In 1980, six gunmen took over the Iranian embassy in London. Following the death of a hostage, theworld watched, and photographers swarmed as the SAS stormed the building.
Newlyweds the Prince and Princess of Wales kiss on a balcony at Buckingham Palace. Charles’s formal pose and Diana’s emotional physicality has since been suggested as a sign for the marriage that lay ahead.
The horrific photograph of 9-year-old Kim Phuc running naked in terror from a napalm attack was widely published around the world and is attributed to having helped end the war in Vietnam.
As President Reagan waved, John Hinckley Jr. fired his gun, and photographer Ron Edmonds captured the vulnerability of political leaders for all the world to see.
The most memorable image from the war in Iraq was taken not by a photographer, but by US Army staff sergeant Ivan Frederick, one of several soldiers to torture Iraqi prisoners at Abu Ghraib.
Kurt Strumpf’s haunting photo of a balaclava-wearing terrorist at The Olympic games in Munich, became a symbol of the times following a 21-hour standoff that ended in an bloodbath.
Greg English’s photo of Nelson Mandela, free for the first time in over a quarter of a century, gave millions of people, not just South Africans, hope for the future.
The photograph of 2-year-old Aylan Kurdi lying face down on a Turkish beach caused international outrage and woke the world to the urgency of the Syrian refugee crisis.
The London 7/7 bombings image of commuter Davinia Turrell clutching a white burns mask to her face outside Edgware Road tube station brought home the very real threat of terrorism in the UK.
A chilling ‘trophy’ photograph taken by Ian Brady shows Myra Hindley looking down on the shallow grave of John Kilbride, one of five children murdered in crimes that shocked the nation.
Jeff Widener's photograph of a lone man stood in front of a column of tanks in Tiananmen Square became a powerful symbol of both the bloody events of June 4, 1989, and of non-violent resistance.
With its 50th anniversary landing in July 2019, the photo of Buzz Aldrin standing on an alien world is the enduring image of Apollo 11, and changed the way we see ourselves and our planet.