martin Jennings, St Pancras International, railways' terminus celebrated for its Victorian architecture, London, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • John Betjeman (detail), larger-than-lifesize bronze statue, 2007, Martin Jennings, St Pancras International, with "The Meeting Place", by Paul Day, 2007, and the famous St. Pancras Clock in the background, London, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Eurostar train getting into St Pancras International, seen from an opposite platform, behind a wall of glass with grey opaque strips, with the Victorian architecture of the railways' terminus in the background, London, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Lloyd's building, office building, 1986, Richard Rogers, City of London, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • The Swiss Re building, known as the Gherkin, 1997 -  2004, Foster and Partners, Arup Engineering, London, UK. Seen from an adjacent empty street with only one Yamaha 900 parked. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • St Pancras International seen through window panels, 19th century railways' terminus celebrated for its Victorian architecture, "The Meeting Place", by Paul Day, 2007, and the famous St. Pancras Clock which has been re constructed by the original makers Dent and now hangs high in the apex of the Barlow shed, London, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Lloyd's building reflected in the Willis Building, London, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • The Swiss Re building, known as the Gherkin, 1997 -  2004, Foster and Partners, Arup Engineering, London, UK. Willis Building on the right and Lloyds building on the left. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Friday fashion day at Old Spitalfields Market, London, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Big Ben, 1858, clock tower of Palace of Westminster or Houses of Parliament, London, UK, 1840-60, by Sir Charles Barry and Augustus Pugin, seen from Westminster Bridge, road and foot traffic bridge, 1862, Thomas Page and Charles Barry. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Two-storey branch of fashion retailer AllSaints, 2009, furnished with antique Singer sewing machines, Portobello Road Antiques Market, Notting Hill, London, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • St Pancras International, beneath iron archways constructed by engineer William Barlow in 1868, railways' terminus celebrated for its Victorian architecture, London, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • River Thames and the Palace of Westminster, London, UK, or Houses of Parliament, 1840-60, by Sir Charles Barry and Augustus Pugin. The Gothic Perpendicular building replaced its predecessor, destroyed by fire, 1834. The 96.3 metre high clock tower is named after its largest bell, Big Ben. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Passementerie piece, detail, in the studio of Elizabeth Ashdown, a textile artist specialising in hand woven and hand embroidered passementerie and fine textiles, in her studio at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Elizabeth uses traditional techniques of hand weaving, macrame, hand embroidery, braid making and cord making to produce textile pieces used in home furnishings, fashion, wall hangings and artworks. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 31st May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
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  • Selection of passementerie pieces in the studio of Elizabeth Ashdown, a textile artist specialising in hand woven and hand embroidered passementerie and fine textiles, in her studio at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Elizabeth uses traditional techniques of hand weaving, macrame, hand embroidery, braid making and cord making to produce textile pieces used in home furnishings, fashion, wall hangings and artworks. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 31st May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_009.jpg
  • Postcards and thread samples in the studio of Elizabeth Ashdown, a textile artist specialising in hand woven and hand embroidered passementerie and fine textiles, in her studio at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Elizabeth uses traditional techniques of hand weaving, macrame, hand embroidery, braid making and cord making to produce textile pieces used in home furnishings, fashion, wall hangings and artworks. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 31st May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_008.jpg
  • Samples and design ideas in the studio of Elizabeth Ashdown, a textile artist specialising in hand woven and hand embroidered passementerie and fine textiles, in her studio at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Elizabeth uses traditional techniques of hand weaving, macrame, hand embroidery, braid making and cord making to produce textile pieces used in home furnishings, fashion, wall hangings and artworks. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 31st May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_007.jpg
  • Design sketches in the studio of Elizabeth Ashdown, a textile artist specialising in hand woven and hand embroidered passementerie and fine textiles, in her studio at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Elizabeth uses traditional techniques of hand weaving, macrame, hand embroidery, braid making and cord making to produce textile pieces used in home furnishings, fashion, wall hangings and artworks. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 31st May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_006.jpg
  • Selection of passementerie pieces in the studio of Elizabeth Ashdown, a textile artist specialising in hand woven and hand embroidered passementerie and fine textiles, in her studio at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Elizabeth uses traditional techniques of hand weaving, macrame, hand embroidery, braid making and cord making to produce textile pieces used in home furnishings, fashion, wall hangings and artworks. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 31st May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_005.jpg
  • Selection of passementerie pieces in the studio of Elizabeth Ashdown, a textile artist specialising in hand woven and hand embroidered passementerie and fine textiles, in her studio at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Elizabeth uses traditional techniques of hand weaving, macrame, hand embroidery, braid making and cord making to produce textile pieces used in home furnishings, fashion, wall hangings and artworks. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 31st May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_003.jpg
  • Selection of passementerie pieces in the studio of Elizabeth Ashdown, a textile artist specialising in hand woven and hand embroidered passementerie and fine textiles, in her studio at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Elizabeth uses traditional techniques of hand weaving, macrame, hand embroidery, braid making and cord making to produce textile pieces used in home furnishings, fashion, wall hangings and artworks. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 31st May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_002.jpg
  • Elizabeth Ashdown, a textile artist specialising in hand woven and hand embroidered passementerie and fine textiles, sorting textiles in her studio at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Elizabeth uses traditional techniques of hand weaving, macrame, hand embroidery, braid making and cord making to produce textile pieces used in home furnishings, fashion, wall hangings and artworks. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 31st May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
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  • Wooden vessel with multiple holes, in the studio of Eleanor Lakelin, wood sculptor, at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Eleanor makes pieces which celebrate the natural shapes and eccentricities of wood, using lathing, chiseling and carving techniques to make vessels which expose the patterns and gnarls within the natural forms. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 1st June 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_035.jpg
  • Photographs and shelves of materials in the studio of Eleanor Lakelin, wood sculptor, at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Eleanor makes pieces which celebrate the natural shapes and eccentricities of wood, using lathing, chiseling and carving techniques to make vessels which expose the patterns and gnarls within the natural forms. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 1st June 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_034.jpg
  • Sawdust and wood remnants in the studio of Eleanor Lakelin, wood sculptor, at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Eleanor makes pieces which celebrate the natural shapes and eccentricities of wood, using lathing, chiseling and carving techniques to make vessels which expose the patterns and gnarls within the natural forms. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 1st June 2019 by Manuel Cohen
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  • Cockpit Arts building, a social enterprise and creative business incubator at Creekside in Deptford, London, UK. On the wall is the Love Over Gold mural created by Gary Drostle and local school children in 1989, commissioned by Dire Straits. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across fields including fine art, ceramics, textiles, illustration, woodwork, bookbinding, leatherwork and jewellery making. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Elizabeth Ashdown, a textile artist specialising in hand woven and hand embroidered passementerie and fine textiles, at work weaving on a loom in her studio at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Elizabeth uses traditional techniques of hand weaving, macrame, hand embroidery, braid making and cord making to produce textile pieces used in home furnishings, fashion, wall hangings and artworks. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 31st May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_031.jpg
  • Elizabeth Ashdown, a textile artist specialising in hand woven and hand embroidered passementerie and fine textiles, at work weaving on a loom in her studio at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Elizabeth uses traditional techniques of hand weaving, macrame, hand embroidery, braid making and cord making to produce textile pieces used in home furnishings, fashion, wall hangings and artworks. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 31st May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_030.jpg
  • Elizabeth Ashdown, a textile artist specialising in hand woven and hand embroidered passementerie and fine textiles, at work weaving on a loom in her studio at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Elizabeth uses traditional techniques of hand weaving, macrame, hand embroidery, braid making and cord making to produce textile pieces used in home furnishings, fashion, wall hangings and artworks. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 31st May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_029.jpg
  • Elizabeth Ashdown, a textile artist specialising in hand woven and hand embroidered passementerie and fine textiles, at work weaving on a loom in her studio at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Elizabeth uses traditional techniques of hand weaving, macrame, hand embroidery, braid making and cord making to produce textile pieces used in home furnishings, fashion, wall hangings and artworks. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 31st May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_028.jpg
  • Elizabeth Ashdown, a textile artist specialising in hand woven and hand embroidered passementerie and fine textiles, at work weaving on a loom in her studio at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Elizabeth uses traditional techniques of hand weaving, macrame, hand embroidery, braid making and cord making to produce textile pieces used in home furnishings, fashion, wall hangings and artworks. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 31st May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_027.jpg
  • Elizabeth Ashdown, a textile artist specialising in hand woven and hand embroidered passementerie and fine textiles, at work weaving on a loom in her studio at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Elizabeth uses traditional techniques of hand weaving, macrame, hand embroidery, braid making and cord making to produce textile pieces used in home furnishings, fashion, wall hangings and artworks. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 31st May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_026.jpg
  • Elizabeth Ashdown, a textile artist specialising in hand woven and hand embroidered passementerie and fine textiles, at work braiding by hand in her studio at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Elizabeth uses traditional techniques of hand weaving, macrame, hand embroidery, braid making and cord making to produce textile pieces used in home furnishings, fashion, wall hangings and artworks. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 31st May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_025.jpg
  • Elizabeth Ashdown, a textile artist specialising in hand woven and hand embroidered passementerie and fine textiles, at work braiding by hand in her studio at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Elizabeth uses traditional techniques of hand weaving, macrame, hand embroidery, braid making and cord making to produce textile pieces used in home furnishings, fashion, wall hangings and artworks. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 31st May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_024.jpg
  • Elizabeth Ashdown, a textile artist specialising in hand woven and hand embroidered passementerie and fine textiles, at work braiding by hand in her studio at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Elizabeth uses traditional techniques of hand weaving, macrame, hand embroidery, braid making and cord making to produce textile pieces used in home furnishings, fashion, wall hangings and artworks. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 31st May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_023.jpg
  • Elizabeth Ashdown, a textile artist specialising in hand woven and hand embroidered passementerie and fine textiles, at work braiding by hand in her studio at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Elizabeth uses traditional techniques of hand weaving, macrame, hand embroidery, braid making and cord making to produce textile pieces used in home furnishings, fashion, wall hangings and artworks. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 31st May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_022.jpg
  • Elizabeth Ashdown, a textile artist specialising in hand woven and hand embroidered passementerie and fine textiles, at work braiding by hand in her studio at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Elizabeth uses traditional techniques of hand weaving, macrame, hand embroidery, braid making and cord making to produce textile pieces used in home furnishings, fashion, wall hangings and artworks. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 31st May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_021.jpg
  • Elizabeth Ashdown, a textile artist specialising in hand woven and hand embroidered passementerie and fine textiles, at work in her studio at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Elizabeth uses traditional techniques of hand weaving, macrame, hand embroidery, braid making and cord making to produce textile pieces used in home furnishings, fashion, wall hangings and artworks. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 31st May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_020.jpg
  • Elizabeth Ashdown, a textile artist specialising in hand woven and hand embroidered passementerie and fine textiles, at work in her studio at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Elizabeth uses traditional techniques of hand weaving, macrame, hand embroidery, braid making and cord making to produce textile pieces used in home furnishings, fashion, wall hangings and artworks. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 31st May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_019.jpg
  • Elizabeth Ashdown, a textile artist specialising in hand woven and hand embroidered passementerie and fine textiles, at work in her studio at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Elizabeth uses traditional techniques of hand weaving, macrame, hand embroidery, braid making and cord making to produce textile pieces used in home furnishings, fashion, wall hangings and artworks. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 31st May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_018.jpg
  • Postcards in the studio of Elizabeth Ashdown, a textile artist specialising in hand woven and hand embroidered passementerie and fine textiles, in her studio at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Elizabeth uses traditional techniques of hand weaving, macrame, hand embroidery, braid making and cord making to produce textile pieces used in home furnishings, fashion, wall hangings and artworks. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 31st May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_017.jpg
  • Passementerie piece, detail, in the studio of Elizabeth Ashdown, a textile artist specialising in hand woven and hand embroidered passementerie and fine textiles, in her studio at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Elizabeth uses traditional techniques of hand weaving, macrame, hand embroidery, braid making and cord making to produce textile pieces used in home furnishings, fashion, wall hangings and artworks. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 31st May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_015.jpg
  • Design sketch in the studio of Elizabeth Ashdown, a textile artist specialising in hand woven and hand embroidered passementerie and fine textiles, in her studio at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Elizabeth uses traditional techniques of hand weaving, macrame, hand embroidery, braid making and cord making to produce textile pieces used in home furnishings, fashion, wall hangings and artworks. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 31st May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_014.jpg
  • Design sketch in the studio of Elizabeth Ashdown, a textile artist specialising in hand woven and hand embroidered passementerie and fine textiles, in her studio at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Elizabeth uses traditional techniques of hand weaving, macrame, hand embroidery, braid making and cord making to produce textile pieces used in home furnishings, fashion, wall hangings and artworks. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 31st May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_013.jpg
  • Passementerie piece, detail, in the studio of Elizabeth Ashdown, a textile artist specialising in hand woven and hand embroidered passementerie and fine textiles, in her studio at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Elizabeth uses traditional techniques of hand weaving, macrame, hand embroidery, braid making and cord making to produce textile pieces used in home furnishings, fashion, wall hangings and artworks. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 31st May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_012.jpg
  • Passementerie piece, detail, in the studio of Elizabeth Ashdown, a textile artist specialising in hand woven and hand embroidered passementerie and fine textiles, in her studio at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Elizabeth uses traditional techniques of hand weaving, macrame, hand embroidery, braid making and cord making to produce textile pieces used in home furnishings, fashion, wall hangings and artworks. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 31st May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_011.jpg
  • Mood board, workbench and tools in the studio of Fflur Owen, a leatherworker who makes leather sculptures and objects inspired by nature, at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 31st May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_061.jpg
  • Eleanor Lakelin, wood sculptor, seen through the open window of her studio at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, UK. Eleanor makes pieces which celebrate the natural shapes and eccentricities of wood, using lathing, chiseling and carving techniques to make vessels which expose the patterns and gnarls within the natural forms. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 1st June 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_059.jpg
  • Mood board with photographs, found objects and made samples, in the studio of Fflur Owen, a leatherworker who makes leather sculptures and objects inspired by nature, at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 31st May 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_060.jpg
  • Eleanor Lakelin, wood sculptor, seen through an open window at work oiling a sculpture outside her studio at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Eleanor makes pieces which celebrate the natural shapes and eccentricities of wood, using lathing, chiseling and carving techniques to make vessels which expose the patterns and gnarls within the natural forms. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 1st June 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_058.jpg
  • Eleanor Lakelin, wood sculptor, seen through an open window at work oiling a sculpture outside her studio at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Eleanor makes pieces which celebrate the natural shapes and eccentricities of wood, using lathing, chiseling and carving techniques to make vessels which expose the patterns and gnarls within the natural forms. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 1st June 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_056.jpg
  • Eleanor Lakelin, wood sculptor, seen through an open window at work oiling a sculpture outside her studio at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Eleanor makes pieces which celebrate the natural shapes and eccentricities of wood, using lathing, chiseling and carving techniques to make vessels which expose the patterns and gnarls within the natural forms. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 1st June 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_057.jpg
  • Hole in a wooden vessel, detail, in the studio of Eleanor Lakelin, wood sculptor, at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Eleanor makes pieces which celebrate the natural shapes and eccentricities of wood, using lathing, chiseling and carving techniques to make vessels which expose the patterns and gnarls within the natural forms. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 1st June 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_054.jpg
  • Hole in a wooden vessel, detail, in the studio of Eleanor Lakelin, wood sculptor, at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Eleanor makes pieces which celebrate the natural shapes and eccentricities of wood, using lathing, chiseling and carving techniques to make vessels which expose the patterns and gnarls within the natural forms. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 1st June 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_053.jpg
  • Growths within a piece of wood, detail, in the studio of Eleanor Lakelin, wood sculptor, at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Eleanor makes pieces which celebrate the natural shapes and eccentricities of wood, using lathing, chiseling and carving techniques to make vessels which expose the patterns and gnarls within the natural forms. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 1st June 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_052.jpg
  • Growths within a piece of wood, detail, in the studio of Eleanor Lakelin, wood sculptor, at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Eleanor makes pieces which celebrate the natural shapes and eccentricities of wood, using lathing, chiseling and carving techniques to make vessels which expose the patterns and gnarls within the natural forms. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 1st June 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_051.jpg
  • Hole in a wooden vessel, detail, in the studio of Eleanor Lakelin, wood sculptor, at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Eleanor makes pieces which celebrate the natural shapes and eccentricities of wood, using lathing, chiseling and carving techniques to make vessels which expose the patterns and gnarls within the natural forms. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 1st June 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_050.jpg
  • Open window of the studio of Eleanor Lakelin, wood sculptor, at Cockpit Arts, a social enterprise and creative business incubator in Deptford, London, UK. Eleanor makes pieces which celebrate the natural shapes and eccentricities of wood, using lathing, chiseling and carving techniques to make vessels which expose the patterns and gnarls within the natural forms. Cockpit was founded in 1986 with 5 units opening in Cockpit Yard in Holborn, and now supports 170 businesses in the Holborn and Deptford sites. Creatives receive training, support and bursaries and work across a wide range of art and craft practices. Photographed on 1st June 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_CockpitJune2019_MC_049.jpg
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