Catégorie : photo

  • Gallerie de photos {keyword

    Cuba diffère des systèmes politiques européens où les partis investissent des candidats. Les personnes autorisées à se présenter aux scrutins sont sélectionnées par la Commission nationale de candidature, qui effectue ses choix sur la base de critères comme l’« éthique » et le « patriotisme » des candidats, ainsi que leur « histoire révolutionnaire »

    Havana, Cuba
    cuba
    Image by Iker Merodio
    Habana, Kuba.

    Mogotes – Parque Nacional De Viñales – Cuba – IMG_3684
    cuba
    Image by Patxi64
    Mogotes en el Parque Nacional De Viñales
    Cuba

    Copyright Notice
    (C) Francis LARREDE Photography – All Rights Reserved
    Use without permission is illegal.

    If You Want To Use A Pic Contact Me At: [email protected]

    Thanks for looking and all your comments !!!!

    Avec le cadavre du « comandante », on enterrerait ainsi paisiblement et sans remords, une sorte d’accident dans la chronologie cubaine. En vérité cette perspective ne semble pas très réaliste : il sera sans doute malaisé de rayer d’un trait de plume une expérience aussi radicale, ne serait ce que parce que Cuba a accumulé un retard économique considérable pendant cette période.

  • Vacances à cuba

    Cuba se présente comme un pays socialiste, et se veut être une république unitaire des ouvriers et paysans et une république parlementaire – où le Parti communiste est le seul parti politique reconnu par la Constitution, qui le désigne comme « la force dirigeante supérieure de la société et de l’État ».

    Cuba, april 2005
    cuba
    Image by Martha de Jong-Lantink
    Santiago de Cuba, een taxi…….!

    Cuba sans Fidel Castro ? Depuis un certain temps toutes les interrogations et les prévisions semblent se concentrer autour d’un seul événement : la disparition de celui qui a personnalisé la révolution cubaine pendant près d’un demi siècle. La mort de Castro serait la clé de l’évolution, ou de la disparition, d’un système collectiviste et autoritaire qui régente l’île depuis 1959.

  • Vacances à cuba

    Cuba se présente comme un pays socialiste, et se veut être une république unitaire des ouvriers et paysans et une république parlementaire – où le Parti communiste est le seul parti politique reconnu par la Constitution, qui le désigne comme « la force dirigeante supérieure de la société et de l’État ».

    Jose Marti Airport_Cuba 010
    cuba
    Image by hoyasmeg
    First picture on Cuban soil.

    used at rutas.excite.es/noticias/328/Descubre-como-y-con-que-comp…

    Indira Reyes (Havana, Cuba)
    cuba
    Image by BasBoerman
    This photograph has been taken during a photography workshop with Dan Callis in Havana, Cuba.

    For more information: www.havanaworkshops.com

    cuba 2009
    cuba
    Image by Swem Media Center, College of William and Mary

    Cuba sans Fidel Castro ? Depuis un certain temps toutes les interrogations et les prévisions semblent se concentrer autour d’un seul événement : la disparition de celui qui a personnalisé la révolution cubaine pendant près d’un demi siècle. La mort de Castro serait la clé de l’évolution, ou de la disparition, d’un système collectiviste et autoritaire qui régente l’île depuis 1959.

  • Images de paysage cuba

    Cuba se présente comme un pays socialiste, et se veut être une république unitaire des ouvriers et paysans et une république parlementaire – où le Parti communiste est le seul parti politique reconnu par la Constitution, qui le désigne comme « la force dirigeante supérieure de la société et de l’État ».

    Fires in Cuba
    cuba
    Image by NASA Goddard Photo and Video
    NASA image captured by MODIS on the Aqua satellite on April 2, 2010.

    A number of fires dot Cuba in this image, captured by the MODIS on the Aqua satellite on April 2, 2010. The fires are marked in red; some of them show smoke plumes, like the one near the eastern part ofthe island.. Most likely this is a mix of relatively small and are likely to be a mixture of prescribed and wild fires.

    The waters in this image are jewel-like: turquoise, bright blue, and emerald green near the islands, as well as the deeper blue of the Gulf of Mexico (left) and the Atlantic Ocean (right). The brighter colors surrounding the Bahamas (the islands north of Cuba) are caused by the relatively shallow waters over the Little and Great Bahama Banks, which are shelves of land that were submerged as the continental glaciers of the last ice age melted. The brightly-colored waters around Cuba and Florida’s tip (visible at the top of the image) could be a consequence of shallow waters, but could also be colored by a larger presence of microscopic marine organisms, such as algae and phytoplankton, which lend a darker-green tinge to the water.

    To see more information related to this image go to: modis.gsfc.nasa.gov/gallery/individual.php?db_date=2010-0…

    NASA/GSFC/Jeff Schmaltz/MODIS Land Rapid Response Team

    NASA Goddard Space Flight Center is home to the nation’s largest organization of combined scientists, engineers and technologists that build spacecraft, instruments and new technology to study the Earth, the sun, our solar system, and the universe.

    Creole Choir of Cuba
    cuba
    Image by Stuart Madeley
    Performing at WOMAD Charlton Park on Sunday 31st July 2011

    At home in Cuba the choir is known as Grupo Vocal Desandann (the Descendants’ Choir) referring to their Creole ancestry and heritage which originated in Haiti. They performed beautiful harmonies and solos in the warm glow of the sun setting over Charlton Park.

    The rest of my shots from WOMAD 2011 are here
    www.flickr.com/photos/stuartmadeley/sets/7215762730707539…

    « The best pina colada in Cuba »,
    cuba
    Image by andreakw
    according to the staff at the Parque Josone bar. It was delicious but I would have liked it more without the liberal layer of fresh cinnamon. And on that note, we end the set and fly home to a Toronto winter.

    Varadero, Cuba

    Cuba sans Fidel Castro ? Depuis un certain temps toutes les interrogations et les prévisions semblent se concentrer autour d’un seul événement : la disparition de celui qui a personnalisé la révolution cubaine pendant près d’un demi siècle. La mort de Castro serait la clé de l’évolution, ou de la disparition, d’un système collectiviste et autoritaire qui régente l’île depuis 1959.

  • Vacances à cuba

    Cuba se présente comme un pays socialiste, et se veut être une république unitaire des ouvriers et paysans et une république parlementaire – où le Parti communiste est le seul parti politique reconnu par la Constitution, qui le désigne comme « la force dirigeante supérieure de la société et de l’État ».

    Cuba, Havana
    cuba
    Image by hdes.copeland
    hotel santander Havana Cuba

    Borrowed from the web. Copyrights may apply.

    Photo and text posed on 1 February 2008
    Revised: 3 February 2011
    Copyright reference: image borrowed from the web for educational purposes only, copyrights may apply

    Aujourd’hui encore Cuba n’a probablement pas retrouvé son niveau de vie de 1989, lorsque l’Union Soviétique subventionnait généreusement sa tête de pont dans le golfe du Mexique. Les années 1990 ont été une décennie perdue pour l’économie cubaine qui a fait un bond en arrière de dix ans.

  • Gallerie de photos {keyword

    Cuba se présente comme un pays socialiste, et se veut être une république unitaire des ouvriers et paysans et une république parlementaire – où le Parti communiste est le seul parti politique reconnu par la Constitution, qui le désigne comme « la force dirigeante supérieure de la société et de l’État ».

    More Cuba, Dec 2011 – 040
    cuba
    Image by Ed Yourdon
    This is a second set of a couple hundred photos taken in Havana, Cuba in December 2011. The first set, which included what I felt were the best 100 photos of the 3500+ images, was uploaded earlier. You can find it here on Flickr

    One of many horse-and-carriage rides available in Havana, along with the pedi-cabs, mini-taxis, and vintage-1950s cars being used as taxis. The horse-and-carriage arrangement was mostly favored by tourists, as you might imagine…

    ***********************

    As I suggested in my first set of Cuba photos on Flickr, the notion of traveling to Cuba is — at least for many Americans today — probably like that of traveling to North Korea. It’s off-limits, forbidden by the government — and frankly, why would anyone bother? But for someone like me, who spent his childhood in the Cold War era of the 1950s, and who went off to college just after Castro took power, and just before the Bay of Pigs and the Cuban missile crisis, the notion of traveling to Cuba has entirely different overtones.

    And yet Cuba is only 90 miles away from Key West (as we were reminded so often in the 1960s), and its climate is presumably no different than a dozen of Caribbean islands I’ve visited over the years. Numerous friends have made quasi-legal trips to Cuba over the years, flying in from Canada or Mexico, and they’ve all returned with fabulous pictures and great stories of a vibrant, colorful country. So, when the folks at the Santa Fe Photographic Workshops sent out a notice in November 2011, announcing a series of photo workshops in Havana, we couldn’t resist the temptation to sign up.

    Getting into Cuba turned out to be trivial: an overnight stay in Miami, a 45-minute chartered flight operated by American Airlines, and customs/immigration formalities that turned out to be cursory or non-existent. By mid-afternoon, our group was checked into the Parque Central Hotel in downtown Havana — where the rooms were spacious, the service was friendly, the food was reasonably tasty, the rum was delicious, and the Internet was … well, slow and expensive.

    We had been warned that that some of our American conveniences — like credit cards — would not be available, and we were prepared for a fairly spartan week. But no matter how prepared we might have been intellectually, it takes a while to adjust to a land with no Skype, no Blackberry service, no iPhone service, no phone-based Twitter, Facebook, or Google+. I was perfectly happy that there were no Burger Kings, no Pizza Huts, no Wendys, no Starbuck’s, and MacDonalds. There was Coke (classic), but no Diet Coke (or Coke Light). There were also no police sirens, no ambulance sirens, and no church bells. There were no iPods, and consequently no evidence of people plugged into their music via the thin white earplugs that Apple supplies with their devices. No iPads, no Kindles, no Nooks, no … well, you get the picture. (It’s also worth noting that, with U.S. tourists now beginning to enter the country in larger numbers, Cuba seems to be on the cusp of a "modern" invasion; if I come back here in a couple years, I fully expect to see Kentucky Fried Chicken outlets on every corner.)

    But there were lots of friendly people in Havana, crowding the streets, peering out of windows and doorways, laughing and shouting and waving at friends and strangers alike. Everyone was well-dressed in clean clothes (the evidence of which could be seen in the endless lines of clothing hanging from laundry lines strung from wall to wall, everywhere); but there were no designer jeans, no fancy shoes, no heavy jewelry, and no sign of ostentatious clothing of any kind. Like some other developing countries, the people were sometimes a little too friendly — constantly offering a taxi ride, a pedicab ride, a small exchange of the "official" currency (convertible pesos, or "cuqs") for the "local" currency (pesos), a great meal or a great drink at a nearby restaurant or bar, a haircut, a manicure, or just a little … umm, well, friendship (offers for which ran the gamut of "señor" to "amigo" to "my friend"). On the street, you often felt you were in the land of the hustle; but if you smiled, shook your head, and politely said, "no," people generally smiled and back off.

    As for the photography: well, I was in one of three different workshop groups, each of which had roughly a dozen participants. The three dozen individual photographers were well equipped with all of the latest Nikon and Canon gear, and they generally focused on a handful of subjects: buildings and architecture, ballet practice sessions, cockfights, boxing matches, rodeos, fishing villages, old cars, interiors of people’s homes, street scenes, and people. Lots of people. As in every other part of the world I’ve visited, the people were the most interesting. We saw young and old, men and women, boisterous children, grizzled elders, police officers, bus drivers, and people of almost every conceivable race.

    The streets were clean, though not spotless; and the streets were jammed, with bicycles and motorbikes and pedi-cabs, taxis, buses, horse-and-carriages, pedestrians, dogs (lots of dogs, many sleeping peacefully in the middle of a sidewalk), and even a few people on roller skates. And, as anyone who has seen photos of Havana knows, there were lots and lots and LOTS of old cars. Plymouths, Pontiacs, Dodges, Buicks, and Chevys, along with the occasional Cadillac. A few were old and rusted, but most had been renovated, repaired, and repainted — often in garishly bright colors from every spectrum of the rainbow. Cherry pink, fire-engine red, Sunkist orange, lime green, turquoise and every shade of blue, orange, brown, and a lot more that I’ve probably forgotten. All of us in the photo workshop succumbed to the temptation to photograph the cars when we first arrived … but they were everywhere, every day, wherever we went, and eventually we all suffered from sensory overload. (For what it’s worth, one of our workshop colleagues had visited Cuba eight years ago, and told us that at the time, there were only old cars in sight; now roughly half of the cars are more-or-less modern Kia’s, Audis, Russian Ladas, and other "generic" compact cars.)

    The one thing I wasn’t prepared for in Havana was the sense of decay: almost no modern buildings, no skyscrapers, and very little evidence of renovation. There were several monstrous, ugly, vintage-1950s buildings that oozed "Russia" from every pore. But the rest of the buildings date back to the 40s, the 30s, the 20s, or even the turn of the last century. Some were crumbling, some were just facades; some showed evidence of the kind of salt-water erosion that one sees near the ocean. But many simply looked old and decrepit, with peeling paint and broken stones, like the run-down buildings in whatever slum you’re familiar with in North America. One has a very strong sense of a city that was vibrant and beautiful all during the last half of the 19th century, and the first half of the 20th century — and then time stopped dead in its tracks.

    Why that happened, and what’s being done about it, is something I didn’t have a chance to explore; there was a general reluctance to discuss politics in great detail. Some of Havana looks like the less-prosperous regions of other Caribbean towns; and some of it is presumably the direct and/or indirect result of a half-century of U.S. embargo. But some of it seems to be the result of the collapse of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s, and the subsequent collapse of foreign aid that Cuba depended upon.

    As for my own photos: I did not attend the ballet practice sessions, nor did I see the rodeo. I did see some interesting graffiti on a few walls, which I photographed; but for some reason, I missed almost all of the numerous political billboards and stylized paintings of Che Guevera on buildings and walls. What I focused on instead was the "street scenes" of people and buildings and cars, which will hopefully give you a sense of what the place is like.

    Enjoy!

    More Cuba, Dec 2011 – 024
    cuba
    Image by Ed Yourdon
    This is a second set of a couple hundred photos taken in Havana, Cuba in December 2011. The first set, which included what I felt were the best 100 photos of the 3500+ images, was uploaded earlier. You can find it here on Flickr

    Another example of life being observed from a second floor balcony, up above the Prado.

    ***********************

    As I suggested in my first set of Cuba photos on Flickr, the notion of traveling to Cuba is — at least for many Americans today — probably like that of traveling to North Korea. It’s off-limits, forbidden by the government — and frankly, why would anyone bother? But for someone like me, who spent his childhood in the Cold War era of the 1950s, and who went off to college just after Castro took power, and just before the Bay of Pigs and the Cuban missile crisis, the notion of traveling to Cuba has entirely different overtones.

    And yet Cuba is only 90 miles away from Key West (as we were reminded so often in the 1960s), and its climate is presumably no different than a dozen of Caribbean islands I’ve visited over the years. Numerous friends have made quasi-legal trips to Cuba over the years, flying in from Canada or Mexico, and they’ve all returned with fabulous pictures and great stories of a vibrant, colorful country. So, when the folks at the Santa Fe Photographic Workshops sent out a notice in November 2011, announcing a series of photo workshops in Havana, we couldn’t resist the temptation to sign up.

    Getting into Cuba turned out to be trivial: an overnight stay in Miami, a 45-minute chartered flight operated by American Airlines, and customs/immigration formalities that turned out to be cursory or non-existent. By mid-afternoon, our group was checked into the Parque Central Hotel in downtown Havana — where the rooms were spacious, the service was friendly, the food was reasonably tasty, the rum was delicious, and the Internet was … well, slow and expensive.

    We had been warned that that some of our American conveniences — like credit cards — would not be available, and we were prepared for a fairly spartan week. But no matter how prepared we might have been intellectually, it takes a while to adjust to a land with no Skype, no Blackberry service, no iPhone service, no phone-based Twitter, Facebook, or Google+. I was perfectly happy that there were no Burger Kings, no Pizza Huts, no Wendys, no Starbuck’s, and MacDonalds. There was Coke (classic), but no Diet Coke (or Coke Light). There were also no police sirens, no ambulance sirens, and no church bells. There were no iPods, and consequently no evidence of people plugged into their music via the thin white earplugs that Apple supplies with their devices. No iPads, no Kindles, no Nooks, no … well, you get the picture. (It’s also worth noting that, with U.S. tourists now beginning to enter the country in larger numbers, Cuba seems to be on the cusp of a "modern" invasion; if I come back here in a couple years, I fully expect to see Kentucky Fried Chicken outlets on every corner.)

    But there were lots of friendly people in Havana, crowding the streets, peering out of windows and doorways, laughing and shouting and waving at friends and strangers alike. Everyone was well-dressed in clean clothes (the evidence of which could be seen in the endless lines of clothing hanging from laundry lines strung from wall to wall, everywhere); but there were no designer jeans, no fancy shoes, no heavy jewelry, and no sign of ostentatious clothing of any kind. Like some other developing countries, the people were sometimes a little too friendly — constantly offering a taxi ride, a pedicab ride, a small exchange of the "official" currency (convertible pesos, or "cuqs") for the "local" currency (pesos), a great meal or a great drink at a nearby restaurant or bar, a haircut, a manicure, or just a little … umm, well, friendship (offers for which ran the gamut of "señor" to "amigo" to "my friend"). On the street, you often felt you were in the land of the hustle; but if you smiled, shook your head, and politely said, "no," people generally smiled and back off.

    As for the photography: well, I was in one of three different workshop groups, each of which had roughly a dozen participants. The three dozen individual photographers were well equipped with all of the latest Nikon and Canon gear, and they generally focused on a handful of subjects: buildings and architecture, ballet practice sessions, cockfights, boxing matches, rodeos, fishing villages, old cars, interiors of people’s homes, street scenes, and people. Lots of people. As in every other part of the world I’ve visited, the people were the most interesting. We saw young and old, men and women, boisterous children, grizzled elders, police officers, bus drivers, and people of almost every conceivable race.

    The streets were clean, though not spotless; and the streets were jammed, with bicycles and motorbikes and pedi-cabs, taxis, buses, horse-and-carriages, pedestrians, dogs (lots of dogs, many sleeping peacefully in the middle of a sidewalk), and even a few people on roller skates. And, as anyone who has seen photos of Havana knows, there were lots and lots and LOTS of old cars. Plymouths, Pontiacs, Dodges, Buicks, and Chevys, along with the occasional Cadillac. A few were old and rusted, but most had been renovated, repaired, and repainted — often in garishly bright colors from every spectrum of the rainbow. Cherry pink, fire-engine red, Sunkist orange, lime green, turquoise and every shade of blue, orange, brown, and a lot more that I’ve probably forgotten. All of us in the photo workshop succumbed to the temptation to photograph the cars when we first arrived … but they were everywhere, every day, wherever we went, and eventually we all suffered from sensory overload. (For what it’s worth, one of our workshop colleagues had visited Cuba eight years ago, and told us that at the time, there were only old cars in sight; now roughly half of the cars are more-or-less modern Kia’s, Audis, Russian Ladas, and other "generic" compact cars.)

    The one thing I wasn’t prepared for in Havana was the sense of decay: almost no modern buildings, no skyscrapers, and very little evidence of renovation. There were several monstrous, ugly, vintage-1950s buildings that oozed "Russia" from every pore. But the rest of the buildings date back to the 40s, the 30s, the 20s, or even the turn of the last century. Some were crumbling, some were just facades; some showed evidence of the kind of salt-water erosion that one sees near the ocean. But many simply looked old and decrepit, with peeling paint and broken stones, like the run-down buildings in whatever slum you’re familiar with in North America. One has a very strong sense of a city that was vibrant and beautiful all during the last half of the 19th century, and the first half of the 20th century — and then time stopped dead in its tracks.

    Why that happened, and what’s being done about it, is something I didn’t have a chance to explore; there was a general reluctance to discuss politics in great detail. Some of Havana looks like the less-prosperous regions of other Caribbean towns; and some of it is presumably the direct and/or indirect result of a half-century of U.S. embargo. But some of it seems to be the result of the collapse of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s, and the subsequent collapse of foreign aid that Cuba depended upon.

    As for my own photos: I did not attend the ballet practice sessions, nor did I see the rodeo. I did see some interesting graffiti on a few walls, which I photographed; but for some reason, I missed almost all of the numerous political billboards and stylized paintings of Che Guevera on buildings and walls. What I focused on instead was the "street scenes" of people and buildings and cars, which will hopefully give you a sense of what the place is like.

    Enjoy!

    Avec le cadavre du « comandante », on enterrerait ainsi paisiblement et sans remords, une sorte d’accident dans la chronologie cubaine. En vérité cette perspective ne semble pas très réaliste : il sera sans doute malaisé de rayer d’un trait de plume une expérience aussi radicale, ne serait ce que parce que Cuba a accumulé un retard économique considérable pendant cette période.

  • Vacances à cuba

    Cuba diffère des systèmes politiques européens où les partis investissent des candidats. Les personnes autorisées à se présenter aux scrutins sont sélectionnées par la Commission nationale de candidature, qui effectue ses choix sur la base de critères comme l’« éthique » et le « patriotisme » des candidats, ainsi que leur « histoire révolutionnaire »

    Cuba
    cuba
    Image by NatalieMaynor

    Cuba
    cuba
    Image by NatalieMaynor

    Cuba
    cuba
    Image by NatalieMaynor

    Avec le cadavre du « comandante », on enterrerait ainsi paisiblement et sans remords, une sorte d’accident dans la chronologie cubaine. En vérité cette perspective ne semble pas très réaliste : il sera sans doute malaisé de rayer d’un trait de plume une expérience aussi radicale, ne serait ce que parce que Cuba a accumulé un retard économique considérable pendant cette période.

  • Images de paysage cuba

    Cuba se présente comme un pays socialiste, et se veut être une république unitaire des ouvriers et paysans et une république parlementaire – où le Parti communiste est le seul parti politique reconnu par la Constitution, qui le désigne comme « la force dirigeante supérieure de la société et de l’État ».

    Cuba
    cuba
    Image by NatalieMaynor

    Cuba
    cuba
    Image by El Mambo Taxi
    Coche cubano #6. Hecho a mano, con los restos de otros coches/cosas.

    Cuba
    cuba
    Image by NatalieMaynor

    Aujourd’hui encore Cuba n’a probablement pas retrouvé son niveau de vie de 1989, lorsque l’Union Soviétique subventionnait généreusement sa tête de pont dans le golfe du Mexique. Les années 1990 ont été une décennie perdue pour l’économie cubaine qui a fait un bond en arrière de dix ans.