Boston, Feb. 22 (Notimex).- The Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, Massachusetts, presents nearly 140 photographs of the Mexican Graciela Iturbide (1942), in an exhibition to tell the visual history of Mexico since the 1970 decade.
The exhibition “El Mexico de Graciela Iturbide” until May 22 will exhibit “the tensions that exist between urban and rural life, human presence and nature, indigenous and Spanish cultures,” the museum said in a statement.
The exhibition is composed of works belonging to the collection of Iturbide herself, photographs acquired by the Museum and others obtained by means of loans from museums and private collections in the United States, Mexico and France.
For the occasion, the Museum of Fine Arts of Boston prepared an illustrated catalog with more than 100 black and white photographic reproductions and essays about the artist.
“I am excited to present the revolutionary images of Graciela to our global audience, and it has been a pleasure and an honor to work hand in hand with her in the preparation of this exhibition,” said curator Kristen Gresh.
Iturbide Guerra, who has exhibited her work in various parts of the world, will participate on May 5 at a symposium on prominent photographers sponsored by the American cultural institution that presents the exhibition.
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