Show Navigation

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
{ 27 images found }

Loading ()...

  • Newar girl in ceremonial clothes at her Ihi ceremony, a mock marriage to the Hindu god Vishnu, in Patan in the Kathmandu Valley, Nepal. Among the Newars, who are the original inhabitants of the Kathmandu Valley, every girl goes through this ceremony sometime between the age of five and ten. The Ihi makes the girl a full member of her father's family and caste and is also said to make sure that she will never become a widow, even if later on her future human husband would die, since she will forever be married to the god Vishnu. The Ihi is therefore for the Newar women a protection against the stigmatization of widows otherwise common in Hindu culture.
    4518.jpg
  • Devastating April 2015 Nepal Earthquake. Kirtipur Municipality, Kathmandu Valley. Villagers working their way into their collapsed homes to save what they can of their belongings and to clear the land of rubble.
    DSCF5546.jpg
  • Devastating April 2015 Nepal Earthquake. Panga Village, Kirtipur, Kathmandu Valley, a few hours after the earthquake struck. People watching one of the collapsed buildings in the village. More than a third of the houses in Panga were destroyed, most of them old traditional houses made of brick.
    ARyman_20150425_131017.jpg
  • Devastating April 2015 Nepal Earthquake. Kirtipur Municipality, Kathmandu Valley. People digging with their bare hands through the remains of their homes in search of their belongings.
    ARyman_20150427_101526.jpg
  • Girls and their mothers scatter grains of rice as an offering to the gods while a priest conducts the rituals for the girls’ Ihi ceremony, a mock marriage to the Hindu god Vishnu, in Patan in the Kathmandu Valley, Nepal. Among the Newars, who are the original inhabitants of the Kathmandu Valley, every girl goes through this ceremony sometime between the age of five and ten. The Ihi makes the girl a full member of her father's family and caste and is also said to make sure that she will never become a widow, even if later on her future human husband would die, since she will forever be married to the god Vishnu. The Ihi is therefore for the Newar women a protection against the stigmatization of widows otherwise common in Hindu culture.
    4359.jpg
  • A 10-year old Newar girl, dressed in school uniform, sits outside her family's house in Kathamndu, Nepal. She has just come home from school, and is waiting to begin her bahra ceremony, a mock first-menstruation rite, during which she will be secluded in a room for twelve days. Her mother and female relatives and friends may enter the room, but no male can go inside and its windows will be covered so that the sun cannot shine in.
    4421.jpg
  • Devastating April 2015 Nepal Earthquake. Kirtipur Municipality, Kathmandu Valley. People digging with their bare hands through the remains of their homes in search of their belongings.
    DSCF5418.jpg
  • Devastating April 2015 Nepal Earthquake. Bricks from a collapsed building in Panga Village, Kirtipur, Kathmandu Valley. More than a third of the houses in Panga were destroyed, most of them old traditional houses made of brick.
    ARyman_20150427_071748.jpg
  • Devastating April 2015 Nepal Earthquake. Panga Village, Kirtipur, Kathmandu Valley. A woman feeding  her baby in a tent camp set up in an open field. Out of fear of new quakes, the days after the earthquake struck everybody slept outside of their homes. More than a third of the houses in Panga were destroyed, most of them old traditional houses made of brick.
    ARyman_20150427_035449.jpg
  • At a farewell party before a Newar wedding in the Kahmandu Valley, Nepal, friends and family offer the bride their congratualations and deposit gifts in a large brass bowl.
    4426.jpg
  • Newar girl in ceremonial clothes at her Ihi ceremony, a mock marriage to the Hindu god Vishnu, in Patan in the Kathmandu Valley, Nepal. Among the Newars, who are the original inhabitants of the Kathmandu Valley, every girl goes through this ceremony sometime between the age of five and ten. The Ihi makes the girl a full member of her father's family and caste and is also said to make sure that she will never become a widow, even if later on her future human husband would die, since she will forever be married to the god Vishnu. The Ihi is therefore for the Newar women a protection against the stigmatization of widows otherwise common in Hindu culture.
    4356.jpg
  • The aunt of a Newar girl prepares her for her Ihi ceremony, a mock marriage to the Hindu god Vishnu, in Patan in the Kathmandu Valley, Nepal. Among the Newars, who are the original inhabitants of the Kathmandu Valley, every girl goes through this ceremony sometime between the age of five and ten. The Ihi makes the girl a full member of her father's family and caste and is also said to make sure that she will never become a widow, even if later on her future human husband would die, since she will forever be married to the god Vishnu. The Ihi is therefore for the Newar women a protection against the stigmatization of widows otherwise common in Hindu culture.
    4351.jpg
  • Devastating April 2015 Nepal Earthquake. Collapsed buildings in Panga Village, Kirtipur, Kathmandu Valley. More than a third of the houses in Panga were destroyed, most of them old traditional houses made of brick
    ARyman_20150427_064313.jpg
  • Devastating April 2015 Nepal Earthquake. Bungamati, Kathmandu Valley, shortly after the earthquake struck. Digging through the rubble of a fallen brick house, searching for people trapped inside.
    ARyman_20150425_083531.jpg
  • Devastating April 2015 Nepal Earthquake. Rescue workers on Durbar Square in Patan, Kathmandu Valley, where an ancient temple collapsed. Patan is one of three ancient royal cities in the Kathmandu Valley, with a rich cultural heritage and much old architecture.
    DSCF7038.jpg
  • Devastating April 2015 Nepal Earthquake. Bungamati, Kathmandu Valley, shortly after the earthquake struck. People in distress, trying to get in contact with their families.
    ARyman_20150425_090621.jpg
  • Devastating April 2015 Nepal Earthquake. Kirtipur Municipality, Kathmandu Valley. A woman in distress after the roof of her house has collapsed.
    ARyman_20150427_095250.jpg
  • A young Newar girl, who has been secluded in a room at home for twelve days during her barha ceremony, is taken to the roof of the family house to show herself to the sun god Surya, Kathmandu, Nepal. The barha is a Newar mock first-menstruation rite, held before the girl's first menstruation. During the seclusion, no male above the age of initiation is allowed to see the girl, and the windows of the room are covered so that the rays of the sun god, who is a male, cannot shine on her. The ceremony is also a mock-marriage, as it is said that the girl is married to Surya when she shows herself to him after the seclusion. The mother is standing behind the girl.
    4423.jpg
  • Devastating April 2015 Nepal Earthquake. Panga Village, Kirtipur, Kathmandu Valley. Workers belonging to the local CDMC (Community Disaster Management Committee). More than a third of the houses in Panga were destroyed, most of them old traditional houses made of brick.
    DSCF5196.jpg
  • The Bungamati Kumari, a pre-pubescent girl and living goddess, with entourage take part in a ceremony in Bungamati in the Kathmandu Valley, Nepal, just moments before the major earthquake of 25 April 2015 struck. She never left the site during the tremors and, luckily, the wall behind her did not fall. She is resting, lying down on her throne with a doll in her hand. Offerings of money lie in a bowl beneath her.
    ARyman_20150425_080014.jpg
  • Devastating April 2015 Nepal Earthquake. Panga Village, Kirtipur, Kathmandu Valley, a few hours after the earthquake struck. People gathered in a open field in fear of aftershocks and more houses collapsing.
    ARyman_20150425_115804.jpg
  • Devastating April 2015 Nepal Earthquake. People salvaging furniture from their collapsed home in Bhaktapur, one of three ancient royal cities of Kathmandu Valley and a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The town was severely damaged, with many old buildings destroyed.
    DSCF6866.jpg
  • Devastating April 2015 Nepal Earthquake. Collapsed buildings in Bhaktapur, one of three ancient royal cities in the Kathmandu Valley and a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The town was severely damaged, with many old houses and temples destroyed.
    DSCF6875.jpg
  • Fathers hold their daughters in their laps as they give them away in marriage at the girls’ Ihi ceremony, a mock marriage to the Hindu god Vishnu, in Patan in the Kathmandu Valley, Nepal. Among the Newars, who are the original inhabitants of the Kathmandu Valley, every girl goes through this ceremony sometime between the age of five and ten. The Ihi makes the girl a full member of her father's family and caste and is also said to make sure that she will never become a widow, even if later on her future human husband would die, since she will forever be married to the god Vishnu. The Ihi is therefore for the Newar women a protection against the stigmatization of widows otherwise common in Hindu culture.
    4387.jpg
  • Newar bride cries loudly when taking farewell of her family and friends in Panga Village, Kathmandu, Nepal. It is in the middle of the night and the groom's family has arrived to bring the bride to their home, where the couple will be married the following day. It is customary for the bride to cry at this stage in the ceremonies, when she is about to leave her home and begin a new life with another family. She is comforted by friends and family and also by the matchmaker who is sitting to the left.
    4427.jpg
  • Newar woman with her daughter at the daughter's Ihi ceremony, a mock marriage to the Hindu god Vishnu, Patan, the Kathmandu Valley, Nepal. Among the Newars, who are the original inhabitants of the Kathmandu Valley, every girl goes through this ceremony sometime between the age of five and ten. The Ihi makes the girl a full member of her father's family and caste and is also said to make sure that she will never become a widow, even if later on her future human husband would die, since she will forever be married to the god Vishnu. The Ihi is therefore for the Newar women a protection against the stigmatization of widows otherwise common in Hindu culture.
    4360.jpg
  • A happy couple embracing each other after just having been married at a drive-thru wedding at A Little White Wedding Chapel in Las Vegas, Nevada, USA. They are standing in the sunroof of a rented Limousine and the bride is holding the marriage certificate. They groom is an immigrant from Nepal. The wedding industry is the third largest in Las Vegas after gambling and entertainment.
    4720.jpg
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x

Anders Ryman

  • Portfolio
  • About
  • Books
  • Exhibitions
  • Archive
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area
  • Contact