国家地理杂志图片
欢迎感兴趣的朋友将图片的介绍译成中文Myanmar Boy Bathing, Meiktila, Myanmar (Burma), 1984
Photograph by James L. Stanfield
"Near Mandalay, in the village of Meiktila, I saw this young boy bathing by a river bank. I am always looking for faces, light, some kind of mood, something that will move the reader. Although this one was just beautiful, it did not appear in the magazine."
—From Eye of the Beholder: The Photography of James L. Stanfield, 1998 Bhutan Monk, Tongsa, Bhutan, 1991
Photograph by James L. Stanfield
At the time of this photograph, senior monk Tharpa Tashi had been confined to the Tongsa Dzong ("Tongsa Fortress") watchtower for six years. He was to remain there for four more years, when he was to retire at 60.
Empty Quarter Desert, Oman, 1995
Photograph by James L. Stanfield
Late afternoon light glints off the sand dunes in the Rub’ al Khali (Empty Quarter) desert. Puerto Ayora Albatross, Ecuador, 1999
Photograph by Stuart Franklin
"Imagine Puerto Ayora without fishing and tourist boats and that concrete albatross , and you get a picture of the pristine South American islands Charles Darwin visited in 1835. But the picture has since been developed."
—From "Galápagos: Paradise in Peril," April 1999, National Geographic magazine
Sari and Catsuit, Mumbai (Bombay), India, 1999
Photograph by Joe McNally
"They’re well-off, well-educated, widely traveled, fluent in several languages. Nakshatra Reddy is a biochemist, married to a prosperous businessman in Mumbai (formerly Bombay). Her daughter Meghana (in a PVC catsuit of her own design) is a model and former host on the music video channel VTV. Another daughter models full-time, and a third works for Swatch, the trendy Swiss watchmaker. They are elites, and the global marketplace for goods, information, and style is their corner store."
—From "A World Together," August 1999, National Geographic magazine Neversink Pit, Alabama, 1998
Photograph by George Steinmetz
"The limestone walls of Neversink, a 162-foot-deep open-air pit, provide habitat for a rare fern. ’The frontiers,’ wrote Henry David Thoreau, ’are not east or west, north or south, but wherever a man fronts a fact.’"
—From "Making Sense of the Millennium," January 1998, National Geographic magazine Arles, France, 1997
Photograph by Lynn Johnson
"Lit by a vigorous sun, a sheet casts a long shadow on a building in Arles, an ancient town in the south of France where van Gogh journeyed to seek luminous colors like the ones in Japanese prints."
—From "Vincent van Gogh: Lullaby in Color," October 1997, National Geographic magazine :lol
很好,浮想联翩~~
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