Ed Gold

[12][13] While in the USA, he documented Harley-Davidson enthusiasts at the House of Harley in Anchorage[14][independent source needed] and the US Army at the Northern Warfare Training Center.

One soldier who had first enlisted at age 15 lost both legs while on active service and Gold's work documents his time in the army and thereafter.

[21] Gold lived and worked for a total of three years in Patagonia, in a community made up of descendants of Welsh people who arrived there in 1865.

[23] Gold documented communities living off-grid in the UK when he visited Tinkers Bubble in Somerset.

[24] In 2023 he travelled by motorcycle to Ukraine to document a pyrolysis project[25][26] and appeared in a documentary, To Save Horsie, about the Kramatorsk railway station attack.

One Donetsk female hunger-striking pensioner (left) and two male pensioners lie silently side by side in a military tent erected outside the Ukrainian government's pensions office at Donetsk Maidan.