Olivier Asselin photography

Show Navigation
  • Portfolio
  • About
  • Contact
  • Archive
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area

Search Results

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

Loading ()...

  • Fishing nets and boat on the beach at Aflao, Volta Region, Eastern Ghana
    GHA05AflaoFishing0007.jpg
  • Refrigerated fruit cargo boat docked at seaport.
    05GHA.IMG_5492.jpg
  • Refrigerated fruit cargo boat docked at seaport.
    05GHA.IMG_5493.jpg
  • A young girl sits on the beach next to a colorful wooden fishing boat near Sao Filipe, Fogo Island, Cape Verde, on Thursday December 30, 2010.
    CPV10.1230.TRAVEL0527.jpg
  • A young girl sits on the beach next to a colorful wooden fishing boat near Sao Filipe, Fogo Island, Cape Verde, on Thursday December 30, 2010.
    CPV10.1230.TRAVEL0524.jpg
  • Fisherman repairing fishing nets on the beach at Aflao, Volta region, Eastern Ghana.
    GHA05AflaoFishing0006.jpg
  • Women sitting in wooden crates aboard the Yapei Queen, the only passenger ferry on Lake Volta, the world's largest man-made lake.
    CRW_2582.jpg
  • Boys balancing sailboat, dhow, off Lamu Island, Kenya, Africa
    KEN07.0505.LAMU524.JPG
  • Men on sailboat, dhow, off Lamu Island, Kenya, Africa
    KEN07.0505.LAMU510.JPG
  • Boys tying rope aboard sailboat, dhow, off Lamu Island, Kenya, Africa
    KEN07.0505.LAMU535.JPG
  • Boys balancing sailboat, dhow, off Lamu Island, Kenya, Africa
    KEN07.0505.LAMU521.JPG
  • Boy balancing sailboat, dhow, off Lamu Island, Kenya, Africa
    KEN07.0505.LAMU519.JPG
  • Boy on sailboat, dhow, off Lamu Island, Kenya, Africa
    KEN07.0505.LAMU509.JPG
  • Fishing boat on Volta river near Ada, Ghana.
    GHA43.jpg
  • Crane loading pineapples crates onto cargo boat.
    05GHA.IMG_5541.jpg
  • Crane loading containers on boat at harbour in Tema, Ghana.
    GHA05Papayas0026.jpg
  • Fishing boat and palm trees. Beach at Beyin, Western Ghana.
    CRW_3275.jpg
  • Pirogues and salt production on the shore of Lac Rose (Pink Lake) near Dakar, Senegal.
    SEN11.1015.DAKAR0051.JPG
  • Fishing sailboats off Lamu Island, Kenya, Africa.
    KEN07.0505.LAMU539.JPG
  • Doris Morrison Amankwaa and her boyfriend Emmanuel Kwaku Yeboah look at pictures they took of each other as they sit on a fishing boat on the beach in Cape Coast, Ghana on Sunday September 7, 2008. The couple was visiting to attend the Oguaa Fetu Afahye Festival, held annually in the coastal town.
    GHA_FESTIVAL095.JPG
  • Fishermen pull nets they had left overnight into their small wooden boat a few hundred meters away from shore near Cape Coast, roughly 120km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009.
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0504.jpg
  • Man sitting by stacks of pineapples crates on the lower deck of a cargo boat.
    GHA90.jpg
  • Fishermen pull in their catch into their small wooden boat a few hundred meters away from shore near Cape Coast, roughly 120km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009. Unlike traditional fishing boats, industrial trawlers are required by law to operate in waters deeper than 30 meters. However, local fishermen frequently report that foreign vessels come much closer to the coast, often destroying their nets and causing important damage to the ocean floor by dragging their nets to maximize their catch.
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0583.jpg
  • Fishermen pull in their catch into their small wooden boat a few hundred meters away from shore near Cape Coast, roughly 120km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009. The increasing presence of international trawlers in Ghanaian waters not only means more competition to capture a declining fish stock, but larger boats often damage the nets of small-scale fishermen by running through them as they pursue fish.
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0573.jpg
  • Doris Morrison Amankwaa and her boyfriend Emmanuel Kwaku Yeboah look at pictures they took of each other as they sit on a fishing boat on the beach in Cape Coast, Ghana on Sunday September 7, 2008. The couple was visiting to attend the Oguaa Fetu Afahye Festival, held annually in the coastal town.
    GHA_FESTIVAL094.JPG
  • Fishermen set off to work at sunrise on their small traditional wooden boat near Cape Coast, roughly 120km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009..
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0567.jpg
  • Fishermen set off to work at sunrise on their small traditional wooden boat near Cape Coast, roughly 120km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009. The Ghana Ministry of Fisheries estimates to about 500,000 the number of fishermen and fishmongers in Ghana. Up to 2 million people - nearly 10 percent of the country's population  - make a living from professions - such as canoe-building - dependent on the fishing industry.
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0480.jpg
  • Man sitting by stacks of pineapples crates on the lower deck of a cargo boat.
    05GHA.IMG_5504.jpg
  • Fishermen pull in their catch into their small wooden boat a few hundred meters away from shore near Cape Coast, roughly 120km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009. Fish is a staple in the diet of most Ghanaians: it is estimated that up to 60% of animal protein nationwide is derived from fish products.
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0717.jpg
  • Fishermen pull in their catch into their small wooden boat a few hundred meters away from shore near Cape Coast, roughly 120km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009.
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0600.jpg
  • A tractor carries containers to be loaded aboard a cargo boat at the sea port in Lome, Togo on Friday October 3, 2008.
    TGO08.1003.HARBOUR0003.JPG
  • Fishermen pull in their boat onto the beach after returning from sea in Cape Coast, roughly 120km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009..
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0773.jpg
  • A small fish lies on a wooden fishing boat while fishermen pull in their catch a few hundred meters away from shore near Cape Coast, roughly 120km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009.
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0654.jpg
  • Fishermen pull in their catch into their small wooden boat a few hundred meters away from shore near Cape Coast, roughly 120km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009.
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0612.jpg
  • Community Health Nurse Isatu Djalloh looks over two-year-old Blackie as he slowly recovers at the Bonthe district hospital in Bonthe, Sierra Leone on Thursday April 22, 2010. After medical staff struggled for over 30 minutes and gave the child ORS, an IV was successfully injected, and Blackie started to stabilize. At left is Samuel Coker from the Environmental justice foundation, an NGO the operates an emergency boat transport service.
    SLE10.0422.HEALTH0419.JPG
  • A tractor carries containers to be loaded aboard a cargo boat at the sea port in Lome, Togo on Friday October 3, 2008.
    TGO08.1003.HARBOUR0005.JPG
  • A tractor carries containers to be loaded aboard a cargo boat at the sea port in Lome, Togo on Friday October 3, 2008.
    TGO08.1003.HARBOUR0004.JPG
  • A worker stands by a large cargo boat at the sea port in Lome, Togo on Friday October 3, 2008.
    TGO08.1003.HARBOUR0002.JPG
  • Fishermen pull in their catch into their small wooden boat a few hundred meters away from shore near Cape Coast, roughly 120km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009.
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0675.jpg
  • Fishermen pull in their catch into their small wooden boat a few hundred meters away from shore near Cape Coast, roughly 120km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009.
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0624.jpg
  • Fishermen pull in their catch into their small wooden boat a few hundred meters away from shore near Cape Coast, roughly 120km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009.
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0614.jpg
  • Fishermen pull in their catch into their small wooden boat a few hundred meters away from shore near Cape Coast, roughly 120km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009. Ghanaian fishermen have for generations harvested the ocean in a small-scale, sustainable way.
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0579.jpg
  • Leader of the House of Lords Baroness Valerie Amos listens to explanations from a tour guide as she looks at a graphic depicting the conditions in which slaves were transported on boats during a visit at the former slave fort of Cape Coast Castle in Cape Coast, Ghana, on Sunday Mar 4, 2007. Amos was visiting on the occasion of the 200th anniversary of the abolition of slave trade, which coincides with Ghana's 50th anniversary of independence...
    GHA07.0304.VALAMOS150.JPG
  • Boats in the sea port in Lome, Togo on Friday October 3, 2008.
    TGO08.1003.HARBOUR0010.JPG
  • Fishermen stand on their boats while cleaning nets under the towering former slave fort of Cape Coast castle in Cape Coast, roughly 120km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009. Cape Coast's slave-trading days may be long gone but the town is no stranger to modern exploitation. Pirate fishing vessels and illegally-operating foreign trawlers are raping the seas, stealing the town's biggest commodity - its fish.
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0768.jpg
  • Boats in the sea port in Lome, Togo on Friday October 3, 2008.
    TGO08.1003.HARBOUR0009.JPG
  • Fishing boats in the harbor of Elmina, about 130km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009. Global fish stocks are running low; the advocacy group Environmental Justice Foundation says fisheries are in deep decline and could collapse within 50 years if current trends continue. Developing countries like Ghana are among the crisis' first victims.
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0857.jpg
  • A fisherman pulls in his catch near Cape Coast, roughly 120km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009. Small fish get caught in nets left at sea overnight and retrieved by fishermen in the morning. The increasing presence of international trawlers in Ghanaian waters not only means more competition to capture a declining fish stock, but larger boats often damage the nets of small-scale fishermen by running through them as they pursue fish.
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0537.jpg
  • Young men sit on fishing boats as they relax on the beach in Cape Coast, Ghana on Saturday September 6, 2008.
    GHA_FESTIVAL065.JPG
  • Leader of the House of Lords Baroness Valerie Amos stands by the gate of no return - through which slaves left as they embarked on boats that took them to the New World - as she visits the former slave fort of Elmina Castle in Elmina, Ghana, on Sunday Mar 4, 2007. Amos was visiting on the occasion of the 200th anniversary of the abolition of slave trade, which coincides with Ghana's 50th anniversary of independence.
    GHA07.0304.VALAMOS078.JPG
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x