JEREMY HORNER IMAGES

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  • Conde Nast Traveler (Italy). Reportage on Giant buddha statues in Asia
    JeremyHorner-PublishedWork034.jpg
  • Conde Nast Traveler (Italy). Reportage on Giant buddha statues in Asia
    JeremyHorner-PublishedWork128.png
  • Conde Nast Traveler (Italy). Reportage on Giant buddha statues in Asia
    JeremyHorner-PublishedWork032.png
  • Conde Nast Traveler (Italy). Reportage on Giant buddha statues in Asia
    JeremyHorner-PublishedWork031.png
  • Conde Nast Traveler (Italy). Reportage on Giant buddha statues in Asia
    JeremyHorner-PublishedWork033.png
  • Conde Nast Traveler (Italy). Reportage on Giant buddha statues in Asia
    JeremyHorner-PublishedWork036.png
  • Conde Nast Traveler (Italy). Reportage on Giant buddha statues in Asia
    JeremyHorner-PublishedWork035.png
  • Built around 1190 AD by King Jayavarman VII, the Bayon is a Buddhist temple incorporating elements of Hindu cosmology. The Bayon Temple is believed to represent the intersection of heaven and earth, at the exact centre of Angkor Thom.<br />
<br />
It is known for its huge stone faces of the bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara, with one facing outward and keeping watch at each compass point. The curious smiling image, thought by many to be a portrait of Jayavarman VII himself, has been dubbed by some the "Mona Lisa of Southeast Asia." There are 51 smaller towers surrounding the Bayon, each with four faces of its own.
    Cambodia-Angkor046.jpg
  • Built around 1190 AD by King Jayavarman VII, the Bayon is a Buddhist temple incorporating elements of Hindu cosmology. The Bayon Temple is believed to represent the intersection of heaven and earth, at the exact centre of Angkor Thom.<br />
<br />
It is known for its huge stone faces of the bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara, with one facing outward and keeping watch at each compass point. The curious smiling image, thought by many to be a portrait of Jayavarman VII himself, has been dubbed by some the "Mona Lisa of Southeast Asia." There are 51 smaller towers surrounding the Bayon, each with four faces of its own.
    Cambodia-Angkor050.jpg
  • Built around 1190 AD by King Jayavarman VII, the Bayon is a Buddhist temple incorporating elements of Hindu cosmology. The Bayon Temple is believed to represent the intersection of heaven and earth, at the exact centre of Angkor Thom.<br />
<br />
It is known for its huge stone faces of the bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara, with one facing outward and keeping watch at each compass point. The curious smiling image, thought by many to be a portrait of Jayavarman VII himself, has been dubbed by some the "Mona Lisa of Southeast Asia." There are 51 smaller towers surrounding the Bayon, each with four faces of its own.
    Cambodia-Angkor010.jpg
  • The Bayon, Angkor Thom, Siem Reap, Cambodia<br />
<br />
Built around 1190 AD by King Jayavarman VII, the Bayon is a Buddhist temple incorporating elements of Hindu cosmology. The Bayon Temple is believed to represent the intersection of heaven and earth, at the exact centre of Angkor Thom.<br />
<br />
It is known for its huge stone faces of the bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara, with one facing outward and keeping watch at each compass point. The curious smiling image, thought by many to be a portrait of Jayavarman VII himself, has been dubbed by some the "Mona Lisa of Southeast Asia." There are 51 smaller towers surrounding the Bayon, each with four faces of its own.
    Cambodia-Angkor006.jpg
  • Built around 1190 AD by King Jayavarman VII, the Bayon is a Buddhist temple incorporating elements of Hindu cosmology. The Bayon Temple is believed to represent the intersection of heaven and earth, at the exact centre of Angkor Thom.<br />
<br />
It is known for its huge stone faces of the bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara, with one facing outward and keeping watch at each compass point. The curious smiling image, thought by many to be a portrait of Jayavarman VII himself, has been dubbed by some the "Mona Lisa of Southeast Asia." There are 51 smaller towers surrounding the Bayon, each with four faces of its own.
    Horner_Cambodia 1439.jpg
  • Built around 1190 AD by King Jayavarman VII, the Bayon is a Buddhist temple incorporating elements of Hindu cosmology. The Bayon Temple is believed to represent the intersection of heaven and earth, at the exact centre of Angkor Thom.<br />
<br />
It is known for its huge stone faces of the bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara, with one facing outward and keeping watch at each compass point. The curious smiling image, thought by many to be a portrait of Jayavarman VII himself, has been dubbed by some the "Mona Lisa of Southeast Asia." There are 51 smaller towers surrounding the Bayon, each with four faces of its own.
    Cambodia-Angkor037.jpg
  • Built around 1190 AD by King Jayavarman VII, the Bayon is a Buddhist temple incorporating elements of Hindu cosmology. The Bayon Temple is believed to represent the intersection of heaven and earth, at the exact centre of Angkor Thom.<br />
<br />
It is known for its huge stone faces of the bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara, with one facing outward and keeping watch at each compass point. The curious smiling image, thought by many to be a portrait of Jayavarman VII himself, has been dubbed by some the "Mona Lisa of Southeast Asia." There are 51 smaller towers surrounding the Bayon, each with four faces of its own.
    Cambodia-Angkor009.jpg
  • Built around 1190 AD by King Jayavarman VII, the Bayon is a Buddhist temple incorporating elements of Hindu cosmology. The Bayon Temple is believed to represent the intersection of heaven and earth, at the exact centre of Angkor Thom.<br />
<br />
It is known for its huge stone faces of the bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara, with one facing outward and keeping watch at each compass point. The curious smiling image, thought by many to be a portrait of Jayavarman VII himself, has been dubbed by some the "Mona Lisa of Southeast Asia." There are 51 smaller towers surrounding the Bayon, each with four faces of its own.
    Cambodia-Angkor016.jpg
  • Built around 1190 AD by King Jayavarman VII, the Bayon is a Buddhist temple incorporating elements of Hindu cosmology. The Bayon Temple is believed to represent the intersection of heaven and earth, at the exact centre of Angkor Thom.<br />
<br />
It is known for its huge stone faces of the bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara, with one facing outward and keeping watch at each compass point. The curious smiling image, thought by many to be a portrait of Jayavarman VII himself, has been dubbed by some the "Mona Lisa of Southeast Asia." There are 51 smaller towers surrounding the Bayon, each with four faces of its own.
    Cambodia-Angkor017.jpg
  • Built around 1190 AD by King Jayavarman VII, the Bayon is a Buddhist temple incorporating elements of Hindu cosmology. The Bayon Temple is believed to represent the intersection of heaven and earth, at the exact centre of Angkor Thom.<br />
<br />
It is known for its huge stone faces of the bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara, with one facing outward and keeping watch at each compass point. The curious smiling image, thought by many to be a portrait of Jayavarman VII himself, has been dubbed by some the "Mona Lisa of Southeast Asia." There are 51 smaller towers surrounding the Bayon, each with four faces of its own.
    Cambodia-Angkor004.jpg
  • Built around 1190 AD by King Jayavarman VII, the Bayon is a Buddhist temple incorporating elements of Hindu cosmology. The Bayon Temple is believed to represent the intersection of heaven and earth, at the exact centre of Angkor Thom.<br />
<br />
It is known for its huge stone faces of the bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara, with one facing outward and keeping watch at each compass point. The curious smiling image, thought by many to be a portrait of Jayavarman VII himself, has been dubbed by some the "Mona Lisa of Southeast Asia." There are 51 smaller towers surrounding the Bayon, each with four faces of its own.
    Cambodia-Angkor056.jpg
  • Stone-carved statues of Buddha preside over the upper levels of the magnificent Borobodr,a 9th-century Mahayana Buddhist Temple. Waisak Day (Buddha's birthday) draws pilgrim monks from all over Asia.
    Indonesia038.jpg
  • Stone-carved panels depict the life and times of the Lord Buddha on the magnificent Borobodur,a 9th-century Mahayana Buddhist Temple. Waisak Day (Buddha's birthday) draws pilgrim monks from all over Asia.
    Indonesia034.jpg
  • Waisak Day (Buddha's birthday) draws pilgrim monks from all over Asia, at Borobudur, the  imposing 9th-century Mahayana Buddhist Temple.
    Java_Borobudur 11369.jpg
  • Stone-carved panels depict the life and times of the Lord Buddha on the magnificent Borobodur,a 9th-century Mahayana Buddhist Temple. Waisak Day (Buddha's birthday) draws pilgrim monks from all over Asia.
    Indonesia021.jpg
  • The magnificent Borobodur,a 9th-century Mahayana Buddhist Temple, rises above the forest below. Waisak Day (Buddha's birthday) draws pilgrim monks from all over Asia.
    Indonesia042.jpg
  • Dharma trumpets are blown during festivities. Monks and pilgrims mix to celebrate the Lamayuru Festival 5-6 June, 2013, Lamayuru Monastery. Lamayuru Gompa (monastery) is built above the ruins of the old one, along the Srinagar-Leh highway.
    India-Pigments028.jpg
  • Portrait of a devout moslem man, moslem quarter, Varanasi.Notice the burnished forehead from prostrations to Allah.
    India-Varanasi020.jpg
  • Yoga classes at dawn at Kedar Ghat, along the banks of the sacred Ganges River at Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh.
    India-Varanasi032.jpg
  • The main bazar in the old town of Varanasi
    India-Varanasi026.jpg
  • Jat tribal women with calf,near Bhuj, Gujarat
    India-Pigments143.jpg
  • Parked cycle rickshaws during a holiday, Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh
    India-Varanasi025.jpg
  • Relaxing with a newspaper by Lal Ghat. Daily laundry activities on Lal Ghat begin at dawn.
    India-Varanasi018.jpg
  • A Jain pilgrim makes a prayer at the  Bahubali Gommateshwara Statue, Shravanabelagola
    India-Pigments020.jpg
  • Chinese Fishing Nets, Fort Cochin
    India-Pigments017.jpg
  • Kushti wrestlers after bathing in the Ganges following their dawn sesssion.
    India-Varanasi016.jpg
  • Within the old city of Jodhpur the homes are painted predominantly blue, apparently to ward off mosquitos.
    India-Rajasthan359.jpg
  • Yoga classes at dawn at Kedar Ghat, along the banks of the sacred Ganges River at Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh.
    India-Varanasi031.jpg
  • Indian boy selling flowers for puja, at dawn on the ganges.Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh, India
    India-Varanasi015.jpg
  • Daily laundry activities on Lal Ghat begin at dawn.
    India-Varanasi010.jpg
  • Streetscene with goat, old town, Varanasi
    India-Varanasi045.jpg
  • Sarees and other garments are woven, bleached then dyed before being printed in the town of Pali, before being distributed all over the subcontinent. It is Jodhpur's nearest neighbour across the desert and was an important source of industry until the government closed it down due to the chronic pollution from the dying process into the groundwater.
    India-Rajasthan001.jpg
  • Friday prayers at Jama Masjid, also known as Jumah Mosque, Ahmedabad. Built in 1424 during the reign of Ahmad Shah I by demolishing the Bhadrakali Temple.
    India-Pigments091.jpg
  • The gang of men from Barsana arrive to raid the Temple of Shriji, during Lathmar Holi. Men from Barsana raid the town whilst being assaulted with coloured water sprayed from rooftops, they are beaten by Nandgaon's women with large sticks and smeared with Holi coloured powders in a counterpart festival to the one held in Barsana on the previous day. The spectacle is a riot of colour amidst frenzied celebrations.
    India-Pigments035.jpg
  • The old city of Jodhpur
    India_Holi 16.jpg
  • Jodhpur, Rajasthan
    Rajasthan-22Jodhpur-1226.jpg
  • Holi celebrations in Vrindavarn, a town left high and dry from the Yamuna River.
    Holi-Vrindavarn-100.jpg
  • The settlement of Kumartuli - or "potter locality" - lies besidethe Ganges in the older, northern part of Calcutta.Over 300 years old, today around 150 families live here, earning a living by sculpting idols for Durga Puja and various other festivals. Gangamaati - mud from the Ganges - is also used to make clay, and along with straw and bamboo the statues are crafted by hand.
    India-Calcutta027.jpg
  • The settlement of Kumartuli - or "potter locality" - lies besidethe Ganges in the older, northern part of Calcutta.Over 300 years old, today around 150 families live here, earning a living by sculpting idols for Durga Puja and various other festivals. Gangamaati - mud from the Ganges - is also used to make clay, and along with straw and bamboo the statues are crafted by hand.
    India-Calcutta014.jpg
  • Jat tribal girls on their way home, near Bhuj, Gujarat
    India-Pigments047.jpg
  • Jodhpur, Rajasthan
    India-2022Calcutta-7133.jpg
  • Men from Barsana raid the neighbouring town of Nandgaon and are beaten by Nandgaon's women with large sticks and smeared with Holi coloured powders in a counterpart festival to the one held in Barsana on the previous day. The spectacle is a riot of colour amidst frenzied celebrations.
    Holi_Nandgaon-673.jpg
  • Moslem boys at prayer class in the muslim neighborhood around the Nakhoda Mosque is a labyrinth of bazars and winding alleyways.
    India-Calcutta020.jpg
  • A sadhu smeared with with the white ashes of cremated hindus.
    India-Varanasi007.jpg
  • The settlement of Kumartuli - or "potter locality" - lies besidethe Ganges in the older, northern part of Calcutta.Over 300 years old, today around 150 families live here, earning a living by sculpting idols for Durga Puja and various other festivals. Gangamaati - mud from the Ganges - is also used to make clay, and along with straw and bamboo the statues are crafted by hand.
    India-Calcutta003.jpg
  • “Benaras is older than history, older than tradition, older even than legend and looks twice as old as all of them put together”           Mark Twain
    India-Varanasi003.jpg
  • Jodhpur, Rajasthan
    Rajasthan-22Jodhpur-38.jpg
  • Rows of trees shade a farm worker near Jodhpur, Rajasthan
    India-Pigments133.jpg
  • The settlement of Kumartuli - or "potter locality" - lies beside the Ganges in the older, northern part of Calcutta.Over 300 years old, today around 150 families live here, earning a living by sculpting idols for Durga Puja and various other festivals. Gangamaati - mud from the Ganges - is also used to make clay, and along with straw and bamboo the statues are crafted by hand.
    India-Calcutta034.jpg
  • Daily laundry activities on Lal Ghat begin at dawn.
    India-Varanasi011.jpg
  • A sadhu, or holy man, becomes embroiled in Holi in the town of Nandgaon, where India's spring festival is at is most boisterous.
    Portraits-Collection001.jpg
  • Sarees and other garments are woven, bleached then dyed before being printed in the town of Pali, before being distributed all over the subcontinent. It is Jodhpur's nearest neighbour across the desert and was an important source of industry until the government closed it down due to the chronic pollution from the dying process into the groundwater.
    India-Rajasthan007.jpg
  • A woman drying laundry near Gaay Ghat with the railway bridge over the Ganges beyond.
    India-Varanasi008.jpg
  • Dawn breaks over the Ganges at Varanasi as boatloads of pilgrims jostle for position.
    India-Varanasi001.tiff
  • Sarees and other garments are woven, bleached then dyed before being printed in the town of Pali, before being distributed all over the subcontinent. It is Jodhpur's nearest neighbour across the desert and was an important source of industry until the government closed it down due to the chronic pollution from the dying process into the groundwater.
    India-Rajasthan005.tiff
  • Women of Nangdaon wear locally embroidered sarees during their annual Holi day. Men from Barsana raid the town whilst being assaulted with coloured water sprayed from rooftops, they are beaten by Nandgaon's women with large sticks and smeared with Holi coloured powders in a counterpart festival to the one held in Barsana on the previous day. The spectacle is a riot of colour amidst frenzied celebrations.
    India-Sarees006.jpg
  • Holi in the town of Barsana, where India's spring festival is at is most boisterous during Lathmar Holi.
    Portraits-Collection042.jpg
  • Dawn at Lal Ghat overlooking the Ganges, Varanasi, India
    India-Varanasi009.jpg
  • A wedding takes a turn around the roundabout, Amritsar, Punjab
    India-Pigments049.jpg
  • The muslim neighbourhood around the Nakhoda Mosque is a labyrinth of bazars and winding alleyways.
    India-Calcutta006.jpg
  • Sarees and other garments are woven, bleached then dyed before being printed in the town of Pali, before being distributed all over the subcontinent. It is Jodhpur's nearest neighbour across the desert and was an important source of industry until the government closed it down due to the chronic pollution from the dying process into the groundwater.
    India-Rajasthan035.jpg
  • Informal cricket games occur spontaneously in India and Varanasi is no exception, in spite of its unlikely streetplan.
    India-Varanasi047.jpg
  • The settlement of Kumartuli - or "potter locality" - lies beside the Ganges in the older, northern part of Calcutta.Over 300 years old, today around 150 families live here, earning a living by sculpting idols for Durga Puja and various other festivals. Gangamaati - mud from the Ganges - is also used to make clay, and along with straw and bamboo the statues are crafted by hand.
    India-Calcutta036.jpg
  • Revellers gather at the Shriji Temple (Laadli Sarkar Mahal),in Barsana, during Lathmar Holi, smeared with coloured powder. It is held during a full moon and the town becomes swamped with tourists and revellers making the pilgrimage for a glimpse of "God", the Lord Shiva, who is revealed inside the temple only fleetingly.
    Portraits-Collection189.jpg
  • Mehrangarh Fort dominates the "blue" city of Jodhpur, and provides spectacular views.
    India-Holi 013.jpg
  • Coconut plantation near Mysore/Mysuru, Karnataka
    India-Pigments059.jpg
  • Yellow cows are a common sight during January and February in India's southern states of Kerala and Tamil Nadu where the Sankranthi or Pongol festival is celebrated. The festival occurs every January 14th-18th and is a thanksgiving ceremony for the rice harvest.
    India-Pigments087.jpg
  • A group of mainly women gather to watch the Lathmar Holi festivities, Nandgaon, Uttar Pradesh
    India-Pigments142.jpg
  • Kumartuli is the colourful traditional potters’ quarter in northern Kolkata (formerly Calcutta). Calcutta is the capital of India's West Bengal state. Founded as an East India Company trading post, it was India's capital under the British Raj from 1773–1911.
    India-Calcutta062.jpg
  • As the sun rises over the Ganges, Kedar Ghat is bathed in warm sunlight, Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh
    India-Varanasi006.jpg
  • Horner_Holi031.jpg
  • Men from Barsana raid the neighbouring town of Nandgaon and are beaten by Nandgaon's women with large sticks and smeared with Holi coloured powders in a counterpart festival to the one held in Barsana on the previous day. The spectacle is a riot of colour amidst frenzied celebrations.
    India-Sarees030.jpg
  • Pilgrims to the Pushkar Fair,
    India-Pigments073.jpg
  • Hindu sadhus travelling on pilgrimage, Jansi Railway Station,at night
    Imgtt5t125.jpg
  • The settlement of Kumartuli - or "potter locality" - lies besidethe Ganges in the older, northern part of Calcutta.Over 300 years old, today around 150 families live here, earning a living by sculpting idols for Durga Puja and various other festivals. Gangamaati - mud from the Ganges - is also used to make clay, and along with straw and bamboo the statues are crafted by hand.
    India-Calcutta015.jpg
  • Malik Ghat wholesale flower market lies on the East bank of the Hooghly River below the Howrah Bridge in Calcutta, West Bengal.
    India-Calcutta104.jpg
  • Railway workers shovel coal in a Varanasi rail yard
    India-Varanasi024.jpg
  • Revellers gather at the Shriji Temple (Laadli Sarkar Mahal), during Lathmar Holi, smeared with coloured powder. It is held during a full moon and the town becomes swamped with tourists and revellers making the pilgrimage for a glimpse of "God", the Lord Shiva, who is revealed inside the temple only fleetingly.
    India-Pigments006.jpg
  • Policeman on duty in Barsana village during Lathmar Ho ,Vrindavarn region, Uttar Pradesh
    Portraits-Collection004.jpg
  • Holi in the town of Barsana, where India's spring festival is at is most boisterous during Lathmar Holi.
    Portraits-Collection035.jpg
  • Sarees and other garments are woven, bleached then dyed before being printed in the town of Pali, before being distributed all over the subcontinent. It is Jodhpur's nearest neighbour across the desert and was an important source of industry until the government closed it down due to the chronic pollution from the dying process into the groundwater.
    India-Sarees014.jpg
  • Malik Ghat wholesale flower market lies on the East bank of the Hooghly River below the Howrah Bridge in Calcutta, West Bengal.
    India-Calcutta012.jpg
  • The muslim neighbourhood around the Nakhoda Mosque is a labyrinth of bazars and winding alleyways.
    India-Calcutta002.jpg
  • Timber bazar, Jorasanko district, Calcutta (Kolkata)
    India-Calcutta095.jpg
  • Kumartuli is the colourful traditional potters’ quarter in northern Kolkata (formerly Calcutta). Calcutta is the capital of India's West Bengal state. Founded as an East India Company trading post, it was India's capital under the British Raj from 1773–1911.
    India-Calcutta100.jpg
  • Jodhpur, Rajasthan
    Rajasthan-22Jodhpur-1098.jpg
  • Coconuts, central market, Mysore/Mysuru, Karnataka
    India-Pigments100.jpg
  • The gang of men from Barsana arrive to raid the Temple of Shriji, during Lathmar Holi. Men from Barsana raid the town whilst being assaulted with coloured water sprayed from rooftops, they are beaten by Nandgaon's women with large sticks and smeared with Holi coloured powders in a counterpart festival to the one held in Barsana on the previous day. The spectacle is a riot of colour amidst frenzied celebrations.
    India-Pigments147.jpg
  • Jain temple at Keshariaji.
    India_Udaipur 1388.jpg
  • The gang of men from Barsana arrive to raid the Temple of Shriji, during Lathmar Holi. Men from Barsana raid the town whilst being assaulted with coloured water sprayed from rooftops, they are beaten by Nandgaon's women with large sticks and smeared with Holi coloured powders in a counterpart festival to the one held in Barsana on the previous day. The spectacle is a riot of colour amidst frenzied celebrations.
    India-Pigments085.jpg
  • Hindu shrine, Mysore, Karnataka
    India-Pigments060.jpg
  • Sri Harmandir Sahib.<br />
The Golden Temple is a gurdwara located in the city of Amritsar, Punjab, India. It is the preeminent spiritual site of Sikhism. The gurdwara is built around a man-made pool that was completed by the fourth Sikh Guru, Guru Ram Das, in 1577.
    India-Pigments061.jpg
  • Portrait of a victim of Lathmar Holi revelry, Barsana. Lathmar Holi is held firstly in the town of Barsana, near Vrindavarn in Uttar Pradesh. The following day reprisals are made in the neighbouring village of Nandgaon, where India's spring festival is at is most boisterous.
    Portraits-Collection027.jpg
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