The “King’s Portraits” is an imagery of eight-hundred Nurses and Health Care Assistants who served at King’s College Hospital in London during the Covid-19 pandemic. Most of the images were taken after the first lockdown and the rest soon after the second one. The work examines the identity, role and geographical representation of the front-line staff who fight the current pandemic. It is an illustration of diversity, equality and inclusion.

The portraits were taken inside the hospital. The participants were posing  for approximately seven minutes, when they were less busy or on their break.

The entire body of work comprises a historical archive of Nurses and Assistants of  King’s College Hospital, in a specific chronological time, during the Brexit and the Covid 19 pandemic, seventy-two years after the NHS was founded in 1948 and two centuries since the birth of Florence Nightingale.