Ride Back In Time



Ride Back In Time
April 2005 in the Angkor temples in Siem Reap, Cambodia

Reflecting on a time long ago invites us to use our imaginations. Being in a place makes imagining what the past there may have been like easier.  Finding a way to live out some aspect, as one would have “then” gives experiential depth. I was in the place in a way that seemed to transcend time and space. I did not make the time to take an elephant ride through the South Gate to the temples of Angkor. A thousand years ago arriving by elephant would have been the norm. Now arrival by elephant back is far less than normal, but still a possibility by simply making time in the present to experience an aspect of the past. If you are trying to take a step back in time—or a ride, as the case may be – then make a memory.

Available as a Matte Print
Size: 11" x 14"
Limited series of 500 prints
Price*: $125 US, excludes shipping


Jason Hill -|- Richmond, Virginia, USA -|- jacehill@mythailandtrip.com  -|- 804.545.8955 -|- Site Design by: www.jacehill.com

* Half of the profit will be donated to assist with ongoing tsunami relief efforts in Thailand.

The profit will be determined by taking the overall proceeds from the sales and subtracting the expenses for film processing and framing the images for the shows. The funds will be provided to specific individuals I met on my trip (not organizations) who are still in the Thailand area helping with recovery projects. The individuals receiving the funds are charged with finding locals in need of the funds and dispensing them accordingly for relief projects. [For example, contributions I personally provided to one of these individuals went to paying for school tuition for the daughter of one of the shopkeepers whose store was destroyed in the tsunami. Other such private donations have bought engines for fishing boats, books to replace those lost in the tsunami, etc. My personal experience while in Thailand was the funds being doled out by volunteers who had direct exposure to individuals, in the communities hardest hit by the tsumani, were those funds being best allocated. The volunteers would accompany the tsunami survivor to pay the school fees to the school directly or to buy the engine directly instead of money being handed out.]