
LondonLife – Battleship perspective…



More than 1,000 soldiers and 200 horses from the Household Division took part in the King’s Birthday Parade, also known as Trooping the Colour, on Saturday.








The work of Japanese artist Utagawa Hiroshige has entered the digital realm thanks to a partnership between the British Museum and Outernet London. The collaboration centres on a animated reimagining of Hiroshige’s print Ferry on the Fuji River, Suruga Province from Hiroshige’s Famous Places in Japan series (1832). Using state-of-the-art technology, the installation transforms what was a serene landscape into a large-scale digital experience across Outernet’s 16K wraparound screens. The installation, which can be seen for free in the Now Building until 7th September, complements the British Museum exhibition, Hiroshige: artist of the open road which invites visitors on a journey through Edo Japan. For more, head to outernet.com. For more on the exhibition, see britishmuseum.org/hiroshige.



It’s that time of year again and the flowers are blooming at the annual RHS Chelsea Flower Show which started today and runs until Saturday. Here’s some images from this year’s event…







For more, head to https://www.rhs.org.uk/

London commenced four days of national commemorations for the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II in Europe – known as Victory in Europe (VE) Day – on Monday.
A military processions of about 1000 members of the Royal Navy, British Army and Royal Air Force made its way from Parliament Gardens along Whitehall before turning through Admiralty Arch and down the Mall to Buckingham Palace. Some 23 aircraft were involved in a flypast.
Tea parties were also held across the country to mark the event, including at Buckingham Palace and 10 Downing Street.












CCambridge took the honours over Oxford in both the men’s and women’s races as well as both reserve races and the lightweight men’s and women’s races in the annual rowing event on the River Thames in west London on Sunday.

The Light-Blues won the men’s race by five-and-a-half lengths – their sixth victory in seven years, while the women won by two-and-a-half lengths in their eighth consecutive win.

There was controversy when the women’s race had to be restarted – the first time its happened on the Championship Course (the women’s race moved there in 2015 having earlier been held at Henley-on-Thames and before 1977 on the River Isis in Oxford and the Cam in Cambridge – and history was also made in the men’s race with Sarah Winckless the first female umpire.

The first men’s race was held in 1829 and the first women’s in 1927. It takes place over what is known as the Championship Course which covers 4.25 miles between Putney and Mortlake.
For more on the race, see www.theboatrace.org.







Fern the diplodicus stands in the Jurassic Garden outside the Natural History Museum in South Kensington.
