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British Museum

Hand-to-Hand Combat

This Assyrian relief (c. 645 BC) depicts King Ashurbanipal in hand-to-hand combat with a lion, symbolizing royal valor and divine favor. Despite its wounds, the lion charges fiercely. The unarmored king embodies the ultimate warrior, confronting nature and asserting supremacy over chaos and fate. Such scenes reinforced his image as protector and ruler, highlighting the Assyrian empire’s power and the monarch’s divine right to rule.

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.

Sidi Bou Said

Traditional Doorway of Sidi Bou Said

This arched doorway, characteristic of Sidi Bou Said, features vivid colors and symbolic motifs. The horseshoe arch with alternating black and white bands echoes Andalusian and Ottoman styles, while the yellow double door, studded with metal nails, protects privacy and reflects local aesthetics. Such doors blend architectural elegance with cultural identity.

Ostia Antica

Theater Masks on Capitals

These theatrical masks (2nd–3rd c. AD), carved into marble capitals, once adorned the ancient theater of Ostia. Representing comic and tragic roles, they reflect the deep integration of drama into Roman urban life. Such imagery evoked Dionysian themes of transformation and spectacle, linking performance, architecture, and communal identity in the Roman world.

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.

Templo Mayor

Tlaltecuhtli Monolith

This monumental relief of Tlaltecuhtli, the earth deity, dates to the reign of Ahuitzotl (1486–1502). Shown in a birthing pose, she embodies both creation and sacrifice. Her split abdomen bleeds upward into her mouth, symbolizing the cyclical flow of life. Adorned with skulls, Venus signs, and claws grasping earth spirits, she evokes the sacred violence that sustained the cosmos in Mexica belief.

La Candelaria

Traditional House with Café in La Candelaria

This colonial-era home in La Candelaria (17th c.)exemplifies Andean-Spanish vernacular architecture with its irregular windows, clay-tile roof, and green iron bars. The wooden platform and café tables reflect the area's transformation, where historic buildings now host bookstores, art spaces, and cafés. This blend of tradition and modernity highlights Bogotá's dynamic cultural evolution, illustrating how past and present coexist in urban creativity.

Chapultepec Castle (National Museum of History)

Mexican War of Independence (Detail)

Juan O'Gorman

This mural detail (1960–61) depicts Mexico’s struggle against colonial rule. At center, an Indigenous man is crucified on a tree, symbolizing the suffering of native peoples. Around him, women and children grieve, while men collapse in despair. To the right, Miguel Hidalgo in blue and José María Morelos in clerical robes embody the revolution’s leaders, joined by thinkers holding books and scrolls of Enlightenment ideals.

El Sagrario Church

Baroque Portal of El Sagrario

This monumental baroque portal marks the threshold of El Sagrario, the auxiliary chapel of Quito’s Metropolitan Cathedral. Crafted in the 18th c., its swirling vegetal forms, gilded angels, and sculpted saints exemplify the Quito School’s fusion of Spanish baroque with local aesthetics. The overwhelming visual density evokes a mystical transition from the profane to the divine, guiding the faithful into sacred space.

Luis Alberto Acuña Museum

The Witch of Zascandil

Luis Alberto Acuña

This portrait (1991) shows the Witch of Zascandil, a figure rooted in Colombian folklore. Sharp features and widened eyes create a tense, exaggerated profile. The name Zascandil refers to a trickster or wandering mischief-maker in regional stories. The image indicates how rural mythology blends satire, fear, and ancestral belief.

Novodevichy Convent

Smolensky Cathedral

The cathedral (1524–25) rises with five domes above the convent’s snow-covered grounds, its white walls contrasted by the illuminated bell tower beside it. Inside, 16th–17th-c. frescoes follow Moscow traditions shaped by Byzantine models. Dedicated to the Smolensk Icon of the Mother of God, it functioned as the convent’s spiritual core and burial place for noblewomen, expressing close links between Orthodoxy and the ruling elite.

Museum of Tomorrow (Museu do Amanhã)

Puffed Star

Frank Stella

Installed before the Museum of Tomorrow in Rio de Janeiro (2016), this metallic sculpture by American artist Frank Stella dazzles with radiating points and mirrored planes. Its star-like form evokes cosmology and perception, inviting reflection on the interconnectedness of space, matter, and human imagination.

Sidi Bou Said

Wooden Doorway Framed by Stone and Tile

Set beneath a weathered arch of ochre stone, this traditional wooden door in Sidi Bou Said is flanked by colorful ceramic tiles in geometric patterns. The interplay of natural wood, Islamic ornament, and leafy shadows evokes a quiet elegance—where Tunisia’s architectural traditions meet the timeless language of craft and hospitality.

Ambrosiana Picture Gallery (Pinacoteca Ambrosiana)

Santa Conversazione (detail)

Ambrogio Bergognone

This panel 1490-95) features a trio of female saints bearing lilies, symbolizing purity. Adorned with gold and intricate embroidery, their garments suggest sanctity and nobility. The solemn expressions and clasped books evoke wisdom and devotion, emphasizing the fusion of holiness and human dignity in late Gothic religious art.

Church of the Society of Jesus (Iglesia de la Compañía de Jesús)

Nave and Main Altar

This nave (17th c.) is clad almost entirely in gold leaf, with barrel vaults, arches, and altarpieces covered in dense relief. Jesuit designers used gilded wood, painted panels, and sculpted saints to structure processional space and focus attention on the main altar. The repetition of arches and mudejar patterns shows how European Baroque forms merged with local carving traditions.

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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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