América Latina, 1960-2013 : photographs.
Record details
- ISBN: 9780500970591 (hardcover)
- Physical Description: 391 pages : illustrations (some color), map ; 30 cm
- Publisher: Puebla, Mexico : Museo Amparo ; 2013.
Content descriptions
General Note: | "This book is published in conjunction with the exhibition América Latina 1960-2013 presented at the Foundation Cartier pour l'art contemporain in Paris, France from November 19, 2013 to April 6, 2014 and at the Museo Amparo in Puebla, Mexico from May 15 to September 17, 2014." |
Bibliography, etc. Note: | Includes bibliographical references. |
Formatted Contents Note: | The violence of modernity: Latin America since the late 1950s / text by Olivier Compagnon -- 1. Territory -- 2. The city -- Imagination redirected: photography and text in Latin America 1960-2013 / text by Luis Camnitzer -- 3. Informing, resisting -- 4. Memory and identity -- New pictographs, ancient palimpsests: notes on the scribal uses of photography in Latin America / text by Alfonso Morales Carrillo -- 5. Revuelta(s): a film / by Fredi Casco, codirected by Renate Costa -- Timeline: a half century of Latin American histories 1960-2013 / by Olivier Compagnon -- Biographies A-Z / Carolina Ariza. |
Summary, etc.: | Focusing on the relationship between text and the photographic image, the exhibition América Latina 1960-2013 reveals the extraordinary diversity of photographic practices employed by numerous Latin American artists over the past fifty years, a period marked by great political, economic, and social instability. During this period, many artists combined in their work text and the photographic image, using a wide range of media such as silkscreen, collage, performance, and video. This provided them with an effective way of communicating in times of political urgency and also allowed them to explore ideas related to territory, memory, and identity. Including a selection of around five hundred works, the exhibition América Latina 1960-2013 and its accompanying catalog provide the visitor with the opportunity to delve into the history of the continent and reveal the specificity and great diversity of artistic practices in the region. From back cover. |
Available copies
- 1 of 1 copy available at GRPL.

Publishers Weekly Review
America Latina : 1960 To 2013
Publishers Weekly
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
This expansive exhibition catalogue highlights photographic responses to political unrest in Latin America during the past half-century. The inclusion of text in their photographs unifies the 71 featured artists, though methods and intentions vary from documenting signage, graffiti, human tattoos, and performances, to creating collages and broadsides. Street photographers use public signs to capture the political landscape, as seen in Louise Chin and Ignacio Aronovich's images of graffiti covering Sao Paolo buildings in the '80s. Meanwhile, Mexican artist Miguel Rio Branco uses early color photography to document marginalized people in the '70s and '80s. Luis Pazos shows students arranged to form shapes with their bodies, while Eduardo Villanes creates a wall collage and stages a performance to protest Peru's Cantuta massacre. Some respond to the press, such as Oscar Munoz in his sculptures that reflect through water tragic events from the newspaper. Other selections comment on the history of a place, as seen in Marcos Lopez's repeating geometric patterns in Mexico City apartment fences. The book includes a timeline of milestones in Latin American history, beginning with Fidel Castro's rise to power in 1959 and ending with events in 2013. Insightful essays tie together the work by theme and style, and comprehensive bios of each artist are included. 400 color and b&w illus. (May) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.