Archive for art – Page 15

New Student Photo Series 2010 – Entry #15

We still have more than a month for new students to submit photos for posting, details here.

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The photos today come from Kris Capella, an incoming MIA student.

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Taken in Tarangire National Park in Tanzania.  I think Cheetahs are wonderfully beautiful animals, and we were fortunate to come across a couple as we were leaving the park.  We had plenty of time to watch them because they ambled into the middle of the road and there was no way around them!

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Taken in Stone Town, Zanzibar.  This is an example of the Indian style of extremely elaborate doors that adorn the homes of many wealthy people on Zanzibar.  By far the most picturesque doors I’ve ever seen!

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Taken at the soccer field near the school where I taught as a Peace Corps volunteer for three years in Mashati, Tanzania.  This was the ad-hoc cheering squad for our school at one of the many football (yes, I tried hard to unlearn the word “soccer” from my vocabulary) matches I watched over the years.

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New Student Photo Series 2010 – Entry #14

New students interested in submitting photos for the blog please click here for details.

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The photos today come from Marissa Polnerow, an incoming MIA student.

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Macedonia, 2009

This series of photos captures a day in the life of a Peace Corps volunteer in the Republic of Macedonia.  The shots were taking during a hike from my apartment in Prilep to the 13th-century mountaintop monastery of Treskavec.  The monastery is a timeless and remote gem, adorned with Byzantine frescoes, open to guests to stay however long they desire.  The early morning scene of a goat is followed by a foggy view of Macedonia’s lush hilltops.  The sign reads “cheshma,” and leads to an old fountain.  In the final shot, my friend Darko and I rest beside the monastery, where we stay the weekend with friends and Treskavec’s welcoming Orthodox Monk, Kalist.

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New Student Photo Series 2010 – Entry #13

Here are the latest in our new student photo submissions.  If you are an incoming student please see this entry for details on how to submit your own photos.

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The first set of photos were submitted by Mai Shintani, an incoming MIA student who grew up in Kauai, Hawaii.

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The baobab tree never fails to amaze me. While in the Gambia with the Peace Corps, my assignment was serving as an environment volunteer, in a dry barren landscape, these trees were my only hope of sending the important message of tree planting to the Gambian youth.

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I have been a dancer since age 4, mostly sharing the aloha spirit through dance . . . and during my time in the Peace Corps.

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These tortoises were HUGE!!! Seeing these guys, reminded me how amazing and precious mother nature is.

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The second set of photos were submitted by Diana Carolina Pereira from Colombia, an incoming MIA  student who will be studying International Security Policy.

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This first picture was taken in one of our military forts during and activity of the Ministry of National Defense where I work called Soldier for One Day. This is me standing by one of the helicopters used to rescue 15 members of our military, one former presidential candidate and 3 american citizens kidnapped by FARC guerrillas and held for 10 years in the jungle.

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As part of the activities of Soldier for One Day, we receive training in areas such as parachuting. This is me with the equipment ready to make a jump from a 14 meter tower. I was the first to go and it was great.

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To change the subject, this is a picture taken from a boat in Cartagena, Colombia on our way to Islas del Rosario. These are two men that catch shrimp, preparing it right there as “ceviche” to be sold to passing tourist boats. Doesn’t get any fresher than that.

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New Student Photo Series 2010 – Entry #12

Dear incoming students, please continue to send in photos.  Last summer we had close to 100 entries and I would like to eclipse that this year if possible.  So if you have not submitted photos yet, please do so.  Instructions on how to submit are here.

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The first set of photos come from Ethan Wilkes, an incoming focusing in Economic and Political Development.

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At the feet of the “Great Leader” – North Koreans of all walks of life are required to pay their respects to the late Kim Il Sung, “President for life” of the DPRK (a title which he continues to retain well into death…). Here is a group of schoolgirls doing exactly that at the feet of a VERY large statue of him.

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China’s Wild West – in the area known as Kham, traditionally the eastern frontier of Tibet and now the whole of western Sichuan Province, a monk, two ‘cowboys’ and a Han settler share a drink.

3ewYours truly defying a bit of gravity myself in the wilds of western China.

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The next set of photos is from Nathan Gardner, an incoming MIA student.

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Taken in Autumn of 2007 during Chuseok (Korean Thanksgiving) holiday in South Korea.  I took this picture in Kangwa Island during a temple stay.  The stone guardian is for a nearby burial mound and in the background is a traditional Korean house with a gate and surrounding wall. This type of housing is rare for South Koreans because most live in high rise apartments in urban areas.

Seoul 4 061During the Spring of 2009 in Washington, DC I took this while volunteering with the Japan-America Society during the Sakura Matsuri and National Cherry Blossom Festival.  The performer in the middle is a dancing lion accompanied by a flute player and narration.

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While backpacking through South East Asia in the Winter of 2008 I took this photo in Laos.  Located on the top of Phu Si, which is a tall steep hill in the center of and overlooking the old capital of Luang Prabang.  This was a creative way to use US ordnance from the 1960s-70s.

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New Student Photo Series 2010 – Entry #11

I continue to be amazed by the photos submitted by incoming students.  They are fabulous and I would love to continue to post pictures all the way up to Orientation.  So dig through your archives you incoming students and send us your pictures as described here.

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The first photos were submitted by Jennifer Wilmore, an incoming MIA student.

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Mursi Boy – This photo was taken in 2009 near a Mursi village in the Omo valley of southwestern Ethiopia.  Just as I was leaving, the boy in the foreground asked me to take his picture.  I think it turned out to be an interesting shot because beyond the boy’s face in the mirror you can also see the reflection of a woman whose lower lip is cut in order to wear the pottery lip-plate characteristic of Mursi women.

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Boys in Window – This photo was taken in 2008 during play time at a primary school in the Pallisa district of northeastern Uganda.

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“Me in Kichwamba” – My friend took this photo of me in 2009 during a visit to a primary school in the village of Kichwamba in the mountains of western Uganda.

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The second set of pictures was submitted by Fabian Suwanprateep, see below for details on degree program.

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Attached three pictures which I have taken during my internship with the UN World Food Programme in 2007/2008 in Madagascar.  I am German-Thai dual degree student from the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy and I am will do my MIA at SIPA.

Little boy: in Madagascar’s capital Antananarivo, malnourished children receive food aid in a supplementary feeding center.

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Group of villagers: In Manakara, a group of people who participate in the “Food for Work” project are gathering at a food distribution side to receive their rations.

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Old Couple: I took this picture in Tangainony, at the South East coast of Madagascar. The people in this remote town are facing tuberculosis and leprosy. Supplementary to government sponsored medical treatment, WFP is providing them with food aid.

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—Merit E. Janow, Dean, SIPA, Professor of Practice, International and Economic Law and International Affairs

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