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Jacky Chapman

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  • Branding Photography, London
    Brand Photography_London_8223.jpg
  • Branding Photography, London
    Brand Photography_London_5162.jpg
  • Branding Photography, London
    Brand Photography_London_8130.jpg
  • Branding Photography for Stanley Property London, an established  independent estate agent specialising in Kensington, Chelsea, Belgravia, Knightsbridge and beyond.
    Stanley_Property_London_8754.jpg
  • Branding Photography for Stanley Property London, an established  independent estate agent specialising in Kensington, Chelsea, Belgravia, Knightsbridge and beyond.
    Brand Photography_London_7862.jpg
  • Branding Photography for Stanley Property London, an established  independent estate agent specialising in Kensington, Chelsea, Belgravia, Knightsbridge and beyond.
    Stanley_Property_London_7740.jpg
  • Branding Photography for Stanley Property London, an established  independent estate agent specialising in Kensington, Chelsea, Belgravia, Knightsbridge and beyond.
    Stanley_Property_London_7659.jpg
  • Branding Photography for Stanley Property London, an established  independent estate agent specialising in Kensington, Chelsea, Belgravia, Knightsbridge and beyond.
    Stanley_Property_London_7623.jpg
  • Branding Photography for Stanley Property London, an established  independent estate agent specialising in Kensington, Chelsea, Belgravia, Knightsbridge and beyond.
    Stanley_Property_London_7598.jpg
  • Branding Photography for Stanley Property London, an established  independent estate agent specialising in Kensington, Chelsea, Belgravia, Knightsbridge and beyond.
    Stanley_Property_London_7583.jpg
  • Branding Photography for Stanley Property London, an established  independent estate agent specialising in Kensington, Chelsea, Belgravia, Knightsbridge and beyond.
    Stanley_Property_London.jpg
  • Branding Photography for Stanley Property London, an established  independent estate agent specialising in Kensington, Chelsea, Belgravia, Knightsbridge and beyond.
    Stanley_Property_London_7681.jpg
  • Branding Photography London
    Brand Photography_London_5073.jpg
  • Brand Photography London
    Brand Photography_London_7850.jpg
  • Branding Photography for Stanley Property London, an established  independent estate agent specialising in Kensington, Chelsea, Belgravia, Knightsbridge and beyond.
    Stanley_Property_London_8762a.jpg
  • Branding Photography for Stanley Property London, an established  independent estate agent specialising in Kensington, Chelsea, Belgravia, Knightsbridge and beyond.
    Stanley_Property_London_8691.jpg
  • Branding Photography for Stanley Property London, an established  independent estate agent specialising in Kensington, Chelsea, Belgravia, Knightsbridge and beyond.
    Stanley_Property_London_8735.jpg
  • Stanley Chelsea Branding Photography for Stanley Property London, an established  independent estate agent specialising in Kensington, Chelsea, Belgravia, Knightsbridge and beyond.
    Stanley_Property_London_4916.jpg
  • Branding Photography for Stanley Property London, an established  independent estate agent specialising in Kensington, Chelsea, Belgravia, Knightsbridge and beyond.
    Stanley_Property_London_7714.jpg
  • Branding Photography for Stanley Property London, an established  independent estate agent specialising in Kensington, Chelsea, Belgravia, Knightsbridge and beyond.
    Stanley_Property_London_5056
  • Branding Photography London
    Brand Photography_London_8262.jpg
  • Branding Photography, London, UK
    Brand Photography_London_5111.jpg
  • Branding Photography, London
    Brand Photography_London_5150.jpg
  • Branding Photography for Stanley Property London, an established  independent estate agent specialising in Kensington, Chelsea, Belgravia, Knightsbridge and beyond.
    Stanley_Property_London_4904.jpg
  • Branding Photography for Stanley Property London, an established  independent estate agent specialising in Kensington, Chelsea, Belgravia, Knightsbridge and beyond.
    Stanley_Property_London_7625.jpg
  • Branding Photography for Stanley Property London, an established  independent estate agent specialising in Kensington, Chelsea, Belgravia, Knightsbridge and beyond.
    Stanley_Property_London_7498.jpg
  • Branding Photography for Stanley Property London, an established  independent estate agent specialising in Kensington, Chelsea, Belgravia, Knightsbridge and beyond.
    Stanley_Property_London_5009.jp
  • Branding Photography for Stanley Property London, an established  independent estate agent specialising in Kensington, Chelsea, Belgravia, Knightsbridge and beyond.
    Stanley_Property_London_8742.jpg
  • Branding Photography for Stanley Property London, an established  independent estate agent specialising in Kensington, Chelsea, Belgravia, Knightsbridge and beyond.
    Stanley_Property_London_8683.jpg
  • Branding Photography for Stanley Property London, an established  independent estate agent specialising in Kensington, Chelsea, Belgravia, Knightsbridge and beyond.
    Stanley_Property_London_7254.jpg
  • Branding Photography for Stanley Property London, an established  independent estate agent specialising in Kensington, Chelsea, Belgravia, Knightsbridge and beyond.
    Stanley_Property_London_7544.jpg
  • Branding Photography London
    Brand Photography_London_7834.jpg
  • Stanley Chelsea Branding Photography for Stanley Property London, an established  independent estate agent specialising in Kensington, Chelsea, Belgravia, Knightsbridge and beyond.
    Stanley_Property_London_7373.jpg
  • Stanley Chelsea Branding Photography for Stanley Property London, an established  independent estate agent specialising in Kensington, Chelsea, Belgravia, Knightsbridge and beyond.
    Stanley_Property_London_7413.jpg
  • Branding Photography for Stanley Property London, an established  independent estate agent specialising in Kensington, Chelsea, Belgravia, Knightsbridge and beyond.
    Stanley_Property_London_7276.jpg
  • Branding Photography for Stanley Property London, an established  independent estate agent specialising in Kensington, Chelsea, Belgravia, Knightsbridge and beyond.
    Stanley_Property_London_8772.jpg
  • Branding Photography for Stanley Property London, an established  independent estate agent specialising in Kensington, Chelsea, Belgravia, Knightsbridge and beyond.
    Stanley_Property_London_7321.jpg
  • Support worker with service user playing a game.<br />
Client  - Allerton, an integrated social care, housing, and development company.
    IMG_1690_6.jpg
  • Personal Branding Photography for a stain glass artist in St Petersburg, Russia
    photo-14657-1614081048001c copy.jpg
  • Portrait of a service user.<br />
Client  - Allerton, an integrated social care, housing, and development company.
    _MG_5916.jpg
  • Support worker with service user cracking eggs.<br />
Client  - Allerton, an integrated social care, housing, and development company.
    MG_4558 copy.jpg
  • Support worker with service user. Client  - Allerton, an integrated social care, housing, and development company.
    IMG_1371_1.jpg
  • Support worker with service users during a music class. Client  - Allerton, an integrated social care, housing, and development company.
    _MG_6608.jpg
  • Support worker with service user on the promenade at Blackpool.<br />
Client  - Allerton, an integrated social care, housing, and development company.
    _MG_7167.jpg
  • Support worker helping with service user to drink.<br />
Client  - Allerton, an integrated social care, housing, and development company.
    _MG_5742.jpg
  • Support worker with service user visiting a garden centre. Client  - Allerton, an integrated social care, housing, and development company.
    _MG_5933.jpg
  • Support worker with service user visiting a garden centre. Client  - Allerton, an integrated social care, housing, and development company.
    _MG_5947.jpg
  • Support worker with service user blowing bubbles.<br />
Client  - Allerton, an integrated social care, housing, and development company.
    _MG_5585.jpg
  • Support worker with service user baking.<br />
Client  - Allerton, an integrated social care, housing, and development company.
    _MG_4580.jpg
  • Personal Branding Photography for a final year student
    photo-15942-1614955091686X.JPG
  • Personal Branding Photography for a final year student
    photo-15942-1614878384099X.JPG
  • Personal Branding Photography for a photographer
    1c-photo-21118-21118-1616592896691.jpg
  • Service user outside his home.<br />
Client  - Allerton, an integrated social care, housing, and development company.
    IMG_1413.jpg
  • Support worker with service user folding laundry. <br />
Client  - Allerton, an integrated social care, housing, and development company.
    _MG_6058.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
  • Mike Williams, brand and digital strategist. Owner of Civic, a creative consultancy that provides full brand-related serves, London, UK
    _MG_3285_WB_2.jpg
  • Leading multi-service UK Solicitors specialising in criminal defence, family and civil rights law.
    IMG_7289.jpg
  • Leading multi-service UK Solicitors specialising in criminal defence, family and civil rights law.
    IMG_7229.jpg
  • Leading multi-service UK Solicitors specialising in criminal defence, family and civil rights law.
    IMG_4561.jpg
  • Leading multi-service UK Solicitors specialising in criminal defence, family and civil rights law.
    IMG_4409.jpg
  • Leading multi-service UK Solicitors specialising in criminal defence, family and civil rights law.
    IMG_4438.jpg
  • Leading multi-service UK Solicitors specialising in criminal defence, family and civil rights law.
    IMG_4460.jpg
  • Leading multi-service UK Solicitors specialising in criminal defence, family and civil rights law.
    IMG_4493.jpg
  • ‘The Penitential Procession of Furnes’ (Veurne, West Flanders, Belgium) is a religious procession originating way back in history. Two schools of thought compete to explain where and how it originated. One school argues that in 1637 a Norbertine monk (Jacob Clou) founded Sodality, a religious fraternity, whose members marched in 1644 as hooded, cross-bearing penitents in a Capuchin procession to stave off war and plague. The other school argues that the origin dates to 1099 when crusader Count Robert II of Flanders returned from Jerusalem with a fragment of The Cross.<br />
 <br />
The procession continues today, normally on the last Sunday in July. The first part of the procession is dedicated to biblical storytelling. Residents dress in a variety of costumes and wigs. The second part is a sombre affair. Penitents dress in dark brown hoods and robes and walk barefoot through the small town of Veurne. Many carry large heavy wooden crosses and walk slowly to the monotone sound of a single drumbeat, causing silence and eeriness almost the onlooking throng.
    Religious procession- Veurne-Belgium.jpg