We present a two-pass image retrieval system in which retrieval techniques for text and image documents are combined in a novel approach. In the first pass, the text-based initial query is matched against the text captions of the images in the database to obtain the initial retrieved set. In the second pass, text and image features obtained from this initial retrieved set are used to expand the initial query. Additional images from the database are then retrieved based on the expanded query. The image features that we have used are color histograms, DC coefficients from the discrete cosine transform, and two texture features: multiresolution simultaneous autoregressive model and local binary pattern. These are low-level statistical image features that can be easily computed. Extensive experiments have been performed on 1019 color pictures of mixed variety with captions, relevance judgments and queries supplied by a national archives agency. Objective precision-recall results have been obtained with various combinations of text and image features. The results show that the image features do not perform well when used on their own. However, when image features are used in query expansion, they increase the average precision more significantly than text annotations. Moreover, these findings are valid at all precision levels and are not sensitive to the image feature acquisition parameters.