Show Navigation

Kevin Moloney Photography

  • Portfolio
  • Archive
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area
  • Instagram
  • Transmedia Journalism
  • About
  • Contact
All Galleries
Add to Cart Download

Quick Portfolio

38 images Created 7 Aug 2012

View: 100 | All

Loading ()...

  • A pigeon flies past the Monumento Estácio de Sá, a monument to the founder of Rio de Janeiro, and by Pão de Açúcar, or Sugarloaf Rock in Rio, Monday, July 25, 2022.
    Rio_2022_54.jpg
  • Atop Corcovado at the feet of Cristo Redentor in Rio de Janeiro, Thursday, July 21, 2022.
    Rio_2022_42.jpg
  • Rio de Janeiro from atop Pão de Açúcar —Sugarloaf — Thursday, July 21, 2022.
    Rio_2022_39.jpg
  • March for our Lives, Indianapolis, June 11, 2022.
    March_for_Our_Lives_01.jpg
  • Family trip to Puerto Rico with friend Arden Delong, July, 2019.
    Puerto_Rico_22.JPG
  • Dizzy Gillespie performs at the Van Wezel Performing Arts Hall in Sarasota, Fla., Feb. 4, 1990.
    Dizzy_Gillespie_VanWezel_01.jpg
  • Kosciusko County Fair and Rodeo, Warsaw, Indiana, July 9, 2018.
    Indiana_Rodeos_Kosciusko_001.jpg
  • Demonstrators march in the Women's March on Colorado, Saturday, Jan. 21, 2017, one day after the inauguration of president Donald Trump. Tens of thousands took part to support women's rights perceived to be under threat by the new administration. (Kevin Moloney)
    March_on_Denver_04.jpg
  • Fishermen and fishmongers await the morning catch in the colonial village of Adícora on Venezuela's Paraguaná Peninsula, Dec. 12, 2015. The remote desert peninsula in the Caribbean Sea lays bare the effects of Venezuela's politicized economy after 17 years under Hugo Chavez and successor Nicolas Maduro.
    Paraguana_Workshop_Moloney_01.jpg
  • A boy waits as fishermen bring in the morning catch in the colonial village of Adícora on Venezuela's Paraguaná Peninsula, Dec. 12, 2015. The remote desert peninsula in the Caribbean Sea lays bare the effects of Venezuela's politicized economy after 17 years under Hugo Chavez and successor Nicolas Maduro.
    Paraguana_Workshop_Moloney_03.jpg
  • Cleaning a vase of flowers in a rain drain. New Orleans, January, 1993.
    New_Orleans_Flowers_01.jpg
  • Colorado marijuana industry insiders light a vapor pipe that vaporizes butane-extracted cannabis oils outside Grow Big Supply, a giant marijuana growers supply store in Denver, Colo., Thursday, July 31, 2014. The warehouse and store features a gathering for industry insiders each Thursday that features a bar and gogo dancers. (Photo/Kevin Moloney)
    Danver_Marijuana_Industry_08.jpg
  • Sonya Robison, of rural Yoder, Colo., was attacked in 2006 at home and missed a couple of payments while deciding whether to abandon the home because of her trauma. She decided to stay, and negotiated a repayment plan with her servicer. Though Robison was current on payments, she went away for Christmas and returned to find the locks changed and the house ìwinterized.î The electricity, gas, water supply were all turned off. The servicer said it was a mistake, they would cover the costs of turning everything back on. She suggested she just skip on payment. By the time she made the next payment, they sent it back and initiated foreclosure proceedings. But it turns out the party thatís filed the foreclosure does not appear on any deed or note. She is suing the bank. (Photo/Kevin Moloney for the New York Times)
    Foreclosure_Victims_Robison_03.jpg
  • Professional bull rider Scott Barajas, 19, of Cheyenne, demostrates the up-facing riding position of his good friend Bryan Guthrie at a small arena behind the Stampede Steakhouse in Fort Collins, Colo. Nationally ranked professional bull rider Bryan Guthrie often rode in the small local series. Guthrie died of an overdose of heroine last December. His former friend Joel Murdoch faces sentencing in June for conspiracy to distribute drugs. (Kevin Moloney for the New York Times)
    Bullrider_Guthrie_Death_35.jpg
  • A Buddhist monk Wan Na Sharmi explains his life at the tiny Warso monastery in Yangon, Union of Myanmar (Burma). More than 50,000 Buddhist monasteries fill Myanmar, drawing monks to study from all of south and southeast Asia.
    Rangoon_Burma_Botataung_02.jpg
  • Vendors, worshippers and neighborhood residents circulate on the streets outside the historic Botataung Paya in Yangon, Union of Myanmar (Burma). The pagoda is said to house several strands of the Buddha's hair, brought by pilgrims from India 2,000 years ago...EDS: Not for syndication nor redistribution. Web slide show only. Please do not strip metadata for Web use..
    Rangoon_Burma_Botataung_01.jpg
  • A bride poses for pre-nuptual photos near the Church of Nossa Senhora da Conceição, or Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception, in Ouro Prêto, Brazil. Ouro Prêto boasts 19 churches from the Baroque and Rococco schools. Brazil's interior state of Minas Gerais, once a colonial mining capitol for the Portuguese crown, has changed little in appearance since the 18th century. With the help of laws to preserve its baroque architecture, the state's sky is scraped at every turn by 250-year-old church steeples, and lined with cobblestones. (Kevin Moloney for the New York Times)
    Minas_Gerais_01.jpg
  • Photojournalist and teacher Paul F. Moloney
    Paul_Moloney_75_03.jpg
  • Tuareg riders watch the Festival au Desert music and culture festival in Essakane, Mali, from atop a nearby dune.
    Festival_au_Desert_15b.jpg
  • A boy hops across a rocky outcrop near Kambasende, Mali. Engineers without Borders, an international aid group with members worldwide, is examining the village in Mali's Dogon country to see if they can improve water distribution to the community. Currently, women and girls must haul from a well a kilometer way, several times a day. The organization hopes freeing time from water needs will allow more gilrs in the community to attend school.
    Engineers_Borders_0017.jpg
  • Travelers pass a Tyranosaurus Rex display at Pittsburgh International Airport advertising the Carnegie Museum of Natural History. Airports are catering to travelers who now spend more time in airport terminals and concourses after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. Pittsburgh boasts shopping with prices guaranteed to be the same as outside, plus lower sales taxes. (Kevin Moloney for the New York Times)
    Airports_Pittsburgh_07.jpg
  • Modern Drunkard Magazine Drunks of the Month Andy Ayers, left, and Shorts McGraw share an inebriated moment of flirtation at the second-annual Modern Drunkard convention.
    ModernDrunks_01.jpg
  • Felicia Quintana crouches behind a grotto before her appearance as an angel in a passion play at the Santuário de Chimayó in northern New Mexico on Good Friday. Thousands of pilgrims make a pilgrimage to the 190-year-old shrine every Easter as an expression of faith, a connection to old Hispanic roots and in hopes of the miracles reputed to occur there.
    Chimayo-05_09.jpg
  • A boy walks below artfully painted walls in the village of Pucara (acute accent on final a), Bolivia. Ernesto "Che" Guevara was captured by the Bolivian army in 1967 in a nearby valley and executed in nearby La Higuera days later. Guevara and fellow communist guerillas were attempting to launch a continent-wide revolution modeled on Guevara's success in Cuba in the late 1950s. The Bolivian government recently began promoting the area where he fought, was captured, killed and burried for 30 years as the "Ruta del Che," or Che's Route. (Kevin Moloney for the New York Times)
    RutaDelChe_14.jpg
  • Muriel Kubishin, center, sells a vast array of clothing alongside U.S. Highway 666 at Sheep Springs, N.M. on the Navajo reservation. Citizen groups petitioned the federal government to change the number of the road for fear the devilish connection contributed to accident and fatality rates on the highway.
    Rt666_16.jpg
  • Delores County deputy sheriff Tom Halper patrols a peaceful stretch of U.S. highway 666 in southwestern Colorado. According to Halper, there has been only one fatality on his stretch of the road in 9 years. (Kevin Moloney for the New York Times)
    666_Halper_01.jpg
  • Two young mule deer fawns huddle among the ashes of Colorado's mammouth Hayman fire, where more than 136,000 acres of forest land have burned. The two likely orphans are indicative of the environmental damage caused by the largest wild fire in state history.
    Fire01.jpg
  • Cuban elementary students line up in martial form after a field trip through the city.
    CubaMarch.jpg
  • A theater troupe advertises an upcoming show in Lafayatte, Colo.
    Aliens.jpg
  • Cuban President Fidel Castro casts a distinctive shadow on a balcony in Santiago de Cuba during a 40th anniversary speech made from the same rail where he addressed crowds after winning the revolution in 1959.
    FidelShadow.JPG
  • School boys in the Amazon port city of Manaus leap from fishing boats into the Rio Negro below a central city market. The Rio Negro enters the Rio Solimões at Manaus to form the Brazilian Amazon.
    032ManausBoys.jpg
  • Maria José da Silva, a recent convert to the assembly of God church in Brazil, is blessed by the pastor and missionaries of her church as she holds her daughter Mêcia, 2, in the livingroom of her home in one of Rio de Janeiro's worst slums.
    048MJBless.jpg
  • Pedestrians and vendors pass political posters in a central square in Mysore, India, shortly before the 1998 elections. Voting in the world’s largest democracy resulted in a 17-party coalition government.
    Mysore.jpg
  • A porta bandeira, or flag bearer, of Rio's Acadêmicos do Salgueiro samba school spins and twists her way through the crowds dancing to the group's chosen theme samba for the year.
    061PortaBand.jpg
  • A rodeo fan watches her favorite cowboy change clothes under the bleechers at a rodeo arena in Okeechobee, Fla.
    OkeeLustBW.jpg
  • Cattlemen's rodeo Okeechobee, Fla.
    OkeeChaos.jpg
  • Kentereon "Squiggy" Hollowell turns a back flip in front of the remains of the Sea Grape Village apartments where he lived before the storm. The government-subsidized housing in Homestead was condemned, leaving hundreds of residents in need of new homes.
    011Flip.jpg
  • Frabces Chavez sweeps the Santuario de Chimayó, in Chimayó, N.M. the morning of Holy Thursday. The annual Good Friday pilgrimage to the church, built in 1815, attracts ten thousand pilgrims.
    ChimayoFrances.jpg