Allen Sullivan Media

  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • Archive
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x

Search Results

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

Loading ()...

  • Graffiti artists painting in a lot off Peachtree Street in Atlanta, Georgia.
    peachtree graffiti .tif
  • Victor Arias paints street scenes on 5a Avenida Norte. Until 1776, Antigua was Guatemala's third capital city, but was nearly destroyed by earthquakes. Today, Antigua is Guatemala's foremost tourist center and a UNESCO World Heritage site.<br />
    051030antigua_guatemala12.jpg
  • Rusted painted metal, Santa Barbara, California, 1992.
    1992 rusted metal sign 1.tif
  • Victor Arias paints street scenes on 5a Avenida Norte. Until 1776, Antigua was Guatemala's third capital city, but was nearly destroyed by earthquakes. Today, Antigua is Guatemala's foremost tourist center and a UNESCO World Heritage site.<br />
    051030antigua_guatemala14.jpg
  • Victor Arias paints street scenes on 5a Avenida Norte. Until 1776, Antigua was Guatemala's third capital city, but was nearly destroyed by earthquakes. Today, Antigua is Guatemala's foremost tourist center and a UNESCO World Heritage site.<br />
    051030antigua_guatemala13.jpg
  • Victor Arias paints street scenes on 5a Avenida Norte. Until 1776, Antigua was Guatemala's third capital city, but was nearly destroyed by earthquakes. Today, Antigua is Guatemala's foremost tourist center and a UNESCO World Heritage site.<br />
    051030antigua_guatemala11.jpg
  • Sun Ra graffiti on wall in midtown Atlanta, Georgia, 1993
    1993 sun ra graffiti 1.tif
  • Graffiti on concrete brige supports in Franklin, North Carolina.
    20200430 xpro3 franklin greenway-40.tif
  • A small dog sits in front of colonial home in Guatemala on Saturday, Feb. 6, 2021.
    20210206 dog sits in front of red do...tif
  • "Chromatic Gate" sculpture by Herbert Bayer on Cabrillo Street in Santa Barbara, California, 1992.
    1992 chromatic gate 1.tif
  • Masks for sale on display in a textile store in La Antigua, Sacatepéquez, Guatemala.
    20090724 antigua wooden masks 001.TIF
  • "Chromatic Gate" sculpture by Herbert Bayer on Cabrillo Street in Santa Barbara, California, 1992.
    1992 chromatic gate 2.tif
  • Details of a back porch screen.
    20070825porch_screen008.jpg
  • Details of a back porch screen.
    20070825porch_screen007.jpg
  • Details of a back porch screen.
    20070825porch_screen006.jpg
  • White picket fence falling apart, surrounded by crawling vegetation, in Atlanta, Ga. on Oct. 11, 2011.
    white picket fence 1.tif
  • A weathered wall in Antigua, Guatemla on Sunday, July 22, 2018.
    20180722 antigua old walls-1116.tif
  • A weathered wall in Antigua, Guatemla on Sunday, July 22, 2018.
    20180722 antigua old walls-1115.tif
  • A bench and beer bottles outside the Timoleague Friary, a Franciscan friary in Timoleague, County Cork, Ireland.
    20100811 Timoleague Abbey red bench.TIF
  • Details of a back porch screen.
    20070825porch_screen005.jpg
  • Details of a back porch screen.
    20070825porch_screen002.jpg
  • Details of a back porch screen.
    20070825porch_screen001.jpg
  • Corrugated metal wall composed to resemble the USA flag, in Antigua, Guatemala on August 13, 2018.
    20180812 antigua morning-1.tif
  • Bordered by collapsed buildings in Jacmel, young men work out in a street gym. The 7.0 earthquake that devastated parts of Haiti on January 12 killed hundreds of thousands of people. January's earthquake killed hundreds of thousands of people and caused significant and lasting structural and economic damage in the Caribbean nation.
    haiti_030.JPG
  • Green, red and yellow cement post. Santa Barbara, California.
    green yellow red post 1.tif
  • Soldiers of the Georgia Army National Guard, 48th Brigade, 1st and 2nd Battalion, 121st Infantry Regiment, and the 1st Battalion, 118th Artillery Regiment practice scenarios at Camp Shelby, Mississippi on Friday, May 8, 2009 in preparation for their deployment to Afghanistan. Their mission is to help train the Afghan National Army and Police forces. Foreign nationals and Mississippi locals act as townspeople, police and soldiers during the scenarios...Still image taken from video.
    20090508 48th Brigade Camp Shelby 00...tif
  • Details of a back porch screen.
    20070825porch_screen004.jpg
  • Details of a back porch screen.
    20070825porch_screen003.jpg
  • A street child shows off one of his few possessions--a photograph of his younger brother in an elementary school graduation uniform.
    delacalle017.dng
  • Pilar Lopez, coordinator of the Guatemalan non-governmental organization Medicos Sin Fronteras, said she believes there to be about 3,000 children and young adults living on the streets of Guatemala City, partially shown here from an overlook in the surrounding mountains<br />
    061905guate003.jpg
  • Joel Luna, who believes he is 18, shows a surgical scar made when doctors pulled a private guard's bullet from his back and tried to repair the damage. Luna said a friend stole a cell phone in Guatemala City, and as Luna ran the guard shot him in the back.
    delacalle022.dng
  • Richard Long in his Inman Park home. The cultural historian is being honored by the National Black Arts Festival on the occasion of his 80th birthday.
    070718 richard long 004.dng
  • Richard Long in his Inman Park home. The cultural historian is being honored by the National Black Arts Festival on the occasion of his 80th birthday.
    070718 richard long 002.dng
  • Richard Long in his Inman Park home. The cultural historian is being honored by the National Black Arts Festival on the occasion of his 80th birthday.
    070718 richard long 001.dng
  • Richard Long in his Inman Park home. The cultural historian is being honored by the National Black Arts Festival on the occasion of his 80th birthday.
    070718 richard long 003.dng
  • The Good Neighbor Day Air Show at Dekalb Peachtree Airport in Atlanta on Saturday, June 3, 2006.
    060603 DKXairshow_090.jpg
  • Jorge, 15, huffs solvent from a soaked ball of cloth. Guatemala's street kids mainly use paint thinner instead of glue, as it is cheaper and gives them a sense of relief from hunger pains and cold nights. A small bottle of paint thinner costs less than a dollar.
    delacalle006.dng
  • Juan Carlos Figueroa spends his nights on a corner in Gautemala City's Zone 8. In his cupped hand he holds a ball of cloth soaked with paint thinner for huffing. Many of "los niños de la calle,"--the children of the streets--are addicted to paint thinner, soaking balls of cloth with it and holding the toxic rags to their mouths. The children and young adults prefer solvent to glue because it is cheaper and helps them forget their hunger pains and cold. Carlos Toledo, director and founder of Nuestros Derechos--Our Rights- a Guatemalan non-governmental organization that tries to help the children off the streets and into society, said there are about 10,000 children living without homes or stable lives in Guatemala. "These children are illegal in their own country," Toledo said, since most have no legal documentation and are not recognized as existing by the government.
    delacalle015.dng
  • About 20 teenagers and young adults live at an abandoned gas station in Guatemala City's Zone 4. Human waste litters the grounds.. About 20 otherwise homeless people live inside the station, and most are addicted to huffing paint thinner to numb the cold and their hunger pains.
    delacalle009.dng
  • Guatemalan youth hang out on a corner in Zona 8 of Guatemala City, Guatemala on Monday, June 13, 2005. Many of "los niños de la calle,"--the children of the streets--are addicted to paint thinner, soaking balls of cloth with it and holding the toxic rags to their mouths. The children and young adults prefer solvent to glue because it is cheaper and helps them forget their hunger pains and cold. Carlos Toledo, director and founder of Nuestros Derechos--Our Rights- a Guatemalan non-governmental organization that tries to help the children off the streets and into society, said there are about 10,000 children living without homes or stable lives in Guatemala. "These children are illegal in their own country," Toledo said, since most have no legal documentation and are not recognized as existing by the government.
    delacalle010.dng
  • Guatemalan youth hang out on a corner in Zona 8 of Guatemala City, Guatemala on Monday, June 13, 2005. Many of "los niños de la calle,"--the children of the streets--are addicted to paint thinner, soaking balls of cloth with it and holding the toxic rags to their mouths. The children and young adults prefer solvent to glue because it is cheaper and helps them forget their hunger pains and cold. Carlos Toledo, director and founder of Nuestros Derechos--Our Rights- a Guatemalan non-governmental organization that tries to help the children off the streets and into society, said there are about 10,000 children living without homes or stable lives in Guatemala. "These children are illegal in their own country," Toledo said, since most have no legal documentation and are not recognized as existing by the government.
    delacalle023.dng
  • Guatemalan youth hang out on a corner in Zona 8 of Guatemala City, Guatemala on Monday, June 13, 2005. Many of "los niños de la calle,"--the children of the streets--are addicted to paint thinner, soaking balls of cloth with it and holding the toxic rags to their mouths. The children and young adults prefer solvent to glue because it is cheaper and helps them forget their hunger pains and cold. Carlos Toledo, director and founder of Nuestros Derechos--Our Rights- a Guatemalan non-governmental organization that tries to help the children off the streets and into society, said there are about 10,000 children living without homes or stable lives in Guatemala. "These children are illegal in their own country," Toledo said, since most have no legal documentation and are not recognized as existing by the government.
    061305 guate233.dng
  • Sandra Guamux, 21, sits with her five-month-old son, Alfredo, at an abandoned gas station in Zone 4 of Guatemala City, Guatemala. About 20 otherwise homeless people live inside the station, and most are addicted to huffing paint thinner to numb the cold and their hunger pains. Guamux said a baby was stolen from her five days after it was born last year, and she is convinced the baby went into an illegal adoption system. She added that the police told her they would not investigate the situation since she had no photograph of the child.
    delacalle014.dng
  • Guatemalan youth hang out on a corner in Zone 8 of Guatemala City, Guatemala on Monday night, June 13, 2005 as Doctors Without Borders workers gather their names. Many of "los niños de la calle,"--the children of the streets--are addicted to paint thinner, soaking balls of cloth with it and holding the toxic rags to their mouths. The children and young adults prefer solvent to glue because it is cheaper and helps them forget their hunger pains and cold. Carlos Toledo, director and founder of Nuestros Derechos--Our Rights- a Guatemalan non-governmental organization that tries to help the children off the streets and into society, said there are about 10,000 children living without homes or stable lives in Guatemala. "These children are illegal in their own country," Toledo said, since most have no legal documentation and are not recognized as existing by the government.
    061305 guate247.dng
  • Sandra Guamux, 21, sits with her five-month-old son, Alfredo, at an abandoned gas station in Zone 4 of Guatemala City, Guatemala. About 20 otherwise homeless people live inside the station, and most are addicted to huffing paint thinner to numb the cold and their hunger pains. Guamux said a baby was stolen from her five days after it was born last year, and she is convinced the baby went into an illegal adoption system. She added that the police told her they would not investigate the situation since she had no photograph of the child.
    delacalle013.dng
  • About 20 teenagers and young adults live at an abandoned gas station in Guatemala City's Zone 4. Human waste litters the grounds.. About 20 otherwise homeless people live inside the station, and most are addicted to huffing paint thinner to numb the cold and their hunger pains. The NGO Nuestros Derechos was visiting on this night.
    061705 guatekids116.dng
  • About 20 teenagers and young adults live at an abandoned gas station in Guatemala City's Zone 4. Human waste litters the grounds.. About 20 otherwise homeless people live inside the station, and most are addicted to huffing paint thinner to numb the cold and their hunger pains.
    delacalle011.dng
  • About 20 teenagers and young adults live at an abandoned gas station in Guatemala City's Zone 4. Human waste litters the grounds.. About 20 otherwise homeless people live inside the station, and most are addicted to huffing paint thinner to numb the cold and their hunger pains.
    delacalle012.dng
  • A man huffing paint thinner sits in one of Guatemala City's massive trash dumps, where people make a meager income rummaging for recyclable debris.
    delacalle028.dng
  • A man addicted to huffing paint thinner sits in one of Guatemala City's massive trash dumps, where people make a meager income rummaging for recyclable debris.
    061405 guatekids059.dng
  • Guatemalan youth hang out on a corner in Zone 8 of Guatemala City, Guatemala on Monday night, June 13, 2005 as Doctors Without Borders workers gather their names. Many of "los niños de la calle,"--the children of the streets--are addicted to paint thinner, soaking balls of cloth with it and holding the toxic rags to their mouths. The children and young adults prefer solvent to glue because it is cheaper and helps them forget their hunger pains and cold. Carlos Toledo, director and founder of Nuestros Derechos--Our Rights- a Guatemalan non-governmental organization that tries to help the children off the streets and into society, said there are about 10,000 children living without homes or stable lives in Guatemala. "These children are illegal in their own country," Toledo said, since most have no legal documentation and are not recognized as existing by the government.
    061305 guate263.dng
  • Guatemalan youth hang out on a corner in Zone 8 of Guatemala City, Guatemala on Monday night, June 13, 2005 as Doctors Without Borders workers gather their names. Many of "los niños de la calle,"--the children of the streets--are addicted to paint thinner, soaking balls of cloth with it and holding the toxic rags to their mouths. The children and young adults prefer solvent to glue because it is cheaper and helps them forget their hunger pains and cold. Carlos Toledo, director and founder of Nuestros Derechos--Our Rights- a Guatemalan non-governmental organization that tries to help the children off the streets and into society, said there are about 10,000 children living without homes or stable lives in Guatemala. "These children are illegal in their own country," Toledo said, since most have no legal documentation and are not recognized as existing by the government.
    061305 guate261.dng
  • Guatemalan youth hang out on a corner in Zone 8 of Guatemala City, Guatemala on Monday night, June 13, 2005 as Doctors Without Borders workers gather their names. Many of "los niños de la calle,"--the children of the streets--are addicted to paint thinner, soaking balls of cloth with it and holding the toxic rags to their mouths. The children and young adults prefer solvent to glue because it is cheaper and helps them forget their hunger pains and cold. Carlos Toledo, director and founder of Nuestros Derechos--Our Rights- a Guatemalan non-governmental organization that tries to help the children off the streets and into society, said there are about 10,000 children living without homes or stable lives in Guatemala. "These children are illegal in their own country," Toledo said, since most have no legal documentation and are not recognized as existing by the government.
    061305 guate259.dng
  • Street teenagers Julio and Aura make out in Guatemala City's Zone 8. Pilar Lopez, coordinator of Medicos Sin Fronteras, said street kids often come to her clinic with sexually transmitted diseases. Many of "los niños de la calle,"--the children of the streets--are addicted to paint thinner, soaking balls of cloth with it and holding the toxic rags to their mouths. The children and young adults prefer solvent to glue because it is cheaper and helps them forget their hunger pains and cold. Carlos Toledo, director and founder of Nuestros Derechos--Our Rights- a Guatemalan non-governmental organization that tries to help the children off the streets and into society, said there are about 10,000 children living without homes or stable lives in Guatemala. "These children are illegal in their own country," Toledo said, since most have no legal documentation and are not recognized as existing by the government.
    delacalle027.dng
  • About 20 teenagers and young adults live at an abandoned gas station in Guatemala City's Zone 4. Human waste litters the grounds.. About 20 otherwise homeless people live inside the station, and most are addicted to huffing paint thinner to numb the cold and their hunger pains.
    061705 guatekids055.dng
  • Guatemalan youth hang out on a corner in Zona 8 of Guatemala City, Guatemala on Monday, June 13, 2005. Many of "los niños de la calle,"--the children of the streets--are addicted to paint thinner, soaking balls of cloth with it and holding the toxic rags to their mouths. The children and young adults prefer solvent to glue because it is cheaper and helps them forget their hunger pains and cold. Carlos Toledo, director and founder of Nuestros Derechos--Our Rights- a Guatemalan non-governmental organization that tries to help the children off the streets and into society, said there are about 10,000 children living without homes or stable lives in Guatemala. "These children are illegal in their own country," Toledo said, since most have no legal documentation and are not recognized as existing by the government.
    061505 guatekids123.dng
  • Guatemalan youth hang out on a corner in Zone 8 of Guatemala City, Guatemala on Monday night, June 13, 2005 as Doctors Without Borders workers gather their names. Many of "los niños de la calle,"--the children of the streets--are addicted to paint thinner, soaking balls of cloth with it and holding the toxic rags to their mouths. The children and young adults prefer solvent to glue because it is cheaper and helps them forget their hunger pains and cold. Carlos Toledo, director and founder of Nuestros Derechos--Our Rights- a Guatemalan non-governmental organization that tries to help the children off the streets and into society, said there are about 10,000 children living without homes or stable lives in Guatemala. "These children are illegal in their own country," Toledo said, since most have no legal documentation and are not recognized as existing by the government.
    061305 guate291_1_1.dng
  • A corrugate metal wall and two painted stones in Antigua, Guatemala on August 4, 2018.
    20180804 antigua guatemala-64.tif
  • A Delta 757, painted with a pink theme to raise awareness to the fight against breast cancer, flies over a C-130 aircraft at The Great Georgia Airshow at Falcon Field Airport in Peachtree City, Ga. on Sunday, Oct. 15, 2006.<br />
    061015 ptc air show 009.jpg
  • Daniela Parra, 12, views a painting during the pubic opening of Louvre Atlanta at the High Museum of Art. Over the next three years, the High Museum will feature hundreds of works of art from the Musée du Louvre in Paris.
    061014_louvreatlanta014.jpg
  • Daniela Parra, 12, views a painting during the pubic opening of Louvre Atlanta at the High Museum of Art. Over the next three years, the High Museum will feature hundreds of works of art from the Musée du Louvre in Paris.
    061014_louvreatlanta013.jpg