Inspired by ... winners 2005
Browse the image gallery below to see large images and details of the category winners for Inspired By... 2005.
What's your type?, Sian Pattenden
What's your type?, Sian Pattenden, judged winner by the Word and Image Department, Inspired By 2005

Folded form, Vanessa Cohen
Folded form, Vanessa Cohen, judged winner by the Ceramic Department

Aquatic opera brooch, Akino Tsuga
Aquatic opera brooch, Akino Tsuga, judged winner by the Architecture Department

The Unbroken line, Sylvie Poupard-Gould
The Unbroken line, Sylvie Poupard-Gould, judged winner by the Glass Department

Untitled, Tony Allen
Untitled, Tony Allen, judged winner by the Richmond Adult Community College

Jarna Jali, Lynne Pretty
Jarna Jali, Lynne Pretty, judged winner by the Textile and Fashion Department and awarded the people's prize 2005

WASP, Dorothy Fowler
WASP, Dorothy Fowler, judged winner by the Theatre Museum

Play it again Ingres, Alice Ross
Play it again Ingres, Alice Ross, judged winner by the Furniture and Woodwork Department

Design of playing cards, Adriana Loyola
Design of playing cards, Adriana Loyola, judged winner by the South and South Eastern Asia Department

Entrellaçat, Aleix Barbat
Entrellaçat, Aleix Barbat, judged winner by the Far East Department

One two buckle my shoe, Annette O'Sullivan
One two buckle my shoe, Annette O'Sullivan, judged winner by the Metalwork and Jewellery Department

Play Notes, Jolanta Jagiello
Play Notes, Jolanta Jagiello, judged winner by the Sculpture Department
British Design 1948–2012: Innovation in the Modern Age
31 March–12 August 2012
Showcasing over 300 British design objects, this exhibition celebrates the best of British post-war art and design from the 1948 ‘Austerity Games' to the summer of 2012.
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Set of 3 Mini Prints
The set comprises Never Say Never, Tomorrow Is Another Day and Everyone's A Winner.
Buy nowEvent - Closer Look: Architecture Talks - Sun & Shadow: Caribbean Homes by Ray Nathaniels
Tue 20 March 2012 13:00

FREE TALK: The Sri Lankan born, London trained architect, Ray James Holman Nathaniels (1920-2005) spent fifty years designing elegant resort homes in the Bahamas blending local materials within a modern architectural vocabulary. This talk explores a selection of his work from the mid 1950s until the late 1990s to assess his unique contributions to the development of the modern Caribbean house.
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