Downtown Rio De Janeiro, Limited Edition M A Andrew print

3 02 2008
Rio De Janeiro
Taken in Rio De Janeiro, 2005. More limited edition prints are available on my site. www.picturesforwalls.com


Children in the surf, Copacabana Beach, Rio, Brazil

25 01 2008
It had rained for about two days solid and the storm had left the coastal front battered. Taken on Copacabana Beach, Rio De Janeiro, 2005.


Impressions of Rio

25 07 2007

The statue of Christ the RedeemerThe flight took 12 hours from the UK. We followed the West coast of Africa for most of it before crossing the Atlantic. This was my first time in Rio and I knew that I wouldn’t get this chance for very long time to come. It was Christmas 2005. Snowfall and cold weather was what I had left behind. Blue skies and beaches was what I imagined lay ahead.

The taxi ride from the airport took about 25 minutes. I was immediately struck by the slums. Upon leaving the airport, the Favelas were soon apparent dotted either side of the made arterial road into the city. The occasional wasteland, a welcome break from the carpet of shanty town housing, were full of young children kicking mishapen footballs.

CariocasI strained to look out of the window of the taxi, searching for the famous landmark of Christ the Redeemer, as we entered the city. Suddenly it came into view. Small – much smaller than I had anticipated – but majestic and proud, the statue would look over me throughout my time in this city.

We passed through a tunnel on the way to Copacabana beach when I heard my first Rio gunshots. It was probably a car backfiring I remember thinking. It wasn’t. The reports on the nightly news highlighted Rio’s problems with guns only too well.The pavement at the Copa

Copacabana is where I stayed. Right on the famous boulevard. At the top of this beach you pass a headland before arriving at Ipanema. Along one side of Copacabana are bars, restaurants and hotels. One of the more famous is the Copacabana Hotel. A big beautiful looking, colonial style affair, the hotel is a throw back to another era and another time. In many ways, I felt this stunning building was a little incongruous to the rest of the Avenida Atlantica which seemed a little run down and rough around the edges. After dark , the working girls of Rio can be found in bars within 50 yards of this palatial setting. I must admit to feeling a little awkward trekking around this city with expensive photography gear. Around Copacabana, the high number of visible police is a double edged sword. Reasurring and panicking visitors at the same time. The police are here for a reason though as Rio is a city of extremes.The Copacabana Palace

Copacabana Beach, Rio De Janeiro

At the beach

Uber rich live and rub shoulders with the super poor. As your taxi stops for a moment at a red light, two boys walk out

into the road and go through their juggling act for umpteenth time that day. 20 seconds to impress the tourists enough to get some form of tip. Across the road from the Copacabana Palace, I saw two more boys rummaging for food and scraps in the bins. Yet Rio is also an idiosyncratic city. In a landscape of such stunning beauty, it is the poor who live and breathe the breathtaking views of the city from the hilltops, albeit from the squalour of

the slums. The rich, in contrast, remain in the low lying areas of Ipanema and

Barra di Tijuca hemmed in by the Atlantic Ocean and the sprawling Favelas.



Christ the Redeemer, Corcovado, Rio De Janeiro

24 07 2007

Christ the Redeemer, ( Cristo Redentor in Portuguese), is perhaps one of the most impressive monuments in the world. Not because of the statue itself, although it is still mightily impressive viewed from just about anywhere in the city of Rio De Janeiro, but because of it’s location atop Rio De Janeiro’s Corcovado peak in the Tijuca Forest National Park.

The statue stands 39.6 metres (130 feet) tall, weighs 700 tons. I climbed to its base via the funicular railway. This in itself was quite a journey. The trainline winds itself around Corcovado at an impossible angle climbing through the forest. The canopy finally breaks and then suddenly spectacular views of the sprawling great city, favelas climbing skywards clinging to the rugged terrain and then with a twist, the Atlantic Ocean and the famous beaches of Ipanema and Copacabana.

Once off the train, you walk. Climbing stone steps up and up, around the base of the statue and upwards once more. I think in total it took about 35 minutes but in the end it was worth it.

Christ the Redeemer