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Milan Cathedral (Duomo di Milano)

St Bartholomew Flayed

Marco d’Agrate

This marble statue (1562) shows St Bartholomew as a flayed figure, his own skin arranged like a draped garment around an exposed muscular body. Such extreme anatomical precision draws on Renaissance study of dissected cadavers. The saint’s upright stance and calm, frontal gaze demonstrate how martyrdom could be articulated as steadfast faith rather than physical defeat.

Memorial Museum of Dominican Resistance

Silenced by Pain

Ángel Haché

This mixed-media work (2014) uses corrugated cardboard to depict three anguished nude figures pierced through the head by jagged red waves, symbols of auditory torture or psychological trauma. Their tense bodies and gestures of covering their ears suggest helplessness before systemic violence. The scene recalls the enforced silence and invisible suffering experienced under Trujillo’s dictatorship in the Dominican Republic.

Issyk-Kul Lake

Grazing Horses near Issyk-Kul

In the golden light of afternoon, horses graze peacefully on the plains near Issyk-Kul Lake, with the Tian Shan mountains rising beyond. Horses remain a living symbol of Kyrgyz identity—freedom, mobility, and heritage echo in every hoofbeat across this timeless steppe.

Fray Pedro Gocial Franciscan Museum

Main Cloister Garden, Convent of San Francisco

Laid out in the 16th c., this quadrangular garden served as the contemplative heart of the Franciscan convent in Quito. Palm trees soar over geometric boxwood paths and a central fountain, reflecting the fusion of European monastic design with Andean landscape. A living metaphor of Eden, it nourished both body and spirit.

Gold Museum (Museo del Oro)

Nencatacoa Ritual Gold Mask

This hammered gold mask(600–1600 AD)represents Nencatacoa, Muisca god of weaving, art, and festivity. Revered as a divine fox or bear, he protected textile workers, goldsmiths, and musicians. Masks like this were worn in rituals celebrating fertility, creation, and communal joy—especially with chicha-fueled dancing honoring the spirit of artistic life.

Castel Sant'Angelo

Grotesque Ceiling Decoration

Bonaccorsi Pietro (Perin del Vaga) and Domenico Rietti

This fresco (c. 16th c.) blends Renaissance whimsy with ancient Roman influence, reviving the grotesque style unearthed in Nero’s Domus Aurea. Figures with human and animal features balance symmetrical vines, mythical beasts, and theatrical masks. The composition celebrates harmony through fantasy, playfully bridging antiquity and imagination.

Milan Cathedral (Duomo di Milano)

Gothic Spires of the Duomo

The rooftop of Milan’s cathedral (from the late 14th c.) is a marvel of verticality. Forests of spires topped with saints rise above ornate flying buttresses, transforming structural necessity into a sculptural landscape. Here, Gothic architecture becomes an ascension—not just of stone, but of the spirit.

Dakar

Great White Pelican

Perched calmly amid colorful pirogues and fishing gear, this great white pelican (Pelecanus onocrotalus) surveys the Atlantic at dusk. A familiar presence in West African coastal towns, the species thrives near human activity, drawn by abundant fish and the rhythm of life along Senegal’s bustling shores.

Luis Alberto Acuña Museum

The Dog Men (Coprophagia)

Luis Alberto Acuña

This disturbing drawing (1988) shows three gaunt hybrid figures with human torsos and doglike heads crouched on all fours. Part of Acuña’s late series on distorted bodies, it examines the boundary between human and animal. The title refers to coprophagia (the consumption of excrement), which Acuña uses to articulate a vision of moral collapse and social dehumanization.

Louis Vuitton Foundation (Fondation Louis Vuitton)

Sudden Awakening

Zhang Huan

This large Buddha head sculpture (2006) lies fragmented on the ground, its heavy upper section slightly shifted above closed eyes and rough, ash-coated features. Formed from ash and steel, it draws on materials linked to ritual burning and industrial residue. The broken, weighty face reveals how contemporary Buddhist art confronts impermanence and the tension between spiritual ideals and material collapse.

Church of Sant'Ignazio di Loyola

The Apotheosis of St. Ignatius

Andrea Pozzo

This Baroque trompe-l’œil painting (1685–94) transforms the flat ceiling into a soaring heavenly vision. St. Ignatius is welcomed into paradise by Christ and the Virgin, while allegories of the continents celebrate Jesuit missions. Pozzo’s masterful illusionism merges faith, perspective, and global ambition.

Ambrosiana Picture Gallery (Pinacoteca Ambrosiana)

Mary Magdalene

Titian

This intimate portrayal of Mary Magdalene (c. 1560) captures the saint in a moment of spiritual ecstasy. Covered by cascading hair, her body becomes a vessel of penitence and divine grace. Titian’s sensual rendering reflects the Renaissance ideal of redemptive beauty and the transformative power of divine love.

Sidi Bou Said

Calico Cat in Midday Shade

Bathed in soft light and nestled against sun-worn stone, this calico cat reclines in the shelter of a narrow alcove in Sidi Bou Said. With alert eyes and a relaxed posture, she embodies the village’s unhurried rhythm—where even its feline residents seem to pause in quiet harmony with the architecture and Mediterranean sun.

Botero Museum (Museo Botero)

Woman with Umbrella

Fernando Botero

A solitary figure walks through a forest, her reflection mirrored below as if suspended between worlds. Her voluminous dress and umbrella contrast with the vertical rhythm of the trees. With surreal calm and poetic symmetry, Botero (1989) transforms a simple stroll into a meditation on solitude, identity, and the quiet theatricality of everyday life.

Hôtel-Dieu

Archangel Michael Weighing Souls

Rogier van der Weyden

In this panel from the Last Judgment Altarpiece (1445–50), Archangel Michael dominates the scene, balancing souls in golden scales as Christ presides above. Trumpeting angels herald resurrection while the blessed and damned await their fate. Painted for Beaune’s Hôtel-Dieu, the work reminded patients that earthly suffering was framed within the ultimate hope of divine justice and salvation.

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Max Tabachnik
Max Tabachnik
41 Countries • 112 Cities
284 Landmarks • 3798 Photos

Explore the world through my eyes: begin with the image below, the map, the dropdowns above, or the search button. Every photo includes a thoughtful caption.

When the path is beautiful, do not ask where it leads.

My travels have always been shaped by two intertwined forms of discovery. One is intellectual: learning why the world is the way it is. History became my guide, drawing me toward museums, old cities, architecture, and the layers of meaning carried by places. The other is emotional: the search for beauty, harmony, and moments of elevation, often found in nature, monasteries, and sacred spaces.

Together, these impulses shape how I travel, what I photograph, and how I interpret what I see. This site is my way of sharing that lifelong learning in visual form—one image at a time, with enough context to deepen curiosity and understanding. I hope these photographs leave you with a sense of wonder and a deeper feeling for the world.

Now let’s explore together.

Want to reach Max with a question, collaboration idea, academic inquiry, media proposal, or a thoughtful note? Use the form below and your message will go directly to him.

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