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Jacky Chapman

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  • Perry Fenwick. English film and television actor. (Plays Billy Mitchell in EastEnders)<br />
Client Pavilion Publishing
    Perry Fenwick.jpg
  • Perry Fenwick. English film and television actor. (Plays Billy Mitchell in EastEnders)<br />
Client Pavilion Publishing
    Perry Fenwick.jpg
  • Sir Michael Hordern, CBE (3 October 1911 – 2 May 1995)  English stage and film actor at Warwick University 1987 - Doctor of Letters.
    Sir Michael Hordern.jpg
  • Robin Ince. English stand-up comedian, actor and writer.
    Robin Ince - comedian, actor and wri...jpg
  • Llewella Gideon, TV and radio actor, writer, and comedian, London 2001.
    27_865.1_03a copy.jpg
  • Llewella Gideon, TV and radio actor, writer, and comedian, London 2001.
    27_865.1_05z copy.jpg
  • Jeremy John Irons. English actor<br />
Jeremy Irons, photographed during a short break from rehearsals, London, UK
    Jeremy Irons.jpg
  • Robin Ince, English comedian, actor and writer, London, UK
    Robin Ince.jpg
  • Charles Venn (Stage name Chucky Venice), actor. At house of lords. <br />
Wear it pink campaign for Breast Cancer campaign
    243.JPG
  • Christopher Eccleston, the new Dr Who, 2005, London, UK.
    Christopher Eccleston .jpg
  • David Carey, voice and text director
    27-720-02.jpg
  • Cathy Shipton who played nurse Duffy in BBC’s drama Casualty (early 1990's)
    Catherine Shipton _04a.jpg
  • Maureen Lipman at a press conference at Muswell Hill Post Office in the 1990's. Lipman was a fierce campaigner to save Muswell Hill post office from back door privatisation.
    Maureen Lipman_02.jpg
  • David Carey, voice and text director
    David Carey-voice-text-director
  • David Carey, voice and text director
    27-720-06.jpg
  • David Carey, voice and text director
    27-720-03.jpg
  • Cathy Shipton who played nurse Duffy in BBC’s drama Casualty (early 1990's)
    Catherine Shipton _06a.jpg
  • Cathy Shipton who played nurse Duffy in BBC’s drama Casualty (early 1990's)
    Catherine Shipton _01a.jpg
  • Cathy Shipton who played nurse Duffy in BBC’s drama Casualty (early 1990's)
    Catherine Shipton _02a.jpg
  • Cathy Shipton who played nurse Duffy in BBC’s drama Casualty (early 1990's)
    Catherine Shipton _06a.jpg
  • Cathy Shipton who played nurse Duffy in BBC’s drama Casualty (early 1990's)
    Catherine Shipton _02a.jpg
  • Cathy Shipton who played nurse Duffy in BBC’s drama Casualty (early 1990's)
    Catherine Shipton _01a.jpg
  • Cathy Shipton who played nurse Duffy in BBC’s drama Casualty (early 1990's)
    Catherine Shipton _04a.jpg
  • Maureen Lipman at a press conference at Muswell Hill Post Office in the 1990's. Lipman was a fierce campaigner to save Muswell Hill post office from back door privatisation.
    Maureen Lipman_03.jpg
  • Maureen Lipman at a press conference at Muswell Hill Post Office in the 1990's. Lipman was a fierce campaigner to save Muswell Hill post office from back door privatisation.
    Maureen Lipman_05.jpg
  • Maureen Lipman at a press conference at Muswell Hill Post Office in the 1990's. Lipman was a fierce campaigner to save Muswell Hill post office from back door privatisation.
    Maureen Lipman_04.jpg
  • James Allan Girls School; preparing for a performance of The Dog Beneath the Skin
    1099509.JPG
  • James Allan Girls School; preparing for a performance of The Dog Beneath the Skin - private school Dulwich London
    1099508.JPG
  • James Allan Girls School; preparing for a performance of The Dog Beneath the Skin
    1066441.JPG
  • Maureen Lipman at a press conference at Muswell Hill Post Office in the 1990's. Lipman was a fierce campaigner to save Muswell Hill post office from back door privatisation.
    Maureen Lipman_01.jpg
  • Cheeky Girls with actor Andrew Newton-Lee (from Hollyoaks) Breast Cancer Campaign's 'The Pink Ribbon Ball' at the Dorchester, 2004
    092.JPG
  • Joanna Lamond Lumley, OBE, FRGS. English actress, comedienne, voice-over artist, former model and author.
    Joanna Lumley jpg
  • Chucky Venice, actor, at the charity run, Hyde Park, London, UK<br />
<br />
Client Breast Cancer Campaign 2005
    046.JPG
  • Chucky Venice (stage name Charles Venn), actor. At the Breast Cancer Ball at the Dorchester
    171.JPG
  • In 1919, artist Marcel Duchamp purchased an empty 50cc glass ampoule from a Parisian pharmacy, filled it with Parisian air and gifted it to friends and patrons, Louise and Walter Arensberg.  The sealed glass ampoule was later exhibited as an art piece entitled ‘Air de Paris’.  Finding myself in Vienna for a few days, and inspired by Duchamp’s ampoule, I armed myself with my own miniature plastic ampoules, a (non needle) syringe and, surreptitiously, went about extracting samples of espresso after espresso, when the ever vigilant waiters looked away, encapsulating my own little ‘Duchampesque’ version of fin-de-siècle Viennese coffee shops. Legend has it that the tradition of the Vienna coffee house sprang from abandoned beans and the imagination of a local hero soon after the failed Ottoman siege in 1683. <br />
<br />
Viennese coffee houses are eponymous with a hot house of thought, creativity and innovation, where great, and often-Bohemian minds met, ideas were exchanged, and double espressos and mélanges consumed.  Artists, architects, psychoanalysts, philosophers, storytellers, dictators, politicians and actors all sat upon the faded and well-worn chairs. And today? Tourists, cameras, iPhones, nostalgia?  Indeed, why did I go?  Was it a vague hope of inspiration? A bit of café creativity? Or simply to sit where Gustav Klimt met Sigmund Freud?  <br />
<br />
In 2011, UNESCO added Vienna’s world-famous coffeehouse culture to its Intangible Cultural Heritage list.
    IMG_4738close up2.jpg
  • In 1919, artist Marcel Duchamp purchased an empty 50cc glass ampoule from a Parisian pharmacy, filled it with Parisian air and gifted it to friends and patrons, Louise and Walter Arensberg.  The sealed glass ampoule was later exhibited as an art piece entitled ‘Air de Paris’.  Finding myself in Vienna for a few days, and inspired by Duchamp’s ampoule, I armed myself with my own miniature plastic ampoules, a (non needle) syringe and, surreptitiously, went about extracting samples of espresso after espresso, when the ever vigilant waiters looked away, encapsulating my own little ‘Duchampesque’ version of fin-de-siècle Viennese coffee shops. Legend has it that the tradition of the Vienna coffee house sprang from abandoned beans and the imagination of a local hero soon after the failed Ottoman siege in 1683. <br />
<br />
Viennese coffee houses are eponymous with a hot house of thought, creativity and innovation, where great, and often-Bohemian minds met, ideas were exchanged, and double espressos and mélanges consumed.  Artists, architects, psychoanalysts, philosophers, storytellers, dictators, politicians and actors all sat upon the faded and well-worn chairs. And today? Tourists, cameras, iPhones, nostalgia?  Indeed, why did I go?  Was it a vague hope of inspiration? A bit of café creativity? Or simply to sit where Gustav Klimt met Sigmund Freud?  <br />
<br />
In 2011, UNESCO added Vienna’s world-famous coffeehouse culture to its Intangible Cultural Heritage list.
    IMG_4738close up.jpg
  • In 1919, artist Marcel Duchamp purchased an empty 50cc glass ampoule from a Parisian pharmacy, filled it with Parisian air and gifted it to friends and patrons, Louise and Walter Arensberg.  The sealed glass ampoule was later exhibited as an art piece entitled ‘Air de Paris’.  Finding myself in Vienna for a few days, and inspired by Duchamp’s ampoule, I armed myself with my own miniature plastic ampoules, a (non needle) syringe and, surreptitiously, went about extracting samples of espresso after espresso, when the ever vigilant waiters looked away, encapsulating my own little ‘Duchampesque’ version of fin-de-siècle Viennese coffee shops. Legend has it that the tradition of the Vienna coffee house sprang from abandoned beans and the imagination of a local hero soon after the failed Ottoman siege in 1683. <br />
<br />
Viennese coffee houses are eponymous with a hot house of thought, creativity and innovation, where great, and often-Bohemian minds met, ideas were exchanged, and double espressos and mélanges consumed.  Artists, architects, psychoanalysts, philosophers, storytellers, dictators, politicians and actors all sat upon the faded and well-worn chairs. And today? Tourists, cameras, iPhones, nostalgia?  Indeed, why did I go?  Was it a vague hope of inspiration? A bit of café creativity? Or simply to sit where Gustav Klimt met Sigmund Freud?  <br />
<br />
In 2011, UNESCO added Vienna’s world-famous coffeehouse culture to its Intangible Cultural Heritage list.
    Fin-de-siècle Vienna- The Coffee H...jpg
  • In 1919, artist Marcel Duchamp purchased an empty 50cc glass ampoule from a Parisian pharmacy, filled it with Parisian air and gifted it to friends and patrons, Louise and Walter Arensberg.  The sealed glass ampoule was later exhibited as an art piece entitled ‘Air de Paris’.  Finding myself in Vienna for a few days, and inspired by Duchamp’s ampoule, I armed myself with my own miniature plastic ampoules, a (non needle) syringe and, surreptitiously, went about extracting samples of espresso after espresso, when the ever vigilant waiters looked away, encapsulating my own little ‘Duchampesque’ version of fin-de-siècle Viennese coffee shops. Legend has it that the tradition of the Vienna coffee house sprang from abandoned beans and the imagination of a local hero soon after the failed Ottoman siege in 1683. <br />
<br />
Viennese coffee houses are eponymous with a hot house of thought, creativity and innovation, where great, and often-Bohemian minds met, ideas were exchanged, and double espressos and mélanges consumed.  Artists, architects, psychoanalysts, philosophers, storytellers, dictators, politicians and actors all sat upon the faded and well-worn chairs. And today? Tourists, cameras, iPhones, nostalgia?  Indeed, why did I go?  Was it a vague hope of inspiration? A bit of café creativity? Or simply to sit where Gustav Klimt met Sigmund Freud?  <br />
<br />
In 2011, UNESCO added Vienna’s world-famous coffeehouse culture to its Intangible Cultural Heritage list.
    Fin-de-siècle Vienna- The Coffee H...jpg