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The way into one of the two entry tunnels, which rapidly become pitch-dark as you make your way along them
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Vast mechanical solar system of half-upside-down toadstools that greets you as you emerge from each entry tunnel
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Pill Clock - pills dropping out of the ceiling onto the Hayward Gallery floor, one every few seconds
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Pill Clock close-up with Edith at the drinking fountain in the background (provided for you to take a pill with if you want to!)
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Pill Clock in context , with the sprawling entry tunnels taking up part of the same space
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This huge replica bug (with smaller bug) was high on a wall near where we were sleeping. I don't envy Edith waking up to this sight above her!
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TVs showing programmes as they're transmitted but alternating between channels on different screens rapidly at the sides, Memory Game in the foreground and the stairs to the Isometric Slides at the back!
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To enable access to the slides, ahead of the major building refurbishment beginning when this exhibition ends in September, part of the Hayward Gallery roof has been removed. This means you can see a cross-section of the building as you go up to the slide
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View of the London Eye and Royal Festival Hall at nearly midnight from the Hayward Gallery roof
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Outside opening hours, this end of the slides is sealed off with locked cage doors. The bottom end is sealed with a solid metal disc. So there's no way anyone is using those slides to break in basically!
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Cross-section of the gallery space, with Edith arranging Memory Game in the distance. I'd never before realised how low the false ceiling was compared with the intended ceiling under the roof pyramids
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Edith did a good job of setting up Memory Game And Table. One side of each card has an unaltered photo of some sort of ride while the other has an artistically warped version. The photos used for both sides are the same but they're all back-to-back with d