Monday, 12 March 2012

A stroll through Bermondsey street

Bermondsey street, once a shabby neighbourhood, full of derelict warehouses and old victorian houses is slowly becoming one of the hip areas of London. It is now home to around 15 restaurants and bars, a new food market under the railway arches, shadowed by the Shard, the tallest building in Western Europe.


Soaking in the sun on Maltby street

Maltby street market - Gourmet food served under the railway arches in Bermondsey


 Best coffee in town, without the Borough market queues


Picturesque wine/flower shop on Bermondsey street

Modern italian food in chic surroundings...prepare to book in advance

 Some of the atmospheric Victorian buildings that could be found in the area


St Mary Magdalen's Church


Gilbert and George's London Pictures at White Cube - comprising 292 pictures based on more than 3000 newspapers' posters they have stolen during the past 6 years


The images are grouped together by stand-out words: Money, Bankers, Tube, Racism and others, a reflection of today's London society









Saturday, 3 March 2012

A small tribute to Spitalfields

Since moving to London, I have always been attracted by the East End, and especially by the area around the Spitalfields Market.

Besides the trendiness of the area, the thousands of tourists and Londoners alike that descend here every weekend to explore the markets, there's something truly genuine in the old cobbled streets mixed with new rising skyscrapers, fashionable restaurants and cafes. 

Spitalfields is a living history of generations of immigrants that have settled here in search for a better life and of street trading, with Petticoat Market open for business continuously since 12th century.

For about a year I've been following the stories of the Gentle Author at www.spitalfieldslife.com on a daily basis. So it's no surprise that I was very eager to attend his book launch last night at Christ Church, where not only hundreds of his readers came, but also some of the subjects of his pen-portraits.

Going through his book and rereading some of the stories has prompted me to put together some of my own pictures of Spitalfields and its surrounding areas.

For a genuinely deep insight of the area I can't recommend enough the Spitalfields Life book and blog.



Steaming food at the Sunday Up Market





 The famous beigels on Brick Lane


 Painted door, next to Shoreditch High Street station


Phone break




The interminable cash queues in Spitalfields


Anything from Banksy to funny poems and rhymes posters


The mirror seller




 Sponge hat



Magician in Spitalfields


Spitalfields Life newly released book