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Palace of Fine Arts (Palacio de Bellas Artes)

Katharsis (detail)

José Clemente Orozco

This explosive mural section (1934) fuses war, lust, and revolution into a single convulsion. Clashing fists, rifles, and machines crush bodies into chaos. The nude woman evokes both violence and moral decay, while fire and protest surge behind. Orozco presents modernity as an inferno—only through destruction can truth emerge.

Fray Pedro Gocial Franciscan Museum

Archangel Gabriel (Isabel de Santiago)

Isabel de Santiago

This early 18th-c. work by Isabel de Santiago—a rare female artist of the Quito School—portrays Gabriel as a celestial messenger of abundance. Draped in luminous textiles, the archangel holds a cornucopia, blending classical fertility symbols with baroque angelology in a uniquely Andean devotional image.

Rodel Tapaya Exhibition: Urban Labyrinth

The Comedy, Parody, and Tragedy

Rodel Tapaya

This painting (2018) from Tapaya’s Urban Labyrinth series swirls with hybrid beings, masks, and mythic figures at a chaotic table. Angelic wings, demonic grins, and spectral visages blur folk imagination with urban satire. Tapaya weaves Philippine mythology into contemporary critique, where humor and menace mirror the fractured realities of modern city life.

National Roman Museum – Palazzo Massimo

Bronze Youth with Spear

This Hellenistic bronze (2nd c. BC), found in Rome, shows a young man in heroic nudity, the visual language of leaders and demi-gods. His relaxed contrapposto, short beard, and athletic build recall works by Lysippos, sculptor of Alexander the Great. The spear (a modern replacement) completes the image of poised authority. Likely a prince or elite figure admired in Rome, the statue exemplified Greek idealism to Roman elite.

Scribe Don Juan de Vargas House Museum

Fantastical Rhinoceros

This mural detail (c. 1590) depicts a rhinoceros modeled on Dürer’s 1515 woodcut, which became the European archetype of the beast despite anatomical inaccuracies. Its armored plates and dragon-like expression reflect colonial-era fascination with exotic fauna, filtered through Renaissance imagination and limited firsthand knowledge of African and Asian animals.

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.

Temple of the Emerald Buddha (Wat Phra Si Rattana Satsadaram)

Hanuman Battle Scene Mural, Wat Phra Kaew

This mural depicts a battle from The Ramakien, Thailand’s version of The Ramayana. Hanuman, the monkey god, confronts a demon amid chariots and celestial beings. Created in the late 18th c., its vivid colors and gold leaf exemplify Thai artistry, while the story itself reinforces ideals of loyalty, courage, and divine justice central to Thai identity.

Raphael’s The School of Athens

Euclid Teaching Geometry

Raphael

In this vibrant lower-right scene from The School of Athens (1509–1511), Raphael presents Euclid demonstrating geometric principles with a compass. Painted in Rome during the High Renaissance, this detail celebrates empirical learning as foundational to human knowledge. The intense focus of his young onlookers reflects the Renaissance ideal of rediscovering ancient scientific wisdom through observation and reason.

British Museum

Bearing the Spoils

This Assyrian relief (7th c. BC) depicts court officials carrying slain lions in a ceremonial procession. The lions, draped across shoulders or in nets, symbolize King Ashurbanipal’s might and divine favor. The scene highlights the lion as both adversary and sacred offering, reflecting the king’s imperial authority and the ritualistic order of the Assyrian court. It illustrates the power dynamics and religious beliefs of ancient Mesopotamia.

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.

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.

Ostia Antica

Thermopolium of Lucius Fullo and Lucius Placidus

This thermopolium (2nd–3rd c.), or a hot food and drink bar, shows a marble-clad counter with built-in jars beside a painted wall panel depicting vessels that advertised the shop’s offerings. Its mosaic floor and brick vaulting accommodated heavy use as such establishments formed a key part of Ostia’s commercial and daily life.

Sidi Bou Said

Prickly Pear and the Mediterranean Horizon

At the edge of a cliff near Sidi Bou Said, a cactus stands firm against the vast blue expanse of the sea. The prickly pear, native to North Africa, symbolizes endurance and quiet resilience. This tranquil vista reflects the meeting of land and water, plant and sky—a still moment in Tunisia’s coastal poetry.

Hôtel-Dieu

Christ the Judge

Rogier van der Weyden

At the summit of the Last Judgment Altarpiece (1445–50), Christ sits enthroned on a rainbow, resting his feet on a golden globe that symbolizes dominion over the world. He raises his right hand in blessing, while his left gestures toward judgment. The sword and lily flanking him signify justice and mercy, balancing wrath with compassion. Draped in vivid red, Christ embodies divine authority, anchoring the entire altarpiece in the promise of eternal judgment and salvation.

Madeleine Islands National Park

Cape Verde Cormorant Family by the Sea

This adult cormorant, Phalacrocorax carbo lucidus, shelters its young atop whitewashed coastal cliffs. Native to West Africa, the species is a skilled swimmer and hunter, diving to catch fish in clear Atlantic waters. The chicks’ dusky fluff and pale faces reveal their early stage of life, still wholly reliant on the parent’s protection and feeding.

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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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