In pictures: What does a protest look like in modern Britain?
Documentary photographer Marc Davenant has been taking photos of protests in recent years as governments have cracked down against activism. His powerful photos are now on show at his Rebellion! exhibition
by:
11 Jun 2026
Anti-migrant protesters photographed by Marc Davenant for his Rebellion! exhibition. Image: Marc Davenant
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Big Issue Changemaker Marc Davenant’s latest photo series is taking aim at protests on Britain’s streets at a time when it is becoming increasingly under attack.
Davenant has spent the last few years chronicling demonstrations across the country as the new legislation has extended police powers to crackdown on protesters.
A Palestine Action activist being removed by police, photographed by Marc Davenant for his Rebellion! exhibition. Image: Marc Davenant
His Rebellion! exhibition is currently showing at Newcastle City Library until 31 August before touring around the UK.
“Rebellion! is a celebration of protest as an essential part of our cultural identity,” said Davenant.
He added: “Now, with the passing of increasingly draconian anti-protest legislation, the right to protest is under threat like never before.”
Davenant’s photos capture the Palestine Action and climate change protests as well as activism calling for the right to roam and anti-immigration protests as well as marches supporting the UK Independence Party.
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Anti-immigration protesters photographed by Marc Davenant for his Rebellion! exhibition. Image: Marc DavenantA Black Lives Matter protest in Luton photographed by Marc Davenant for his Rebellion! exhibition. Image: Marc Davenant
He recently covered a long-running strike at the National Coal Mining Museum in Wakefield, which ended in April when a pay deal was reached.
An anti-Donald Trump protester photographed by Marc Davenant for his Rebellion! exhibition. Image: Marc DavenantA mother and child protesting about climate change, photographed by Marc Davenant for his Rebellion! exhibition. Image: Marc Davenant
Big Issue named Davenant as one of its 2026 Changemakers at the start of the year. That came after he documented the state of homelessness in the UK with his Outsiders project and covered a homeless encampment being broken up in London at the end of 2025.
Davenant turned his attention to protest as successive governments passed laws making activism more difficult, such as the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Act 2022 and the Public Order Act 2023.
A UKIP supporter photographed by Marc Davenant for his Rebellion! exhibition. Image: Marc DavenantThe Easington Miners’ Picnic photographed by Marc Davenant for his Rebellion! exhibition. Image: Marc Davenant
The current Labour government’s Crime and Policing Act bans the deliberate use of face coverings to conceal a person’s identity during a protest, and the possession of fireworks, flares and other pyrotechnics at protests.
Ministers said they “fully support the right of individuals to engage in peaceful protest” but took action over “a rise in disruptive and dangerous tactics used during protests”.
A trans rights protester photographed by Marc Davenant for his Rebellion! exhibition. Image: Marc Davenant
Davenant said his photos capture the reasons why protests continue in the face of growing opposition.
“The history of protest is complicated but one thing about it is indisputable, that discontent lies at the heart of all protest movements,” the photographer said.
“Intertwined with discontent is disempowerment and the belief that change cannot happen within existing social and political systems.”
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