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Issyk-Kul Lake

Horses and Mountains near Issyk-Kul

Framed by the towering Tian Shan range, this pastoral scene near Issyk-Kul captures horses grazing on open fields with a village in the background. In Kyrgyz tradition, horses are not just livestock—they are companions, warriors, and cultural emblems tied to centuries of nomadic life and mountain freedom.

Chalon-sur-Saône

Hanging Flower Basket

A metal bracket holds a green hanging basket spilling yellow, purple, and white blooms into the narrow street. In towns like Chalon-sur-Saône, public planters often mix hardy annuals suited to Burgundy’s temperate climate. Their height frames the pedestrian view and softens the contrast between medieval stone and later plastered facades.

Church of Our Lady (Liebfrauenkirche), Trier

Synagoga Sculpture

This sculptural group (1230–1260) on the portal of the Liebfrauen-Basilika in Trier features Synagoga, a symbolic figure for Judaism, depicted as a blindfolded woman with a broken staff or tablets. Common in Gothic cathedrals, Synagoga contrasts with Ecclesia, representing the Church’s dominance. This imagery reflects medieval theological perspectives and the complex interplay between faiths during the Middle Ages.

Villa Farnesina

Cupid and the Three Graces

Raphael

In this fresco (1518), Raphael portrays Cupid with the Three Graces, who embody beauty, charm, and joy. The scene reflects the harmony of love and divine favor, integral to Psyche’s myth. Framed by Giovanni da Udine’s botanical festoons, it blends mythology with Renaissance ideals of grace and abundance.

Antioquia Museum (Museo de Antioquia)

Portrait of an Indigenous Person

Luis Alberto Acuña

This striking 1934 oil painting reflects the artist’s deep engagement with indigenous identity and pre-Columbian heritage. The stoic, symmetrical face, wrapped in a red hood beneath a wide-brimmed hat, evokes dignity and resilience. Acuña, a key figure in Colombian modernism, often highlighted native ancestry as a counter-narrative to Eurocentric ideals.

Borromeo Palace (Palazzo Borromeo)

Tapestry of Fantastical Beasts in a River

Michael Coxcie

Woven in Brussels (c.1565) in a Flemish workshop according to Coxcie's design, this tapestry depicts hybrid beasts and serpents in a dense river landscape reflecting Renaissance fascination with nature’s wildness and moral allegory, symbolizing sin and chaos before divine order.

Milan Cathedral (Duomo di Milano)

Silhouette over Domes

A solitary statue atop the Duomo di Milano (begun in 1386) gazes westward as dusk settles over the city. In the fading light, Milan’s domes and bell towers emerge as quiet echoes of a sacred past. This image captures the cathedral’s dialogue with the skyline—a fusion of devotion, architecture, and atmosphere suspended in stillness.

Caravaggio’s Roman Period

Judith Beheading Holofernes (Detail)

Caravaggio

In this dramatic scene from Judith Beheading Holofernes (c.1598), the Assyrian general Holofernes struggles in his final moments as Judith, the Jewish widow, delivers the fatal blow. Caravaggio captures his terror with a contorted face and blood spurting across the bed, while Judith's hands hold him with determination. This raw depiction distills the narrative to its core: virtue triumphing over tyranny, conveyed with intense immediacy.

Luis Alberto Acuña Museum

Descent from the Cross

Luis Alberto Acuña

Acuña (mid-1950s) renders the moment of Christ’s body being lowered from the cross with emotional gravity and communal sorrow. The composition emphasizes solidarity in grief, surrounding Christ with figures of all ages and backgrounds, reinforcing the universality of human suffering and compassion.

Luis Alberto Acuña Museum

Cave Painter

Luis Alberto Acuña

In this mural (1960-75), Acuña imagines a prehistoric family gathered as the father paints on a cave wall. The scene blends idealized innocence with artistic origin: music, fire, and breastfeeding evoke harmony, while the act of painting becomes a metaphor for humanity’s first attempt to narrate its world. This work reflects Acuña’s fascination with the roots of civilization and his desire to forge a national artistic identity that honors both primitivism and cultural continuity.

British Museum

Anglo-Saxon Sutton Hoo Helmet

Crafted from iron and tinned copper, the Sutton Hoo Helmet was buried around 600 AD and likely belonged to an East Anglian king. Reconstructed from fragments, its beast-like face and warrior imagery link it to Woden cults and Eastern Sweden. The helmet symbolizes elite status and early English power, reflecting the cultural and political landscape of its time, and showcases the craftsmanship and beliefs of the Anglo-Saxon elite.

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.

Basilica of Santa Maria in Aracoeli

Musical Angels (detail)

Pinturicchio

In this detail (1484–86), Pinturicchio paints two angelic musicians, one playing a violin and the other a wind instrument. Floating on clouds, they contribute to the celestial harmony surrounding Christ in Majesty. The graceful movement of their garments reflects Pinturicchio’s refined sense of rhythm, light, and divine celebration.

Gundestrup Cauldron

Taranis and the Sacred Wheel

A bearded god, often identified as Taranis, grips a cosmic wheel while emerging from a rectangular frame on this Gundestrup Cauldron panel (150 BC - 1 AD). A warrior assists beside a horned serpent, as griffins and leopards encircle the scene. The wheel may symbolize fate, the sun, or divine order, in a ritual of cosmic activation or rebirth.

Museum of Modern Art (Museo de Arte Moderno)

It’s Not Where You Come From, but Where You’re Going

Ramón Calcaño

This oil painting (2018), entitled No importa de dónde vienes, sino hacia dónde vas, Calcaño presents a vast view of informal housing. Central to the scene is a figure holding books, emerging from the margins. The work highlights resilience and the transformative power of education, emphasizing the pursuit of a better future beyond one's origins.

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Max Tabachnik
Max Tabachnik
41 Countries • 115 Cities
283 Landmarks • 3815 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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