
Julien Levy :: Frida Kahlo with ‘rebozo’ (shawl), ca 1938/ src: Philadelphia Museum of Art
more [+] by Julien Levy / more [+] Frida Kahlo’s
images that haunt us

Julien Levy :: Frida Kahlo with ‘rebozo’ (shawl), ca 1938/ src: Philadelphia Museum of Art
more [+] by Julien Levy / more [+] Frida Kahlo’s

Bernard Plossu ::
Karina,
México,
1965 / via
fragrantblossoms and
sailingunderfalsecolours
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John Mack ::
Villahermosa, Tabasco, Mexico, 2008. Silver print. / source: robert-mann

Agustin Victor Casasola
::
Jóvenes Noctámbulos / Young Nightclubbers, Mexico City, 1935 / via
steryios-mal

Eliot Elisofon :: Young girl swimming in pool covered with gardenia blossoms, Mexico, 1945 / via
classyartgallery
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Larry Towell :: Young Mennonite women fleeing a cloud of dust, Durango, Mexico, 1994 / src: Magnum-photos
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Graciela Iturbide :: Mercado / Market, Ciudad de México, Mexico DF, 1978 [from ‘Primeras Fotos’] / source: Iturbide website
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Graciela Iturbide ::
The Cemetery, Juchitan, Mexico, 1988 [in her website, part of the series Birds]
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“This image is
part of Graciela Iturbide’s series on the Juchitan indigenous culture, a major focus of her work from 1979 to 1988. Located in the state of Oaxaca, Mexico, the Juchitan is a matriarchal society in which women are in charge of everything from commerce to religious ceremonies. In The Cemetery, taken in 1988, Iturbide depicts a woman carrying firewood through a cemetery made up of modest adobe tombs. Swallows circle around, filling the frame of the image. The scene is beautifully surreal, but also foreboding. The photographer creates her own reality, moving past Mexico’s Catholic traditions into Indian mysticism.” source of image and quote: ICP