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  • Women with an umbrella looks at the bronze front doors of the Duomo in Siena, Italy.
    ITA_11_xs.jpg
  • Pool & courtyard of Hearst Castle, San Simeon, California. USA.
    USA_MUSE_2_xs.jpg
  • Hollywood Forever Cemetery in Los Angeles, California is the final resting place of many movie stars. The cemetery also has a funeral chapel equipped for live webcasts of funeral services and "LifeStory" tributes.
    USA_LOS_05_xs.jpg
  • Italian restaurant owner Gianni Paoletti and his wife in the caves of Paoletti Estates Winery. Napa Valley, California. The restaurant he owns is called Peppone and is located in West Los Angeles. MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_WINE_19_120_xs.jpg
  • Glen Ragsdale private home winecave by his tennis court, Anguin, Napa Valley, CA.
    USA_021003_06_x.jpg
  • Indianapolis, Indiana. September 11 Memorial 9/11
    USA_111112_12_x.jpg
  • A young girl in traditional costume studies ice cream choices outside a small grocery during the yearly wine festival ceremony in Logroño, La Rioja Region, Spain.
    SPA_038_xs.jpg
  • Michelangelo's David, sculpted from 1501 to 1504, in Florence, Italy.
    ITA_16_xs.jpg
  • Leaning tower of Pisa, Italy.
    ITA_10_xs.jpg
  • Cemetery near the Yasaka-Jinji shrine in Kyoto, Japan.
    Japan_JAP_28_xs.jpg
  • A tourist views murals and statues at the vast State Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg, Russia. (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) Historic buildings like the museum and the Church of our Savior on Spilled Blood have occupied restoration artists like  Vyacheslav Grankovskiy for years due to suppression and neglect during the Soviet era.
    RUS_081016_047_xxw.jpg
  • Italian restaurant owner Gianni Paoletti and his wife in the caves of Paoletti Estates Winery. Napa Valley, California. The restaurant he owns is called Peppone and is located in West Los Angeles. MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_WINE_18_120_xs.jpg
  • Recoletta Cemetery, Buenos Aires
    ARG_110110_149_x.jpg
  • Recoletta Cemetery, Buenos Aires
    ARG_110110_018_x.jpg
  • Lincoln Memorial. Washington, DC. USA.
    USA_DC_3_xs.jpg
  • Museum of Modern Art Ivam, Centro del Carme, Valencia, Spain.
    SPA_080_xs.jpg
  • Hindu Rat Temple in Deshnoke, Rajasthan, India. This ornate Hindu temple was constructed by Maharaja Ganga Singh in the early 1900s as a tribute to the rat goddess, Karni Mata..
    IND_034_xs.jpg
  • An interior shot of the Hamman (Turkish bath). Istanbul, Turkey. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    TUR01_0023_xf1bs.jpg
  • Recoletta Cemetery, Buenos Aires
    ARG_110110_171_x.jpg
  • A grave decorated with flowers in Hilo, Hawaii.
    USA_HI_57_xs.jpg
  • Japanese graves in a cemetery on Big Island, Hawaii. USA.
    USA_HI_35_xs.jpg
  • Children play just outside Marble Moahi's fence in Kabakae Village, Ghanzi, Botswana.  (Marble Moahi is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) .
    BOT_090315_085_xxw.jpg
  • Inside the Moahis' family home in Kabakae Village, Ghanzi, Botswana. The family survives on food rations supplied by the government for an orphaned child.  (Marble Moahi is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)
    BOT_090315_158_xw.jpg
  • Marble Moahi, a 32 year-old mother living with HIV/AIDS, at her home in Kabakae Village, Ghanzi, Botswana. (Featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) MODEL RELEASED.
    BOT_090315_151_xw.jpg
  • Marble Moahi, a mother living with HIV/AIDS, in the family kitchen in Kabakae Village, Ghanzi, Botswana with her typical day's worth of food and antiretroviral medications.  (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) The caloric value of her day's worth of food on a typical day in March was 900 kcals. She is 32 years of age; 5 feet, 5 inches tall; and 92 pounds.  Despite a decline in new HIV infections in sub-Saharan Africa, this region of the world remains the most heavily impacted by HIV/AIDS. . MODEL RELEASED.
    BOT_090315_122_xxw.jpg
  • The Stuart Highway near Devil's Marbles rock formation, Northern Territory, Australia. Pentax Solar Car Race.
    AUS_35_xs.jpg
  • Devil's Marbles rock formation. Northern Territory, Australia.  Shot during the Pentax Solar Car Race. Australia landscapes.
    AUS_29_xs.jpg
  • Sunraycer, General Motors' entry for the Pentax Solar Car Race, the first international solar-powered car race, which began in Darwin, Northern Territories on November 1st, 1987 and finished in Adelaide, South Australia. Sunraycer (bottom left) is shown here on the 3rd day of the race, moving along a dead straight section of the Stuart Highway (Route 87) in the outback 100 km south of Devil's Marbles. Sunraycer was the eventual winner, taking 5 1/2 days to complete the 1,950 miles, traveling at an average speed of 41.6 miles per hour. Sunraycer's power source was an array of 7,200 photovoltaic cells, joined to form a hood over the top and back of the vehicle. (1987) .
    AUS_SCI_SOLCAR_03_xs.jpg
  • The Stuart Highway near Devil's Marbles rock formation, Northern Territory, Australia. Pentax Solar Car Race.
    AUS_36_xs.jpg
  • Devil's Marbles rock formation. Northern Territory, Australia.  Shot during the Pentax Solar Car Race. Australia landscapes.
    AUS_31_xs.jpg
  • Devil's Marbles rock formation. Northern Territory, Australia.  Shot during the Pentax Solar Car Race. Australia landscapes.
    AUS_30_xs.jpg
  • Sunraycer, General Motors' entry for the Pentax Solar Car Race, the first international solar-powered car race, which began in Darwin, Northern Territories on November 1st, 1987 and finished in Adelaide, South Australia. Sunraycer is shown here on the 3rd day of the race, moving along a dead straight section of the Stuart Highway (Route 87) in the outback 100 km south of Devil's Marbles. Sunraycer was the eventual winner, taking 5 1/2 days to complete the 1,950 miles, traveling at an average speed of 41.6 miles per hour. Sunraycer's power source was an array of 7,200 photovoltaic cells, joined to form a hood over the top and back of the vehicle. (1987)
    AUS_SCI_SOLCAR_02_xs.jpg
  • Sunraycer, General Motors' entry for the Pentax Solar Car Race, the first international solar-powered car race, which began in Darwin, Northern Territories on November 1st, 1987 and finished in Adelaide, South Australia. Sunraycer is shown here on the 3rd day of the race, moving along a dead straight section of the Stuart Highway (Route 87) in the outback 100 km south of Devil's Marbles passing the skeleton of a kangaroo. Sunraycer was the eventual winner, taking 5 1/2 days to complete the 1,950 miles, traveling at an average speed of 41.6 miles per hour. Sunraycer's power source was an array of 7,200 photovoltaic cells, joined to form a hood over the top and back of the vehicle. (1987)
    AUS_SCI_SOLCAR_01_xs.jpg

Peter Menzel Photography

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