
A SHADOW BORN OF EARTH:
NEW PHOTOGRAPHY IN MEXICO
June 5 - September 15, 1996
Since the early part of this century, photography in Mexico
has been dominated by a style closely associated with such artists as Tina
Modotti and Manuel Alvarez Bravo. Reminiscent of a photojournalistic sensibility,
this style of straight black-and- white photography arose in the mid-1920s
and proved instrumental in the stylistic development of the medium in Mexico
for the next sixty years. In the last decade, however, experimental approaches
have contributed tremendously to the evolution of photography in that country.
Not only are younger photographers investigating diverse, nontraditional
means of creating and presenting imagery, but also, those committed to
straight photography are imbuing their images with new meaning, as both
kinds of photographers aim to create work relevant to the complex culture
in which they live.
Whether working in traditional or experimental modes,
contemporary Mexican photographers are frequently linked by similar iconography
and concerns. Foremost among these is a keen awareness of their country's
remarkable cultural legacy and the powerful impact it has long had in forming
a national identity. This cultural legacy includes the traditions of sophisticated
pre-Hispanic cultures; the impact of colonization, Spanish culture, and
Catholicism; a revolution early in this century that decisively altered
the nation's political, economic, and social frameworks; and the continuing
presence of indigenous people - a constant reminder of the country's rootedness
to the past. Young Mexican photographers draw freely from their rich history,
exploring issues of identity, spirituality, and the current state of Mexican
society. Artistic movements and cultural philosophies that have arisen
abroad, including feminism, conceptualism, and post modernism, have also
played a role in the work of the photographers represented here. Unlike
their international counterparts, these artists also continually refer
to broader issues: the need for greater social equality, the dignity of
the individual, and the value of the natural world.
The Contemporary Social Document
Alicia Ahumada, Yolanda Andrade, Lourdes Grobet, and Eniac
Martinez work with nonmanipulated photography. The work of Ruben Ortiz
and Carlos Somonte is partially staged but closely based on reality. These
photographers span two generations; while their work constitutes no school,
movement, or style - they have different working methods, record a range
of subject matter, and possess disparate aesthetic points of view - it
is linked by the artists' commitment to interpreting the character of life
in contemporary Mexico. These photographers express the enormous economic,
political, social, and spiritual problems that Mexico currently faces.
The Corporal Image: The Body as Metaphor
The theme of the human body - an integral and often controversial
subject within mainstream contemporary art of the late 1980s and 90's also
occupied a central position in recent Mexican art. Like artists elsewhere,
those in Mexico use their own or others' bodies to explore issues such
as gender, sexuality, politics, and societal norms. In Latin America, however,
the body as subject conveys the concept of a fragmented identity. The great
majority of Latin Americans today are mestizos, a people born from colonization,
rupture, and suppression. Especially when depicted in fragments or with
exposed organs, the body becomes a metaphorical wound and, concomitantly,
a vehicle by which personal and cultural identity can be explored most
potently. The representation of the body likewise conveys the quest for
spirituality.
Marks of Faith: Images of Spirituality
The spiritual dimension of Mexican life is markedly greater
than in the United States, or for that matter, any First World country.
Specifically what that spirituality encompasses, however, is widely variable
and open to interpretation. Since colonial times, the Mexican people have
had a deep relation with Catholicism, and in some indigenous rural communities
Christian beliefs are mixed with native influences to varying degrees.
For example, in the state of Chiapas, the rituals carried out in ostensibly
Catholic churches, can, to the outsider, only be peripherally associated
with orthodox practice. Among intellectuals, spirituality is typically
a highly personal quest, often connected to creative pursuits and to social
activism. Although conducted outside the institutionalized church, such
forms of spiritual exploration have ends similar to those of more conventional
believers - to understand one's place in the world and find solace and
meaning where poverty and social conflict have long been close at hand.
Many of the artists in this exhibition could rightly be included in this
section; those assembled here, however, express some of the most prevalent
themes related to spirituality in Mexico. In the cases of Germán
Herrera and Gerardo Suter, the spiritual quest has meant looking back to
Mexico's ancient cultures and to their profound dependency both on the
natural world and on a panoply of gods. Pablo Ortiz Monasterio and Adolfo
Patio, in contrast, have each developed symbolic vocabularies to express
the formative elements in their personal and artistic identities, including
family, cultural icons, and artistic heroes.
Nature and Invention
In contrast to the United States or Europe, Mexico did
not develop a strong tradition in landscape photography. This belies the
fact that even before the Mexican Revolution, which was in large measure
instigated by the needs of the masses of rural peasants and for agrarian
land reform policies, the land has functioned as an emotional emblem of
nationhood fraught with social, political, cultural, and spiritual significance.
The importance of landscape photography has been overshadowed by the great
tradition of photographic social documentation until a new generation of
photographers and other artists began experimenting with ideas, media,
and subject matter relating to the natural world. Many photographers, notably
Jesus Sanchez Uribe and Salvador Lutteroth in his work of the 1980s, use
elements of nature in constructed images as a way of commenting on aspects
of traditional Mexican culture. In her ritualistic performances and subsequent
photographic documentation, Eugenia Vargas has used earth and water as
metaphors for Mexico's acute environmental crisis and to explore humanity's
physical and spiritual dependency on the earth. Both Jan Hendrix and Laura
Cohen use nature in their formal investigations; yet Cohen's precisely
arranged mise-en-scenes also allude to varied psychological states.
The exhibition is organized and circulated by The American
Federation of Arts. It is sponsored by a generous grant from Professional
Imaging, Eastman Kodak Company. Additional support has been provided by
the Benefactors Circle of the AFA.
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