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Graciela Iturbide has become one of the foremost fine art
photographers living in Mexico
today. Her work is a mixture of history, lyricism and portraiture.
The subtle yet powerful photographs blend the evocative scenes of the
cultures of her native Mexico
with her own deeply personal vision. In dreamlike encounters with things
that at first may appear ordinary, Graciela Iturbide perceives the surreal and
extraordinary. The photographs combine the story of a culture in
transition with issues of identity, diversity, and selfhood. She has
remarkably engaged the workaday life and seasonal celebrations of various
communities throughout Mexico
for the past 35 years. One of the major concerns in the work of Graciela
Iturbide’s has been to explore and articulate the ways the “voice,” of Mexico
is meaningful only when understood as an intricate combination of histories and
practices. The evidence she has gathered is a virtual territory unto
itself.
Graciela Iturbide was born in Mexico City in 1942. She began to study
film-making in the late 1960s at the Centro Universitario de Estudios
Cinematograficos. While assisting Manuel Alvarez Bravo in the early
1970s, she studied photography, and soon devoted herself to the art.
Traveling to Europe around this time,
she met Henri Cartier-Bresson, who became a significant influence on her work.
In 1978 she became a founding member of the Mexican Council of
Photography. Her work has been exhibited internationally and is included
in many major museum collections including: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Museum of Modern Art, and the Los Angeles County
Museum of Art to name only a few. She continues to live and work in Mexico.
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