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Jacky Chapman

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  • Little boy painting at nursery,
    1104321.JPG
  • Teacher reading to children at a nursery school
    830-1.26.jpg
  • Teacher reading a book with young child at a nursery school
    830-1.30.jpg
  • Teacher reading to a group of children at a nursery school
    830-1.20.jpg
  • Teacher reading to a group of children at a nursery school
    830-1.14.jpg
  • Teacher reading to a group of children at a nursery school
    830-1.13.jpg
  • children talking and playing at a nursery school
    830-1.3-7.jpg
  • Teacher reading to a child at a nursery school
    830-1.9.jpg
  • Teacher reading to a group of children at a nursery school
    830-1.11.jpg
  • Young children and toddlers playing on soft play area,
    1104326.JPG
  • Young male toddler covered in chickenpox.
    jc1175m.jpg
  • Young children and toddlers playing on soft play area,
    1104325.JPG
  • Young children and toddlers playing on soft play area,
    1104324.JPG
  • Young girl playing in soft play area at nursery,
    1104319.JPG
  • Young girl playing in soft play area at nursery,
    1104318.JPG
  • Parents taking outdoor clothes off on arrival at day care centre,
    1104316.JPG
  • Mother settling child at daycare centre,
    1104317.JPG
  • Young child and teacher waving good bye to parent at nursery school,
    1104312.JPG
  • Mother bringing child into first day at school
    1104179.JPG
  • Large group of primary school children looking up and listening in the  playground,
    1102450.JPG
  • Ballet class at Montessori nursery
    1095852.JPG
  • Art class at Montessori nursery
    1095849.JPG
  • Ballet class at Montessori nursery
    1095851.JPG
  • Playing the recorder at Montessori nursery
    1095848.JPG
  • Montessori nursery, Learning how to hammer
    1078645.JPG
  • Montessori nursery, Learning how to hammer
    1078644.JPG
  • Boy playing with building blocks in Montessori nursery
    1074089.JPG
  • Children at Montessori nursery
    1070583.JPG
  • Teacher looks at a book with a group of four children at a Montessori nursery
    1069032.JPG
  • Ballet class at Montessori nursery
    1069026.JPG
  • Ballet class at Montessori nursery
    1069025.JPG
  • Ballet class at Montessori nursery
    1069024.JPG
  • Young male toddler covered in chickenpox.
    jc1175m.jpg
  • Young male toddler covered in chickenpox.
    jc1176m.jpg
  • Montessori school  ballet class,
    1104382.JPG
  • Young boy and girl doing puzzle together at nursery school,
    1104323.JPG
  • teacher reading to young boy at girl at nursery school,
    1104322.JPG
  • Young children playing in soft play area at nursery,
    1104320.JPG
  • Say a little prayer. Convent. Vilnius, Lithuania
    convent-jacky-045.jpg
  • Land mines were used extensively during the war by all sides in the conflict: about 1.5 million were laid across the country between 1991-95.<br />
<br />
In 1997, more than 600,000 refugees still remained outside the country; landmines have impeded the return of many. Those who do return often find that their land has become a minefield. These returning refugees have little mine awareness, and, having been away from their communities, they do not know the location of minefields.<br />
<br />
There are thought to be still between 51,000 and 100,000 mines covering a 310-square-mile area across the country.  At least 509 people have been killed and another 1,466 wounded by the devices in Croatia since the war ended.<br />
<br />
It is hoped that by 2019 all suspected minefields will be cleared.
    98_650_1.4 copy 2.jpg
  • Author Ann Philippa Pearce OBE (22 January 1920 – 21 December 2006) photographed at her home in Little Shelford, near Cambridge. 25/10/00<br />
Client Times Educational Supplement
    Ann-Philippa Pearce OBE.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
  • Land mines were used extensively during the war by all sides in the conflict: about 1.5 million were laid across the country between 1991-95.<br />
<br />
In 1997, more than 600,000 refugees still remained outside the country; landmines have impeded the return of many. Those who do return often find that their land has become a minefield. These returning refugees have little mine awareness, and, having been away from their communities, they do not know the location of minefields.<br />
<br />
There are thought to be still between 51,000 and 100,000 mines covering a 310-square-mile area across the country.  At least 509 people have been killed and another 1,466 wounded by the devices in Croatia since the war ended.<br />
<br />
It is hoped that by 2019 all suspected minefields will be cleared.
    98_650_1.4 copy 2.jpg
  • Land mines were used extensively during the war by all sides in the conflict: about 1.5 million were laid across the country between 1991-95.<br />
<br />
In 1997, more than 600,000 refugees still remained outside the country; landmines have impeded the return of many. Those who do return often find that their land has become a minefield. These returning refugees have little mine awareness, and, having been away from their communities, they do not know the location of minefields.<br />
<br />
There are thought to be still between 51,000 and 100,000 mines covering a 310-square-mile area across the country.  At least 509 people have been killed and another 1,466 wounded by the devices in Croatia since the war ended.<br />
<br />
It is hoped that by 2019 all suspected minefields will be cleared.
    Sarajevo-war-destruction-1998.jpg
  • Land mines were used extensively during the war by all sides in the conflict: about 1.5 million were laid across the country between 1991-95.<br />
<br />
In 1997, more than 600,000 refugees still remained outside the country; landmines have impeded the return of many. Those who do return often find that their land has become a minefield. These returning refugees have little mine awareness, and, having been away from their communities, they do not know the location of minefields.<br />
<br />
There are thought to be still between 51,000 and 100,000 mines covering a 310-square-mile area across the country.  At least 509 people have been killed and another 1,466 wounded by the devices in Croatia since the war ended.<br />
<br />
It is hoped that by 2019 all suspected minefields will be cleared.
    98_650_1.4.jpg
  • Land mines were used extensively during the war by all sides in the conflict: about 1.5 million were laid across the country between 1991-95.<br />
<br />
In 1997, more than 600,000 refugees still remained outside the country; landmines have impeded the return of many. Those who do return often find that their land has become a minefield. These returning refugees have little mine awareness, and, having been away from their communities, they do not know the location of minefields.<br />
<br />
There are thought to be still between 51,000 and 100,000 mines covering a 310-square-mile area across the country.  At least 509 people have been killed and another 1,466 wounded by the devices in Croatia since the war ended.<br />
<br />
It is hoped that by 2019 all suspected minefields will be cleared.
    98-650-1-14.jpg
  • Land mines were used extensively during the war by all sides in the conflict: about 1.5 million were laid across the country between 1991-95.<br />
<br />
In 1997, more than 600,000 refugees still remained outside the country; landmines have impeded the return of many. Those who do return often find that their land has become a minefield. These returning refugees have little mine awareness, and, having been away from their communities, they do not know the location of minefields.<br />
<br />
There are thought to be still between 51,000 and 100,000 mines covering a 310-square-mile area across the country.  At least 509 people have been killed and another 1,466 wounded by the devices in Croatia since the war ended.<br />
<br />
It is hoped that by 2019 all suspected minefields will be cleared.
    98_650_1.4.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
  • Land mines were used extensively during the war by all sides in the conflict: about 1.5 million were laid across the country between 1991-95.<br />
<br />
In 1997, more than 600,000 refugees still remained outside the country; landmines have impeded the return of many. Those who do return often find that their land has become a minefield. These returning refugees have little mine awareness, and, having been away from their communities, they do not know the location of minefields.<br />
<br />
There are thought to be still between 51,000 and 100,000 mines covering a 310-square-mile area across the country.  At least 509 people have been killed and another 1,466 wounded by the devices in Croatia since the war ended.<br />
<br />
It is hoped that by 2019 all suspected minefields will be cleared.
    Sarajevo-war-destruction-1998
  • 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
  • Author Ann Philippa Pearce OBE,   (known for one of her more famous novel's Tom's Midnight Garden) photographed at her home in Little Shelford, near Cambridge.
    Ann-Philippa Pearce OBE-author
  • Land mines were used extensively during the war by all sides in the conflict: about 1.5 million were laid across the country between 1991-95.<br />
<br />
In 1997, more than 600,000 refugees still remained outside the country; landmines have impeded the return of many. Those who do return often find that their land has become a minefield. These returning refugees have little mine awareness, and, having been away from their communities, they do not know the location of minefields.<br />
<br />
There are thought to be still between 51,000 and 100,000 mines covering a 310-square-mile area across the country.  At least 509 people have been killed and another 1,466 wounded by the devices in Croatia since the war ended.<br />
<br />
It is hoped that by 2019 all suspected minefields will be cleared.
    98-650-1-7a.jpg
  • Shop windows displaying very little!<br />
St Petersburg, Russia 1994
    Russia-94-331-1.12-36.jpg
  • Green Cabbie Shelter, Pimlico, London, UK, 1985
    82_8_01.jpg
  • Sir Terry Pratchett is among the top fantasy writers of the last century and Britain’s most shoplifted novelist! He was Britain’s best selling author in the 1990s until J K Rowling arrived. I photographed Terry in 1996 for a leading newspaper as he was at his peak. I knew little of him. He was a well know fantasy novelist – a genre I never fancied, I’m afraid!  I am not sure I knew he had a proclivity for wearing large, black fedora hats beforehand either!<br />
<br />
He was a delight to photograph, but as with most newspapers, it was in/out and back to the picture desk with the images! I squeezed out a single roll of b/w! His style was recognized as more “urban cowboy than city gent" and when asked if he ever took his hat off, he replied: “I do take it off sometimes because how else is a man to shower?”
    Terry Pratchett.jpg
  • little elms nursery-jacky chapman026.jpg