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  • Shashi Kanth, a call center worker, dresses in his bedroom at home before leaving for work in Bangalore, India. (Shashi Kanth is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) MODEL RELEASED.
    IND_081208_342_xw.jpg
  • Artist, Mark Bulwinkle at home in Oakland, California in his bedroom with his first wife and a can of beer. MODEL RELEASED. USA.
    USA_ART_04_xs.jpg
  • Mestilde Shigwedha, a diamond polisher for NamCot Diamonds in Windhoek, Namibia, in her bedroom after a hard day at the factory. (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) MODEL RELEASED.
    NAM_090305_078_xxw.jpg
  • Solange Da Silva Correia helps her grandchildren get ready for school in their bedroom of her riverside home near the town of Caviana in Amazonas, Brazil. (Solange Da Silva Correia is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) The children load up their backpacks and use one of the family's outboard canoes to get to school in nearby Caviana, 20 minutes downriver.
    BRA_071108_348_xxw.jpg
  • Mestilde Shigwedha, a diamond polisher for NamCot Diamonds in Windhoek, Namibia, in her bedroom after a work day at the factory. (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) MODEL RELEASED.
    NAM_090305_160_xw.jpg
  • (MODEL RELEASED IMAGE). Brianna Fernandez in her bedroom in her home in San Antonio, Texas. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    UStx04_2020_xf1b.jpg
  • BEDTIME FOR BOZOS WITH THE "HONEYMOONER" Photo Illustration for the Future of Communication GEO (Germany) Special issue. Fictional Representation and Caption: Video phones and teledildactic interactive body gloves facilitated large numbers of long distance relationships among huge numbers of couples in an age where job mobility was crucial to financial well being. But as divorce rates grew, the interpersonal skills for maintaining relationships atrophied, and couples found it easier to have a virtual partner that had a physical presence in the bedroom. No more headaches, bad breath, receding hair or cellulite to worry about. With a "Honeymooner", robotic sex doll, programmable with a PC, all kinds of simulations are possible. Richard "Dick" Kravitz of Sonoma, California,  MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_SCI_COMM_05_xs.jpg
  • Katherine Navas does homework at her home in Caracas, Venezuela. (Katherine Navas is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) MODEL RELEASED.
    VEN_071102_156_xw.jpg
  • Filipe Adams, an Iraqi war vet at home with his father, who is helping him get dressed, in Los Angeles, California. (Felipe Adams is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) Felipe was shot in Baghdad while serving his second tour of duty in September of 2006 and his spine was shattered leaving him unable to feel his lower body, although he is still wracked with periodic pain. MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_080917_162_xw.jpg
  • Filipe Adams, an Iraqi war vet at home with his father, who is helping him get dressed, in Los Angeles, California. (Felipe Adams is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) Felipe was shot in Baghdad while serving his second tour of duty in September of 2006 and his spine was shattered leaving him unable to feel his lower body, although he is still wracked with periodic pain. MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_080917_146_xw.jpg
  • Atefeh Fotowat," 17, studies for University entrance examination in Isfahan, Iran. *Atefeh Fotowat is one of the 101 people selected for inclusion in Peter Menzel & Faith D'Aluisio's upcoming book Nutrition 101 (2008) about what people around the world eat in one day's time.
    IRN_061216_185_rwx.jpg
  • Evan sick at Mekong Estates rental property on the Mekong just south of Luang Prabang, Laos in Ban Saylom Village...
    LAO_120128_223_x.jpg
  • Workers rest in the living quarters of a construction company in the fast-growing Pudong area of Shanghai, China. (From the coverage of welder Huang Neng in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) Living quarters and food services are on site, and at least 10 workers share one room. In China, migrant laborers often live directly on the job-site grounds of big construction projects and work 12-hour shifts, seven days a week. Alcohol is only tolerated in the company cafeteria after dinner.
    CHI_060604_029_xxw.jpg
  • Welder Huang Neng (top left) and his fellow workers rest in the living quarters of a construction company in the fast-growing Pudong area of Shanghai, China. (Huang Neng is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets).  Living quarters and food services are on site, and at least 10 workers share one room. In China, migrant laborers often live directly on the job-site grounds of big construction projects and work 12-hour shifts, seven days a week. Alcohol is only tolerated in the company cafeteria after dinner.
    CHI_060604_041_xw.jpg
  • Ahsanullah Moni, a millionaire film director and business man, shows visitors part of a hotel overlooking his new Taj Mahal Bangladesh, a replica of India's famed Taj mahal built in the middle of rice fields near his home village outside Dhaka, Bangladesh.  He says he built it because most  Bangladeshi people cannot afford the trip to Agra, India to see the real thing. The entry fee for his replica is 50 Taka, about  0.75 USD. There is a 25-room hotel facing the Bangla Taj and he says his plans include a film studio and center nearby. The construction of the main Taj will be completed in about a month but the tourist attraction is now open to the public. Moni claims about 20,000 people visit daily. There is only a single lane two kilometer road winding through the surrounding rice fields connecting the main road to his attraction, near the town of Sonargaon, about 30 kilometers from Dhaka.
    BAN_081213_352_xw.jpg
  • Nguyên Van Thuan, a war veteran, with his wife in their studio apartment with his typical day's worth of food. (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) MODEL RELEASED.
    VIE_081219_312_crop_xxw.jpg
  • Iris Garcia Costa steals a nap after her fifteenth birthday photo shoot in various locations around Old Havana. The traditional 15th birthday coming-of-age party and whirlwind of activities for young girls is called a Quinceañera. The Costa's live in the Marianao district of Havana, Cuba.  From coverage of revisit to Material World Project family in Cuba, 2001.
    Cub_mw2_54_xs.jpg
  • Felipe Adams, a 30-year-old Iraq war veteran who was paralyzed by a sniper's bullet in Baghdad, Iraq, shaves while his father changes his sheets at their home in Inglewood, California. (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) Felipe has already spent an hour in the bathroom going through his morning ritual.
    USA_080917_195_xxw.jpg
  • Marzena Sobczynska, her husband Hubert, and daughter Klaudia finish the family's grocery shopping for one weeks' worth of food at the Auchan hypermarket. The huge new supermarket, ten minutes' drive from their home, is near a big intersection that serves four or five other bedroom communities. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    POL03_7544_xf1b.jpg
  • Ermine Çinar, 78, a Muslim, prays five times a day (at home, on the floor of the bedroom where her husband is resting), Golden Horn (or Haliç) area, Istanbul, Turkey.
    Tur_mw2_26_xs.jpg
  • Atefeh Fotowat, a high school student and aspiring fashion designer, looks at Paris fashions on the Internet in her bedroom at her home in the city of Isfahan, Iran. (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) MODEL RELEASED.
    IRN_061216_213_xxw.jpg
  • Silicon Valley, California;.The birthplace of Apple Computers: Steven Jobs parents' house in 1976 at 2066 Crist Drive in Los Altos, California. The operation was started in a bedroom, but soon moved to the garage. (1999).
    USA_SVAL_02a_xs.jpg
  • Leaning over the glass-topped workbench in the spare bedroom of his Los Alamos, NM condominium, where he builds most of his robot creatures, Mark Tilden shines a flashlight on what will become the head of Nito 1.0. Many of the components scattered over his desk are simple, cheap, and (by contemporary standards) primitive; many are ripped from junked tape decks, cameras, and VCRs. Nito will be Tilden's most ambitious creation yet. (The name stands for "Neural Implementation of a Torso Organism.") When complete, he says, this easily built machine should interact in a simianlike fashion in its world. From the book Robo sapiens: Evolution of a New Species, page 121..
    USA_rs_212_qxxs.jpg
  • The Caven Family with all of their material possessions, except for more boxes of books stored in the garage, American Canyon, California. Craig Caven, Regan Ronayne and their two children, Andrea and Ryan live in a multi-cultural bedroom community called American Canyon, California, about one hour north of San Francisco. The photograph was made by Peter Menzel and patterned after his 1994 book, Material World: A Global Family Portrait.
    Usa_mw2_18_120_xs.jpg
  • Vegetables on display at the Auchan hypermarket, outside Warsaw, Poland. The huge new supermarket, ten minutes' drive from the Sobczynsky home in Konstancin-Jeziorna, Poland, is near a big intersection that serves four or five other bedroom communities. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    POL03_0117_xf1b.jpg
  • (MODEL RELEASED IMAGE). Scooping out sauerkraut, Marzena Sobczynska leads her husband Hubert and daughter Klaudia through the family's grocery shopping at the Auchan hypermarket. The huge new supermarket, ten minutes' drive from their home, is near a big intersection that serves four or five other bedroom communities.Hungry Planet: What the World Eats (p. 249). The Sobczynscy family of Konstancin-Jeziorna, Poland, is one of the thirty families featured, with a weeks' worth of food, in the book Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.
    POL03_0002_xxf1.jpg
  • (MODEL RELEASED IMAGE). Cui Yuqi, 6, looks out from a curtain separating his bedroom from the main room. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    CHI204_4854_xf1brw.jpg
  • (1992) NYPD Crime Scene Unit responding to a possible homicide/rape of a 49-year-old white woman in her apartment in Flushing, New York. She was attacked in the kitchen, carried into the bedroom, tied and then stabbed 31 times. Detective Arnie Roussine and Kim Geis are seen using a forensic laser "Omniprint 1000" to look for traces of sperm on the bloody sheets at the foot of the bed. Roussine has served 28 years with the Crime Scene Unit---he has worked on 7,000 cases (3,000 of them have been homicides.) DNA Fingerprinting..
    USA_SCI_DNA_09_xs.jpg
  • (1992) Crime Scene Unit responding to a body found in a closet in the Bronx. The suspect confessed at the 44th precinct while we were at the crime scene. He smoked 10 vials of crack and killed his girlfriend in his father's apartment bedroom. He mopped up the blood but left pieces of the mop on the floor, and bloody sheets in a bucket in the bathtub. The detectives took samples of the mop, bed sheets and blood on the floor. They bagged the hands of the victim for evidence and analysis at the morgue. There was a pit bull dog found in the other closet. DNA Fingerprinting..
    USA_SCI_DNA_05_xs.jpg
  • (1992) A Crime Scene Unit responds to the dispatcher's call of a body found in a closet in the Bronx. The suspect confessed at the 44th precinct while detectives were gathering evidence at the crime scene. He had smoked ten vials of crack cocaine and killed his girlfriend in his father's apartment bedroom, then mopped up the blood, but left pieces of the mop on the floor and bloody sheets in a bucket in the bathtub. The detectives took samples of the mop, bed sheets and blood on the floor. They bagged the hands of the victim for analysis at the morgue. Bronx, NYC. DNA Fingerprinting..
    USA_SCI_DNA_01_xs.jpg
  • Atefeh Fotowat, a high school student and aspiring fashion designer, looks at Paris fashions on the Internet in her bedroom at her home in the city of Isfahan, Iran. (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)  The caloric value of her typical day's worth of food in December was 2400 kcals. She is 17; 5'4,5" and 121 pounds. Atefeh's relaxed repose and her attire, combining jeans and headscarf, show her ease with foreigners yet respect for tradition. She aspires to turn her fashion designing avocation into a vocation by becoming a designer after college. MODEL RELEASED.
    IRN_061216_240_xw.jpg
  • Atefeh Fotowat, a high school student and aspiring fashion designer, looks at Paris fashions on the Internet in her bedroom at her home in the city of Isfahan, Iran. (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)  MODEL RELEASED.
    IRN_061216_226_xw.jpg
  • Atefeh Fotowat, a high school student and aspiring fashion designer studies for a University entrance examination seated on a Persian carpet on the floor of her bedroom at her home in Isfahan, Iran. (Atefeh Fotowat is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)  MODEL RELEASED.
    IRN_061216_185_xw.jpg
  • In a simulated bedroom complete with stuffed animals, tossed bedclothes, and a sleeping dummy victim, Robin R. Murphy of the University of South Florida keeps tabs on her marsupial robot; or, rather, robots. Developed to help search-and-rescue teams, the robots will work as a team. The larger "mother" is designed to roll into a disaster site. When it can go no farther, several "daughter" robots will emerge, marsupial fashion, from a cavity in its chest. The daughter robots will crawl on highly mobile tracks to look for survivors, feeding the mother robot images of what they see. Although the project is funded by the National Science Foundation and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, Murphy's budget is hardly overwhelming. From the book Robo sapiens: Evolution of a New Species, page 154-155.
    USA_rs_460_qxxs.jpg
  • Bob Goodman, a rancher in Halfway, Oregon, lost his arm in a freak accident. Researchers at the University of Utah gave him a myoelectric arm, which he controls by flexing the muscles in his arm that are still intact. Sensors on the inside of the prosthetic arm socket pick up the faint electrical signals from the muscles and amplify them to control the robot arm. In this way, Goodman can do most things as he did before his accident. Here he is putting his arm on right after he wakes up and gets dressed in his bedroom.
    USA_SCI_MEARM_01_xs.jpg
  • On a school morning before first light, Buaphet wakes her son and daughter who are sleeping in the second bedroom of their house on stilts, which is located at the edge of a rice field. Thailand. The Khuenkaew family lives in a wooden 728-square-foot house on stilts, surrounded by rice fields in the Ban Muang Wa village, outside the northern town of Chiang Mai, in Thailand. Material World Project.
    Tha_mw_709_xs.jpg
  • Simon Qampie brushes his teeth over a bucket in the bedroom of his family's house in Southwest Township (called Soweto), South Africa. They have running water in the kitchen only, and their toilet is an outhouse in their backyard. The Qampie family lives in a 400 square foot concrete block duplex house in the sprawling area of Soweto, outside Johannesburg (Joberg) South Africa. Material World Project.
    Saf_mw_704_xs.jpg
  • Portrait of Poppy Qampie's mother Leah Nosizwe, 64 in the kitchen of their Soweto home. She sleeps in the second small bedroom with the children.  The Qampie family lives in a 400 square foot concrete block duplex house in the sprawling area of Southwest Township (called Soweto), outside Johannesburg (Joberg), South Africa. Material World Project.
    Saf_mw_13_xs.jpg
  • The Dong family in the living room of their one-bedroom apartment in Beijing, China, with a week's worth of food. From the book Hungry Planet: What the World Eats (Model Released)
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  • (MODEL RELEASED IMAGE).The Dong family in the living room of their one-bedroom apartment in Beijing, China, with a week's worth of food. Seated by the table are Dong Li, 39, and his mother, Zhang Liying, 58. Behind them stand Li's wife, Guo Yongmei, 38, and their son, Dong Yan, 13. The Dong family is one of the thirty families featured in the book Hungry Planet: What the World Eats (p. 74).
    CHI103_0001_xxf1rw.jpg
  • On market day in Kouakourou village, Soumana Natomo buys and sells rice and other grains. After haggling with the female wholesalers, he returns with two sacks of rice to store in the house that he shares with his first wife, Pama Kondo. His second wife, Fatouma Toure, is two years younger than Pama and lives in a small one-bedroom apartment up an alley 250 feet away. Published in Material World, page 17. Mali.
    Mal_mw_4_xxs.jpg
  • The Ukita family's possessions displayed in front of their house before the family photograph for the Material World project. The family is situated on the two balconies of the upstairs bedrooms for this preliminary photograph. The Ukita family lives in a 1421 square foot wooden frame house in a suburb northwest of Tokyo, Japan, called Kodaira City. Material World Project.
    Japan_Jap_mw_17_xs.jpg

Peter Menzel Photography

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