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AMARCORD: Che Fine Hanno Fatto. Un mix che ha premiato decine di prodotti televisivi negli anni 7. Risponde a questi requisiti uno dei telefilm pi. Crack Lingua Italiana F1 2012 Xbox. 5/23/2017 0 Comments F1 2015.Titolo. Giochi, Formula 1, Crack, Giochi PC, Crack F1 2015, Download F1 2015. The 2012 Italian Grand Prix (formally known as the Formula 1 Gran Premio Santander d'Italia 2012) was a Formula One motor race that took place at the Autodromo Nazionale Monza in Monza, Italy on 9 September 2012. It was the thirteenth race of the 2012 season, and the final race in Europe before the teams returned to Asia for the Singapore Grand Prix.
Christian Anderl © Sven Gilmore Christian Anderl is a Vienna-based photographer and filmmaker who specialises in portraiture. A passionate musician, he is also a talented chef but considers photography his true calling. When not taking pictures of people he enjoys travel and landscape photography and never goes anywhere without a camera. He also uses his EOS DSLRs to film commercials and music videos. His recent projects have included a film and stills shoot for Red Bull, a commercial shoot for home furnishings giant IKEA and a music video for the rock band Excuse Me Moses. Yann Arthus-Bertrand © Erwan Sourget Yann Arthus-Bertrand’s first Canon camera was given to him by his father. Ten years later, he found himself in Africa photographing lions.
He also had a job as a balloon pilot, which gave him a unique perspective on the world and time to formulate his distinctive style. A succession of highly successful books and powerful films followed including the critically acclaimed ‘The Earth from the Sky’.
In July 2013, he opened a photographic studio in Paris where he invites the public to better understand what happens behind his photos and meet his team. Franco Banfi Switzerland-born photographer Franco Banfi began his underwater photography career in 1981. Since then he has won numerous awards internationally, includingthe overall winner in the Nature’s Best Photography Ocean View Photo Contest 2011, for his image of a Beluga whale, as well as winner of the overall ‘Nature and Underwater’ category in the 2010 International Photography Awards (IPA) competition. He has been published by the likes of National Geographic, Stern, GEO and Focus. Franco now spends much of his time in faraway and challenging locations in an attempt to broaden our knowledge of ocean life with his images. Giancarlo Colombo © Jiro Mochizuki Freelance Italian photographer Giancarlo Colombo has been shooting sports for over 25 years and has thus far covered five football World Cup Finals, plus major world championships in athletics, cycling, skiing and swimming.
He has won many awards for his photography during his career, including being chosen as one of the 12 best athletics photographers in the world in 2007. He is the official photographer for most of the world’s most important marathon races (including London, New York and Tokyo) and has also shot campaigns for top sports brands such as Adidas, Asics, Fila and Nike. He joined the Canon Ambassadors Programme as an Explorer in 2013. Lucie Debelkova Lucie Debelkova was born in Prague, Czech Republic, and regularly travels to all corners of the world on various photo assignments to cover subjects such as special destinations, ancient or modern cultures and food features for a variety of clients. Her philosophy is to take positive photographs highlighting the best a place has to offer, whether it’s the vibrancy of the landscape, the grandeur of ancient monuments or the warmth and friendliness of the people. Lucie’s work has featured in many publications including The Sunday Times, The New York Times, Wanderlust, Lonely Planet and Vanity Fair as well as several in-flight airline magazines. Andrey Golovanov Andrey Golovanov is one half of a Russian photographic duo, alongside Sergey Kivrin, who have worked together for more than 25 years.
Renowned sports photographers and recognised photo artists, they work in a variety of genres - from sports and news to advertising. During their careers they have won numerous photographic awards in contests all over the world including in France, The Netherlands, Belgium, Switzerland, Germany, Japan and their native Russia.
Both photographers are especially proud of their photographic coverage of the 2012 Olympic Games, which marked the duo’s 13th Olympiad. “This image of an Arctic fox was taken in Churchill, Canada, in November. I love Arctic foxes and during the winter I think they are one of the most beautiful animals on the planet. This is not just my favourite image from the year but is one of my all-time favourites. Photography is subjective and people might question images like this but I love clean graphic shots and you can't get much cleaner than this. The subject for me has a strong emotion too as it is a subject I have always wanted to capture.” © Danny Green.
“Of all the projects that I photographed this year, the new building at Fogo Island Natural Park, Cape Verde, from Oto arquitectos was the job that gave some of my favourite images and this is one of them: a group of local singers ready to act for the First Minister of Cape Verde. On this session I had all the elements that I like to shoot architecture with: the people and the unique landscape that acted as a frame for the new building.
The sad thing is that the volcano, after more than 20 years inactive, decided to burst two weeks ago, and the new building doesn't exist any more. All gone, save for the pictures that are a unique recording of those days.” © Fernando Guerra/FG+SG. Marcin Jamkowski Born in Warsaw, Poland, Marcin began his journalistic career as a staff writer on the science section of Poland's largest daily newspaper, Gazeta Wyborcza.
Because of his interests in the outdoors and adventures he was soon assigned to photograph expedition stories – from the Amazon Source expedition to climbing desert towers in Mali. Since 2000 he’s been working with the Polish edition of National Geographic; sharing his time between office duties, working as a photographer and being an expedition leader, including an expedition to the Steuben – a Nazi shipwreck found in 2004 in the Baltic Sea; this story was published in National Geographic magazine worldwide. Eddie Keogh © Eddie Keogh/Reuters UK-born Eddie Keogh is a freelance photographer who shoots sports and sports features for Reuters. He previously worked as a sports photographer for national newspapers from 1986 to 2005.
He covered his first Olympic Games in Los Angeles, USA, at the age of 21 and he has already photographed eight FIFA football World Cups. In 2006 he won the Barclays Premier League Football Photographer of the Year Award; in 2009 and 2010, the Sports Journalists Association (SJA) Sports News Picture of the Year award and the UK Picture Editors Sports Photographer of the Year in 2010. He won the SJA Sports Picture Portfolio award in 2012 and became a Canon Explorer in May 2013.
'Lieutenant Tim McLaughlin, whom I followed during the invasion of Iraq in 2003, was in the 3/4 Marines. We subsequently became friends. Tim was at the Pentagon on 9/11, then went to Iraq as a tank commander. His unit was at the forefront of much combat, and he was at the front of his unit, so he had a substantially violent war.
When he left the Marines in 2006, he trained as a lawyer. While attending law school at Boston College, he worked overseas as a prosecution intern at the Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina in its war crimes section. He subsequently founded and serves as the President of the Board of Directors of Veterans Legal Services, which is a Boston-based 501(3)(c) that provides pro bono legal services to homeless and low-income veterans. He has been open about his experiences during the war, about killing other men and watching your friends being killed, and he is public about the struggles he has had with PTSD. He is a noble, generous and understated man who I have great admiration for.' © Gary Knight/VII.
Ulla Lohmann © Pierre-Emmanuel Rastoin Ulla Lohmann is a German photojournalist and documentary filmmaker with a BSc degree in Natural Resource Management. She works freelance for clients including National Geographic, GEO, Stern View, the BBC, The New York Times and many others. She specialises in documenting the changing world of indigenous tribes and in photographing erupting volcanoes, and some of her photo stories have been exhibited at the Visa pour l’Image international festival of photojournalism. Pascal Maitre © Marion Piet Lautaudrie France-born Pascal Maitre started his career as photojournalist with the Jeune Afrique press group in 1979. In 1984 he joined the staff of the Gamma photo agency and in 1989 co-founded the Odyssey Images agency.
He is now represented by Cosmos. He has worked with many international magazines including GEO (France and Germany), Stern, National Geographic, Life and The New York Times Magazine.
His books include ‘My Africa’ (2000), ‘Madagascar, a unique world’ (2001), and ‘Amazing Africa’ (2012). Pascal has worked in over 40 countries in Africa and extensively in Afghanistan. In 2010 he received the National Magazine Award of Photojournalism for his in-depth essay about Somalia for National Geographic and has had seven exhibitions at the Visa pour l’Image international festival of photojournalism.
“This image was shot during the confrontation with ISIS in Jalawla, Northern Iraq, in August this year. The heat was close to 50 degrees C and the front lines had frozen. Here the Peshmerga fighters are raising the Kurdish flag 500 metres from the ISIS checkpoint after extending their lines as far as possible. At the time I took this picture it was just one among others but later its simplicity, strong symbolism and historical reference made it one of my favourites. For me it also strongly symbolises the rise of the Kurdish population due to this conflict, where they are actually gaining recognition rather than discrimination among the western communities and neighbouring countries.” © Niklas Meltio. Niklas Meltio © Niklas Meltio Finland-born Niklas Meltio has been a freelance photojournalist since 2003.
Amongst other stories he has covered wars in Afghanistan, Libya and Syria, post-war in Iraq, famine in Somaliland, cholera in Haiti and protests in Cairo. In 2011 he published his first book ‘Alley by Alley, House by House’, a photo essay on the battle of Dafnia in Misrata, Libya, and, in 2012, was selected for the TIME Lightbox feature, ‘Syria’s Agony: the photographs that moved them most’. In 2013 Niklas’s Syria coverage received the Visa d'or Daily Press Award at the Visa pour l'Image international festival of photojournalism. He co-produced the documentary ‘Faces of the Syrian War’, based on his Syria coverage during 2012 and 2013, with Finnish TV station YLE. “The last rays of the sun and an Arctic fox appears after days of rain in the eastern coast of Alluttoq Island, Disco Bay, western Greenland.
This was one of the images that I took at the end of summer 2014 in western Greenland. The weather was not clement, but when I take pictures my goal is always to use the natural light to strengthen the beauty of nature – but it is not always possible and often you are at the mercy of ‘Mother Nature’. I can't tell the emotions I got when a low ray from the setting sun struck the top of the mountain and the small Arctic fox appeared at the same time. I held my breath and the place became a perfect scenario for this picture. This fleeting moment creates a memory that will stay with me forever.” © Alessandra Meniconzi. Alessandra Meniconzi © Annick Romanski Swiss documentary photographer Alessandra Meniconzi's work centres on the ancient heritage, customs, spirituality and daily life of indigenous people.
She made several trips to Asia over a 10-year period to document the people and cultures of the so-called Silk Road, the 2,000-year-old trade route linking the Orient and the Occident. These trips led to the publishing of ‘The Silk Road’ in 2004.
Her other books include: ‘Mystic Island’ (2007), ‘Hidden China’ (2008) and ‘QTI – Alessandra Meniconzi, Il coraggio di esser paesaggio’ (2011). “I had an assignment to shoot a wedding in Mauritius. I always try to find impressive backgrounds for portraits to stand out and in Mauritius they have unique places - such as a relatively small area of sand dunes comprising of sand in different colours.
The two main elements of the resulting soil, iron and aluminium, are responsible for red/anthracite and blue/purplish colours respectively. I made all the arrangements with the owner to let the bride walk there, climbed up the nearest tree to have an overview, and asked the bride to run towards me with an idea of salvation in her eyes.” © Ekaterina Mukhina.
Ekaterina Mukhina Ekaterina Mukhina hails from Moscow, Russia, and obtained a degree in Sociology from the National Research University Higher School of Economics in Moscow before embarking on a career in photography. In 2000 she bought her first Canon film camera to start shooting extreme sports as a hobby after graduating from the Moscow Academy of Photography. Since 2003 she has concentrated mainly on shooting people, weddings and various events as a freelance photographer with her work taking her on assignments across Europe, North and South America, the Caribbean, Asia, Africa, the South Pacific and New Zealand. Her work is published regularly in travel magazines and specialist publications including Wedding, Happy Wedding and Vogue Sposa, Vogue’s celebrated ‘bridal bible’. “This image is from my birthday series that I just finished.
Aaltje Hooikammer celebrates her 75th birthday in her town of Staphorst, a village in The Netherlands, where the older generation still wear traditional Dutch clothing. The image is part of a series where I photographed 100 Dutch people during their birthday celebrations, from ages 1 to 100. When I think of Dutch birthdays I picture people sitting in a circle around a table with some snacks, as that is what we do in The Netherlands.
The fact they even wear traditional clothing, which is very rarely seen in our country, makes this one of my favourite images from the series.” © Ilvy Njiokiktjien. Ilvy Njiokiktjien Canon Explorer Ilvy Njiokiktjien was born in The Netherlands, and, after leaving school, studied for a year in South Dakota (USA) before returning home to study journalism and photography. In 2008 she won the Canonprijs, part of the Zilveren Camera award, as well as first prize in the National Geographic Photography Contest. In 2011 she won the Canon AFJ Female Photojournalist Award and her multimedia presentation ‘Afrikaner Blood’, made with multimedia journalist Elles van Gelder, won a POYi first place in the Issue Reporting Multimedia section and first place at the 2012 World Press Photo Multimedia Contest.
David Noton © Ben Pipe Born in England, David Noton is an award-winning landscape and travel photographer. After setting up his photography business, in 1985, his career developed within the landscape and travel arenas and he won awards in the BBC Wildlife Photographer of the Year competition in 1985, 1989 and 1990. Over the years he has travelled extensively to almost every part of the world, exploring deserts, rainforests, mountains, islands and ice caps. In 2008 his first book ‘Waiting for the Light’ was launched to critical acclaim and in 2010 his book ‘Full Frame’ was published alongside his second film ‘Photography in the RAW’. His pictures are published all over the world and he writes for a broad range of media, including photographic magazines and websites. “Sometimes you have to go seeking for pictures and then, like this one of the old petrol pump, you just happen to stumble upon it! On this day I saw a washing line filled with white sheets in the distance, but when I came around the corner I bumped straight into the petrol pump.
What a surprise! Needless to say I lost all interest in the washing line. Because there was not much cloud cover, I decided to shoot directly into the sun to help create some drama in the photograph. The pump looks like an old actor on stage, spotlit by the sun.” © Martin Osner. Andy Rouse © Andy Rouse Andy Rouse is a top wildlife photographer and conservationist. He has won many awards including in the Wildlife Photographer of the Year Awards, the British Wildlife Photography Awards, Nature’s Best and the European Wildlife Photographer of the Year. His work sells worldwide; from traditional publishing, such as calendars and cards, to haute couture fashion and even the tailplanes of aircraft!
He has written 18 books to date, including the critically acclaimed ‘Concepts of Nature’ and ‘Gorillas’, and has appeared on numerous UK TV programmes as well as the Discovery and National Geographic channels worldwide. “Personally, this photograph is special, not only because of the life threatening weather conditions we've faced but also because of the unreal mood.
The powerful lightning discharges that lit the sky seemed to emanate from the camping lamp held by my travel companion. The whole setting reminds me of the legend of the bringer of light and fire to mankind in ancient Greek mythology. When I look at this photograph, I still have goosebumps and feel the rush of adrenalin. And that says a lot about the power that a single image can have on you.” © Joel Santos. Gary Schmid Austria-born Gary Schmid is an international commercial and travel photographer who trained in the days of film and was very quick to realise the potential of digital imaging, becoming an early user of the technology. After completing his studies and gaining a Master Craftsman's Diploma in Photography, in 2005 Gary opened his own studio in Austria. With more business coming in from the Middle East, in 2009 he moved to Dubai from where he now covers the whole of the Middle East and Africa.
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Gary’s commercial photography is very varied and includes luxury hotel interiors and food. On the rare days when he finds time to take pictures for himself, his passion is travel photography. Eberhard Schuy Eberhard Schuy is based in Cologne, Germany, and specialises in advertising and industrial photography for wide variety of international clients.
After training as a photographer, he worked for several years as an assistant before completing his degree as a master photographer. For four-and-a-half years he was a studio manager of an international advertising agency and this valuable experience prepared him for running his own business. He believes in doing as much creative work in-camera as possible, to keep post-production time to a minimum, and is the author of several books on training and product photography. Jonathan and Angela Scott © Jonathan and Angela Scott Jonathan and Angela Scott are multi award-winning wildlife photographers based in Kenya.
They are the only couple to have won, individually, the Wildlife Photographer of the Year Award. They write, illustrate, teach and are TV presenters, most famously known for the ‘Big Cat Diary’ series for BBC television. They have written numerous best-selling books including Jonathan’s ‘The Marsh Lions’ (1982) and their co-authored, ‘Antarctica: Exploring a Fragile Eden’. Their book, ‘Stars of Big Cat Diary’, was published in 2009. Jonathan and Angela hold regular wildlife and travel photography workshops in Africa and Asia. “Navajo son, Claysun Benally, with his horse in Cameron, Arizona, USA. Claysun is a strong believer in traditional Navajo values and, along with his medicine man father, keeps several horses on their property in Flagstaff.
The Navajo have a long relationship with the wild horse, a relationship characterised by gentleness and agreement rather than breaking the horses spirit to the will of man. I like this image because it is picture of a man perfectly content with his place in the world and his relationship with it.
That place echoes back many centuries for the Navajo and he could be wearing buck-skin in this image instead of jeans. His spirit is the same as that of his ancestors. It is unusual to see moments of perfect happiness and that is what Claysun is experiencing here. I shot a fair amount of complex, difficult images of people experiencing or coping with personal tragedy in 2014.
This image has a lightness to it, which was a relief for me.” © Brent Stirton/Reportage by Getty Images. Tom Svensson © Calle Rosenqvist Tom Svensson is a wildlife photographer who was born in Denmark but now lives and works on the west coast of Sweden. He regularly travels the world on assignments, including to Africa to document the anti-poaching initiative and the illegal trade of animals, and is also a regular judge of photo contests. In 2014 Tom travelled widely to document rare species around the globe. He has written two books about endangered animals and lectures around the world, most recently in China, about conservation and the plight of threatened animals.
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Gali Tibbon © Maya Hasson Gali Tibbon is an Israeli photojournalist and documentary photographer, based in Jerusalem. With over a decade of experience covering issues in the Middle East, her work has also taken her on many assignments across Europe, the Caribbean, Asia and Africa. She has often focused on stories on faith through pilgrimage, including documenting religious rituals such as baptism in the River Jordan, Ethiopian Christianity and religious journeys across Europe. Her project on Christianity in Jerusalem, ‘Echoes of Christian Jerusalem’, was exhibited in museums, galleries and photo festivals around the world, including at the Visa pour l’Image international festival of photojournalism in 2010. “Fourteen-year-old Kesia, a ballet dancer in the township of Nyanga in the Western Cape of South Africa. I love this portrait of Kesia practicing her ballet dance routines in the back yard of her mother’s house, as this is the only place she has space to practice. She lives in a two-bedroom dwelling with seven family members.
Kesia is part of a special ballet programme in the historically disadvantaged townships. Through the medium of classical ballet the programme keeps children off the crime-ridden streets and helps them build strong self-esteem.” © Jonathan Torgovnik/Reportage by Getty Images. Jonathan Torgovnik South Africa-based Jonathan Torgovnik was born in Israel and graduated with a BFA degree from the School of Visual Arts in New York. His photographs have been published in various magazines, including The New York Times Magazine, Newsweek, GEO, The Sunday Times Magazine, Stern and Paris Match. He is the author of two books: ‘Bollywood Dreams; An Exploration of the Motion Picture Industry, and it's Culture in India’ (Phaidon, 2003), and ‘Intended Consequences: Rwandan Children Born of Rape’ (Aperture, 2009). His award-winning photographs have been in numerous solo and group exhibitions in the USA and Europe.
Jonathan is the co-founder of Foundation Rwanda, an NGO initiative that supports secondary school education for children born of rape during the Rwandan genocide. Alessandro Trovati Italian sports photographer Alessandro Trovati is the son of Armando Trovati – founder of the Pentaphoto agency, which has specialised in sports and advertising photography since 1978.
In over 20 years, with Associated Press and Pentaphoto, Alessandro has shot the world’s most important sporting events, including nine Olympics (aged 21, he was the youngest photographer commissioned at Albertville in 1992), every Ski World Cup since 1992, the Giro d’Italia and the Tour de France. He has shot advertising campaigns for many top international sports brands. Markus Varesvuo © Tomi Muukkonen Following a 25-year career in business in 2005 Canon Explorer Markus Varesvuo made the leap to become a professional wildlife photographer. Born in Helsinki, Finland, Markus has been fascinated with birds since childhood. He has now won a deserved reputation for the high quality of his photography, often sitting in remote hides in freezing temperatures for days at a time to get the perfect image. Markus has had several books published in his native Finland, and since 2011 he’s published two more with New Holland Publishers: ‘Birds Magic Moments’ (in seven different language editions), and ‘Fascinating Birds’.
He won second prize in the Nature Singles category of the 2014 World Press Photo Contest. “The 49 FX is one of the fastest sailboats and Viki and Anika train for the Rio games all day long and sometimes even at night.
Why this image? I did think about this image for quite a while. I attached six Canon 600EX-RT Speedlite flashguns protected by EWA-Marine bags on the sailboat and with the remote control I could perfectly adjust the settings. At the end of the day you need some luck that everything is in that moment - sunset, wind, great sailors, the flashes, the camera –and ‘boom’, you have the shot of the year!” © Richard Walch.
Richard Walch German photographer Richard Walch started out over 25 years ago shooting snowboarding and skiing, and now specialises in dramatic action shots of snow and water sports. He was 16 when photography became a passion and at the age of 18 he started shooting for magazines professionally. Since 2008 Richard has diversified from stills into shooting HD movie projects with Canon EOS DSLRs, including TV adverts and commercial projects. He is always on the move to find out what technology has to offer and how this can influence his photography and filming in a positive way.