View allAll Photos Tagged MuhammadAli

Sept. 24, 2010 - Miami Beach - Angelo Dundee stands by a portrait of his most famous student, Muhammad Ali, at the new 5th Street Gym in Miami Beach, Florida. Although the original building was torn down in 1993, the new facility is mere steps away from where the fabled gym once stood.

Photographed at the US Open 2008.

 

Part of my Tsonga set

The Muhammad Ali lithographs are all 18 by 24 inches except for Let My People Go which is 13.5 by 10.5 inches, and were published in 1979 in editions of 500. Three have religious imagery: Under the Sun, which shows a jet plane; Guiding Light, showing an image of a lighthouse; and the eponymous Mosque II. The fourth is a cartoonish scene of the boxing ring, titled Sting Like a Bee and the fifth is a drawing of Africa titled Let My People Go.

 

The Museum of UnCut Funk is proud to have Sting Like a Bee in it's collection.

25 May 1965, Lewiston, Maine, USA --- Heavyweight champion Muhammad Ali stands over Sonny Liston and taunts him to get up during their title fight. Ali knocked Liston out in one minute in the first round during their bout at the Central Maine Youth Center in Lewiston, Maine. --- Image by © Bettmann/CORBIS

A hike to Narsok with M.Ali and Taha, the best guides you could ask for! Also, hiking in a full-length shalwar kameez, not as difficult as you'd imagine, though a little bit tricky when it comes to the rock-climbing.

Scene from Louisville, Kentucky. The Capital Of Bourbon Whiskey.

 

#Scene #Warning #Cars #Speeding #Nascar #Louisville #Kentucky #KY #Bourbon #Whiskey ~ www.flickr.com/photos/rachidh/albums

NOVEMBER 13-14, 2008

As a brash young man, Cassius Marcellus Clay was known as "The Lip from Louisville, Kentucky." Over the years, he has inspired millions of people throughout the world not only with his boxing prowess, but also with his courageous opposition to war and other violence, his faith and his humanitarian efforts. He has also made his mark with his words, which are now in vogue even among the hip-hop generation. Confirmed speakers include Dave Anderson, Angelo Dundee, Bill Gallo, Stan Isaacs, Robert Lipsyte, Arthur Mercante, Larry Merchant, Budd Schulberg, Bert Randolph Sugar and boxer Chuck Wepner.

Race Project student workshops on 3/9 and 3/11/20 at The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City, MO. Media Services photographer / Dana Anderson

D300 18-200 vr

cairo egypt

Mosque of Mohamed Ali (or Muhammad Ali Pasha), which was built between 1828 and 1848, perched on the summit of the citadel.This Ottoman mosque was built in memory of Tusun Pasha, Muhammad Ali's oldest son, who died in 1816

Ali's favorite Rolls Royce convertible.

March 8, 1971, at Madison Square Garden in New York City, New York. Frazier won by unanimous decision and retained the title.

For more visit www.boxingmemories.com/

Muhammad Ali - 1942-2016

#ElMasGrande #MuhammadAli #Ali #BoxingLegend #boxing #leyenda #diseñograficovenezolano

One of the profiles of historical fighters at "Fighter’s Heaven”, Muhammad Ali’s Training Camp near Deer Lake, Pennsylvania.

 

fightersheaven.com/

Inside the Citadel. Muhammed Ali Mosque 1848, Cairo

Muhammad Ali Citadel, Cairo

Small, but a picture of Muhammad Ali vs. Sunny Liston

Louisville, Kentucky Downtown Museums. September 27, 2014

Frazier History Museum.

The Muhammad Ali lithographs are all 18 by 24 inches except for Let My People Go which is 13.5 by 10.5 inches, and were published in 1979 in editions of 500. Three have religious imagery: Under the Sun, which shows a jet plane; Guiding Light, showing an image of a lighthouse; and the eponymous Mosque II. The fourth is a cartoonish scene of the boxing ring, titled Sting Like a Bee and the fifth is a drawing of Africa titled Let My People Go.

 

The Museum of UnCut Funk is proud to have Sting Like a Bee in it's collection.

At Hotel Nacional de Cuba in Havana.

View from Muhammad Ali Mosque. Giza pyramids in the background (left)

Ali on wall, MBW, Meatpacking district

Building now demolished

Muhammad Ali is generally considered to be the greatest heavyweight boxer in the history of the sport. Raised in Louisville, Kentucky, his birth name was Cassius Marcellus Clay but changed his name when he converted to Islam. His fights with Joe Frazier and George Forman are considered some of the greatest fights in the history of the sport. He died on June 3, 2016 from the complications of Parkinson's disease and is resting here in one of the more secluded spot in Cave Hill Cemetery.

Race Project student workshops on 3/9 and 3/11/20 at The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City, MO. Media Services photographer / Dana Anderson

Duncan Kinney - La Habra boxing club in Orange County California.

1 2 ••• 51 52 54 56 57 ••• 79 80