Show Navigation

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
{ 80 images found }

Loading ()...

  • Views of the Polish countryside via train and bus.
    023RoadEditTwo.jpg
  • Views of the Polish countryside via train and bus.
    Transitions_007.jpg
  • Bartender Jane Danger prepares at Cienfuegos in Manhattan on August 26, 2010.
    Bartender Portrait
  • Views of the Polish countryside via train and bus.
    _MG_5936.jpg
  • Views of the Polish countryside via train and bus.
    007RoadEditTwo.jpg
  • Views of the Polish countryside via train and bus.
    Transitions_006.jpg
  • Views of the Polish countryside via train and bus.
    Transitions_004.jpg
  • Views of the Polish countryside via train and bus.
    Transitions_003.jpg
  • Views of the Polish countryside via train and bus.
    _MG_5867.jpg
  • Views of the Polish countryside via train and bus.
    _MG_5766.jpg
  • Views of the Polish countryside via train and bus.
    _MG_3606.jpg
  • Views of the Polish countryside via train and bus.
    Road009.jpg
  • Views of the Polish countryside via train and bus.
    Road007.jpg
  • Views of the Polish countryside via train and bus.
    Road003.jpg
  • Views of the Polish countryside via train and bus.
    024RoadEditTwo.jpg
  • Views of the Polish countryside via train and bus.
    020RoadEditTwo.jpg
  • Views of the Polish countryside via train and bus.
    014RoadEditTwo.jpg
  • Views of the Polish countryside via train and bus.
    008RoadEditTwo.jpg
  • Views of the Polish countryside via train and bus.
    Transitions_014.jpg
  • Views of the Polish countryside via train and bus.
    Transitions_012.jpg
  • Views of the Polish countryside via train and bus.
    Transitions_011.jpg
  • Views of the Polish countryside via train and bus.
    Transitions_010.jpg
  • Views of the Polish countryside via train and bus.
    Transitions_008.jpg
  • Views of the Polish countryside via train and bus.
    Transitions_001.jpg
  • Views of the Polish countryside via train and bus.
    Road002.jpg
  • Views of the Polish countryside via train and bus.
    017RoadEditTwo.jpg
  • Views of the Polish countryside via train and bus.
    012RoadEditTwo.jpg
  • Views of the Polish countryside via train and bus.
    004RoadEditTwo.jpg
  • Views of the Polish countryside via train and bus.
    Transitions_015.jpg
  • Views of the Polish countryside via train and bus.
    Transitions_009.jpg
  • Views of the Polish countryside via train and bus.
    Transitions_002.jpg
  • Views of the Polish countryside via train and bus.
    Road010.jpg
  • Views of the Polish countryside via train and bus.
    _MG_5932.jpg
  • Views of the Polish countryside via train and bus.
    027RoadEditTwo.jpg
  • Views of the Polish countryside via train and bus.
    011RoadEditTwo.jpg
  • Views of the Polish countryside via train and bus.
    Transitions_013.jpg
  • Views of the Polish countryside via train and bus.
    Transitions_005.jpg
  • Dennis McCabe, Superintendent and Planning Director for the Village of East Rockaway, shows Flood Insurance Rate Maps at his office. The village is contesting FEMA's recent maps which include more homes in flood zones and have caused insurance rates to increase. a.(October 20, 2010).Photo by Danny Ghitis
    Government Office Worker Portrait
  • Andréa Peters, 36, an interior designer who also runs the non-profit Curly Tails Pug Rescue, poses for a portrait at her apartment in the East Village with her pug Chloe Danae. Chloe suffered from severe allergies until she was put on a raw diet and introduced to a novel protein from elk meat. ..Danny Ghitis for The New York Times
    Ghitis_RawDogs_04.jpg
  • Andréa Peters, 36, an interior designer who also runs the non-profit Curly Tails Pug Rescue, poses for a portrait at her apartment in the East Village with her pugs Chloe Danae, white, and Oliver Grant, black. Chloe suffered from severe allergies until she was put on a raw diet and introduced to a novel protein from elk meat. ..Danny Ghitis for The New York Times
    Ghitis_RawDogs_03.jpg
  • Coal smoke billows from the former SS Headquarters at Auschwitz II - Birkenau, which is now an active Catholic Church for the village of Brzezinka . The large cross above the building is prominent in the skyline of the camp and has been protested by many Jewish organizations as an effort to "Christianize" the Holocaust.
    Auschwitz_002.JPG
  • Andréa Peters, 36, an interior designer who also runs the non-profit Curly Tails Pug Rescue, poses for a portrait at her apartment in the East Village with her pug Chloe Danae. Chloe suffered from severe allergies until she was put on a raw diet and introduced to a novel protein from elk meat. ..Danny Ghitis for The New York Times
    Ghitis_RawDogs_05.jpg
  • Andréa Peters, 36, an interior designer who also runs the non-profit Curly Tails Pug Rescue, poses for a portrait at her apartment in the East Village with her pugs Chloe Danae, white, and Oliver Grant, black. Chloe suffered from severe allergies until she was put on a raw diet and introduced to a novel protein from elk meat. ..Danny Ghitis for The New York Times
    Ghitis_RawDogs_01.jpg
  • Hundreds of men crowd together in a village field outside Varanasi for a local tournament. A commentator announces the contestants as well as honored guests - former champion wrestlers. The ancient tradition of Indian wrestling, known as  kushti, thrives in Varanasi, one of the world's oldest cities. Wrestling gyms, or akhara, scattered around the city are of the few places where Hindu men from different casts are considered equals. Aside from bodybuilding, practiioners emphasize a life of discipline and celibacy. But as modernity sweeps India and Western sports like cricket become more popular, some akhara are being abandoned. While some prominent, government-run gyms switched to mats for Olympic-style wrestling, akhara in villages and towns maintain the old ways.
    kushti-indian-wrestling-08.jpg
  • A mother and son in their strawberry patch in a village bordering Oswiecim.
    33_D_Ghitis_LandofOs.jpg
  • Andréa Peters, 36, an interior designer who also runs the non-profit Curly Tails Pug Rescue, poses for a portrait at her apartment in the East Village with her pug Chloe Danae. Chloe suffered from severe allergies until she was put on a raw diet and introduced to a novel protein from elk meat. ..Danny Ghitis for The New York Times
    Ghitis_RawDogs_07.jpg
  • Andréa Peters, 36, an interior designer who also runs the non-profit Curly Tails Pug Rescue, poses for a portrait at her apartment in the East Village with her pug Chloe Danae. Chloe suffered from severe allergies until she was put on a raw diet and introduced to a novel protein from elk meat. ..Danny Ghitis for The New York Times
    Ghitis_RawDogs_06.jpg
  • A young boy at a wedding reception above the firehouse in the village of Brzezinka (Birkenau).
    Auschwitz_004.JPG
  • A girl skates along the Birkenau perimeter road headed from the adjacent village of Brzezinka to the town of Os›wie™cim. The road separates farmland and houses circling the death camp museum. A buffer zone of 100 meters was established to limit development near Auschwitz - Birkenau, but some of the land had already been settled by the time the law was enacted.
    01_Ghitis_LandofOS.JPG
  • A girl skates along the Birkenau perimeter road headed from the adjacent village of Brzezinka to the town of Os›wie™cim. The road separates farmland and houses circling the death camp museum. A buffer zone of 100 meters was established to limit development near Auschwitz - Birkenau, but some of the land had already been settled by the time the law was enacted.
    Auschwitz_001.JPG
  • Andréa Peters, 36, an interior designer who also runs the non-profit Curly Tails Pug Rescue, poses for a portrait at her apartment in the East Village with her pug Chloe Danae. Chloe suffered from severe allergies until she was put on a raw diet and introduced to a novel protein from elk meat. ..Danny Ghitis for The New York Times
    Ghitis_RawDogs_08.jpg
  • Andréa Peters, 36, an interior designer who also runs the non-profit Curly Tails Pug Rescue, poses for a portrait at her apartment in the East Village with her pugs Chloe Danae, white, and Oliver Grant, black. Chloe suffered from severe allergies until she was put on a raw diet and introduced to a novel protein from elk meat. ..Danny Ghitis for The New York Times
    Ghitis_RawDogs_02.jpg
  • Maria Churchill and Kevin McCarthy moved from the East Village to Hastings-on-Hudson about eight months ago to start their housewares store Maisonette. ..Danny Ghitis for The New York Times
    Ghitis_Suburbia_11.JPG
  • Maria Churchill and Kevin McCarthy moved from the East Village to Hastings-on-Hudson about eight months ago to start their housewares store Maisonette. ..Danny Ghitis for The New York Times
    Ghitis_Suburbia_12.JPG
  • Maria Churchill and Kevin McCarthy moved from the East Village to Hastings-on-Hudson about eight months ago to start their housewares store Maisonette. ..Danny Ghitis for The New York Times
    Ghitis_Suburbia_10.JPG
  • Maria Churchill and Kevin McCarthy moved from the East Village to Hastings-on-Hudson about eight months ago to start their housewares store Maisonette. ..Danny Ghitis for The New York Times
    Ghitis_Suburbia_07.JPG
  • Maria Churchill and Kevin McCarthy moved from the East Village to Hastings-on-Hudson about eight months ago to start their housewares store Maisonette. ..Danny Ghitis for The New York Times
    Ghitis_Suburbia_09.JPG
  • Maria Churchill and Kevin McCarthy moved from the East Village to Hastings-on-Hudson about eight months ago to start their housewares store Maisonette. ..Danny Ghitis for The New York Times
    Ghitis_Suburbia_08.JPG
  • Some men and boys climb nearby trees for a better view of the fights. The ancient tradition of Indian wrestling, known as  kushti, thrives in Varanasi, one of the world's oldest cities. Wrestling gyms, or akhara, scattered around the city are of the few places where Hindu men from different casts are considered equals. Aside from bodybuilding, practiioners emphasize a life of discipline and celibacy. But as modernity sweeps India and Western sports like cricket become more popular, some akhara are being abandoned. While some prominent, government-run gyms switched to mats for Olympic-style wrestling, akhara in villages and towns maintain the old ways.
    kushti-indian-wrestling-13.jpg
  • The ancient tradition of Indian wrestling, known as  kushti, thrives in Varanasi, one of the world's oldest cities. Wrestling gyms, or akhara, scattered around the city are of the few places where Hindu men from different casts are considered equals. Aside from bodybuilding, practiioners emphasize a life of discipline and celibacy. But as modernity sweeps India and Western sports like cricket become more popular, some akhara are being abandoned. While some prominent, government-run gyms switched to mats for Olympic-style wrestling, akhara in villages and towns maintain the old ways.
    kushti-indian-wrestling-09.jpg
  • The small arena brings young men from different castes together whereas they might never interact in the real world. The ancient tradition of Indian wrestling, known as  kushti, thrives in Varanasi, one of the world's oldest cities. Wrestling gyms, or akhara, scattered around the city are of the few places where Hindu men from different casts are considered equals. Aside from bodybuilding, practiioners emphasize a life of discipline and celibacy. But as modernity sweeps India and Western sports like cricket become more popular, some akhara are being abandoned. While some prominent, government-run gyms switched to mats for Olympic-style wrestling, akhara in villages and towns maintain the old ways.
    kushti-indian-wrestling-04.jpg
  • The ancient tradition of Indian wrestling, known as  kushti, thrives in Varanasi, one of the world's oldest cities. Wrestling gyms, or akhara, scattered around the city are of the few places where Hindu men from different casts are considered equals. Aside from bodybuilding, practiioners emphasize a life of discipline and celibacy. But as modernity sweeps India and Western sports like cricket become more popular, some akhara are being abandoned. While some prominent, government-run gyms switched to mats for Olympic-style wrestling, akhara in villages and towns maintain the old ways.
    kushti-indian-wrestling-22.JPG
  • The ancient tradition of Indian wrestling, known as  kushti, thrives in Varanasi, one of the world's oldest cities. Wrestling gyms, or akhara, scattered around the city are of the few places where Hindu men from different casts are considered equals. Aside from bodybuilding, practiioners emphasize a life of discipline and celibacy. But as modernity sweeps India and Western sports like cricket become more popular, some akhara are being abandoned. While some prominent, government-run gyms switched to mats for Olympic-style wrestling, akhara in villages and towns maintain the old ways.
    kushti-indian-wrestling-21.JPG
  • The ancient tradition of Indian wrestling, known as  kushti, thrives in Varanasi, one of the world's oldest cities. Wrestling gyms, or akhara, scattered around the city are of the few places where Hindu men from different casts are considered equals. Aside from bodybuilding, practiioners emphasize a life of discipline and celibacy. But as modernity sweeps India and Western sports like cricket become more popular, some akhara are being abandoned. While some prominent, government-run gyms switched to mats for Olympic-style wrestling, akhara in villages and towns maintain the old ways.
    kushti-indian-wrestling-20.JPG
  • The ancient tradition of Indian wrestling, known as  kushti, thrives in Varanasi, one of the world's oldest cities. Wrestling gyms, or akhara, scattered around the city are of the few places where Hindu men from different casts are considered equals. Aside from bodybuilding, practiioners emphasize a life of discipline and celibacy. But as modernity sweeps India and Western sports like cricket become more popular, some akhara are being abandoned. While some prominent, government-run gyms switched to mats for Olympic-style wrestling, akhara in villages and towns maintain the old ways.
    kushti-indian-wrestling-19.JPG
  • The ancient tradition of Indian wrestling, known as  kushti, thrives in Varanasi, one of the world's oldest cities. Wrestling gyms, or akhara, scattered around the city are of the few places where Hindu men from different casts are considered equals. Aside from bodybuilding, practiioners emphasize a life of discipline and celibacy. But as modernity sweeps India and Western sports like cricket become more popular, some akhara are being abandoned. While some prominent, government-run gyms switched to mats for Olympic-style wrestling, akhara in villages and towns maintain the old ways.
    kushti-indian-wrestling-17.JPG
  • The ancient tradition of Indian wrestling, known as  kushti, thrives in Varanasi, one of the world's oldest cities. Wrestling gyms, or akhara, scattered around the city are of the few places where Hindu men from different casts are considered equals. Aside from bodybuilding, practiioners emphasize a life of discipline and celibacy. But as modernity sweeps India and Western sports like cricket become more popular, some akhara are being abandoned. While some prominent, government-run gyms switched to mats for Olympic-style wrestling, akhara in villages and towns maintain the old ways.
    kushti-indian-wrestling-16.JPG
  • The ancient tradition of Indian wrestling, known as  kushti, thrives in Varanasi, one of the world's oldest cities. Wrestling gyms, or akhara, scattered around the city are of the few places where Hindu men from different casts are considered equals. Aside from bodybuilding, practiioners emphasize a life of discipline and celibacy. But as modernity sweeps India and Western sports like cricket become more popular, some akhara are being abandoned. While some prominent, government-run gyms switched to mats for Olympic-style wrestling, akhara in villages and towns maintain the old ways.
    kushti-indian-wrestling-14.jpg
  • The ancient tradition of Indian wrestling, known as  kushti, thrives in Varanasi, one of the world's oldest cities. Wrestling gyms, or akhara, scattered around the city are of the few places where Hindu men from different casts are considered equals. Aside from bodybuilding, practiioners emphasize a life of discipline and celibacy. But as modernity sweeps India and Western sports like cricket become more popular, some akhara are being abandoned. While some prominent, government-run gyms switched to mats for Olympic-style wrestling, akhara in villages and towns maintain the old ways.
    kushti-indian-wrestling-11.jpg
  • A constant flow of matches overlap, keeping the audience engaged. The ancient tradition of Indian wrestling, known as  kushti, thrives in Varanasi, one of the world's oldest cities. Wrestling gyms, or akhara, scattered around the city are of the few places where Hindu men from different casts are considered equals. Aside from bodybuilding, practiioners emphasize a life of discipline and celibacy. But as modernity sweeps India and Western sports like cricket become more popular, some akhara are being abandoned. While some prominent, government-run gyms switched to mats for Olympic-style wrestling, akhara in villages and towns maintain the old ways.
    kushti-indian-wrestling-10.jpg
  • The ancient tradition of Indian wrestling, known as  kushti, thrives in Varanasi, one of the world's oldest cities. Wrestling gyms, or akhara, scattered around the city are of the few places where Hindu men from different casts are considered equals. Aside from bodybuilding, practiioners emphasize a life of discipline and celibacy. But as modernity sweeps India and Western sports like cricket become more popular, some akhara are being abandoned. While some prominent, government-run gyms switched to mats for Olympic-style wrestling, akhara in villages and towns maintain the old ways.
    kushti-indian-wrestling-07.jpg
  • Wrestlers at an akhara near the Ganges river in Varanasi prepare the soil for a morning practice. The process itself is rigorous, where men take turn hauling each other on a plow. The ancient tradition of Indian wrestling, known as  kushti, thrives in Varanasi, one of the world's oldest cities. Wrestling gyms, or akhara, scattered around the city are of the few places where Hindu men from different casts are considered equals. Aside from bodybuilding, practiioners emphasize a life of discipline and celibacy. But as modernity sweeps India and Western sports like cricket become more popular, some akhara are being abandoned. While some prominent, government-run gyms switched to mats for Olympic-style wrestling, akhara in villages and towns maintain the old ways.
    kushti-indian-wrestling-02.jpg
  • The ancient tradition of Indian wrestling, known as  kushti, thrives in Varanasi, one of the world's oldest cities. Wrestling gyms, or akhara, scattered around the city are of the few places where Hindu men from different casts are considered equals. Aside from bodybuilding, practiioners emphasize a life of discipline and celibacy. But as modernity sweeps India and Western sports like cricket become more popular, some akhara are being abandoned. While some prominent, government-run gyms switched to mats for Olympic-style wrestling, akhara in villages and towns maintain the old ways.
    095_Humor.JPG
  • The ancient tradition of Indian wrestling, known as  kushti, thrives in Varanasi, one of the world's oldest cities. Wrestling gyms, or akhara, scattered around the city are of the few places where Hindu men from different casts are considered equals. Aside from bodybuilding, practiioners emphasize a life of discipline and celibacy. But as modernity sweeps India and Western sports like cricket become more popular, some akhara are being abandoned. While some prominent, government-run gyms switched to mats for Olympic-style wrestling, akhara in villages and towns maintain the old ways.
    kushti-indian-wrestling-18.JPG
  • After a training session, the wrestlers take a dip in the holy Ganges river to wash off the dirt and pay tribute to the gods. The sport and its religious observance are deeply woven. Each akhara has its own shrine for the warrior god Hanuman. The ancient tradition of Indian wrestling, known as  kushti, thrives in Varanasi, one of the world's oldest cities. Wrestling gyms, or akhara, scattered around the city are of the few places where Hindu men from different casts are considered equals. Aside from bodybuilding, practiioners emphasize a life of discipline and celibacy. But as modernity sweeps India and Western sports like cricket become more popular, some akhara are being abandoned. While some prominent, government-run gyms switched to mats for Olympic-style wrestling, akhara in villages and towns maintain the old ways.
    kushti-indian-wrestling-15.jpg
  • The fighters give in after an exhausting few minutes of grappling. The ancient tradition of Indian wrestling, known as  kushti, thrives in Varanasi, one of the world's oldest cities. Wrestling gyms, or akhara, scattered around the city are of the few places where Hindu men from different casts are considered equals. Aside from bodybuilding, practiioners emphasize a life of discipline and celibacy. But as modernity sweeps India and Western sports like cricket become more popular, some akhara are being abandoned. While some prominent, government-run gyms switched to mats for Olympic-style wrestling, akhara in villages and towns maintain the old ways.
    kushti-indian-wrestling-12.jpg
  • A professional wrestling coach from the city's Olympic-style gym visits to help train for an upcoming tournament. He is revered as a wise man and the men touch his feet when he enters as a sign of respect. The ancient tradition of Indian wrestling, known as  kushti, thrives in Varanasi, one of the world's oldest cities. Wrestling gyms, or akhara, scattered around the city are of the few places where Hindu men from different casts are considered equals. Aside from bodybuilding, practiioners emphasize a life of discipline and celibacy. But as modernity sweeps India and Western sports like cricket become more popular, some akhara are being abandoned. While some prominent, government-run gyms switched to mats for Olympic-style wrestling, akhara in villages and towns maintain the old ways.
    kushti-indian-wrestling-06.jpg
  • The ancient tradition of Indian wrestling, known as  kushti, thrives in Varanasi, one of the world's oldest cities. Wrestling gyms, or akhara, scattered around the city are of the few places where Hindu men from different casts are considered equals. Aside from bodybuilding, practiioners emphasize a life of discipline and celibacy. But as modernity sweeps India and Western sports like cricket become more popular, some akhara are being abandoned. While some prominent, government-run gyms switched to mats for Olympic-style wrestling, akhara in villages and towns maintain the old ways.
    kushti-indian-wrestling-05.jpg
  • The ancient tradition of Indian wrestling, known as  kushti, thrives in Varanasi, one of the world's oldest cities. Wrestling gyms, or akhara, scattered around the city are of the few places where Hindu men from different casts are considered equals. Aside from bodybuilding, practiioners emphasize a life of discipline and celibacy. But as modernity sweeps India and Western sports like cricket become more popular, some akhara are being abandoned. While some prominent, government-run gyms switched to mats for Olympic-style wrestling, akhara in villages and towns maintain the old ways.
    kushti-indian-wrestling-01.jpg
  • Using the soil to reduce impact and improve movement, wrestlers intertwine their bodies in complex techniques. Behind them, a shrine for the Hindu warrior god Hanuman, which they pray to before stepping onto the sacred arena. The ancient tradition of Indian wrestling, known as  kushti, thrives in Varanasi, one of the world's oldest cities. Wrestling gyms, or akhara, scattered around the city are of the few places where Hindu men from different casts are considered equals. Aside from bodybuilding, practiioners emphasize a life of discipline and celibacy. But as modernity sweeps India and Western sports like cricket become more popular, some akhara are being abandoned. While some prominent, government-run gyms switched to mats for Olympic-style wrestling, akhara in villages and towns maintain the old ways.
    kushti-indian-wrestling-03.jpg
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x

DANNY GHITIS

  • Portfolio
  • About
  • Contact
  • Archive
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area