Alejandro Cartagena
Monterrey N.L.
www.alejandrocartagena.com
www.liviacorona.com
www.ingridhernandez.com.mx
www.danielagarza.net
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3 Mexican Looks by Mexican Women
The year 2012 begins. The world ends. That´s why we´ll start the year with a mega post on Mexican photographers. Livia Corona, Daniela Garza and Ingrid Hernandez. Three different looks on the piece of land called Mexico.
First we see the images of Livia Corona.
Livia (winner of a Guggenheim Latin Fellowship) has already in her portfolio a number of large jobs. The one presented here is called Two Million Homes for Mexico.
It is an innovative project that denotes a new direction in Mexican photography. For several years she traveled to different cities documenting the characteristics of urban neighborhoods where people can observe how the topographical environment has changed.
Her interest is not only showing the general environment but also to introduce us to different forms of how these two million serial homes are transformed by their newcomers. The way of documenting the housing metamorphosis is that it allows dealing with the sterility of these new Mexican cities rather than providing a progress that sometimes seems to condemn its people to a life of problems.
Second we see the work called fracture by Daniela Garza .
A native of Monterrey, Daniela has developed a project that presents us with a somewhat different perspective of Mexican households from Livia. Monterrey, capital of Nuevo Leon in northern Mexico, has become a victim of violence between drug cartels and municipal and federal forces. This has generated a kind of exodus among the habitants of some parts of the metropolitan area. Daniela took the task of documenting the residual spaces of this phenomenon, presenting to us images of spaces where time seems to have stopped completely. Many who have chosen to emigrate, either by fear or a direct threat, have abandon their lives completely. Losing touch with family and friends in order to "guarantee" their new hiding place in the United States or another state in Mexico. Thus, these homes also end up being victims of violence.
Finally we see the work Compressed Tijuana by Ingrid Hernandez .
Ingrid, a photographer, educator and winner of several awards for her photographic series, worked for a year in the New Hope settlement,her hometown of Tijuana. There she explored how these informal spaces are constructed or assembled by people who have come from other parts of Mexico and Latin America. In the process of completion, she began the task of interviewing people and getting to know some of the stories behind these spaces. Her photography essay seems to exalt the ability of human survival and the need for personal space. The materials used in these constructions connote the pilgrimage of the people to achieve a place called home. It seems ironic that these three realities are given in the same country and at the same time.
There are those who transform with the little things they have, the ones that drop everything and the ones that with crumbs built their "American dream". An encouraging reality and at the same time cruel. A reality, which we face every day but sometimes, we do not want to see.
The good news is that there are these three great photographers who have recorded this in their images showing us their opinion on these different Mexicos.
Alejandro Cartagena
Monterrey N.L.
www.alejandrocartagena.com
www.liviacorona.com
www.ingridhernandez.com.mx
www.danielagarza.net












