MJ Maccardini (trailerfullofpix)'s photos with the keyword: china

IMG 2635-001-Seed Cathedral

18 Nov 2024 1 48
Thomas Heatherwick's studio at Making House, Argyle Street. The studio was an Open House 2025 venue. The Seed Cathedral was the UK pavilion at the Shanghai World Expo 2010: publicdelivery.org/thomas-heatherwick-shanghai

IMG 1511-001-Art & Porcelain

30 May 2024 109
In addition to the keyboard instrument collection, Fenton House contains a fine collection of paintings by the Camden Town Group (a personal favourite genre of mine) and Chinese porcelain, which I know nothing about.

IMG 1450-001-Teacups

26 May 2024 1 106
Pierrepont Arcade Antiques Market, Camden Passage, Islington

IMG 1442-001-Keats House Pantry 2

25 May 2024 1 1 79
Keats House, Keats Grove, Hampstead

IMG 1441-001-Keats House Pantry 1

25 May 2024 1 2 81
Keats House, Keats Grove, Hampstead

IMG 9524-001-Dining Room

03 Jun 2023 1 114
Leighton House, home of the artist Frederic Leighton, Holland Park Road

Tower of Babel 6

01 Jan 2016 1 334
From the V&A's website: "The Tower of Babel consisted of 3,000 individual bone china buildings, each measuring 10 – 13cm tall and depicting a real London shop. Barford photographed over 6,000 shop fronts in the process of making the Tower, cycling over 1,000 miles to visit every postcode in London. The photographs were created as ceramic transfers and fired onto fine bone china to produce the individual shops. The Tower reflected London’s society and economy, inviting visitors to view themselves as consumers. At its base the shops were derelict, while at its pinnacle were London’s exclusive boutiques and galleries, with the Tower appearing more precarious towards the top."

Tower of Babel 5

01 Jan 2016 329
From the V&A's website: "The Tower of Babel consisted of 3,000 individual bone china buildings, each measuring 10 – 13cm tall and depicting a real London shop. Barford photographed over 6,000 shop fronts in the process of making the Tower, cycling over 1,000 miles to visit every postcode in London. The photographs were created as ceramic transfers and fired onto fine bone china to produce the individual shops. The Tower reflected London’s society and economy, inviting visitors to view themselves as consumers. At its base the shops were derelict, while at its pinnacle were London’s exclusive boutiques and galleries, with the Tower appearing more precarious towards the top."

Tower of Babel 4

01 Jan 2016 307
From the V&A's website: "The Tower of Babel consisted of 3,000 individual bone china buildings, each measuring 10 – 13cm tall and depicting a real London shop. Barford photographed over 6,000 shop fronts in the process of making the Tower, cycling over 1,000 miles to visit every postcode in London. The photographs were created as ceramic transfers and fired onto fine bone china to produce the individual shops. The Tower reflected London’s society and economy, inviting visitors to view themselves as consumers. At its base the shops were derelict, while at its pinnacle were London’s exclusive boutiques and galleries, with the Tower appearing more precarious towards the top."

Tower of Babel 3

01 Jan 2016 1 317
From the V&A's website: "The Tower of Babel consisted of 3,000 individual bone china buildings, each measuring 10 – 13cm tall and depicting a real London shop. Barford photographed over 6,000 shop fronts in the process of making the Tower, cycling over 1,000 miles to visit every postcode in London. The photographs were created as ceramic transfers and fired onto fine bone china to produce the individual shops. The Tower reflected London’s society and economy, inviting visitors to view themselves as consumers. At its base the shops were derelict, while at its pinnacle were London’s exclusive boutiques and galleries, with the Tower appearing more precarious towards the top."

Tower of Babel 2

01 Jan 2016 351
From the V&A's website: "The Tower of Babel consisted of 3,000 individual bone china buildings, each measuring 10 – 13cm tall and depicting a real London shop. Barford photographed over 6,000 shop fronts in the process of making the Tower, cycling over 1,000 miles to visit every postcode in London. The photographs were created as ceramic transfers and fired onto fine bone china to produce the individual shops. The Tower reflected London’s society and economy, inviting visitors to view themselves as consumers. At its base the shops were derelict, while at its pinnacle were London’s exclusive boutiques and galleries, with the Tower appearing more precarious towards the top."

Tower of Babel 1

01 Jan 2016 2 332
From the V&A's website: "The Tower of Babel consisted of 3,000 individual bone china buildings, each measuring 10 – 13cm tall and depicting a real London shop. Barford photographed over 6,000 shop fronts in the process of making the Tower, cycling over 1,000 miles to visit every postcode in London. The photographs were created as ceramic transfers and fired onto fine bone china to produce the individual shops. The Tower reflected London’s society and economy, inviting visitors to view themselves as consumers. At its base the shops were derelict, while at its pinnacle were London’s exclusive boutiques and galleries, with the Tower appearing more precarious towards the top."

Puma Court Window

24 May 2014 1 281
Looking in the window of someone's Georgian house in Puma Court.

Octagon Room 7

14 Jul 2013 5 535
Bits of broken china from the foreshore of the Thames River at Bankside, London, in the Octagon Room, by Mark Dion, at MASS MoCA. www.massmoca.org/event_details.php?id=755

My China Cupboard

11 Mar 2007 258
Some of my Harlequin collection. It's the "poor people's Fiestaware" -- made by the same company (Homer Laughlin) and sold in the 30s and 40s at Woolworths.

First Emperor at the BM

21 Nov 2007 230
The First Emperor: China's Terracotta Army at the British Museum. No photo taking allowed in the exhibit. See where this picture was taken. [?]

Parlor

16 May 2012 428
Black Swan Flea Market, Broad Street, New Bern, NC. See where this picture was taken. [?]