Archive for photography – Page 14

New Student Photo Series 2010 – Post #28

This week we are wrapping up our summer photo series featuring submissions by incoming students.  Thank you to everyone who has participated, it’s been another great summer of photo submissions.

The first three photos were submitted Salinthip (Joyce) Tangpanjapon, an incoming international dual degree student.

_______________________________

Each year on Aug 12th Thailand not only celebrates the birthday of Her Majesty Queen Regent Sirikit, but it also treats this day as the national mother’s day.  As a traditional custom, fresh flower garlands (refer to “garland”
photo) are given to Mother as a symbol of respect and love.

Moreover, as a tropical country, Thailand has many exotic plants and flowers. For instance, the pink/white lotus grows naturally in a river or lagoon, coconut trees mostly found near to the beach, and the red flower. Thai flowers are in high demand as common export product.

Pink Thai Lotus

Garland

Coconut

___________________________

And the last photo comes from Emily Loebelson, an incoming MIA student.

This photo was taken in Kashgar, Xinjiang Province, China.  The photo shows Uighur children playing in the old part of Kashgar, the westernmost city in China.  The old town is quickly being razed to make room for the construction of a new modern city.  I had been living in Shanghai for almost three years before I was able to get out to Xinjiang, and I was wandering the streets gobsmacked at this totally different civilization in western China when I ran into these lively kids.

IMG_0423

New Student Photo Series 2010 – Post #27

We are wrapping up our last week of incoming photos from new students . . . enjoy this last week, hard to believe Orientation is next Monday!

The first set of photos come from Emily Eller, an incoming MIA student.
___________________________

These three photos were taken in The Gambia where I live.

I took the first two photos near the Sukuta Mosque on Tobaski day in 2007 and 2006 respectively. Tobaski is a day of prayer and celebration. The little boy is Kaderi Janneh and the other men are his uncles. I think he looks so sweet in his sunglasses! Everyone gets a new outfit for Tobaski but Kaderi gets new sunglasses every year too.
2007 Tobaski Christmas 069___
Tida and more 004
The last photo is of Awa Bojang, durring her “Kolio” or the naming ceremony for her child. This was Awa’s first child and they had a huge party for her. She wore 9 different dresses during the ceremony. I think this one is particularly striking because of all the gold. The photo was taken inside her home in Gunjur.
Dad naming ceremony 2007 097
__________________________
The next set are from Rabayah Akhter, an incoming MIA student.
__________________________
I took the first picture in the summer of 2005 on a visit to Pakistan with my family. It is literally the prettiest place I’ve ever been. this is Saiful Muluk lake in Naran, a part of Kaghan valley in northern Pakistan which was particularly hard-hit by a devastating earthquake only a few months later. (also – I’ve never had fresher tasting fish in my life than from this area.)
n8803335_30095223_7726
The second photo was taken during my favorite part of the day (while I was a Peace Corps volunteer in Mali) – before sunset when the women would be on their way home from a long day of washing laundry in the bani river. 2 years of watching them, I’m still flabbergasted at the amount of weight they could balance atop their heads without so much as a grimace.
P9011002
The third photo is one I had a friend take of me in my patriotic Malian outfit. Malians love expressing themselves through their clothes so i fit right in! The Malian markets were flooded with Obama t-shirts, belt buckles, watches, boxers and even Michelle Obama had was depicted on Malian fabric.
CIMG0836The last photo is one of my favorites . . . though I guess artistically, it isn’t saying much. Malians are, on the whole, devout Muslims. This is a picture of boatmen praying in a makeshift mosque (made on the sand-ish shore of where the Bani River should be, if there were more rain) . . . I like to think, as a Muslim myself, that this is all it takes to make a place of worship: a cleared-out space to pray, nothing fancy.

P4033581

New Student Photo Series 2010 – Post #26

More photos from incoming students today, enjoy!

Stephane Keil Rios from Mexico is entering the MPA-DP program and submitted the first batch.

I took this picture from the Popocatepetl (The smoking Mountain) while climbing the Iztaccihuatl Volcano (Sleeping Woman). These two volcanoes dominate the valley of Mexico City and hold an important symbolic component for the City. Hernan Cortes had his first view of ancient tenochtitlan from a pass between these mountains.

The two volcanoes hold an important place in Nahuatl Culture as Popocateptl the nahuatl warrior watches over her loved sleeping woman who committed suicide thinking he had died in a battle, when he returns and finds her dead he decides to turn into a volcano and protect her, he will smoke and crumble whenever he is angry. Talk about the Nahuatl version of Romeo and Juliet. Popo erupted fiercely on 2002 putting all of Mexico’s residents to shake as you could see the bright lava from home. You can see these two lovers only on very clean days since pollution in the city covers them most of the year.
iztapopo

I took this picture in the Atacama desert in Chile a couple years ago. The inmense hand statue in the middle of nowhere in the most dry hot desert in the world had a small legend on the bottom. “Let’s give earth a hand unless we want all places to look just like this one”.
mano
On the rooftop of a beatiful Coyoacan House in the southern tip of Mexico City we built our first Urban Orchard with Hidroponics. Our first harvest included brocoli, tomatoes, lettuce, eggplant, squash, chard and of course Chiles. We made the most delicious pizzas afterwards. In the picture I was trying to maintain the orchard alive under over 36 celsius degress (100 fahrenheit), my straw sombrero sure did somthing to stop my brain from boiling.

CaptureUrbano___________________________

The next batch was submitted by Stephen Schaber, an incoming MIA student.  He states simply:

The attached photos were taken this past May at Machu Picchu, Cusco and Lake Titicaca in Peru.

DSC01222

DSC01625

DSC01531

New Student Photo Series 2010 – Post #25

More photos from incoming students, enjoy.

The first set of photos comes from Maria Lahore, an incoming MIA student.

I have always been very impressed by the deserts. Sandy or rocky, they make me feel tiny in that immensity.

The first two pictures were taken in the Atacama desert in Chile in January 2009. I could imagine how a road on the moon would be. This is the most arid desert in the world. The cordillera de la Sal (Salt mountain range) in the Moon Valley.  One of the most beautiful sunsets I have ever seen. Amazing.

fiesta oppc 034

fiesta oppc 094

This was also taken in Peru but this time in the north, Tucume (Lambayeque) November 2006, this is called the Valley of the Pyramids. Underneath those rocky hills, there were found archeological remains of cultures before the Inca empire, and still finding.

IMG_0394_________________________

This next set was submitted by Huilan Jordan, an incoming MIA student.

_________________________

This photo was taken in Zhouzhuang, near Shanghai. I happened to be there during China’s golden holiday period, so there were various performances in the well known tourist town. These middle aged women dressed in traditional clothes and were dancing to old tunes.

DSC00401

This was taken in the summer of 2002 or 2003, in Corona Meadow park in Flushing, Queens. Two young boys were enjoying cool breeze brought by the fountain underneath the big globe in the park. That was the first and the last time I saw the fountain working.

aa6f
Freedom was taken in the fall of 2001, in the Bronx Zoo. This fella was standing there looking out, as if longing to fly out of the glass house. Or maybe he was just wondering what he’d have for dinner.

freedom

New Student Photo Series 2010 – Post #24

Two more sets of photos from incoming students today.  Enjoy!

___________________________

The first set of photos are from Severine Koen, from Paris, France who will be joining the MIA program.
___________________________
The following photographs were taken when I spent the first couple of months of 2010 in Uganda, working as a journalist for a weekly news magazine in the capital, Kampala. This first picture was taken in Kitintale, a suburb of Kampala. This skate park is the only one in East Africa and is the property of the Uganda Skateboard Union, a nationally registered NGO. In the late afternoon sun, it was quite impressive to watch the young skaters, who are all really good!
kitintale skate park 030
This second picture is from Gisenyi, in Rwanda, and was taken in the early morning. I was enchanted by the combination of the Rwandan guys just hanging out on their boda-boda (motorcycle) in the forefront and the still active Nyiragongo volcano in the background.
Gisenyi-Rwanda 002
This last picture was taken on the Nile, at around 7am. The strange white stuff you can see floating is actually foam created by the impressive Murchison Falls, which are several kilometers upstream. It was an eerily peaceful moment.
murchison falls trip 023___________________________
The next set of photos are from Justin Jimenez an incoming MIA student.
___________________________
Walking along the Bund one smoggy Shanghai morning, I saw this procession of ships trudging along the Huangpu River. With the maddening pace of construction in the city’s Pudong District across the river, I thought it was a fitting scene to open the day.
IMG_7859
When traveling to the mountainous northern region of the Philippines, I tend to take overnight buses so I can sleep through the seven hour trek. As we stopped for our morning bathroom break on this particular trip, I woke up to the view of these incredible two-millennia-old structures — the Banaue Rice Terraces.
IMG_6253
While exploring Angkor Wat, I came across this Cambodian boy drawing Khmer figures in the sand. Despite the massive losses that the country sustained during the Khmer Rouge, it was heartening to see that not all was lost.
IMG_5009

"The most global public policy school, where an international community of students and faculty address world challenges."

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

Boiler Image