Show Navigation

Elizabeth Dalziel

  • Portfolio
  • About
  • Contact
  • Archive
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area

Elizabeth Dalziel

All Galleries
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x
Download

39 images Created 11 Jun 2020

5 LONDONS

View: 100 | All

Loading ()...

  • Nigerian women huddle around a baby in the dressing room of an old French Gothic church ahead of a five hour service at The Celestial Church of Christ in London, Sunday February 26, 2012. The Celestial Church of Christ in London is associated to a pentecostal church based in Lagos, Nigeria. This congregation is one of the many  extraordinary communities hidden in the city. Snapshots of subcultures that look as though they could have been taken a million miles away from London.(Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    LONDON NIGERIA COLOUR001.JPG
  • Yoruba is Adedoyin Adeleye Mathew, 43, fourth from left to right, sings as she walks in to church, thick with incense, at The Celestial Church of Christ in London, Sunday February 26, 2012. The church helped her flee Nigeria and a very traditional husband, who she says wanted her and their daughter to undergo female circumcision. <br />
She arrived in London seven years ago, <br />
“There is no place where I would rather live,” she says, but adds in the church, her second home, it feels exactly like Lagos. This congregation is one of the many  extraordinary communities hidden in the city. Snapshots of subcultures that look as though they could have been taken a million miles away from London.(Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    LONDON NIGERIA COLOUR003.JPG
  • Yoruba is Adedoyin Adeleye Mathew, 43, first left, sings as she walks in to church, thick with incense, at The Celestial Church of Christ in London, Sunday February 26, 2012. The church helped her flee Nigeria and a very traditional husband, who she says wanted her and their daughter to undergo female circumcision. <br />
She arrived in London seven years ago, <br />
“There is no place where I would rather live,” she says, but adds in the church, her second home, it feels exactly like Lagos. This congregation is one of the many  extraordinary communities hidden in the city. Snapshots of subcultures that look as though they could have been taken a million miles away from London.(Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    LONDON NIGERIA COLOUR004.JPG
  • Sunlight streams into the nave of the French Gothic church where the air is thick with incense as the congregation sings during a five hour service at The Celestial Church of Christ in London, Sunday February 26, 2012. The Celestial Church of Christ in London, is associated to a pentecostal church based in Lagos, Nigeria. This congregation is one of the many  extraordinary communities hidden in the city. Snapshots of subcultures that look as though they could have been taken a million miles away from London.(Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    LONDON NIGERIA COLOUR005.JPG
  • A woman donning  a white robe is in an apparent trance as the congregation prays during a five hour service at The Celestial Church of Christ in London, Sunday February 26, 2012. The Celestial Church of Christ in London, is associated to a pentecostal church based in Lagos, Nigeria. This congregation is one of the many  extraordinary communities hidden in the city. Snapshots of subcultures that look as though they could have been taken a million miles away from London.(Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    LONDON NIGERIA COLOUR007.JPG
  • A child huddles up to her mother during a five hour service at The Celestial Church of Christ in London, Sunday February 26, 2012. The Celestial Church of Christ in London is associated to a pentecostal church based in Lagos, Nigeria. This congregation is one of the many  extraordinary communities hidden in the city. Snapshots of subcultures that look as though they could have been taken a million miles away from London.(Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    LONDON NIGERIA COLOUR008.JPG
  • A baby snoozes as she is wrapped in a bundle around her mother's back during a five hour service at The Celestial Church of Christ in London, Sunday February 26, 2012. The Celestial Church of Christ in London is associated to a pentecostal church based in Lagos, Nigeria. This congregation is one of the many  extraordinary communities hidden in the city. Snapshots of subcultures that look as though they could have been taken a million miles away from London.(Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    LONDON NIGERIA COLOUR010.JPG
  • A woman holding a crucifix prays during a five hour service at The Celestial Church of Christ in London, Sunday February 26, 2012. The Celestial Church of Christ in London, is associated to a pentecostal church based in Lagos, Nigeria. This congregation is one of the many  extraordinary communities hidden in the city. Snapshots of subcultures that look as though they could have been taken a million miles away from London.(Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    LONDON NIGERIA COLOUR011.JPG
  • Sunlight streams into the nave of the French Gothic church where the air is thick with incense as the congregation prays during a five hour service at The Celestial Church of Christ in London, Sunday February 26, 2012. The Celestial Church of Christ in London, is associated to a pentecostal church based in Lagos, Nigeria. This congregation is one of the many  extraordinary communities hidden in the city. Snapshots of subcultures that look as though they could have been taken a million miles away from London.(Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    LONDON NIGERIA COLOUR013.JPG
  • Sunlight streams into the nave of the French Gothic church where the air is thick with incense as the congregation prays during a five hour service at The Celestial Church of Christ in London, Sunday February 26, 2012. The Celestial Church of Christ in London, is associated to a pentecostal church based in Lagos, Nigeria. This congregation is one of the many  extraordinary communities hidden in the city. Snapshots of subcultures that look as though they could have been taken a million miles away from London.(Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    LONDON NIGERIA COLOUR014.JPG
  • A woman prays during a five hour service at The Celestial Church of Christ in London, Sunday February 26, 2012. The Celestial Church of Christ in London, is associated to a pentecostal church based in Lagos, Nigeria. This congregation is one of the many  extraordinary communities hidden in the city. Snapshots of subcultures that look as though they could have been taken a million miles away from London.(Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    LONDON NIGERIA COLOUR019.JPG
  • A women donning white robes receives a blessing from a reverend as she prays during a five hour service at The Celestial Church of Christ in London, Sunday February 26, 2012. The Celestial Church of Christ in London, is associated to a pentecostal church based in Lagos, Nigeria. This congregation is one of the many  extraordinary communities hidden in the city. Snapshots of subcultures that look as though they could have been taken a million miles away from London.(Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    LONDON NIGERIA COLOUR022.JPG
  • Sunlight streams into the nave of the French Gothic church where a little boy is shown a candle by an elder as the congregation sings and prays during a five hour service at The Celestial Church of Christ in London, Sunday February 26, 2012. The Celestial Church of Christ in London, is associated to a pentecostal church based in Lagos, Nigeria. This congregation is one of the many  extraordinary communities hidden in the city. Snapshots of subcultures that look as though they could have been taken a million miles away from London.(Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    LONDON NIGERIA COLOUR023.JPG
  • Women donning white robes dance and sing as the congregation prays during a five hour service at The Celestial Church of Christ in London, Sunday February 26, 2012. The Celestial Church of Christ in London, is associated to a pentecostal church based in Lagos, Nigeria. This congregation is one of the many  extraordinary communities hidden in the city. Snapshots of subcultures that look as though they could have been taken a million miles away from London.(Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    LONDON NIGERIA COLOUR024.JPG
  • Women donning white robes dance and sing as the congregation prays during a five hour service at The Celestial Church of Christ in London, Sunday February 26, 2012. The Celestial Church of Christ in London, is associated to a pentecostal church based in Lagos, Nigeria. This congregation is one of the many  extraordinary communities hidden in the city. Snapshots of subcultures that look as though they could have been taken a million miles away from London.(Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    LONDON NIGERIA COLOUR025.JPG
  • A baby snoozes as he is wrapped in a bundle around his mother's back during a five hour service at The Celestial Church of Christ in London, Sunday February 26, 2012. The Celestial Church of Christ in London is associated to a pentecostal church based in Lagos, Nigeria. This congregation is one of the many  extraordinary communities hidden in the city. Snapshots of subcultures that look as though they could have been taken a million miles away from London.(Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    LONDON NIGERIA COLOUR026.JPG
  • Worshipers talk about prophesies while they speak in tongues outside of a French Gothic church after a five hour service at The Celestial Church of Christ in London, Sunday February 26, 2012. The Celestial Church of Christ in London, is associated to a pentecostal church based in Lagos, Nigeria. This congregation is one of the many  extraordinary communities hidden in the city. Snapshots of subcultures that look as though they could have been taken a million miles away from London.(Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    LONDON NIGERIA COLOUR027.JPG
  • A view of Shri Swaminarayan Mandir Hindu temple, a the massive structure rising from the horizon two miles west of Wembley Stadium, in London March 7, 2012. The Hindu community worked for three years building the temple, entirely from donations, after decades of dreaming it. Many of the volunteers were born in East Africa and in the early 1970s as Idi Amin expelled tens of thousands of South Asians from Uganda, London was where they rebuilt their lives. (Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    LONDON INDIA COLOUR001.JPG
  • An elderly woman sits in a hall  at the Hindu school across the street from the Shri Swaminarayan Mandir Hindu temple,  in London March 7, 2012. The Hindu community worked for three years building the temple, entirely from donations, after decades of dreaming it. Many of the volunteers were born in East Africa and in the early 1970s as Idi Amin expelled tens of thousands of South Asians from Uganda, London was where they rebuilt their lives.(Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    LONDON INDIA COLOUR002.JPG
  • Hindu worshipers celebrate Holi Dakan  to welcome spring at the Hindu school across the street from the Shri Swaminarayan Mandir Hindu temple, in London March 7, 2012. The Hindu community worked for three years building the temple, entirely from donations, after decades of dreaming it. Many of the volunteers were born in East Africa and in the early 1970s as Idi Amin expelled tens of thousands of South Asians from Uganda, London was where they rebuilt their lives. (Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    LONDON INDIA COLOUR003.JPG
  • Hindu worshipers celebrate Holi Dakan  to welcome spring at the Hindu school across the street from the Shri Swaminarayan Mandir Hindu temple, in London March 7, 2012. The Hindu community worked for three years building the temple, entirely from donations, after decades of dreaming it. Many of the volunteers were born in East Africa and in the early 1970s as Idi Amin expelled tens of thousands of South Asians from Uganda, London was where they rebuilt their lives. (Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    LONDON INDIA COLOUR004.JPG
  • Hindu worshipers celebrate Holi Dakan  to welcome spring at the Hindu school across the street from the Shri Swaminarayan Mandir Hindu temple, in London March 7, 2012. The Hindu community worked for three years building the temple, entirely from donations, after decades of dreaming it. Many of the volunteers were born in East Africa and in the early 1970s as Idi Amin expelled tens of thousands of South Asians from Uganda, London was where they rebuilt their lives. (Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    LONDON INDIA COLOUR009.JPG
  • A man protects himself from sparks as he stokes the Holi Dakan bonfire to welcome spring at the Hindu school across the street from the Shri Swaminarayan Mandir Hindu temple, a the massive structure rising from the horizon two miles west of Wembley Stadium, in London March 7, 2012. The Hindu community worked for three years building the temple, entirely from donations, after decades of dreaming it. Many of the volunteers were born in East Africa and in the early 1970s as Idi Amin expelled tens of thousands of South Asians from Uganda, London was where they rebuilt their lives. This is one of the many extraordinary communities hidden in the city. Snapshots that look as though they could have been taken a million miles away from London.(Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    LONDON INDIA COLOUR011.JPG
  • Women circle the Holi Dakan bonfire to welcome spring at the Hindu school across the street from the Shri Swaminarayan Mandir Hindu temple, a the massive structure rising from the horizon two miles west of Wembley Stadium, in London March 7, 2012. The Hindu community worked for three years building the temple, entirely from donations, after decades of dreaming it. Many of the volunteers were born in East Africa and in the early 1970s as Idi Amin expelled tens of thousands of South Asians from Uganda, London was where they rebuilt their lives. This is one of the many extraordinary communities hidden in the city. Snapshots that look as though they could have been taken a million miles away from London.(Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    LONDON INDIA COLOUR012.JPG
  • Thousands circle the Holi Dakan bonfire to welcome spring at the Hindu school across the street from the Shri Swaminarayan Mandir Hindu temple, a the massive structure rising from the horizon two miles west of Wembley Stadium, in London March 7, 2012. The Hindu community worked for three years building the temple, entirely from donations, after decades of dreaming it. Many of the volunteers were born in East Africa and in the early 1970s as Idi Amin expelled tens of thousands of South Asians from Uganda, London was where they rebuilt their lives. This is one of the many extraordinary communities hidden in the city. Snapshots that look as though they could have been taken a million miles away from London.(Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    LONDON INDIA COLOUR013.JPG
  • Thousands circle the Holi Dakan bonfire to welcome spring at the Hindu school across the street from the Shri Swaminarayan Mandir Hindu temple, a the massive structure rising from the horizon two miles west of Wembley Stadium, in London March 7, 2012. The Hindu community worked for three years building the temple, entirely from donations, after decades of dreaming it. Many of the volunteers were born in East Africa and in the early 1970s as Idi Amin expelled tens of thousands of South Asians from Uganda, London was where they rebuilt their lives. This is one of the many extraordinary communities hidden in the city. Snapshots that look as though they could have been taken a million miles away from London.(Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    LONDON INDIA COLOUR015.JPG
  • Hindu worshipers attending the Holi Dakan bonfire to welcome spring eat at the Hindu school across the street from the Shri Swaminarayan Mandir Hindu temple, a the massive structure rising from the horizon two miles west of Wembley Stadium, in London March 7, 2012. The Hindu community worked for three years building the temple, entirely from donations, after decades of dreaming it. Many of the volunteers were born in East Africa and in the early 1970s as Idi Amin expelled tens of thousands of South Asians from Uganda, London was where they rebuilt their lives. (Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    LONDON INDIA COLOUR017.JPG
  • Russians cast their ballot for the Presidential election in Russia and at the embassy in Kensington Palace Gardens as London’s Russian community stream in to vote in London March 4, 2012. London has become more Russian, a street known as Billionaires Row where an unidentified Russian last year reportedly paid £140 million for a house. In more public acquisitions, Roman Abramovich bought Chelsea Football Club, Alexander Lebedev scooped up The Independent and The Evening Standard and Alexander Mamut rescued Waterstones.The disillusionment accompanying Putin’s re-election will attract more of Russia’s brightest to what has been dubbed “Moscow on Thames,” (Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    LONDON RUSSIA COLOUR 001.JPG
  • Russians cast their ballot for the Presidential election in Russia and at the embassy in Kensington Palace Gardens as London’s Russian community stream in to vote in London March 4, 2012. London has become more Russian, a street known as Billionaires Row where an unidentified Russian last year reportedly paid £140 million for a house. In more public acquisitions, Roman Abramovich bought Chelsea Football Club, Alexander Lebedev scooped up The Independent and The Evening Standard and Alexander Mamut rescued Waterstones.The disillusionment accompanying Putin’s re-election will attract more of Russia’s brightest to what has been dubbed “Moscow on Thames,” (Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    LONDON RUSSIA COLOUR 003.JPG
  • An official looks on as fellow Russians coming in to cast their ballot for the Presidential election in Russia and at the embassy in Kensington Palace Gardens as London’s Russian community stream in to vote in London March 4, 2012. London has become more Russian, a street known as Billionaires Row where an unidentified Russian last year reportedly paid £140 million for a house. In more public acquisitions, Roman Abramovich bought Chelsea Football Club, Alexander Lebedev scooped up The Independent and The Evening Standard and Alexander Mamut rescued Waterstones.The disillusionment accompanying Putin’s re-election will attract more of Russia’s brightest to what has been dubbed “Moscow on Thames,” (Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    LONDON RUSSIA COLOUR 004.JPG
  • Russians cast their ballot for the Presidential election in Russia and at the embassy in Kensington Palace Gardens as London’s Russian community stream in to vote in London March 4, 2012. London has become more Russian, a street known as Billionaires Row where an unidentified Russian last year reportedly paid £140 million for a house. In more public acquisitions, Roman Abramovich bought Chelsea Football Club, Alexander Lebedev scooped up The Independent and The Evening Standard and Alexander Mamut rescued Waterstones.The disillusionment accompanying Putin’s re-election will attract more of Russia’s brightest to what has been dubbed “Moscow on Thames,” (Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    LONDON RUSSIA COLOUR 006.JPG
  • Russians cast their ballot for the Presidential election in Russia and at the embassy in Kensington Palace Gardens as London’s Russian community stream in to vote in London March 4, 2012. London has become more Russian, a street known as Billionaires Row where an unidentified Russian last year reportedly paid £140 million for a house. In more public acquisitions, Roman Abramovich bought Chelsea Football Club, Alexander Lebedev scooped up The Independent and The Evening Standard and Alexander Mamut rescued Waterstones.The disillusionment accompanying Putin’s re-election will attract more of Russia’s brightest to what has been dubbed “Moscow on Thames,” (Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    LONDON RUSSIA COLOUR 007.JPG
  • Russians cast their ballot for the Presidential election in Russia and at the embassy in Kensington Palace Gardens as London’s Russian community stream in to vote in London March 4, 2012. London has become more Russian, a street known as Billionaires Row where an unidentified Russian last year reportedly paid £140 million for a house. In more public acquisitions, Roman Abramovich bought Chelsea Football Club, Alexander Lebedev scooped up The Independent and The Evening Standard and Alexander Mamut rescued Waterstones.The disillusionment accompanying Putin’s re-election will attract more of Russia’s brightest to what has been dubbed “Moscow on Thames,” (Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    LONDON RUSSIA COLOUR 009.JPG
  • A boy stands next to pictures and informations for the Russians  Presidential candidates at the Russian embassy in Kensington Palace Gardens as London’s Russian community stream in to vote in London March 4, 2012. London has become more Russian, a street known as Billionaires Row where an unidentified Russian last year reportedly paid £140 million for a house. In more public acquisitions, Roman Abramovich bought Chelsea Football Club, Alexander Lebedev scooped up The Independent and The Evening Standard and Alexander Mamut rescued Waterstones.The disillusionment accompanying Putin’s re-election will attract more of Russia’s brightest to what has been dubbed “Moscow on Thames,” (Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    LONDON RUSSIA COLOUR 010.JPG
  • Russians cast their ballot for the Presidential election in Russia and at the embassy in Kensington Palace Gardens as London’s Russian community stream in to vote in London March 4, 2012. London has become more Russian, a street known as Billionaires Row where an unidentified Russian last year reportedly paid £140 million for a house. In more public acquisitions, Roman Abramovich bought Chelsea Football Club, Alexander Lebedev scooped up The Independent and The Evening Standard and Alexander Mamut rescued Waterstones.The disillusionment accompanying Putin’s re-election will attract more of Russia’s brightest to what has been dubbed “Moscow on Thames,” (Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    LONDON RUSSIA COLOUR 011.JPG
  • A woman shelters from the rain as protesters hold up anti-Putin placards near the Russian embassy in Kensington Palace Gardens as London’s Russian community stream in to vote for the Presidential elections in London March 4, 2012. London has become more Russian, a street known as Billionaires Row where an unidentified Russian last year reportedly paid £140 million for a house. In more public acquisitions, Roman Abramovich bought Chelsea Football Club, Alexander Lebedev scooped up The Independent and The Evening Standard and Alexander Mamut rescued Waterstones.The disillusionment accompanying Putin’s re-election will attract more of Russia’s brightest to what has been dubbed “Moscow on Thames,” (Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    LONDON RUSSIA COLOUR 012.JPG
  • Protesters hold up anti-Putin placards near the Russian embassy in Kensington Palace Gardens as London’s Russian community stream in to vote for the Presidential elections in London March 4, 2012. London has become more Russian, a street known as Billionaires Row where an unidentified Russian last year reportedly paid £140 million for a house. In more public acquisitions, Roman Abramovich bought Chelsea Football Club, Alexander Lebedev scooped up The Independent and The Evening Standard and Alexander Mamut rescued Waterstones.The disillusionment accompanying Putin’s re-election will attract more of Russia’s brightest to what has been dubbed “Moscow on Thames,” (Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    LONDON RUSSIA COLOUR 013.JPG
  • Protesters hold up anti-Putin placards near the Russian embassy in Kensington Palace Gardens as London’s Russian community stream in to vote for the Presidential elections in London March 4, 2012. London has become more Russian, a street known as Billionaires Row where an unidentified Russian last year reportedly paid £140 million for a house. In more public acquisitions, Roman Abramovich bought Chelsea Football Club, Alexander Lebedev scooped up The Independent and The Evening Standard and Alexander Mamut rescued Waterstones.The disillusionment accompanying Putin’s re-election will attract more of Russia’s brightest to what has been dubbed “Moscow on Thames,” (Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    LONDON RUSSIA COLOUR 014.JPG
  • Protesters hold up anti-Putin placards near the Russian embassy in Kensington Palace Gardens as London’s Russian community stream in to vote for the Presidential elections in London March 4, 2012. London has become more Russian, a street known as Billionaires Row where an unidentified Russian last year reportedly paid £140 million for a house. In more public acquisitions, Roman Abramovich bought Chelsea Football Club, Alexander Lebedev scooped up The Independent and The Evening Standard and Alexander Mamut rescued Waterstones.The disillusionment accompanying Putin’s re-election will attract more of Russia’s brightest to what has been dubbed “Moscow on Thames,” (Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    LONDON RUSSIA COLOUR 015.JPG