Skip to main content

RoadPeace brings safety into focus

Photography exhibition will give insight into 'grief and suffering' caused by crashes
By Adam Hill December 27, 2022 Read time: 2 mins
CrumpledZone (© Prof. Paul Wenham-Clarke)

When Lives Collide, a new photography exhibition described by its organisers as "hard-hitting and emotive" aims to show the human face of the suffering caused by road crashes.

Shot by Paul Wenham-Clarke, a professor of photography at Arts University Bournemouth (AUB), the images are being exhibited to mark the 30th anniversary of RoadPeace, the UK national charity for road crash victims.

The organisation provides information and support services to people bereaved or seriously injured in road crashes and engages in evidence-based policy and campaigning work to fight for justice for victims and reduce road danger.

Since RoadPeace was founded in 1992, 81,315 people have been killed on British roads, which equates to seven deaths every single day over the last 30 years.

The exhibition, which features pictures of crash scenes as well as portraits of people whose lives have been irrevocably affected by the deaths of loved ones, is designed to show that crashes affect everybody – whatever their age or gender and wherever they live.

Nick Simmons, CEO of RoadPeace, said: “When Lives Collide 2023 takes an artistic approach to explore the impact of road harm from the point of view of those directly impacted by it. Paul’s work so cleverly and creatively documents the lives of crash victims and acts as a call to work together to end road death and injury. We cannot allow this kind of preventable and avoidable suffering to go on.”

RoadPeace’s first When Lives Collide exhibition was launched at the same gallery in 2002 with pictures by Wenham-Clarke.

Twenty years on, he says: “These images serve as a window into the soul of people who have experienced a nightmare, and they address the emotional consequences of devastating collisions, which radiate out like waves on a pond."

“Some of the portraits capture raw emotions as they surge and flow through the participants, ranging from grief-stricken crying to smiling, as they remember their lost one. Mothers and fathers are left wondering why they have outlived a child and lovers are separated forever with no opportunity to say goodbye.”

When Lives Collide runs at Gallery@Oxo, Oxo Tower Wharf, London, UK, from Wednesday 4 January to Sunday 15 January, 2023

Related Content

  • October 7, 2013
    ANPR shockwaves emanate from Royston ruling
    Colin Sowman looks at how a ruling regarding ANPR cameras in a small English town could have wide-reaching implications. Superficially it was an easy decision: the local council and traders wanted, and were prepared to fund, automatic number plate recognition (ANPR) cameras installed to deter crime in Royston, a small town (population 17,000) in rural England.
  • January 26, 2012
    GIS-based state of the art emergency response, damage recovery
    The gecko is one of several members of the lizard family which demonstrate autotomy: the ability to re-grow a tail or some other appendage lost during a time of peril. The GITA's GECCo programme is looking to give US infrastructures much the same capability
  • July 1, 2016
    UK road safety’ is stagnating’ – IAM and RoSPA call for new strategy
    Independent road safety charity IAM RoadSmart and safety charity the Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents (RoSPA) have called for government action following the release of the Department for Transport’s (DfT) reported road casualties in Great Britain 2015. The 2015 figures show there were 1,732 reported road deaths – two per cent fewer compared with 2014. According to the DfT, this is the second lowest annual total on record after 2013. The number of people seriously injured in reported road tr
  • November 21, 2012
    UN chief highlights road safety
    UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has highlighted the importance of road safety in preventing more than one million people from dying and many more from getting injured each year in traffic accidents. “This year, the world's roads have claimed some 1.2 million lives,” Mr. Ban said in his message marking World Day of Remembrance for Road Traffic Victims. “Added to the fatalities are the more than 50 million people injured each year – many of them now condemned to enduring physical disabilities and psychologic