Daniel Gafanhoto Photography

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  • Fine art photography.<br />
<br />
A favela is the generally used term for a shanty town in Brazil. In the late 18th century, the first settlements were called bairros africanos (African neighbourhoods). This was the place where former slaves with no land ownership and no options for work lived. Over the years, many freed black slaves moved in.<br />
<br />
Even before the first "favela" came into being, poor citizens were pushed away from downtown and forced to live in the far suburbs. However, most modern favelas appeared in the 1970s, due to rural exodus, when many people left rural areas of Brazil and moved to cities. Without finding a place to live, many people ended up in a favela.<br />
Census data released in December 2011 by the IBGE (Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics) shows that in 2010, about (6%) of the population lived in slums in Brazil. It means that 11.4 million of the 190 million people lived in the country areas of irregular occupation and lack of public services or urbanization - called by the IBGE of "subnormal agglomerations."<br />
The original favela was erected on the Morro de Castelo in Rio de Janeiro by the families of soldiers returning from the Canudos Campaign of 1897, to beg for their salaries.<br />
<br />
The term favela was coined in the late 1800's. At the time, 20,000 veteran soldiers were brought from the conflict against the settlers of Canudos, in the Eastern province of Bahia, to Rio de Janeiro and left with no place to live. When they served the army in Bahia, those soldiers had been familiar with Canudos's Favela Hill — a name referring to favela, a skin-irritating tree in the spurge family indigenous to Bahia, Jatropha phyllacantha (or else the related faveleira tree, Cnidoscolus quercifolius). When they settled in the Providência [Providence] hill in Rio de Janeiro, they nicknamed the place Favela hill from their common reference, thereby calling a slum a favela for the first time.
    Wall of houses.tif
  • The port of Rio de Janeiro is a port city of Rio de Janeiro, capital of the homonymous state, Brazil. Your pier includes fringes of the Centre and the neighborhoods of Gamboa, Saúde, Santo Cristo and Caju.<br />
It serves the states of Rio de Janeiro, Sao Paulo, Minas Gerais, Espirito Santo, Bahia and south of Goiás, among others.<br />
It is one of the busiest in the country regarding the value of goods and tonnage. Iron ore, manganese, coal, wheat, oil and gas are the main products disposed.<br />
<br />
O Porto do Rio de Janeiro é um porto da cidade do Rio de Janeiro, capital do estado homônimo, Brasil. Seu cais compreende as orlas marítimas do Centro e dos bairros da Gamboa, Saúde, Santo Cristo e Caju.<br />
O Porto do Rio de Janeiro atende aos estados do Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, Minas Gerais, Espírito Santo, Bahia e sudoeste de Goiás, entre outros.<br />
É um dos mais movimentados do país quanto ao valor das mercadorias e à tonelagem. Minério de ferro, manganês, carvão, trigo, gás e petróleo são os principais produtos escoados.
    Concrete, water and steel.tif
  • The port of Rio de Janeiro is a port city of Rio de Janeiro, capital of the homonymous state, Brazil. Your pier includes fringes of the Centre and the neighborhoods of Gamboa, Saúde, Santo Cristo and Caju.<br />
It serves the states of Rio de Janeiro, Sao Paulo, Minas Gerais, Espirito Santo, Bahia and south of Goiás, among others.<br />
It is one of the busiest in the country regarding the value of goods and tonnage. Iron ore, manganese, coal, wheat, oil and gas are the main products disposed.<br />
<br />
O Porto do Rio de Janeiro é um porto da cidade do Rio de Janeiro, capital do estado homônimo, Brasil. Seu cais compreende as orlas marítimas do Centro e dos bairros da Gamboa, Saúde, Santo Cristo e Caju.<br />
O Porto do Rio de Janeiro atende aos estados do Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, Minas Gerais, Espírito Santo, Bahia e sudoeste de Goiás, entre outros.<br />
É um dos mais movimentados do país quanto ao valor das mercadorias e à tonelagem. Minério de ferro, manganês, carvão, trigo, gás e petróleo são os principais produtos escoados.
    Concrete, water and steel.tif
  • Fine art photography.<br />
<br />
A favela is the generally used term for a shanty town in Brazil. In the late 18th century, the first settlements were called bairros africanos (African neighbourhoods). This was the place where former slaves with no land ownership and no options for work lived. Over the years, many freed black slaves moved in.<br />
<br />
Even before the first "favela" came into being, poor citizens were pushed away from downtown and forced to live in the far suburbs. However, most modern favelas appeared in the 1970s, due to rural exodus, when many people left rural areas of Brazil and moved to cities. Without finding a place to live, many people ended up in a favela.<br />
Census data released in December 2011 by the IBGE (Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics) shows that in 2010, about (6%) of the population lived in slums in Brazil. It means that 11.4 million of the 190 million people lived in the country areas of irregular occupation and lack of public services or urbanization - called by the IBGE of "subnormal agglomerations."<br />
The original favela was erected on the Morro de Castelo in Rio de Janeiro by the families of soldiers returning from the Canudos Campaign of 1897, to beg for their salaries.<br />
<br />
The term favela was coined in the late 1800's. At the time, 20,000 veteran soldiers were brought from the conflict against the settlers of Canudos, in the Eastern province of Bahia, to Rio de Janeiro and left with no place to live. When they served the army in Bahia, those soldiers had been familiar with Canudos's Favela Hill — a name referring to favela, a skin-irritating tree in the spurge family indigenous to Bahia, Jatropha phyllacantha (or else the related faveleira tree, Cnidoscolus quercifolius). When they settled in the Providência [Providence] hill in Rio de Janeiro, they nicknamed the place Favela hill from their common reference, thereby calling a slum a favela for the first time.
    Wall of houses.tif
  • Fine art photography.<br />
<br />
A favela is the generally used term for a shanty town in Brazil. In the late 18th century, the first settlements were called bairros africanos (African neighbourhoods). This was the place where former slaves with no land ownership and no options for work lived. Over the years, many freed black slaves moved in.<br />
<br />
Even before the first "favela" came into being, poor citizens were pushed away from downtown and forced to live in the far suburbs. However, most modern favelas appeared in the 1970s, due to rural exodus, when many people left rural areas of Brazil and moved to cities. Without finding a place to live, many people ended up in a favela.<br />
Census data released in December 2011 by the IBGE (Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics) shows that in 2010, about (6%) of the population lived in slums in Brazil. It means that 11.4 million of the 190 million people lived in the country areas of irregular occupation and lack of public services or urbanization - called by the IBGE of "subnormal agglomerations."<br />
The original favela was erected on the Morro de Castelo in Rio de Janeiro by the families of soldiers returning from the Canudos Campaign of 1897, to beg for their salaries.<br />
<br />
The term favela was coined in the late 1800's. At the time, 20,000 veteran soldiers were brought from the conflict against the settlers of Canudos, in the Eastern province of Bahia, to Rio de Janeiro and left with no place to live. When they served the army in Bahia, those soldiers had been familiar with Canudos's Favela Hill — a name referring to favela, a skin-irritating tree in the spurge family indigenous to Bahia, Jatropha phyllacantha (or else the related faveleira tree, Cnidoscolus quercifolius). When they settled in the Providência [Providence] hill in Rio de Janeiro, they nicknamed the place Favela hill from their common reference, thereby calling a slum a favela for the first time.
    High Houses.tif
  • Royal Portuguese Reading<br />
<br />
The institution was founded in 1837 by a group of forty-three Portuguese immigrants, political refugees, to promote culture among the Portuguese community in the then capital of the Empire. It was the first association of this community in the city.<br />
<br />
The current headquarters building, designed by Portuguese architect Rafael da Silva e Castro, was erected between 1880 and 1887 neomanuelino style. This architectural style evokes the exuberant Gothic-Renaissance effect at the time of the Portuguese Discoveries, known as Manueline in Portugal for having coincided with the reign of King Manuel I (1495-1521).<br />
<br />
The interior also follows the style neomanuelino doors, wooden shelves for books and memorials. The roof of the Reading Room has a beautiful chandelier and a skylight in the iron structure, the first example of this type of architecture in Brazil. The lounge also has a beautiful monument of silver, ivory and marble (the Altar of the Fatherland), 1.7 meters high, which celebrates the time of discovery, performed at Kings & Sons in Port Antonio Maria Ribeiro by the goldsmith, and purchased in 1923 by the Royal Cabinet.<br />
Among its distinguished visitors, past, are the names of Machado de Assis, Olavo Bilac and John in Rio<br />
<br />
The Office publishes the magazine Real Convergence Lusíada (biannual) and promotes courses on Literature, Portuguese Language, History, Anthropology and Arts, aimed mainly at college students.<br />
<br />
The history of the Brazilian Academy of Letters is attached to the Royal Cabinet, since the first five solemn sessions of the Academy, under the presidency of Machado de Assis, were held here.
    Color Royal Portuguese Reading Chamb...tif
  • Fine art photography.<br />
<br />
Royal Portuguese Reading<br />
<br />
The institution was founded in 1837 by a group of forty-three Portuguese immigrants, political refugees, to promote culture among the Portuguese community in the then capital of the Empire. It was the first association of this community in the city.<br />
<br />
The current headquarters building, designed by Portuguese architect Rafael da Silva e Castro, was erected between 1880 and 1887 neomanuelino style. This architectural style evokes the exuberant Gothic-Renaissance effect at the time of the Portuguese Discoveries, known as Manueline in Portugal for having coincided with the reign of King Manuel I (1495-1521).<br />
<br />
The interior also follows the style neomanuelino doors, wooden shelves for books and memorials. The roof of the Reading Room has a beautiful chandelier and a skylight in the iron structure, the first example of this type of architecture in Brazil. The lounge also has a beautiful monument of silver, ivory and marble (the Altar of the Fatherland), 1.7 meters high, which celebrates the time of discovery, performed at Kings & Sons in Port Antonio Maria Ribeiro by the goldsmith, and purchased in 1923 by the Royal Cabinet.<br />
Among its distinguished visitors, past, are the names of Machado de Assis, Olavo Bilac and John in Rio<br />
<br />
The Office publishes the magazine Real Convergence Lusíada (biannual) and promotes courses on Literature, Portuguese Language, History, Anthropology and Arts, aimed mainly at college students.<br />
<br />
The history of the Brazilian Academy of Letters is attached to the Royal Cabinet, since the first five solemn sessions of the Academy, under the presidency of Machado de Assis, were held here.
    Royal Portuguese Reading Chambers.tif
  • Frozen heat island. Downtown Rio de Janeiro.
    Frozen heat island.tif
  • Corcovado e a Zona Sul
    Corcovado e a Zona Sul.tif
  • Traffic jam colors. View from heights of the hectic traffic jam in Downtown Rio de Janeiro.
    Traffic jam colors.tif
  • Sugar Loaf view from heights.
    Sugar Loaf.tif
  • Depth of Rio. Interesting view of Rio with Guanabara Bay, the Niteroi bridge, two slums, downtown buildings all in one big shot.
    Depth of Rio.tif
  • December 2010: The summer started yesterday and the temperatures are already as high as 35ºC/95ºF. I sure hope it doesn't get as hot as last year when we had 45ºC/113ºF in January.
    Downtown heat.tif
  • Landship. Fine art photography of Downtown Rio de Janeiro.
    Landship.tif
  • Rodrigo de Freitas lagoon and the Ipanema sea from heights.
    Rodrigo de Freitas lagoon and the Ip...tif
  • Sugar Loaf view.
    The white fishes and the green city.tif
  • Corcovado and the colors of Brazil
    Corcovado and the colors of Brazil.tif
  • Charitas the Ferry Building is the building of the marine terminal in the neighborhood of Charitas in the city of Niteroi. The station took the signature of the architect Oscar Niemeyer and became a tourist attraction in the city and is part of the architectural complex cultural called Niemeymer's Path, which runs through several neighborhoods bordering its Niterói seaboard.<br />
<br />
The station belongs to the company waterway Barcas S / A receiving line of catamarans that make the link between the city of Niterói and Rio de Janeiro across Guanabara Bay. Turning the neighborhood of the station Charitas Praça XV in the city of Rio de Janeiro.
    Charita's color splash.tif
  • All views. Downtown Rio de Janeiro.
    All views.tif
  • Heliport flare. Heliport on Sugar Loaf.
    Heliport flare.tif
  • Downtown Rio. Carioca view.
    Downtown Rio.tif
  • Oil and water. Guanabara bay view.
    Oil and water.tif
  • Foto para o acervo da Casa da Moeda do Brasil realizada em parceria com a Fattoria Web.
    Casa da Moeda em parceria com Fattor...jpg