Images of the spirit
(Book)

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Published
New York : Aperture Foundation, [1996].
Format
Book
Edition
1st ed.
Physical Desc
123 pages, 5 unnumbered pages : chiefly illustrations ; 30 cm
Status

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LocationCall NumberStatusDue Date
Main Library - Adult779 ITURBIDEChecked OutMay 6, 2024
Main Library - Adult779 ITURBIDEChecked OutMay 17, 2024

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Published
New York : Aperture Foundation, [1996].
Edition
1st ed.
Language
English

Notes

General Note
"A traveling exhibition of Images of the spirit is being organized by the Philadelphia Museum of Art"--P. [127.
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (page 125).
Description
Graciela Iturbide makes subtle yet powerful photographs that blend evocative scenes, primarily the cultures of her native Mexico, with her own deeply personal vision. Images of the Spirit, the first major publication of Iturbide's photography, demonstrates how in her dreamlike encounters with what may first appear to be the ordinary, she perceives the surreal and the marvelous. Iturbide's work is a mixture of history, lyricism, and portraiture, sometimes informed by the art of Mexico's photographic master, Manuel Alvarez Bravo. In Iturbide's photoraphs, she combines the story of a culture in transition with issues of identity, diversity, and selfhood.
Description
As the poet and critic Roberto Tejada points out in his Preface, "Sidelong Mirrors and Invisible Masks," Iturbide's photographs "underline time and again the rift between belonging and citizenship, rendered often against a backdrop of Mexican icons or heroes - be it the frail displacement of a rural campesino in Puebla, or the triumph of locals in East Los Angeles." Tejada, who has lived in Mexico for the last ten years, provides a trenchant illumination of this Mexican photographer's use of her country's lore and stories of conquest, its pre-Hispanic past, its indigenous visual vocabulary, and its centuries of tradition and ceremony, often infused with Christian iconography.
Description
Writer and scholar Alfredo Lopez Austin is an anthropologist studying Latin American cultures. In his series of letters to Iturbide, which form the poetic Epilogue to Images of the Spirit, he envisions her "on a promontory set over the world in such a way as to see from one ocean to the other, to approach the vault of heaven, and to surpass the artificial boundaries:" Reflecting on the breadth of her expansive, insightful mind while invoking many narrative voices and identities drawn from Mexico's richly vibrant mythologies, Lopez Austin shows us how Iturbide's photographs mirror the artist herself. Through his writing, Iturbide is revealed as observer, searcher, affirmer.

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