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David Rochkind

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  • The Torre Latinoamericano in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_TorreLatino_002.jpg
  • Tatiana Bilbao works with Damian Figueroa, an architect, inside her office in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Tatiana_010.jpg
  • Mauricio Rocha sits in his office in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Rocha_012.jpg
  • Tiling on the terrace of the offices of Productora in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Productora_009.jpg
  • The cofee area inside the offices of Productora in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Productora_007.jpg
  • The Torre Latinoamericano in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_TorreLatino_003.jpg
  • Adriana Vallejo works inside the office of Tatiana Bilbao in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Tatiana_022.jpg
  • Details inside the office of Tatiana Bilbao in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Tatiana_018.jpg
  • Details inside the office of Tatiana Bilbao in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Tatiana_012.jpg
  • Tatiana Bilbao works inside her office in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Tatiana_006.jpg
  • Tatiana Bilbao works inside her office in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Tatiana_005.jpg
  • Tatiana Bilbao works inside her office in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Tatiana_003.jpg
  • Mauricio Rocha sits for a portrait in the the workshop were models are made at his office in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Rocha_014.jpg
  • Deatils inside Mauricio Rocha's office in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Rocha_008.jpg
  • The courtyard is seen through the windows of the office of Mauricio Rocha in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Rocha_007.jpg
  • Deatils inside Mauricio Rocha's office in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Rocha_004.jpg
  • Details of the courtyard in the office of Mauricio Rocha in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Rocha_003.jpg
  • Details of the courtyard in the office of Mauricio Rocha in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Rocha_002.jpg
  • Details of the courtyard in the office of Mauricio Rocha in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Rocha_001.jpg
  • Details of the offices of Productora in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Productora_012.jpg
  • Lapiz, the office dog, inside the offices of Productora in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Productora_011.jpg
  • Left to right: Abel Perles,Wonne Icks, Victor Jaime and Carlos Bedoya of Productora sit on the terrace of their office in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Productora_003.jpg
  • Left to right: Abel Perles,Carlos Bedoya,Wonne Icks and Victor Jaime of Productora sit on the terrace of their office in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Productora_002.jpg
  • Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Overview_005.jpg
  • Mexico City as seen from the top of the Torre Latinoamericano.
    Rochkind_Overview_002.jpg
  • The Torre Latinoamericano in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_TorreLatino_007.jpg
  • The Torre Latinoamericano in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_TorreLatino_005.jpg
  • The Torre Latinoamericano in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_TorreLatino_004.jpg
  • The Torre Latinoamericano in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_TorreLatino_001.jpg
  • Details inside the office of Tatiana Bilbao in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Tatiana_023.jpg
  • Details inside the office of Tatiana Bilbao in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Tatiana_020.jpg
  • The office of Tatiana Bilbao in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Tatiana_017.jpg
  • An umbrella hangs on a window inside the office of Tatiana Bilbao in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Tatiana_016.jpg
  • Details inside the office of Tatiana Bilbao in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Tatiana_015.jpg
  • Details inside the office of Tatiana Bilbao in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Tatiana_014.jpg
  • Details inside the office of Tatiana Bilbao in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Tatiana_013.jpg
  • Tatiana Bilbao works with Damian Figueroa, an architect, inside her office in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Tatiana_011.jpg
  • Tatiana Bilbao works inside her office in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Tatiana_004.jpg
  • Mauricio Rocha sits in his office in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Rocha_011.jpg
  • Deatils inside Mauricio Rocha's office in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Rocha_009.jpg
  • The courtyard is seen through the windows of the office of Mauricio Rocha in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Rocha_006.jpg
  • Details of the offices of Productora in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Productora_013.jpg
  • Lapiz, the office dog, inside the offices of Productora in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Productora_010.jpg
  • A camping chair sits on the terrace of the offices of Productora in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Productora_008.jpg
  • A trolley stop just down the block from the offices of Productora in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Productora_006.jpg
  • Left to right: Wonne Icks,, Carlos Bedoya, Abel Perles and Victor Jaime of Productora stand outside their office in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Productora_004.jpg
  • Mexico City as seen from the top of the Torre Latinoamericano.
    Rochkind_Overview_004.jpg
  • The Torre Latinoamericano in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_TorreLatino_006.jpg
  • A calendar is on a glass door inside the office of Tatiana Bilbao in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Tatiana_019.jpg
  • Tatiana Bilbao works with Damian Figueroa, an architect, inside her office in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Tatiana_008.jpg
  • Tatiana Bilbao works inside her office in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Tatiana_007.jpg
  • Tatiana Bilbao inside her office in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Tatiana_002.jpg
  • Mauricio Rocha sits for a portrait in the the workshop were models are made at his office in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Rocha_013.jpg
  • Mauricio Rocha sits in his office in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Rocha_010.jpg
  • Deatils inside Mauricio Rocha's office in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Rocha_005.jpg
  • Details inside the renovation of the new offices of Productora in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Productora_014.jpg
  • Tatiana Bilbao works with Damian Figueroa, an architect, inside her office in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Tatiana_009.jpg
  • Tatiana Bilbao in the elevator that leads to her office in Mexico City.
    Rochkind_Tatiana_001.jpg
  • Jose Castillo(hand over face) and Saidee Springall of Arquitectura 911Sc, hold a meeting in their office with consultants from the Theater Project Consultancy about the design for the Guadalajara Performing Arts Center.
    Rochkind_911sc_001.jpg
  • Saidee Springall of Arquitectura 911Sc, holds a meeting in her office with consultants from the Theater Project Consultancy about the design for the Guadalajara Performing Arts Center.
    Rochkind_911sc_002.jpg
  • Inside the Master Control Room at Globovision  Globovision, a 24 hour opposition news channel, faces various challenges with the introduction of a new media law.  Supporters of the law, which limits the showing of sex and violence during daylight hours, says it is designed to protect children who may be watching TV.  Opponents claim it is an attempt by President Hugo Chavez to limit what opposition news media can broadcast, and cover, that may negatively reflect the government.
    Rochkind_Venezuela_Media001.jpg
  • Backstage on the second night of  Fashion Week in Venezuela.  Throughout the week Venezuelan designers will show their new collections; there is also a night featuring Italian designers and BCBG will be featured on a different night.  Fashion and looking good are top priorities in Venezuela, where there is a general culture of beauty.  It is a culture that permeates all walks of life and covers the country like a blanket. Girls enter beauty pageants as toddlers and young women and men get plastic surgery as teens.  Venezuela is a country where thongs and short skirts are the norm, cleavage awaits around every corner and metrosexual men abound.
    Rochkind_VenBeauty104.jpg
  • A girl sits in front of a church that Father Sebastian Obermaier built in El Alto, Bolivia. a town he has lived in for 27 years .  "I don't feel Bolivian, I feel Aymara" he says, referring to the Aymara indigenous population that makes up more than 80% of El Alto. Father Obermaier has been designing and building churches in El Alto for the past 10 years, with a goal of building one church for every 10,000 inhabitants of the city, which currently has nearly 700,000 people living in it.  Everyone that visits Bolivia can see his numerous churches from the window of their airplane as it lands in El Alto.  The churches are marked by a style unique to Father Obermaier, that mixes indigenous symbols with tall towers and bright colors, that leave every church looking different, as if they were straight out of a children's pop-up book.
    Rochkind_Bolivia_Travel008.jpg
  • Andres Izarra gives an interview in his office when he was the Minister of Communications and Information. Private media in Venezuela say they face various challenges with the introduction of a new media law.  Supporters of the law, which limits the showing of sex and violence during daylight hours, says it is designed to protect children who may be watching TV.  Opponents claim it is an attempt by President Hugo Chavez to limit what opposition news media can broadcast, and cover, that may negatively reflect the government.  Television stations like Globovision, a 24 hour news channel,  must constantly monitor the material they show from their own broadcasts  as well as what they air from other networks like CNN in order to ensure they comply with the law.  In recent months Globovision has had to censor daytime footage from Iraq, a Jennifer Lopez video and street clashes in Caracas.
    Rochkind_Izarra004.jpg
  • Inside the Globovision news studio. Private media in Venezuela say they face various challenges with the introduction of a new media law.  Supporters of the law, which limits the showing of sex and violence during daylight hours, says it is designed to protect children who may be watching TV.  Opponents claim it is an attempt by President Hugo Chavez to limit what opposition news media can broadcast, and cover, that may negatively reflect the government.  Television stations like Globovision, a 24 hour news channel,  must constantly monitor the material they show from their own broadcasts  as well as what they air from other networks like CNN in order to ensure they comply with the law.  In recent months Globovision has had to censor daytime footage from Iraq, a Jennifer Lopez video and street clashes in Caracas.
    Rochkind_Globovision001.jpg
  • Models hang out  backstage during  Fashion Week in Venezuela.  Throughout the week Venezuelan designers will show their new collections; there is also a night featuring Italian designers and BCBG will be featured on a different night.  Fashion and looking good are top priorities in Venezuela, where there is a general culture of beauty.  It is a culture that permeates all walks of life and covers the country like a blanket. Girls enter beauty pageants as toddlers and young women and men get plastic surgery as teens.  Venezuela is a country where thongs and short skirts are the norm, cleavage awaits around every corner and metrosexual men abound.
    Rochkind_VenBeauty096.jpg
  • The second night of  Fashion Week in Venezuela.  Throughout the week Venezuelan designers will show their new collections; there is also a night featuring Italian designers and BCBG will be featured on a different night.  Fashion and looking good are top priorities in Venezuela, where there is a general culture of beauty.  It is a culture that permeates all walks of life and covers the country like a blanket. Girls enter beauty pageants as toddlers and young women and men get plastic surgery as teens.  Venezuela is a country where thongs and short skirts are the norm, cleavage awaits around every corner and metrosexual men abound.
    Rochkind_VenBeauty006.jpg
  • Models wait backstage before the opening night of Fashion Week in Caracas, Venezuela..  Throughout the week Venezuelan designers will show their new collections; there is also a night featuring Italian designers and BCBG will be featured on a different night.  Fashion and looking good are top priorities in Venezuela, where there is a general culture of beauty.  It is a culture that permeates all walks of life and covers the country like a blanket. Girls enter beauty pageants as toddlers and young women and men get plastic surgery as teens.  Venezuela is a country where thongs and short skirts are the norm, cleavage awaits around every corner and metrosexual men abound.
    Rochkind_VenBeauty049.jpg
  • Models wait backstage before the opening night of Fashion Week in Caracas, Venezuela..  Throughout the week Venezuelan designers will show their new collections; there is also a night featuring Italian designers and BCBG will be featured on a different night.  Fashion and looking good are top priorities in Venezuela, where there is a general culture of beauty.  It is a culture that permeates all walks of life and covers the country like a blanket. Girls enter beauty pageants as toddlers and young women and men get plastic surgery as teens.  Venezuela is a country where thongs and short skirts are the norm, cleavage awaits around every corner and metrosexual men abound.
    Rochkind_VenBeauty103.jpg
  • Inside the Master Control Room at Globovision  Globovision, a 24 hour opposition news channel, faces various challenges with the introduction of a new media law.  Supporters of the law, which limits the showing of sex and violence during daylight hours, says it is designed to protect children who may be watching TV.  Opponents claim it is an attempt by President Hugo Chavez to limit what opposition news media can broadcast, and cover, that may negatively reflect the government.
    Rochkind_Venezuela_Media002.jpg
  • Portrait of a church that Father Sebastian Obermaier built in El Alto, Bolivia. a town he has lived in for 27 years .  "I don't feel Bolivian, I feel Aymara" he says, referring to the Aymara indigenous population that makes up more than 80% of El Alto. Father Obermaier has been designing and building churches in El Alto for the past 10 years, with a goal of building one church for every 10,000 inhabitants of the city, which currently has nearly 700,000 people living in it.  Everyone that visits Bolivia can see his numerous churches from the window of their airplane as it lands in El Alto.  The churches are marked by a style unique to Father Obermaier, that mixes indigenous symbols with tall towers and bright colors, that leave every church looking different, as if they were straight out of a children's pop-up book.
    Rochkind_Bolivia_Travel006.jpg
  • People walk in front of the first church that Father Sebastian Obermaier built in El Alto, Bolivia. a town he has lived in for 27 years .  "I don't feel Bolivian, I feel Aymara" he says, referring to the Aymara indigenous population that makes up more than 80% of El Alto. Father Obermaier has been designing and building churches in El Alto for the past 10 years, with a goal of building one church for every 10,000 inhabitants of the city, which currently has nearly 700,000 people living in it.  Everyone that visits Bolivia can see his numerous churches from the window of their airplane as it lands in El Alto.  The churches are marked by a style unique to Father Obermaier, that mixes indigenous symbols with tall towers and bright colors, that leave every church looking different, as if they were straight out of a children's pop-up book.
    Rochkind_Bolivia_Travel001.jpg
  • Andres Izarra gives an interview in his office when he was the Minister of Communications and Information. Private media in Venezuela say they face various challenges with the introduction of a new media law.  Supporters of the law, which limits the showing of sex and violence during daylight hours, says it is designed to protect children who may be watching TV.  Opponents claim it is an attempt by President Hugo Chavez to limit what opposition news media can broadcast, and cover, that may negatively reflect the government.  Television stations like Globovision, a 24 hour news channel,  must constantly monitor the material they show from their own broadcasts  as well as what they air from other networks like CNN in order to ensure they comply with the law.  In recent months Globovision has had to censor daytime footage from Iraq, a Jennifer Lopez video and street clashes in Caracas.
    Rochkind_Izarra003.jpg
  • Andres Izarra gives an interview in his office when he was the Minister of Communications and Information. Private media in Venezuela say they face various challenges with the introduction of a new media law.  Supporters of the law, which limits the showing of sex and violence during daylight hours, says it is designed to protect children who may be watching TV.  Opponents claim it is an attempt by President Hugo Chavez to limit what opposition news media can broadcast, and cover, that may negatively reflect the government.  Television stations like Globovision, a 24 hour news channel,  must constantly monitor the material they show from their own broadcasts  as well as what they air from other networks like CNN in order to ensure they comply with the law.  In recent months Globovision has had to censor daytime footage from Iraq, a Jennifer Lopez video and street clashes in Caracas.
    Rochkind_Izarra002.jpg
  • Andres Izarra gives an interview in his office when he was the Minister of Communications and Information. Private media in Venezuela say they face various challenges with the introduction of a new media law.  Supporters of the law, which limits the showing of sex and violence during daylight hours, says it is designed to protect children who may be watching TV.  Opponents claim it is an attempt by President Hugo Chavez to limit what opposition news media can broadcast, and cover, that may negatively reflect the government.  Television stations like Globovision, a 24 hour news channel,  must constantly monitor the material they show from their own broadcasts  as well as what they air from other networks like CNN in order to ensure they comply with the law.  In recent months Globovision has had to censor daytime footage from Iraq, a Jennifer Lopez video and street clashes in Caracas.
    Rochkind_Izarra001.jpg
  • A woman walks beneath an overpass by graffiti that reads "The coup plotting Supreme Court".  Today marks the end of the initial 10 day period the court had to designate members of the National Electoral Council.  The NEC is the body that will ultimately be able to authorize and validate signatures calling for a presidential recall.
    Rochkind_VenPol005.tif
  • A woman walks in front of a church that Father Sebastian Obermaier built in El Alto, Bolivia. a town he has lived in for 27 years .  "I don't feel Bolivian, I feel Aymara" he says, referring to the Aymara indigenous population that makes up more than 80% of El Alto. Father Obermaier has been designing and building churches in El Alto for the past 10 years, with a goal of building one church for every 10,000 inhabitants of the city, which currently has nearly 700,000 people living in it.  Everyone that visits Bolivia can see his numerous churches from the window of their airplane as it lands in El Alto.  The churches are marked by a style unique to Father Obermaier, that mixes indigenous symbols with tall towers and bright colors, that leave every church looking different, as if they were straight out of a children's pop-up book.
    Rochkind_Bolivia_Travel009.jpg
  • Portrait of a church that Father Sebastian Obermaier built in El Alto, Bolivia. a town he has lived in for 27 years .  "I don't feel Bolivian, I feel Aymara" he says, referring to the Aymara indigenous population that makes up more than 80% of El Alto. Father Obermaier has been designing and building churches in El Alto for the past 10 years, with a goal of building one church for every 10,000 inhabitants of the city, which currently has nearly 700,000 people living in it.  Everyone that visits Bolivia can see his numerous churches from the window of their airplane as it lands in El Alto.  The churches are marked by a style unique to Father Obermaier, that mixes indigenous symbols with tall towers and bright colors, that leave every church looking different, as if they were straight out of a children's pop-up book.
    Rochkind_Bolivia_Travel007.jpg
  • A woman prays  at at church that Father Sebastian Obermaier built in El Alto, Bolivia. a town he has lived in for 27 years .  "I don't feel Bolivian, I feel Aymara" he says, referring to the Aymara indigenous population that makes up more than 80% of El Alto. Father Obermaier has been designing and building churches in El Alto for the past 10 years, with a goal of building one church for every 10,000 inhabitants of the city, which currently has nearly 700,000 people living in it.  Everyone that visits Bolivia can see his numerous churches from the window of their airplane as it lands in El Alto.  The churches are marked by a style unique to Father Obermaier, that mixes indigenous symbols with tall towers and bright colors, that leave every church looking different, as if they were straight out of a children's pop-up book.
    Rochkind_Bolivia_Travel005.jpg
  • A boy adds holy water before mass  at at church that Father Sebastian Obermaier built in El Alto, Bolivia. a town he has lived in for 27 years .  "I don't feel Bolivian, I feel Aymara" he says, referring to the Aymara indigenous population that makes up more than 80% of El Alto. Father Obermaier has been designing and building churches in El Alto for the past 10 years, with a goal of building one church for every 10,000 inhabitants of the city, which currently has nearly 700,000 people living in it.  Everyone that visits Bolivia can see his numerous churches from the window of their airplane as it lands in El Alto.  The churches are marked by a style unique to Father Obermaier, that mixes indigenous symbols with tall towers and bright colors, that leave every church looking different, as if they were straight out of a children's pop-up book.
    Rochkind_Bolivia_Travel004.jpg
  • Bolivians attend a service at at church that Father Sebastian Obermaier built in El Alto, Bolivia. a town he has lived in for 27 years .  "I don't feel Bolivian, I feel Aymara" he says, referring to the Aymara indigenous population that makes up more than 80% of El Alto. Father Obermaier has been designing and building churches in El Alto for the past 10 years, with a goal of building one church for every 10,000 inhabitants of the city, which currently has nearly 700,000 people living in it.  Everyone that visits Bolivia can see his numerous churches from the window of their airplane as it lands in El Alto.  The churches are marked by a style unique to Father Obermaier, that mixes indigenous symbols with tall towers and bright colors, that leave every church looking different, as if they were straight out of a children's pop-up book.
    Rochkind_Bolivia_Travel003.jpg
  • People walk in front of the first church that Father Sebastian Obermaier built in El Alto, Bolivia. a town he has lived in for 27 years .  "I don't feel Bolivian, I feel Aymara" he says, referring to the Aymara indigenous population that makes up more than 80% of El Alto. Father Obermaier has been designing and building churches in El Alto for the past 10 years, with a goal of building one church for every 10,000 inhabitants of the city, which currently has nearly 700,000 people living in it.  Everyone that visits Bolivia can see his numerous churches from the window of their airplane as it lands in El Alto.  The churches are marked by a style unique to Father Obermaier, that mixes indigenous symbols with tall towers and bright colors, that leave every church looking different, as if they were straight out of a children's pop-up book.
    Rochkind_Bolivia_Travel002.jpg
  • A fashion show during  Fashion Week in Venezuela.  Throughout the week Venezuelan designers will show their new collections; there is also a night featuring Italian designers and BCBG will be featured on a different night.  Fashion and looking good are top priorities in Venezuela, where there is a general culture of beauty.  It is a culture that permeates all walks of life and covers the country like a blanket. Girls enter beauty pageants as toddlers and young women and men get plastic surgery as teens.  Venezuela is a country where thongs and short skirts are the norm, cleavage awaits around every corner and metrosexual men abound.
    Rochkind_VenBeauty023.jpg
  • Models get ready backstage at Italian Festival night, featuring designers Renato Balestra and Franco Ciambella, during fashion week in Caracas.   Fashion and looking good are top priorities in Venezuela, where there is a general culture of beauty.  It is a culture that permeates all walks of life and covers the country like a blanket. Girls enter beauty pageants as toddlers and young women and men get plastic surgery as teens.  Venezuela is a country where thongs and short skirts are the norm, cleavage awaits around every corner and metrosexual men abound.
    Rochkind_VenBeauty025.jpg
  • Models wait backstage before the opening night of Fashion Week in Caracas, Venezuela..  Throughout the week Venezuelan designers will show their new collections; there is also a night featuring Italian designers and BCBG will be featured on a different night.  Fashion and looking good are top priorities in Venezuela, where there is a general culture of beauty.  It is a culture that permeates all walks of life and covers the country like a blanket. Girls enter beauty pageants as toddlers and young women and men get plastic surgery as teens.  Venezuela is a country where thongs and short skirts are the norm, cleavage awaits around every corner and metrosexual men abound.
    Rochkind_VenBeauty105.jpg