Attack the Animals

Model of Battersea Power Station (from the Animals album) and a half-scale model of a World War II German Junkers Ju 87 Stuka dive-bomber for Pink Floyd - The Wall, 1982

 

References to World War II in The Wall album and live show were expanded in the 1982 film. In Roger Waters' semi-autobiographical narrative, the central character Pink loses his father in battle as a baby (Roger Waters lost his own father at five months old in World War II) and the filim is punctuated by stark imagery of war.

[V&A]

 

Part of Pink Floyd: Their Mortal Remains

An exhibition at the V&A (May to October 2017)

 

...a spectacular and unparalleled audio-visual journey through Pink Floyd's unique and extraordinary worlds, chronicling the music, design and staging of the band, from their debut in the 1960s through to the present day

[V&A website]

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Uploaded on March 31, 2018
Taken on September 30, 2017