IMAGES OF THE SPIRIT.
by Brown, Kevin
Afterimage • May-June, 2007 • Eyes to Fly With: Portraits, Self-Portraits, and Other
Photographs; Las Soldaderas: Women of the Mexican
Revolution
EYES TO FLY WITH: PORTRAITS, SELF-PORTRAITS, AND OTHER PHOTOGRAPHS
BY GRACIELA ITURBIDE
AUSTIN, TEXAS: UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS PRESS, 2006
212 PP./$50.00 (HB)
LAS SOLDADERAS: WOMEN OF THE MEXICAN REVOLUTION
BY ELENA PONIATOWSKA
EL PASO, TEXAS: CINCO PUNTOS PRESS, 2006
80 PP./$12.95 (SB)
In November 2006, to honor its revolution, Mexico had its portrait
painted by two artists working in very different media: writer Elena
Poniatowska, who has written catalog essays for several Mexican
photographers including Juan Rulfo and Mariana Yampolsky, and
photographer Graciela Iturbide, who is as much influenced by writers as
by other photographers. The political differences of these two artists
are as intriguing as the aesthetic similarities in their work. This
essay will attempt to illustrate what the artist who creates images made
out of words has in common with the artist who creates words made out of
images as well as how art represents the process of discovering what it
means to be Mexican for each artist.
The isthmus of Mexico, with its vast visual wealth, looms large
upon our common border. Yet work that foreign photographers like Henri
Cartier-Bresson and Edward Steichen did in Mexico may be better known in
the United States than that of Mexican contemporaries like Iturbide.
Eyes to Fly With: Portraits, Self-Portraits, and Other Photographs
gathers representative images from each phase of what Iturbide calls a
photographic "opportunity of discovering my own country." (1)
"Wherever we go," Iturbide says, "we want to find
the theme we carry inside ourselves." She discovered the style of
her themes early on; the 1969 photos are visually consistent with the
images from 2006. Iturbide began exhibiting her work in 1975, after a
fellow Mexican visual artist invited her to the province of Zapotec,
previously visited by Frida Kahlo. There, off and on for six years,
Iturbide composed images of fat, raunchy, liberated women and drag
queens of the pueblo, later collected in Women of Juchitan (1988),
featuring a catalog essay by Poniatowska.
With the exception of images like "The Slaughter" (1992),
(2) Iturbide's admitted preference for long exposures and nuanced
grays lends her work static quality. Some of her photos, commissioned by
the National Indigenous Institute, capture the bridal processions,
carnivals, and burials of Mixtec Indians; cane workers in Morelos; goat
butchers in Oaxaca; campesinos in Puebla; and Seri Indians in the Sonora
Desert. Yet, Iturbide does not consider herself a documentarian of
Mexican ethnology; rather she insists she represents people as they go
about the mythmaking of their day-to-day lives.
Fortunately, certain Latin writers and artists now distance
themselves from the term "magic realism." Claimant to the
legacy of surrealism, Iturbide confirms that dreams--dreams that trawl
the depths of consciousness with baited hooks, that clamor the portent
of paths untaken--are crucial to her work. The photographer's
mission, she states, is to invest life with light. At times, among the
mangled corpses, vultures, and other deeply personal "allegories of
death," the poet's eye fails her. But Iturbide's most
powerful works--"Lost Dogs" (1998), starkly silhouetted
against the landscape, or "Death (Tuxtepec, Puebla, Mexico)"
(1979), her haunted vigil recalling the great photo essays of W. Eugene
Smith--achieve a visual poetry as genuine as any in photography.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
For Iturbide as for Poniatowska, whose hybrid of straight reporting
and imaginative narrative has come to be known as "testimonial
literature," the dichotomy between imagination and image is cliche.
"A photographer without imagination is," simply, "not a
good photographer," writes Iturbide.
Even more striking are the commonsensical remarks of Iturbide in
her in-depth interview with Fabienne Bradu included in the book. Every
page of Eyes to Fly With reveals an artistic sensibility, leathery
tough, like beef jerky. Persevering as an artist, for Iturbide, is about
"showing how you connect what you live with what you dream, and
what you dream with what you do."
Carlos Monsivais credits Poniatowska with a literary impact
unequalled by a Mexican woman writer since Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz.
Like a lover yearning to "feel Mexico inside [herself],"
Poniatowska has been a passionate devotee of her adoptive country since
the 1950s. (3)
Poniatowska's recent book, Las Soldaderas: Women of the
Mexican Revolution, was published by Cinco Puntos Press in conjunction
with Ediciones ERA and the Mexican National Institute of Anthropology
and History. The catalog essay, accompanied by images from the Agustin
Casasola Archive, revisits the soldaderas (female soldiers) of the
Mexican Revolution. These remarkable women--part pack mule, part cook,
all-purpose concubine--followed and tended camp for peasant soldiers
from 1910 until 1917 as the forces of Pancho Villa in the North battled
those of Emiliano Zapata in the South.
Poniatowska's text is instructive on several counts. It
confirms Virginia Woolf's observation that "the second-rate
works of a great writer are generally worth reading ... [if only]
because they are apt to offer us the very best criticism of [her]
masterpieces." (4) Among Poniatowska's masterpieces is La
noche de Tlatelolco (Massacre in Mexico) (1971)--a narrative collage of
the 1968 student uprisings--written while Iturbide was still engaged in
her apprenticeship to Manuel Alvarez Bravo.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Given the Casasola Archive's seminal importance as a
photojournalistic document of the Mexican Revolution, Poniatowska
obviously never intended to gloss over the archival material anymore
than Iturbide, who collaborates actively with writers whose texts her
images accompany, conceives of her photos as mere illustrations. An
equally brief introduction to Poniatowska's body of work, the
epistolary novella Dear Diego (1978) makes a far greater impact. The
following passage, depicting a female painter's obsession, supports
Mexican critic Christopher Dominguez's claim that
Poniatowska's writing is among the best prose in Mexico:
I set myself a schedule ... from 8 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., from 1:30 to
5, and again from 8 to 10 at night. Nine hours a day of painting
.... I would eat thinking of how to handle the shadows of the face
I'd just set aside. I wolfed down dinner remembering the picture on
the easel .... When it was time to eat, it used to annoy me if
anybody spoke to me, distracting me from my thoughts, which were
fixed on the next line that had to be sketched and which I wanted
continuous and pure and exact .... I was possessed ... and only 20.
I never felt tired, on the contrary, I would have died had anyone
forced me to abandon that life. I avoided the theater, I avoided
strolls, I even avoided the company of other people, because the
degree of joy they gave me was much less than the pleasure, so
very intense, of learning my craft. (5)
Artistically, through portraits such as "Carlos
Monsivais" (1991), Iturbide has contributed to both Mexican
literature and Mexican photography. Both she and Poniatowska admit to
being fascinated by the artist-object relationship and by the distancing
effect of composition--literary or visual--on how the eye
"frames" life. Politically, their portraits of rebellion and
independence defy stereotypes of submissively dependent women in Mexican
society. The unrepentant voice of protagonist Jesusa Palancares in
Here's to You, Jesusa! (Hasta no verte, Jesus mio, 1969),
Poniatowska's vividly fictionalized, first-person oral history of
Revolutionary-era Mexico, echoes like an audio track over images like
"Cholas" (1986), Iturbide's mini-series devoted to
Mexican American gangster girls in East Los Angeles. A committed
journalist in a country where high illiteracy means many writers compete
for the attention of few readers and low demand makes books expensive
for vendors to supply, Poniatowska's larger purpose has been to
bear witness to the persistent marginalization of disenfranchised
Mexicans in general. Iturbide, on the other hand, wants to make useful
art but is "not trying to change the world." For both artists,
in every way, unsuspected Mexico, a land of sorrow and sunlight, remains
"part of an ongoing collective project in which we are [all]
involved." (6)
NOTES (1.) All quotes, unless otherwise noted, are from Elena
Poniatowska's Eyes to Fly With: Portraits, Self-Portraits, and
Other Photographs (Austin, Texas: University of Texas Press, 2006). (2.)
See plate in Eyes to Fly With. See also Image #5670, from Soldaderas.
(3.) From www.elenaponiatowska.com. (4.) "A Minor Dostoevsky,"
The Essays of Virginia Woolf Volume II: 1912 1918 (San Diego: Harcourt
Brace Jovanovich, 1988), 165. (5.) My translation. (6.) From
www.elenaponiatowska.com.
KEVIN BROWN is a literary translator currently working on Mexican
poet Efrain Bartolomeo's Ocosingo War Diary.
COPYRIGHT 2007 Visual Studies
Workshop Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
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NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.