Aktuális sajtó tartalmak és illusztrációs fotók

[its a date] képek

58 492 találat
  • / 500
  • kép/oldal:
RM
EDITORIAL USE ONLY The Pin Drop, a 20-metre-high temporary installation by Gareth Pugh and Carson McColl, rises above the Southbank Centre as the centrepiece of its 75th anniversary celebrations, launching You Are Here, a site wide takeover taking place on Sunday 3 May. Picture date: Friday May 1, 2026.-stock-foto
RM
EDITORIAL USE ONLY The Pin Drop, a 20-metre-high temporary installation by Gareth Pugh and Carson McColl, rises above the Southbank Centre as the centrepiece of its 75th anniversary celebrations, launching You Are Here, a site wide takeover taking place on Sunday 3 May. Picture date: Friday May 1, 2026.-stock-foto
RM
EDITORIAL USE ONLY The Pin Drop, a 20-metre-high temporary installation by Gareth Pugh and Carson McColl, rises above the Southbank Centre as the centrepiece of its 75th anniversary celebrations, launching You Are Here, a site wide takeover taking place on Sunday 3 May. Picture date: Friday May 1, 2026.-stock-foto
RM
EDITORIAL USE ONLY The Pin Drop, a 20-metre-high temporary installation by Gareth Pugh and Carson McColl, rises above the Southbank Centre as the centrepiece of its 75th anniversary celebrations, launching You Are Here, a site wide takeover taking place on Sunday 3 May. Picture date: Friday May 1, 2026.-stock-foto
RM
EDITORIAL USE ONLY The Pin Drop, a 20-metre-high temporary installation by Gareth Pugh and Carson McColl, rises above the Southbank Centre as the centrepiece of its 75th anniversary celebrations, launching You Are Here, a site wide takeover taking place on Sunday 3 May. Picture date: Friday May 1, 2026.-stock-foto
RM
EDITORIAL USE ONLY The Pin Drop, a 20-metre-high temporary installation by Gareth Pugh and Carson McColl, rises above the Southbank Centre as the centrepiece of its 75th anniversary celebrations, launching You Are Here, a site wide takeover taking place on Sunday 3 May. Picture date: Friday May 1, 2026.-stock-foto
RM
EDITORIAL USE ONLY The Pin Drop, a 20-metre-high temporary installation by Gareth Pugh and Carson McColl, rises above the Southbank Centre as the centrepiece of its 75th anniversary celebrations, launching You Are Here, a site wide takeover taking place on Sunday 3 May. Picture date: Friday May 1, 2026.-stock-foto
RM
EDITORIAL USE ONLY The Pin Drop, a 20-metre-high temporary installation by Gareth Pugh and Carson McColl, rises above the Southbank Centre as the centrepiece of its 75th anniversary celebrations, launching You Are Here, a site wide takeover taking place on Sunday 3 May. Picture date: Friday May 1, 2026.-stock-foto
RM
EDITORIAL USE ONLY The Pin Drop, a 20-metre-high temporary installation by Gareth Pugh and Carson McColl, rises above the Southbank Centre as the centrepiece of its 75th anniversary celebrations, launching You Are Here, a site wide takeover taking place on Sunday 3 May. Picture date: Friday May 1, 2026.-stock-foto
RM
EDITORIAL USE ONLY The Pin Drop, a 20-metre-high temporary installation by Gareth Pugh and Carson McColl, rises above the Southbank Centre as the centrepiece of its 75th anniversary celebrations, launching You Are Here, a site wide takeover taking place on Sunday 3 May. Picture date: Friday May 1, 2026.-stock-foto
RM
EDITORIAL USE ONLY The Pin Drop, a 20-metre-high temporary installation by Gareth Pugh and Carson McColl, rises above the Southbank Centre as the centrepiece of its 75th anniversary celebrations, launching You Are Here, a sitewide takeover taking place on Sunday 3 May. Picture date: Friday May 1, 2026.-stock-foto
RM
EDITORIAL USE ONLY The Pin Drop, a 20-metre-high temporary installation by Gareth Pugh and Carson McColl, rises above the Southbank Centre as the centrepiece of its 75th anniversary celebrations, launching You Are Here, a sitewide takeover taking place on Sunday 3 May. Picture date: Friday May 1, 2026.-stock-foto
RM
EDITORIAL USE ONLY The Pin Drop, a 20-metre-high temporary installation by Gareth Pugh and Carson McColl, rises above the Southbank Centre as the centrepiece of its 75th anniversary celebrations, launching You Are Here, a sitewide takeover taking place on Sunday 3 May. Picture date: Friday May 1, 2026.-stock-foto
RM
EDITORIAL USE ONLY The Pin Drop, a 20-metre-high temporary installation by Gareth Pugh and Carson McColl, rises above the Southbank Centre as the centrepiece of its 75th anniversary celebrations, launching You Are Here, a sitewide takeover taking place on Sunday 3 May. Picture date: Friday May 1, 2026.-stock-foto
RM
EDITORIAL USE ONLY The Pin Drop, a 20-metre-high temporary installation by Gareth Pugh and Carson McColl, rises above the Southbank Centre as the centrepiece of its 75th anniversary celebrations, launching You Are Here, a sitewide takeover taking place on Sunday 3 May. Picture date: Friday May 1, 2026.-stock-foto
RM
EDITORIAL USE ONLY The Pin Drop, a 20-metre-high temporary installation by Gareth Pugh and Carson McColl, rises above the Southbank Centre as the centrepiece of its 75th anniversary celebrations, launching You Are Here, a sitewide takeover taking place on Sunday 3 May. Picture date: Friday May 1, 2026.-stock-foto
RM
Upperville Charles, a newborn lamb named after King Charles III to mark the state visit to the US, is held by its owner Tracy Bloom after being kissed by Queen Camilla during a community block party and pot luck celebrating America's 250th 'birthday', in Front Royal, Virginia, on day four of the state visit to the US. Picture date: Thursday April 30, 2026.-stock-foto
RM
Conservators Matt Blake (centre), Lynne Humphries (left) and Joseph Jones (right) prepare to complete the restoration of the memorial of William Murray, Lord Mansfield to its original position within Westminster Abbey's north transept. Born in 1705, Murray served as Lord Chief Justice of England from 1756-88 and played a decisive role in ending slavery in England. The memorial was moved in 1933 but has now been dismantled and re-erected in its original location in preparation for the opening of the King Charles III Sacristy. Picture date: Wednesday April 29, 2026.-stock-foto
RM
Conservators Matt Blake (centre), Lynne Humphries (left) and Joseph Jones (right) prepare to complete the restoration of the memorial of William Murray, Lord Mansfield, to its original position within Westminster Abbey's north transept. Born in 1705, Murray served as Lord Chief Justice of England from 1756-88 and played a decisive role in ending slavery in England. The memorial was moved in 1933 but has now been dismantled and re-erected in its original location in preparation for the opening of the King Charles III Sacristy. Picture date: Wednesday April 29, 2026.-stock-foto
RM
Conservators Matt Blake (left), Lynne Humphries (right) and Joseph Jones (centre) prepare to complete the restoration of the memorial of William Murray, Lord Mansfield to its original position within Westminster Abbey's north transept. Born in 1705, Murray served as Lord Chief Justice of England from 1756-88 and played a decisive role in ending slavery in England. The memorial was moved in 1933 but has now been dismantled and re-erected in its original location in preparation for the opening of the King Charles III Sacristy. Picture date: Wednesday April 29, 2026.-stock-foto
RM
Conservators Matt Blake (left) and Joseph Jones (right) prepare to complete the restoration of the memorial of William Murray, Lord Mansfield to its original position within Westminster Abbey's north transept. Born in 1705, Murray served as Lord Chief Justice of England from 1756-88 and played a decisive role in ending slavery in England. The memorial was moved in 1933 but has now been dismantled and re-erected in its original location in preparation for the opening of the King Charles III Sacristy. Picture date: Wednesday April 29, 2026.-stock-foto
RM
Conservators Matt Blake (centre), Lynne Humphries (left) and Joseph Jones (right) prepare to complete the restoration of the memorial of William Murray, Lord Mansfield to its original position within Westminster Abbey's north transept. Born in 1705, Murray served as Lord Chief Justice of England from 1756-88 and played a decisive role in ending slavery in England. The memorial was moved in 1933 but has now been dismantled and re-erected in its original location in preparation for the opening of the King Charles III Sacristy. Picture date: Wednesday April 29, 2026.-stock-foto
RM
Conservators Matt Blake (centre), Lynne Humphries (left) and Joseph Jones (right) prepare to complete the restoration of the memorial of William Murray, Lord Mansfield to its original position within Westminster Abbey's north transept. Born in 1705, Murray served as Lord Chief Justice of England from 1756-88 and played a decisive role in ending slavery in England. The memorial was moved in 1933 but has now been dismantled and re-erected in its original location in preparation for the opening of the King Charles III Sacristy. Picture date: Wednesday April 29, 2026.-stock-foto
RM
Conservators Matt Blake (left) and Joseph Jones (right) prepare to complete the restoration of the memorial of William Murray, Lord Mansfield to its original position within Westminster Abbey's north transept. Born in 1705, Murray served as Lord Chief Justice of England from 1756-88 and played a decisive role in ending slavery in England. The memorial was moved in 1933 but has now been dismantled and re-erected in its original location in preparation for the opening of the King Charles III Sacristy. Picture date: Wednesday April 29, 2026.-stock-foto
RM
Conservators Matt Blake (left) and Joseph Jones (right) prepare to complete the restoration of the memorial of William Murray, Lord Mansfield to its original position within Westminster Abbey's north transept. Born in 1705, Murray served as Lord Chief Justice of England from 1756-88 and played a decisive role in ending slavery in England. The memorial was moved in 1933 but has now been dismantled and re-erected in its original location in preparation for the opening of the King Charles III Sacristy. Picture date: Wednesday April 29, 2026.-stock-foto
RM
Conservators Matt Blake (left) and Joseph Jones (right) prepare to complete the restoration of the memorial of William Murray, Lord Mansfield to its original position within Westminster Abbey's north transept. Born in 1705, Murray served as Lord Chief Justice of England from 1756-88 and played a decisive role in ending slavery in England. The memorial was moved in 1933 but has now been dismantled and re-erected in its original location in preparation for the opening of the King Charles III Sacristy. Picture date: Wednesday April 29, 2026.-stock-foto
RM
Conservators Matt Blake (top), Lynne Humphries (centre) and Joseph Jones (bottom) prepare to complete the restoration of the memorial of William Murray, Lord Mansfield to its original position within Westminster Abbey's north transept. Born in 1705, Murray served as Lord Chief Justice of England from 1756-88 and played a decisive role in ending slavery in England. The memorial was moved in 1933 but has now been dismantled and re-erected in its original location in preparation for the opening of the King Charles III Sacristy. Picture date: Wednesday April 29, 2026.-stock-foto
RM
Conservators Matt Blake (right) and Joseph Jones (left) prepare to complete the restoration of the memorial of William Murray, Lord Mansfield to its original position within Westminster Abbey's north transept. Born in 1705, Murray served as Lord Chief Justice of England from 1756-88 and played a decisive role in ending slavery in England. The memorial was moved in 1933 but has now been dismantled and re-erected in its original location in preparation for the opening of the King Charles III Sacristy. Picture date: Wednesday April 29, 2026.-stock-foto
RM
Conservator Matt Blake prepares to complete the restoration of the memorial of William Murray, Lord Mansfield to its original position within Westminster Abbey's north transept. Born in 1705, Murray served as Lord Chief Justice of England from 1756-88 and played a decisive role in ending slavery in England. The memorial was moved in 1933 but has now been dismantled and re-erected in its original location in preparation for the opening of the King Charles III Sacristy. Picture date: Wednesday April 29, 2026.-stock-foto
RM
Conservator Matt Blake prepares to complete the restoration of the memorial of William Murray, Lord Mansfield to its original position within Westminster Abbey's north transept. Born in 1705, Murray served as Lord Chief Justice of England from 1756-88 and played a decisive role in ending slavery in England. The memorial was moved in 1933 but has now been dismantled and re-erected in its original location in preparation for the opening of the King Charles III Sacristy. Picture date: Wednesday April 29, 2026.-stock-foto
RM
Duesseldorf, Germany. 29th Apr, 2026. "TKE" lettering on the roof of the TK Elevator headquarters on an office building. The Finnish elevator manufacturer KONE is planning to acquire its competitor TK Elevator (TKE) from the financial investors Cinven and Advent International; a deal is expected to be completed at a later date. Credit: Rolf Vennenbernd/dpa/Alamy Live News-stock-foto
RM
The Princess Royal during a visit to the the National Theatre, on the Southbank in London, to mark it becoming a recipient of the Princess Royal Training Award for its apprenticeship scheme. Picture date: Tuesday April 28, 2026.-stock-foto
RM
The Princess Royal during a visit to the the National Theatre, on the Southbank in London, to mark it becoming a recipient of the Princess Royal Training Award for its apprenticeship scheme. Picture date: Tuesday April 28, 2026.-stock-foto
RM
The Princess Royal during a visit to the the National Theatre, on the Southbank in London, to mark it becoming a recipient of the Princess Royal Training Award for its apprenticeship scheme. Picture date: Tuesday April 28, 2026.-stock-foto
RM
The Princess Royal during a visit to the the National Theatre, on the Southbank in London, to mark it becoming a recipient of the Princess Royal Training Award for its apprenticeship scheme. Picture date: Tuesday April 28, 2026.-stock-foto
RM
The Princess Royal during a visit to the the National Theatre, on the Southbank in London, to mark it becoming a recipient of the Princess Royal Training Award for its apprenticeship scheme. Picture date: Tuesday April 28, 2026.-stock-foto
RM
The Princess Royal during a visit to the the National Theatre, on the Southbank in London, to mark it becoming a recipient of the Princess Royal Training Award for its apprenticeship scheme. Picture date: Tuesday April 28, 2026.-stock-foto
RM
The Princess Royal during a visit to the the National Theatre, on the Southbank in London, to mark it becoming a recipient of the Princess Royal Training Award for its apprenticeship scheme. Picture date: Tuesday April 28, 2026.-stock-foto
RM
The Princess Royal during a visit to the the National Theatre, on the Southbank in London, to mark it becoming a recipient of the Princess Royal Training Award for its apprenticeship scheme. Picture date: Tuesday April 28, 2026.-stock-foto
RM
The Princess Royal during a visit to the the National Theatre, on the Southbank in London, to mark it becoming a recipient of the Princess Royal Training Award for its apprenticeship scheme. Picture date: Tuesday April 28, 2026.-stock-foto