8 results filtered with: Town
- Digital Images
- Online
Nepal; Kathmandu Valley, Bhaktapur, 1986
Carole Reeves- Digital Images
- Online
Street scene in Rouen, France, 21st July, 1817, taken by camera lucida on the second day of Lister's visit
Joseph Jackson Lister- Digital Images
- Online
Watercolous of a palace and bridge along the banks of the Rhine created via a camera lucida
Joseph Jackson Lister- Digital Images
- Online
Nepal; town life in the Khumbu, 1986. Namche Bazar (altitude 3446 metres), a bustling and prosperous market town, is the largest Sherpa settlement in the Khumbu. Many of its Tibetan-style houses devote the ground floor to animal shelters while the family lives upstairs. Most have windows and doors at the front of the building only, the back being built into the side of the mountain. Firewood is stacked against walls, and small terraced fields grow staples (potatoes, barley, wheat). At left is a Buddhist shrine or stupa, on each side of which is painted the eyes of the Buddha. Prayer flags are strung out from its summit.
Carole Reeves- Digital Images
- Online
Nepal; street cleaning in Kathmandu, 1986. In the mid-1980s, Kathmandu was a mix of medieval architecture and urban sprawl. Television was a late-comer to Nepal but by the 1980s, the skyline of urban areas had become peppered with television aerials. Copying western culture and values became fashionable, and drug addiction amongst the young increased significantly during the decade.
Carole Reeves- Digital Images
- Online
Nepal; Kathmandu Valley, Bhaktapur, 1986
Carole Reeves- Digital Images
- Online
Histoires Prodigieuses; the Monster of Cracow
- Digital Images
- Online
Nepal; town life in the Khumbu, 1986. A street in Namche Bazar (altitude 3446 metres). Men relax outside a store. In the mid-1980s, Nepal was rigidly patriarchical although Sherpa women had more autonomy than other groups. Women generally had limited access to markets, education, health care and local government. Malnutrition and poverty hit them the hardest, and female children were usually given less food than male children, especially during food shortages.
Carole Reeves