Portraits

Angkor Rice Farming

Angkor Rice Farming

Angkor is the world’s most extensive medieval hydraulic city and the cultivation of rice around the temples continues today. Monsoon rains start the short, intense planting season in summer. The lands are flat and the work is hard, all done by humans and animals. The farmers grow enough rice for themselves to eat for the [...]


Angkor Portrait

Angkor Portrait

This is one of my favorite portraits from Cambodia so far. The colors and light aren’t special, but the woman is. It was a Sunday afternoon and she was alone, watching the busloads of tourists entering Angkor Wat. She’s probably a rice farmer who lives in the area surrounding the Angkor temples. She was wonderfully [...]


The Ghats of Maheshwar

The Ghats of Maheshwar

Maheshwar was another small revelation and I’ll certainly be going back. Named after Lord Shiva and mentioned in the Hindu epics the Ramayana and Mahabharata, Maheshwar is a small, peaceful pilgrimage town along the banks of the Narmada River. Since I haven’t had a very good or productive time at other Hindu pilgrimage sites in [...]


30 Meters of Turban

30 Meters of Turban

This man is a fully baptized Sikh whom I met at The Golden Temple. His turban is made of 30 meters of cloth and is decorated with the two primary symbols of Sikhism: the Khanda and the Ek-Onkar. Baptized (Khalsa) Sikhs like this man follow the famous five K’s: Kachera, Kara, Kirpan, Kanga and Kesh. [...]


Tea with the Rabaris

Tea with the Rabaris

The Rabaris are a Hindu tribe found in Gujarat, Rajasthan, Punjab, and other northwest Indian states, as well as in Pakistan. Their traditional occupation is raising and herding animals like goats, camels and cattle. They were once nomadic but have almost completely settled into villages. The women are famous for their textile embroidery, and in [...]


Hampi

Hampi

The ruins of the Vijayanagara Empire at Hampi are just spectacular. India at its best. Hampi on Wikipedia Hampi on UNESCO


Cochin, Kerala

Cochin, Kerala

Cochin (Kochi) is made up of a handful of islands and peninsulas including the main hub of Ernakulum and the historic areas of Fort Kochi and Mattancherry. Most of these images are from Fort Kochi, where you can still see and feel the Portuguese influence. Sometimes it feels like Cuba or Latin America too—the same [...]


A Man (I might understand)

A Man (I might understand)

This man asked me to take his picture at Stondge Monastery in Zanskar. He was alone and asked me to bring the photo to his work in Leh, which I’ll do. Usually these kinds of pictures aren’t very interesting, but this guy was different. He reminds me of the men from New Mexico where I [...]


Three Young Monks

Three Young Monks

These three young monks from Karsha Monastery are truly as charming and sweet as they look. Each has an older monk that acts as kind of a mentor or guardian to them. The monk above is mentored by Wangboo, the monk who put me up in his place at Karsha, and he was often around [...]


Youth in Red + Green

Youth in Red + Green

How can you not love these faces??? This is a huge reason why I love it so much here. I ended up taking many pictures of the young Zanskarpas among the greens, source of life…


Sani Festival Portraits

Sani Festival Portraits

Portraits of the monks of Bardan Monastery, who perform the festival at Sani.


Lamayuru Festival

Lamayuru Festival

Lamayuru is one of my favorite places in Ladakh. It’s a beautiful village with an amazing monastery set in a totally surreal mountain landscape. I went to the monastery’s annual festival last weekend. Masked dances (chams) enacting themes from Tibetan mythology are the center stage of these festivals and the house is always packed. (Thankfully, [...]


A Great Little Day!

A Great Little Day!

Today was a great little day for me. I stumbled onto a small festival where I was the only non-Ladakhi and the locals just brought me into the fold. The exact reason for the festival is still unclear to me, but monks and nuns from different monasteries were there to recite some Buddhist texts. The [...]


Ladakh Prayer Festival: Day 5

Ladakh Prayer Festival: Day 5

The photo above is the gompa’s big prayer wheel. I met the monk at Lamayuru Monastery last year. He spends most of his time in a meditation room (6 years so far) and is the only long-haired and long-bearded monk I’ve seen here. I gave him the pictures I took of him last year, as [...]


Ming Po

Ming Po

Ming Po is 86 years old and comes from Karsha village in Zanskar. She caught my eye the other morning while she was filling her yellow and green jugs at the neighborhood water tap. Like many places in India, Leh has a water shortage and residents without their own sources of water (most of the [...]