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  • Farmer Joel Salatin (with cat in lap)  discusses business for the next day with one of his apprentices at his farm in Swoope, Virginia. (Joel Salatin is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)
    USA_071018_477_xw.jpg
  • Family cat at Wiezowski/Ledochowicz family All Saints Day dinner. Zadzim, Poland.
    POL_031101_024_x.jpg
  • (MODEL RELEASED IMAGE). Delphine Le Moine, a dance student at the Centre International de Danse Jazz Rick Odums, shares lunch at home with her sister Laetitia, a high school student, and her cat in the family dining room in the Paris suburb of Montreuil, France. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    FRA04_8336_xf1brw.jpg
  • (MODEL RELEASED IMAGE). The Le Moine family in the living room of their apartment in the Paris suburb of Montreuil, with a week's worth of food. Michel Le Moine and Eve Le Moine,  stand behind their daughters, Delphine (standing), and Laetitia (holding spaghetti and Coppelius the cat). The Le Moine family is one of the thirty families featured in the book Hungry Planet: What the World Eats (p. 124).
    FRA04_0001_xxf1rw.jpg
  • Recoletta Cemetery, Buenos Aires
    ARG_110110_011_x.jpg
  • Recoletta Cemetery, Buenos Aires
    ARG_110110_010_x.jpg
  • Hollmann Sturm family in Hamburg, Germany photographed for the Hungry Planet: What I Eat project with a week's worth of food. Model Released.
    GER_130612_303_x.jpg
  • The daughter-in-law of rice farmer Nguyen Van Theo cuts up pork for lunch at their shared homestead in Tho Quang village, Vietnam. (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)  Nguyen Van Theo and his family still eat traditional Vietnamese foods.
    VIE_081220_032_xw.jpg
  • Hollmann Sturm family in Hamburg, Germany photographed for the Hungry Planet: What I Eat project with a week's worth of food. Model Released.
    GER_130612_303_x.jpg
  • Menzel-D'Aluisio compound, Napa Valley, CA
    USA_090504_025_x.jpg
  • Joel Salatin, a farmer and author, relaxes after a long day at his farm in Virginia's Shenandoah Valley. (Joel Salatin is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)  MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_071018_677_xw.jpg
  • Menzel and D'Aluisio house, Napa Valley, CA
    USA_101004_005_x.jpg
  • A lioness lying in the grass at dawn in Kruger National Park. Northern Transvaal, South Africa.
    SAF_07_xs.jpg
  • Not everyone has a place to live in Manila, Philippines. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    PHI04_9752_xf1b.jpg
  • Menzel and D'Aluisio house, Napa Valley, CA
    USA_101004_015_x.jpg
  • Menzel and D'Aluisio house, Napa Valley, CA
    USA_101004_026_x.jpg
  • Menzel and D'Aluisio house, Napa Valley, CA
    USA_101004_011_x.jpg
  • Menzel-D'Aluisio guesthouse, Napa Valley, CA
    USA_100701_001_x.jpg
  • Astrid Holmann of the Hollmann Sturm family in Hamburg, Germany with her daughter Lillith Sturm. They were photographed for the Hungry Planet: What I Eat project with a week's worth of food in June. Model Released.
    GER_130612_034_x.jpg
  • Astrid Holmann of the Hollmann Sturm family in Hamburg, Germany with her daughter Lillith Sturm. They were photographed for the Hungry Planet: What I Eat project with a week's worth of food in June. Model Released.
    GER_130612_034_x.jpg
  • CT Scan of a horse's head at a California Veterinary teaching hospital. Veterinarian School, University of California, Davis. MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_ANML_12_xs.jpg
  • Menzel and D'Aluisio house, Napa Valley, CA
    USA_101004_045_x.jpg
  • Menzel-D'Aluisio compound, Napa Valley, CA
    USA_090504_014_x.jpg
  • Guerrino Lovato, mask maker, in his studio in Venice, Italy during Winter Carnival.
    ITA_39_xs.jpg
  • The Schmidt family eats outside their home near Cologne, Germany. MODEL RELEASED.
    GER_04_xs.jpg
  • The Tiger Balm gardens developed by wealthy businessman Aw Boon Haw. Hong Kong, China.
    CHI_32_xs.jpg
  • Butter churning, cooking, and child care in Namgay and Nalim's home in Shingkhey, Bhutan. Nalim and her daughter Sangay care for the children and work in their mustard, rice, and wheat fields. Namgay, who has a hunched back and a clubfoot, grinds grain for neighbors with a small mill his family purchased from the government. From Peter Menzel's Material World Project.
    Bhu_mw_714_xs.jpg
  • Menzel and D'Aluisio house, Napa Valley, CA
    USA_101004_008_x.jpg
  • Faith D'Aluisio with broken leg, Napa Valley, CA
    USA_100624_55_x.jpg
  • Menzel-D'Aluisio compound, Napa Valley, CA
    USA_090504_029_x.jpg
  • Menzel-D'Aluisio compound, Napa Valley, CA
    USA_090504_023_x.jpg
  • Icelandic sculptor Ilmur Stefnsdottir and her partner, the actor Valur Freyr Einarsson. Ilmur, pregnant with her fourth child, is experimenting with a piece of her performance art; focusing on the connection between people and objects and using common objects in an uncommon fashion.  "People misunderstand objects in their environment," she says, "I'm exploring visually how this happens." Valur occasionally acts in performances that center on his partner's artworks; most recently in a show called Common Nonsense that they and a troupe of actors performed in Reykjavik, Stockholm, and London. MODEL RELEASED.
    ICE_9969_rwx.jpg
  • A male lion lying in the grass at dawn in Kruger National Park. Northern Transvaal, South Africa.
    SAF_08_xs.jpg
  • In the town of Oak Bluffs on Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts.
    USA_030611_005_x.jpg
  • A woman walks past a pile of garbage at Shari Khayyamiya, a tentmakers street and market area in Cairo, Egypt.
    EGY_080326_134_xw.jpg
  • Relaxing in his office at the Mechanical Engineering Lab in Tsukuba, Japan, Takanori Shibata pats a derivative product from his research: a robot cat named Tama. Shibata is a roboticist who studied with MIT robot guru Rodney Brooks before heading his own lab. Omron, a Japanese engineering company, applied Shibata's discoveries to produce Tama, a mechanical pet with sensors beneath its fur that react to sound and touch.  Omron says it has no plans as of yet to commercialize its robot cats. From the book Robo sapiens: Evolution of a New Species, page 227.
    Japan_JAP_rs_33_qxxs.jpg
  • A scan operator monitors a patient who is having a CAT (computer-aided tomography) scan of a brain tumor. (1983)
    USA_SCI_MED_13_xs.jpg
  • CAT (computer-aided tomography) scans of a brain tumor. (1983)
    USA_SCI_MED_11_xs.jpg
  • The Le Moine family in the living room of their apartment in the Paris suburb of Montreuil, with a week's worth of food. Michel Le Moine, 50, and Eve Le Moine, 50, stand behind their daughters, Delphine, 20 (standing), and Laetitia, 16 (holding spaghetti and Coppelius the cat). From the book Hungry Planet: What the World Eats (Model Released)
    FRA04_0001_xxf1rw.JPG
  • The City Cat tourist boat cruises by downtown Brisbane, Australia. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    AUS04_0259_xf1b.jpg
  • (MODEL RELEASED IMAGE). Delphine Le Moine, a dance student at the Centre International de Danse Jazz Rick Odums, makes lunch at home with her sister Laetitia, a high school student, who holds their cat in the family kitchen in the Paris suburb of Montreuil, France. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    FRA04_2639_xf1brw.jpg
  • Cryonics experiment on a hamster conducted in a garage laboratory in Berkeley, California, by Paul Segall (left) and Sternberg. Cryonics is a speculative life support technology that seeks to preserve human life in a state that will be viable and treatable by future medicine. Cryonics involves the freezing of whole human bodies, organs or pet cats & dogs, and their preservation in liquid nitrogen to await a future thaw. MODEL RELEASED 1988..
    USA_SCI_CRY_16_xs.jpg
  • USA_SCI_CRY_08_xs .Cryonics: Dr Avi Ben-Abraham, of Trans Time Inc., a cryonics company of Oakland, California. Cryonics is a speculative life support technology that seeks to preserve human life in a state that will be viable and treatable by future medicine. Cryonics involves freezing whole human bodies, organs or pet cats & dogs, in liquid nitrogen (tank in background) to await a future thaw. Cryonicists claim that medical science in the future may offer a cure for cancer or the restoration of youth, and that their methods of preservation might offer some people an opportunity to benefit from these advances. Conventional cryobiology methods for freezing organs (for organ transplants, for example) are plagued by problems of intracellular ice crystal formation, which destroys their component cells. Dr. Ben Abraham is reading ?the Prospect of Immortality? and is wearing a bracelet that identifies him as a cryonic patient should he be found dead. MODEL RELEASED 1987.
    USA_SCI_CRY_08_xs.jpg
  • Cryonics: Dr Avi Ben-Abraham, of Trans Time Inc., a cryonics company of Oakland, California. Cryonics is a speculative life support technology that seeks to preserve human life in a state that will be viable and treatable by future medicine. Cryonics involves the freezing of whole human bodies, organs or pet cats & dogs, and their preservation in liquid nitrogen (background) to await a future thaw. Cryonicists claim that medical science in the future may offer a cure for cancer or the restoration of youth, and that their methods of preservation might offer some people an opportunity to benefit from these advances. Conventional cryobiology methods for freezing organs (for organ transplants, for example) are plagued by problems of intracellular ice crystal formation, which destroys their component cells. Dr. Ben Abraham wears a bracelet that identifies him as a cryonic patient should he be found dead. MODEL RELEASED 1987..
    USA_SCI_CRY_07_xs.jpg
  • Cryonics: Dr Avi Ben-Abraham, of Trans Time Inc., a cryonics company of Oakland, California. Cryonics is a speculative life support technology that seeks to preserve human life in a state that will be viable and treatable by future medicine. Cryonics involves the freezing of whole human bodies, organs or pet cats & dogs, and their preservation in liquid nitrogen (background) to await a future thaw. Cryonicists claim that medical science in the future may offer a cure for cancer or the restoration of youth, and that their methods of preservation might offer some people an opportunity to benefit from these advances. Conventional cryobiology methods for freezing organs (for organ transplants, for example) are plagued by problems of intracellular ice crystal formation, which destroys their component cells. Dr. Ben Abraham wears a bracelet that identifies him as a cryonic patient should he be found dead. MODEL RELEASED 1987.
    USA_SCI_CRY_06_xs.jpg
  • Cryonics: Art Quaif (seated at computer) and a colleague at Trans Time Inc., a cryonics company in Oakland, California. In the stainless steel vats full of liquid nitrogen are dead human bodies. Cryonics is a speculative life support technology that seeks to preserve human life in a state that will be viable and treatable by future medicine. Cryonics involves the freezing of whole human bodies, organs or pet cats & dogs, and their preservation in liquid nitrogen to await a future thaw. Cryonicists claim that medical science in the future may offer a cure for cancer or the restoration of youth, and that their methods of preservation might offer some people an opportunity to benefit from these advances. Conventional cryobiology methods for freezing organs (for organ transplants, for example) are plagued by problems of intracellular ice crystal formation, which destroys their component cells. MODEL RELEASED 1987..
    USA_SCI_CRY_05_xs.jpg
  • The modest premises of Trans Time Inc., a cryonics company in Oakland, California. Cryonics is a speculative life support technology that seeks to preserve human life in a state that will be viable and treatable by future medicine. Cryonics involves the freezing of whole human bodies, organs or pet cats & dogs, to await a future thaw & a potential second opportunity to live. A recently dead body would be frozen in stages, firstly down to -110 degrees Fahrenheit (using dry ice) and then down to -320 F (in liquid nitrogen). During this process, blood is replaced with a substitute mixed with glycerol, to prevent formation of ice crystals. Intracellular ice formation causes severe damage to organs & tissues, and is a major obstacle in the mainstream development of cryobiology science. MODEL RELEASED 1988.
    USA_SCI_CRY_02_xs.jpg
  • Cryonics experiment on a hamster conducted in a garage laboratory in Berkeley, California. Cryonics is a speculative life support technology that seeks to preserve human life in a state that will be viable and treatable by future medicine. Cryonics involves the freezing of whole human bodies, organs or pet cats & dogs, and their preservation in liquid nitrogen to await a future thaw.  1988.
    USA_SCI_CRY_14_xs.jpg
  • Cryonics experiments: laboratory re-agent bottles used by Paul Segall, of Berkeley, California, in his cryonics experiments that involved freezing animals after replacing their blood with a blood substitute solution, and then bringing them back to life. Cryonics is a speculative life support technology that seeks to preserve human life in a state that will be viable and treatable by future medicine. Cryonics involves the freezing of whole human bodies, organs, or pet cats & dogs, and their preservation in liquid nitrogen to await a future thaw. Cryonicists claim that medical science in the future may offer a cure for cancer or the restoration of youth, and that their methods of preservation might offer some people an opportunity to benefit from these advances. Conventional cryobiology methods for freezing organs (for organ transplants, for example) are plagued by problems of intracellular ice crystal formation, which destroys organs.  1988..
    USA_SCI_CRY_01_xs.jpg

Peter Menzel Photography

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