Manuel Álvarez Bravo

Manuel Álvarez Bravo
Born February 4, 1902(1902-02-04)
Mexico City
Died October 19, 2002(2002-10-19) (aged 100)
Nationality Mexican
Field photography
Training Academia Nacional de Bellas Artes
Works Obrero en huelga, asesinado (Striking Worker, Assassinated)

Manuel Álvarez Bravo (February 4, 1902 – October 19, 2002) was a Mexican photographer.[1]

Álvarez Bravo was born in Mexico City on February 4, 1902. He came from a family of artists and writers, and met several other prominent artists who encouraged his work when he was young, including Tina Modotti and Diego Rivera. His grandfather was a photographer and his father was a patron of photography, painting and literary composition.

Manuel began studying painting and music at the Academia Nacional de Bellas Artes in 1918. He received his first photographic camera in 1923, and in 1925 began his essays on aesthetics and the technical work of photography, but did not begin professional photography until 1925. Though he was never formally a member of the surrealist movement, his work displays many characteristics of surrealism, and he was exposed to many of its founders. His work often suggests dreams or fantasies, and he frequently photographed inanimate objects in ways that gave them humanistic qualities. In 1939 Andre Breton, the leader of the Surrealist movement, featured Alvarez Bravo's work in an exhibition of Surrealist art in Paris, bringing it into the world's artistic center. In just a single decade, from 1920 to 1930, Alvarez Bravo quickly completed a long aesthetic journey, from the pictorialism of his predecessors and contemporaries through the radical experimentation in modernist form in the early 1920’s to a fully evolved personal style by 1930. Although he did not travel to the principal centers of avant-garde photographic activity, Paris or New York, he was able to succeed at achieving an avant-garde style that gained him fame. [2]

His work bears some similarity to the work of Clarence John Laughlin, an American photographer who was working in New Orleans at around the same time. They both loved literature, and made references to the mythologies of their time visually and in the titles of their images. They both used old-fashioned cameras which were slower than the Leica which were becoming popular among other art photographers of the day. They also both knew Edward Weston, so it is possible that they influenced each other's work.

Álvarez Bravo's work was often political, referencing the turmoil of the Mexican Revolution both directly and indirectly. One of his most famous photographs, Obrero en huelga, asesinado (Striking Worker, Assassinated) depicts the face of a bloodied corpse lying in the sun is housed at The Wittliff Collections, which houses the largest archive of modern and contemporary Mexican photography in the United States www.thewiffliffcollections@txstate.edu. He associated with many revolutionary artists and writers, but did not let politics overwhelm the personal aspects of his work; he continued to create beautiful, dreamlike, photographs of life in Mexico until his death in 2002.

He is considered a profoundly influential figure in contemporary Mexican and Latin American Photography, and his work is widely published around the world.

Contents

Personal life

Alvarez Bravo married Doris Heyden who became a prominent scholar of Mexico’s ancient cultures. Together they had a son and daughter. He was also married to Mexican photographer, Lola Alvarez Bravo well-known in her own right. In his last decades, he was married to Mme. Colette Alvarez Bravo, a French photographer also revered in her own right.

See also

References

  1. ^ Manuel Álvarez-Bravo (1902–2002), MX), Artfacts.net.
  2. ^ Kismaric, Susan. Manuel Alvarez Bravo. New York: Harry N. Abrams Inc., 1997. Print.

External links