Show Navigation

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
{ 605 images found }

Loading ()...

  • Man walks with his bike in the Square where is the statue of Luiz de Camoes. Camoes was one of the greatest poets in portuguese history and lived in XVI Century. It is believed that he lived in a house in this Square.
    0010009moz0001-018.jpg
  • Man passes through Saint Sebastian Fortress gate. This gate is an example of the Manueline style, a late gothic style spread during Portuguese Discoveries
    0010009moz0001-050.jpg
  • Silhoueted man drives a canoe at sunset, in the fishing harbour in Ilha de Mozambique
    0010009moz0001-036.jpg
  • An old man in one of the little villages of the northeast zone of Santo Antao island.
    CV-SAntao-Velhote.jpg
  • Barcelona. Guys standing out of a bar on the street late at night.
    DavidMolinaHeroes-10.jpg
  • White rose from the burial of my uncle Santi.
    DavidMolinaHeroes-14.jpg
  • My brother is walking trough the old houses of my father's village during the sunset.
    DavidMolinaHeroes-13.jpg
  • Family landscapes, France. tourning pathway on Alice's village, Le Four.
    DavidMolinaHeroes-12.jpg
  • Barcelona. Skull projection in a night club.
    DavidMolinaHeroes-11.jpg
  • Family landscapes, Barcelona. Chain attached on a lamppost.
    DavidMolinaHeroes-9.jpg
  • Family landscapes. Mira-sol. A tree shadow projected on a backyard fence at night
    DavidMolinaHeroes-7.jpg
  • My sister is looking at me while my mother is talking by phone in home.
    DavidMolinaHeroes-8.jpg
  • A young couple walking on the night with their twin babies on my father's spanish village.
    DavidMolinaHeroes-6.jpg
  • Family landscapes. Barcelona. Marks on the asphalt.
    DavidMolinaHeroes-5.jpg
  • Cecília looking a hole on an abandoned backyard.
    DavidMolinaHeroes-3.jpg
  • My dog Otto is barking to me while I'm taking him pictures
    DavidMolinaHeroes-1.jpg
  • Family landscapes. Sant Cugat del Vallès. Train tracks fence.
    DavidMolinaHeroes-2.jpg
  • My mother is watching me on our home corridor.
    DavidMolinaHeroes-4.jpg
  • June 2015. Brussels. A Man holding a bear and a couch at the same time during an street art's festival.
    ImitationOfLifeBrussels-29.jpg
  • September 2015. Thessaloniki. A man crossing the road.
    ImitationOfLifeThessaloniki-34.jpg
  • September 2015. Thessaloniki. A man with his old Chevrolet in a trade fair.
    ImitationOfLifeThessaloniki-27.jpg
  • September 2015. Thessaloniki. A man listen a mass in one of the biggest orthodox churches in Thessaloniki.
    ImitationOfLifeThessaloniki-13.jpg
  • September 2015. Thessaloniki. A man walking on the streets with his daughter on his arms.
    ImitationOfLifeThessaloniki-6.jpg
  • April 2015. Paris. A man on a photo booth in Sebastopol's subway station.
    ImitationOfLifeParis-16.jpg
  • A sick man rests during the daytime. Nobody knows why he is sick, and going to the hospital is too expensive and risky because he has no Thai papers. Those without Thai papers face many problems. It's more difficult to get a job, and they are targeted for harassment more easily.

On the banks of a polluted river, in poorly-built houses, live more than a hundred people from the Lahu tribe. They live in a slum in Chiang Mai, Thailand, away from the Lahu people’s original way of life. Usually, the Lahu people get their resources from the forest. The slum has been there for decades.

Despite this harsh reality, they are a civilized and caring community: they share with each other, families help other families, and if there is an important decision to be made, then it is made together. <br />
<br />
They learn life the hard way, and every day can be a struggle. It is a life with a visible contrast between care and discipline, where beatings and punishment do occur, but the love and compassion of family members are essential for survival.
    h_00015883.jpg
  • April 2015. Brussels. A man lies on the grass of a park where some people use to meet to take drugs.
    ImitationOfLifeBrussels-26.jpg
  • June 2015. Brussels. A man walks while reading the newspaper with Alexis Tsipras photo on the cover.
    ImitationOfLifeBrussels-6.jpg
  • March 2015. Brussels. A man up the stairs on Central train station.
    ImitationOfLifeBrussels-1.jpg
  • June 2015. Brussels. A man walks on the streets.
    ImitationOfLifeBrussels-4.jpg
  • March 2015. Brussels. A man walks by the Central train station.
    ImitationOfLifeBrussels-3.jpg
  • September 2015. Thessaloniki. Drunked man trying to stand up on the Thessaloniki's seafront at night.
    ImitationOfLifeThessaloniki-25.jpg
  • September 2015. Thessaloniki. a man plays violin on the streets at night.
    ImitationOfLifeThessaloniki-12.jpg
  • September 2015. Thessaloniki. A man stays on the street at night.
    ImitationOfLifeThessaloniki-11.jpg
  • September 2015. Thessaloniki. A man is showing me his new big tattoo on a tattoo convention in the industrial port of the town.
    ImitationOfLifeThessaloniki-7.jpg
  • September 2015. Thessaloniki. A man being tattoed on his leg on a tattoo convention on the industrial port of the town.
    ImitationOfLifeThessaloniki-5.jpg
  • April 2015. Paris. A man walking on the streets.
    ImitationOfLifeParis-25.jpg
  • March 2015. Paris. a man goes out of a subway station.
    ImitationOfLifeParis-13.jpg
  • Marche 2015. Paris. Man walking on the streets.
    ImitationOfLifeParis-6.jpg
  • A man waits for the tram in front of Sırkesı Train Station in Istanbul
    120809-LFC-6819.jpg
  • A man stands close to a oca (oka) tree stock. This is one of the biggest ones found in Principe island.
    001009stp0002-0019.jpg
  • Man on the beach in Lagoa Azul (Blue lagoon) with baobab trees on a hill. Lagoa Azul is on the north coast of Sao Tome island.
    001009stp0001-0013.jpg
  • Man seated on the main square garden ornated by staues and a music stand in Ilha de Mozambique
    0010009moz0001-013.jpg
  • The portrait of a young shepperd  in the abandoned village of Vinagre in Brava's east coast. Vinagre is so called because of the acid fountain water that reminds vinegar. The young man is wearing a political t-shirt from one of the candidates for President.
    001009CPV004-2102.jpg
  • a man walk in a city^.<br />
The shadow line is a trip, a trip losing myself, looking for myself.<br />
Like the romance “the shadow line” by Joseph Conrad (1917).<br />
I was in Italy, England, Bosnia, Montenegro, Serbia..<br />
It isn’t a reportage, it isn’t a story.<br />
It is a searching..
    017.jpg
  • A man walks on the pier during autumn tides in Costa da Caparica, Portugal. 13/11/2011 NO SALES IN PORTUGAL
    h_00016587.jpg
  • Portrait of an old man in Cañaveral, Caceres province, Extremadura region, Spain . The WAY OF SAINT JAMES or CAMINO DE SANTIAGO following the Silver Way, between Seville and Astorga, SPAIN. Tradition says that the body and head of St. James, after his execution circa. 44 AD, was taken by boat from Jerusalem to Santiago de Compostela. The Cathedral built to keep the remains has long been regarded as important as Rome and Jerusalem in terms of Christian religious significance, a site worthy to be a pilgrimage destination for over a thousand years. In addition to people undertaking a religious pilgrimage, there are many travellers and hikers who nowadays walk the route for non-religious reasons: travel, sport, or simply the challenge of weeks of walking in a foreign land. In Spain there are many different paths to reach Santiago. The three main ones are the French, the Silver and the Coastal or Northern Way. The pilgrimage was named one of UNESCO's World Heritage Sites in 1993. When there is a Holy Compostellan Year (whenever July 25 falls on a Sunday; the next will be 2010) the Galician government's Xacobeo tourism campaign is unleashed once more. Last Compostellan year was 2004 and the number of pilgrims increased to almost 200.000 people.
    h_CSVP_017.jpg
  • Tough Guy is crazy race where the athletes are submitted to really hard proofs.
    h_The Tough Guy15.jpg
  • Tchikuteny?s son at the door of a village house. In Angola?s Namibe desert, at Giraul, in the Namibe province, Tchikuteny, from the Mucubal tribe, is the leader of a big family, maybe the biggest family in the world.<br />
He is the chief leader, the manager and responsible for the entire village. <br />
In his village, Tchikuteny lives nowadays with most of his big family, his 33 wives, that were once 43, but 10 left the village, and most of their descendants.<br />
Tchikuteny maintains the registry of all the new-borns, totalizing 154 sons, and his grandsons, that are around 60. Nowadays, 4 new babies are on the way, and 3 great grand children were born recently.<br />
Huge harmony, love and respect transpire in the village atmosphere. The sense of a community is the pillar of their sustainability and sustenance and their autonomy depends prominently on cattle and agriculture that is made by the villagers. Nevertheless, Tchikuteny village is in close connection with their surrounding communities. Children attend Giraul School and there is proximity and relations with the extended family that lives in the surroundings.<br />
Being the spiritual leader of the community, Tchikuteny is also responsible for the weekly religious works that happens in the village church. <br />
This big family opened his doors to share with us their daily lives.
    h_00021321.jpg
  • During the Tchikuteny?s visit to the newborn grandson mother?s family, the new  extended family chooses  the babys name. In Angola?s Namibe desert, at Giraul, in the Namibe province, Tchikuteny, from the Mucubal tribe, is the leader of a big family, maybe the biggest family in the world.<br />
He is the chief leader, the manager and responsible for the entire village. <br />
In his village, Tchikuteny lives nowadays with most of his big family, his 33 wives, that were once 43, but 10 left the village, and most of their descendants.<br />
Tchikuteny maintains the registry of all the new-borns, totalizing 154 sons, and his grandsons, that are around 60. Nowadays, 4 new babies are on the way, and 3 great grand children were born recently.<br />
Huge harmony, love and respect transpire in the village atmosphere. The sense of a community is the pillar of their sustainability and sustenance and their autonomy depends prominently on cattle and agriculture that is made by the villagers. Nevertheless, Tchikuteny village is in close connection with their surrounding communities. Children attend Giraul School and there is proximity and relations with the extended family that lives in the surroundings.<br />
Being the spiritual leader of the community, Tchikuteny is also responsible for the weekly religious works that happens in the village church. <br />
This big family opened his doors to share with us their daily lives.
    h_00021316.jpg
  • Tough Guy is crazy race where the athletes are submitted to really hard proofs.
    h_The Tough Guy13.jpg
  • Tough Guy is crazy race where the athletes are submitted to really hard proofs.
    h_The Tough Guy08.jpg
  • Tough Guy is crazy race where the athletes are submitted to really hard proofs.
    h_The Tough Guy03.jpg
  • The new economic dynamics surprised us and changed the conception of what is, after all, essential to our lives. It does seem increasingly essential to rediscover traditions. To give life to what, for us, has no longer been natural for some time. To restart saying good morning to those we occasionally meet when passing by a path…<br />
The aspiration to reinvent the parameters that govern our daily lives, the desire to leave the city ever more chaotic and a vicious and saturated labor system, are leading more and more people to the choosing of the rural world as a crib for a new life.<br />
The mirandese upland, in the northeastern of Portugal, has already adopted new settlers...
    h_New Settlers03.jpg
  • The new economic dynamics surprised us and changed the conception of what is, after all, essential to our lives. It does seem increasingly essential to rediscover traditions. To give life to what, for us, has no longer been natural for some time. To restart saying good morning to those we occasionally meet when passing by a path…<br />
The aspiration to reinvent the parameters that govern our daily lives, the desire to leave the city ever more chaotic and a vicious and saturated labor system, are leading more and more people to the choosing of the rural world as a crib for a new life.<br />
The mirandese upland, in the northeastern of Portugal, has already adopted new settlers...
    h_New Settlers21.jpg
  • Summer 2015. Sugny, Belgium. Martn from France drinks beer on the forest near FEDASIL refugee center during our international work-camp experience.
    DavidMolinaInBetween-11.jpg
  • April 2015. Paris. Dani is going to enter in his home on Flandre avenue.
    ImitationOfLifeParis-32.jpg
  • April 2015. Paris. Kids playing on La Villette's park while Dani is looking at them.
    ImitationOfLifeParis-11.jpg
  • Hindu pilgrim coming out of the water after bathing in the Ganges River at Dashashwamedh Gath in Varanasi, India.
    140804-LFC-1450.jpg
  • It is a quite normal foggy day at the beginning of the summer in Porto, Portugal. Many people go to the seaside neighborhood, Foz. Looks like they use to come here to spend some of the first morning hours. Many of them are already part of the landscape, they are camouflaged between the old yellow granit rocks and the grainy sand impaled by the tents. It is a normal day, maybe the first sunny day after a long winter, many of them are still feeling the bones wet. There is a sudden need to dry them to the sun. There is a weird enviroment, even if we are outdoor, I can feel the dust on the carpet, the smoky fur on the walls and a strong stagnant smell. We need to open the windows' doors, leave the sun come into the house and wait that this foggy day dissolves itself in the meantime we are waiting for.
    Attilio Fiumarella_a day on the beac...jpg
  • It is a quite normal foggy day at the beginning of the summer in Porto, Portugal. Many people go to the seaside neighborhood, Foz. Looks like they use to come here to spend some of the first morning hours. Many of them are already part of the landscape, they are camouflaged between the old yellow granit rocks and the grainy sand impaled by the tents. It is a normal day, maybe the first sunny day after a long winter, many of them are still feeling the bones wet. There is a sudden need to dry them to the sun. There is a weird enviroment, even if we are outdoor, I can feel the dust on the carpet, the smoky fur on the walls and a strong stagnant smell. We need to open the windows' doors, leave the sun come into the house and wait that this foggy day dissolves itself in the meantime we are waiting for.
    Attilio Fiumarella_a day on the beac...jpg
  • Colonial portuguese standard in Ilha de Mozambique. This standard was built in the 20th century in the fascist New State style that dominated portuguese architecture during dictatorship
    0010009moz0001-032.jpg
  • Young basket carrier pictured in the beach that serves as Ilha de Mozambique fishing harbour.
    0010009moz0001-022.jpg
  • In a "trapiche" sugar cane is used to make a kind of firewater vey appreciated in Cape Verde called "grog". The best one is usually from Santo Antao island where it is better distilled.
    CV-SAntao-TrapMelaco.jpg
  • Anabela playing piano. Anabela and Carlos, a  middle-class couple, are facing a new stage in their life with early retirement situation, learning and adapting to new schedules, new rituals, new interests and above all the desire to take advantage of this new reality.<br />
Photo Credit: Pedro Nunes/4SEE
    h_28.jpg
  • Anabela and Carlos, a  middle-class couple, are facing a new stage in their life with early retirement situation, learning and adapting to new schedules, new rituals, new interests and above all the desire to take advantage of this new reality.<br />
Photo Credit: Pedro Nunes/4SEE
    h_21.jpg
  • Anabela and Carlos shopping. Anabela and Carlos, a  middle-class couple, are facing a new stage in their life with early retirement situation, learning and adapting to new schedules, new rituals, new interests and above all the desire to take advantage of this new reality.<br />
Photo Credit: Pedro Nunes/4SEE
    h_17.jpg
  • Anabela preparing lunch. Anabela and Carlos, a  middle-class couple, are facing a new stage in their life with early retirement situation, learning and adapting to new schedules, new rituals, new interests and above all the desire to take advantage of this new reality.<br />
Photo Credit: Pedro Nunes/4SEE
    h_14.jpg
  • Anabela and Carlos, a  middle-class couple, are facing a new stage in their life with early retirement situation, learning and adapting to new schedules, new rituals, new interests and above all the desire to take advantage of this new reality.<br />
Photo Credit: Pedro Nunes/4SEE
    h_13.jpg
  • Daw portraits of the couple's three sons. <br />
<br />
Anabela and Carlos, a  middle-class couple, are facing a new stage in their life with early retirement situation, learning and adapting to new schedules, new rituals, new interests and above all the desire to take advantage of this new reality.<br />
Photo Credit: Pedro Nunes/4SEE
    h_11.jpg
  • Anabela at her room.<br />
<br />
Anabela and Carlos, a  middle-class couple, are facing a new stage in their life with early retirement situation, learning and adapting to new schedules, new rituals, new interests and above all the desire to take advantage of this new reality.<br />
Photo Credit: Pedro Nunes/4SEE
    h_10.jpg
  • Carlos at the cumputer.<br />
<br />
Anabela and Carlos, a  middle-class couple, are facing a new stage in their life with early retirement situation, learning and adapting to new schedules, new rituals, new interests and above all the desire to take advantage of this new reality.<br />
Photo Credit: Pedro Nunes/4SEE
    h_04.jpg
  • Anabela and Carlos taking their breakfasting in their kitchen at 10:00 AM. <br />
<br />
Anabela and Carlos, a  middle-class couple, are facing a new stage in their life with early retirement situation, learning and adapting to new schedules, new rituals, new interests and above all the desire to take advantage of this new reality.<br />
Photo Credit: Pedro Nunes/4SEE
    h_01.jpg
  • Elder men in Carrion de los Condes, Palencia province, Spain . The WAY OF SAINT JAMES or CAMINO DE SANTIAGO following the French Route, between Saint Jean Pied de Port and Santiago de Compostela in Galicia, SPAIN. Tradition says that the body and head of St. James, after his execution circa. 44 AD, was taken by boat from Jerusalem to Santiago de Compostela. The Cathedral built to keep the remains has long been regarded as important as Rome and Jerusalem in terms of Christian religious significance, a site worthy to be a pilgrimage destination for over a thousand years. In addition to people undertaking a religious pilgrimage, there are many travellers and hikers who nowadays walk the route for non-religious reasons: travel, sport, or simply the challenge of weeks of walking in a foreign land. In Spain there are many different paths to reach Santiago. The three main ones are the French, the Silver and the Coastal or Northern Way. The pilgrimage was named one of UNESCO's World Heritage Sites in 1993. When there is a Holy Compostellan Year (whenever July 25 falls on a Sunday; the next will be 2010) the Galician government's Xacobeo tourism campaign is unleashed once more. Last Compostellan year was 2004 and the number of pilgrims increased to almost 200.000 people.
    h_00008547.jpg
  • Peasant harvesting grass. Galicia . Spain . The WAY OF SAINT JAMES or CAMINO DE SANTIAGO following the French Route, between Saint Jean Pied de Port and Santiago de Compostela in Galicia, SPAIN. Tradition says that the body and head of St. James, after his execution circa. 44 AD, was taken by boat from Jerusalem to Santiago de Compostela. The Cathedral built to keep the remains has long been regarded as important as Rome and Jerusalem in terms of Christian religious significance, a site worthy to be a pilgrimage destination for over a thousand years. In addition to people undertaking a religious pilgrimage, there are many travellers and hikers who nowadays walk the route for non-religious reasons: travel, sport, or simply the challenge of weeks of walking in a foreign land. In Spain there are many different paths to reach Santiago. The three main ones are the French, the Silver and the Coastal or Northern Way. The pilgrimage was named one of UNESCO's World Heritage Sites in 1993. When there is a Holy Compostellan Year (whenever July 25 falls on a Sunday; the next will be 2010) the Galician government's Xacobeo tourism campaign is unleashed once more. Last Compostellan year was 2004 and the number of pilgrims increased to almost 200.000 people.
    h_00008534.jpg
  • Vineyards near Estella or Lizarra. Navarre . Spain . The WAY OF SAINT JAMES or CAMINO DE SANTIAGO following the French Route, between Saint Jean Pied de Port and Santiago de Compostela in Galicia, SPAIN. Tradition says that the body and head of St. James, after his execution circa. 44 AD, was taken by boat from Jerusalem to Santiago de Compostela. The Cathedral built to keep the remains has long been regarded as important as Rome and Jerusalem in terms of Christian religious significance, a site worthy to be a pilgrimage destination for over a thousand years. In addition to people undertaking a religious pilgrimage, there are many travellers and hikers who nowadays walk the route for non-religious reasons: travel, sport, or simply the challenge of weeks of walking in a foreign land. In Spain there are many different paths to reach Santiago. The three main ones are the French, the Silver and the Coastal or Northern Way. The pilgrimage was named one of UNESCO's World Heritage Sites in 1993. When there is a Holy Compostellan Year (whenever July 25 falls on a Sunday; the next will be 2010) the Galician government's Xacobeo tourism campaign is unleashed once more. Last Compostellan year was 2004 and the number of pilgrims increased to almost 200.000 people.
    h_00008506.jpg
  • Pilgrim near Pamplona, Navarre region. Spain . The WAY OF SAINT JAMES or CAMINO DE SANTIAGO following the French Route, between Saint Jean Pied de Port and Santiago de Compostela in Galicia, SPAIN. Tradition says that the body and head of St. James, after his execution circa. 44 AD, was taken by boat from Jerusalem to Santiago de Compostela. The Cathedral built to keep the remains has long been regarded as important as Rome and Jerusalem in terms of Christian religious significance, a site worthy to be a pilgrimage destination for over a thousand years. In addition to people undertaking a religious pilgrimage, there are many travellers and hikers who nowadays walk the route for non-religious reasons: travel, sport, or simply the challenge of weeks of walking in a foreign land. In Spain there are many different paths to reach Santiago. The three main ones are the French, the Silver and the Coastal or Northern Way. The pilgrimage was named one of UNESCO's World Heritage Sites in 1993. When there is a Holy Compostellan Year (whenever July 25 falls on a Sunday; the next will be 2010) the Galician government's Xacobeo tourism campaign is unleashed once more. Last Compostellan year was 2004 and the number of pilgrims increased to almost 200.000 people.
    h_00008481.jpg
  • Fountain in Portomarin, Galicia. Spain . The WAY OF SAINT JAMES or CAMINO DE SANTIAGO following the French Route, between Saint Jean Pied de Port and Santiago de Compostela in Galicia, SPAIN. Tradition says that the body and head of St. James, after his execution circa. 44 AD, was taken by boat from Jerusalem to Santiago de Compostela. The Cathedral built to keep the remains has long been regarded as important as Rome and Jerusalem in terms of Christian religious significance, a site worthy to be a pilgrimage destination for over a thousand years. In addition to people undertaking a religious pilgrimage, there are many travellers and hikers who nowadays walk the route for non-religious reasons: travel, sport, or simply the challenge of weeks of walking in a foreign land. In Spain there are many different paths to reach Santiago. The three main ones are the French, the Silver and the Coastal or Northern Way. The pilgrimage was named one of UNESCO's World Heritage Sites in 1993. When there is a Holy Compostellan Year (whenever July 25 falls on a Sunday; the next will be 2010) the Galician government's Xacobeo tourism campaign is unleashed once more. Last Compostellan year was 2004 and the number of pilgrims increased to almost 200.000 people.
    h_00008477.jpg
  • h_00005827.jpg
  • The hands of Mr Dembo, tailor in Bijene. Tailor is very popular craft among men in Guinea Bissau.
    h_00005819.jpg
  • A hot and lazy afternoon in front of the old Presidential Palace, still a wreck since the civil war that hit the country in 1998.
    h_00005808.jpg
  • Tchikuteny coming from the church with three of his sons. In Angola?s Namibe desert, at Giraul, in the Namibe province, Tchikuteny, from the Mucubal tribe, is the leader of a big family, maybe the biggest family in the world.<br />
He is the chief leader, the manager and responsible for the entire village. <br />
In his village, Tchikuteny lives nowadays with most of his big family, his 33 wives, that were once 43, but 10 left the village, and most of their descendants.<br />
Tchikuteny maintains the registry of all the new-borns, totalizing 154 sons, and his grandsons, that are around 60. Nowadays, 4 new babies are on the way, and 3 great grand children were born recently.<br />
Huge harmony, love and respect transpire in the village atmosphere. The sense of a community is the pillar of their sustainability and sustenance and their autonomy depends prominently on cattle and agriculture that is made by the villagers. Nevertheless, Tchikuteny village is in close connection with their surrounding communities. Children attend Giraul School and there is proximity and relations with the extended family that lives in the surroundings.<br />
Being the spiritual leader of the community, Tchikuteny is also responsible for the weekly religious works that happens in the village church. <br />
This big family opened his doors to share with us their daily lives.
    h_00021340.jpg
  • Tchikuteny is responsible for the management of the village. In Angola?s Namibe desert, at Giraul, in the Namibe province, Tchikuteny, from the Mucubal tribe, is the leader of a big family, maybe the biggest family in the world.<br />
He is the chief leader, the manager and responsible for the entire village. <br />
In his village, Tchikuteny lives nowadays with most of his big family, his 33 wives, that were once 43, but 10 left the village, and most of their descendants.<br />
Tchikuteny maintains the registry of all the new-borns, totalizing 154 sons, and his grandsons, that are around 60. Nowadays, 4 new babies are on the way, and 3 great grand children were born recently.<br />
Huge harmony, love and respect transpire in the village atmosphere. The sense of a community is the pillar of their sustainability and sustenance and their autonomy depends prominently on cattle and agriculture that is made by the villagers. Nevertheless, Tchikuteny village is in close connection with their surrounding communities. Children attend Giraul School and there is proximity and relations with the extended family that lives in the surroundings.<br />
Being the spiritual leader of the community, Tchikuteny is also responsible for the weekly religious works that happens in the village church. <br />
This big family opened his doors to share with us their daily lives.
    h_00021311.jpg
  • President José Eduardo dos Santos who has been inaugurated as the country's head of state for another term following a general election victory. In Luanda The President  thanked the people´s confidence for leading him the country's destination. José Eduardo dos Santos also reminded that over the last five years the Angolan economy grew up a lot, due to the effective measures of the Angolan Executive and he hopes that throughout the new mandate he can improve even more the stability of the economy.
    h_00020447.jpg
  • President José Eduardo dos Santos who has been inaugurated as the country's head of state for another term following a general election victory. In Luanda The President  thanked the people´s confidence for leading him the country's destination. José Eduardo dos Santos also reminded that over the last five years the Angolan economy grew up a lot, due to the effective measures of the Angolan Executive and he hopes that throughout the new mandate he can improve even more the stability of the economy.
    h_00020444.jpg
  • President José Eduardo dos Santos who has been inaugurated as the country's head of state for another term following a general election victory. In Luanda The President  thanked the people´s confidence for leading him the country's destination. José Eduardo dos Santos also reminded that over the last five years the Angolan economy grew up a lot, due to the effective measures of the Angolan Executive and he hopes that throughout the new mandate he can improve even more the stability of the economy.
    h_00020443.jpg
  • President José Eduardo dos Santos who has been inaugurated as the country's head of state for another term following a general election victory. In Luanda The President  thanked the people´s confidence for leading him the country's destination. José Eduardo dos Santos also reminded that over the last five years the Angolan economy grew up a lot, due to the effective measures of the Angolan Executive and he hopes that throughout the new mandate he can improve even more the stability of the economy.
    h_00020441.jpg
  • President José Eduardo dos Santos who has been inaugurated as the country's head of state for another term following a general election victory. In Luanda The President  thanked the people´s confidence for leading him the country's destination. José Eduardo dos Santos also reminded that over the last five years the Angolan economy grew up a lot, due to the effective measures of the Angolan Executive and he hopes that throughout the new mandate he can improve even more the stability of the economy.
    h_00020438.jpg
  • President José Eduardo dos Santos who has been inaugurated as the country's head of state for another term following a general election victory. In Luanda The President  thanked the people´s confidence for leading him the country's destination. José Eduardo dos Santos also reminded that over the last five years the Angolan economy grew up a lot, due to the effective measures of the Angolan Executive and he hopes that throughout the new mandate he can improve even more the stability of the economy.
    h_00020435.jpg
  • President José Eduardo dos Santos who has been inaugurated as the country's head of state for another term following a general election victory. In Luanda The President  thanked the people´s confidence for leading him the country's destination. José Eduardo dos Santos also reminded that over the last five years the Angolan economy grew up a lot, due to the effective measures of the Angolan Executive and he hopes that throughout the new mandate he can improve even more the stability of the economy.
    h_00020433.jpg
  • President José Eduardo dos Santos who has been inaugurated as the country's head of state for another term following a general election victory. In Luanda The President  thanked the people´s confidence for leading him the country's destination. José Eduardo dos Santos also reminded that over the last five years the Angolan economy grew up a lot, due to the effective measures of the Angolan Executive and he hopes that throughout the new mandate he can improve even more the stability of the economy.
    h_00020427.jpg
  • President José Eduardo dos Santos who has been inaugurated as the country's head of state for another term following a general election victory. In Luanda The President  thanked the people´s confidence for leading him the country's destination. José Eduardo dos Santos also reminded that over the last five years the Angolan economy grew up a lot, due to the effective measures of the Angolan Executive and he hopes that throughout the new mandate he can improve even more the stability of the economy.
    h_00020424.jpg
  • President José Eduardo dos Santos who has been inaugurated as the country's head of state for another term following a general election victory. In Luanda The President  thanked the people´s confidence for leading him the country's destination. José Eduardo dos Santos also reminded that over the last five years the Angolan economy grew up a lot, due to the effective measures of the Angolan Executive and he hopes that throughout the new mandate he can improve even more the stability of the economy.
    h_00020419.jpg
  • Train between Seville and Granada - ANDALUSIA region - Spain. Route by train after the steps of Washington Irving, romantic American writer who travelled in 1829 from Seville to Granada, where he wrote 'Tales of the Alhambra'. Fascinated by the wealth and exoticism of the Spanish-Muslim civilization, Irving was responsible, along with the French writers of the 19th century, for the romantic image of Al-Andalus. Alberto Paredes / 4SEE
    h_00010198.jpg
  • Train between Seville and Granada - ANDALUSIA region - Spain. Route by train after the steps of Washington Irving, romantic American writer who travelled in 1829 from Seville to Granada, where he wrote 'Tales of the Alhambra'. Fascinated by the wealth and exoticism of the Spanish-Muslim civilization, Irving was responsible, along with the French writers of the 19th century, for the romantic image of Al-Andalus. Alberto Paredes / 4SEE
    h_00010195.jpg
  • Royal Alcazars - The Courtyard of the Maidens  - SEVILLE - Seville province - Andalusia region - Spain. Route by train after the steps of Washington Irving, romantic American writer who travelled in 1829 from Seville to Granada, where he wrote 'Tales of the Alhambra'. Fascinated by the wealth and exoticism of the Spanish-Muslim civilization, Irving was responsible, along with the French writers of the 19th century, for the romantic image of Al-Andalus. Alberto Paredes / 4SEE
    h_00010190.jpg
  • Train station master - OSUNA - Seville province - Andalusia region - Spain. Route by train after the steps of Washington Irving, romantic American writer who travelled in 1829 from Seville to Granada, where he wrote 'Tales of the Alhambra'. Fascinated by the wealth and exoticism of the Spanish-Muslim civilization, Irving was responsible, along with the French writers of the 19th century, for the romantic image of Al-Andalus. Alberto Paredes / 4SEE
    h_00010175.jpg
  • Patio del Cuarto Dorado / Golden Room Patio / Alhambra Palace / GRANADA / Andalusia Region / Spain. Route by train after the steps of Washington Irving, romantic American writer who travelled in 1829 from Seville to Granada, where he wrote 'Tales of the Alhambra'. Fascinated by the wealth and exoticism of the Spanish-Muslim civilization, Irving was responsible, along with the French writers of the 19th century, for the romantic image of Al-Andalus. Alberto Paredes / 4SEE
    h_00010163.jpg
  • Glazed Tile featuring Don Quixote - ANTEQUERA - Malaga province - Andalusia region - Spain. Route by train after the steps of Washington Irving, romantic American writer who travelled in 1829 from Seville to Granada, where he wrote 'Tales of the Alhambra'. Fascinated by the wealth and exoticism of the Spanish-Muslim civilization, Irving was responsible, along with the French writers of the 19th century, for the romantic image of Al-Andalus. Alberto Paredes / 4SEE
    h_00010160.jpg
  • San Sebastian Colegiata - ANTEQUERA - Malaga province - Andalusia region - Spain. Route by train after the steps of Washington Irving, romantic American writer who travelled in 1829 from Seville to Granada, where he wrote 'Tales of the Alhambra'. Fascinated by the wealth and exoticism of the Spanish-Muslim civilization, Irving was responsible, along with the French writers of the 19th century, for the romantic image of Al-Andalus. Alberto Paredes / 4SEE
    h_00010159.jpg
  • Playing domino in a bar in Aldeanueva del Camino, Caceres province, Extremadura region, Spain . The WAY OF SAINT JAMES or CAMINO DE SANTIAGO following the Silver Way, between Seville and Astorga, SPAIN. Tradition says that the body and head of St. James, after his execution circa. 44 AD, was taken by boat from Jerusalem to Santiago de Compostela. The Cathedral built to keep the remains has long been regarded as important as Rome and Jerusalem in terms of Christian religious significance, a site worthy to be a pilgrimage destination for over a thousand years. In addition to people undertaking a religious pilgrimage, there are many travellers and hikers who nowadays walk the route for non-religious reasons: travel, sport, or simply the challenge of weeks of walking in a foreign land. In Spain there are many different paths to reach Santiago. The three main ones are the French, the Silver and the Coastal or Northern Way. The pilgrimage was named one of UNESCO's World Heritage Sites in 1993. When there is a Holy Compostellan Year (whenever July 25 falls on a Sunday; the next will be 2010) the Galician government's Xacobeo tourism campaign is unleashed once more. Last Compostellan year was 2004 and the number of pilgrims increased to almost 200.000 people.
    h_CSVP_076.jpg
Next
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x

4SEE Photographers

  • Portfolio
  • JUMP TO EDITORIAL WEBSITE
  • About
  • Contact
  • Archive
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area