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Search Results |
Total 962 matches found. |
Apart from our online database, Patker Photo Agency has access to the large offline photoarchives of Caucasus, Central Asia, Russia and Middle East photographers.
If you can't find a particular photo, submit a archive search request to photo@parkerphoto.com, we might have a perfect match for you.
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View of Yerevan
View of Yerevan, Mount Ararat in the background Date: 30 Jul, 2010 By Ruben Mangasaryan
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View of Yerevan
View of Yerevan, Mount Ararat in the background Date: 30 Jul, 2010 By Ruben Mangasaryan
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Child and Water-Melon
City scene. Date: Oct, 2002 By Ruben Mangasaryan
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Echmiadzin Cathedral
Echmiadzin is the center of the Armenian Church. It is where the Catholicos Of All... Date: Sep, 2002 By Ruben Mangasaryan
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Popular Yerevan Cafe "Poplavok"
Famous cafe "Poplavok" in the center of Yerevan, where people come to rest, meet each... Date: Sep, 2002 By Ruben Mangasaryan
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Popular Yerevan Cafe "Poplavok"
Famous cafe "Poplavok" in the center of Yerevan, where people come to rest, meet each... Date: Sep, 2002 By Ruben Mangasaryan
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Popular Yerevan Cafe "Poplavok"
Famous cafe "Poplavok" in the center of Yerevan, where people come to rest, meet each... Date: Sep, 2002 By Ruben Mangasaryan
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Popular Yerevan Cafe "Poplavok"
Famous cafe "Poplavok" in the center of Yerevan, where people come to rest, meet each... Date: Sep, 2002 By Ruben Mangasaryan
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MerhaBarev
By PatkerPhoto:Ruben Mangasaryan, German Avagyan, Anahit Hayrapetyan, Karen Mirzoyan, Nelli Shishmanyan.
NarPhotos: Ozcan Yurdalan,Mehmet Kacmaz,Serra Akcan,Tolga Sezgin, Kerem Uzel.
MerhaBarev is a unique photo-bridge between Armenia and Turkey, two neighboring countries with no diplomatic relations and a border remained closed for more than 80 years.
This project was created in 2006, when five Armenian photojournalists from Patker photo agency shot Istanbul during a week, and the same did five Turkish photojournalists from Nar photo agency in Yerevan.
MerhaBarev is a combined greeting in two languages:Turkish - "merhaba" and Armenian - "barev". MerhaBarev is indeed the first visual greeting between the two countries, which are separated not only by the sharp wire on the border, built during the Soviet Union period, but by the political and historical problems.
Using the black and white language of the photography, photojournalists narrated about Istanbul and Yerevan, their cultures, traditions, every-day life and people.
The project was presented as a number of exhibitions in Armenia (Yerevan, Gumri) and Turkey (Istanbul, Ankara, Kars, Diarbekir). MerhaBarev is also a book in four languages (Armenian,Turkish, English and German), calendars and posters.
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