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Pablo Ortíz Monasterio

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pablo Ortiz Monasterio is a Mexican photographer, writer and editor born in Mexico City in 1952.[1] He is internationally recognized as one of the most representative artists of the Mexican contemporary photography.[2]

Early life and education

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Pablo Ortíz Monasterio was born in Mexico City in 1952 and is the fourth son of the plastic surgeon Fernando Ortiz Monasterio and Leonor Prieto. In his youth, his parents used to travel frequently and narrate their experiences to their children using transparencies. He says that the possibility of narrating experiences using images was something that marked him forever.[1] When Monasterio was 16, he discovered the work of French photographer Bernard Plossu, and that is when he decided that he wanted to be a photographer.[3] He studied economics at the National Autonomous University of Mexico, but during the 1970s he moved to London and studied photography at the London College of Printing.[4]

Career

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Monasterio returned to Mexico at the beginning of the 1980s, and in 1982 he edited a book called "Los pueblos del viento" (1982).[4] In 2010, Monasterio presented a photo-book called Montaña Blanca which he started in 1992. In this project, he spent 13 years visiting towns near to the volcanos Popocatépetl and Iztaccíhuatl to capture how two geological phenomena have a very strong impact on Mexican culture. The book includes literary texts written by Margo Glantz, Antonio Saborit and Alfonso Morales and it is divided by different readings. The first is the Mexican legend of origins of the bronze race, the second is a reflection on gender which inquires into the question of why these volcanoes are considered male and female. The third is a popular and idealized representation of the pre-Hispanic past and, finally, a chronicle about the mixture of the photography genres.[5]

In 2013, Monasterio was one of the twenty artists selected to photograph some of Russia's most symbolic places. He decided to work at the Akadem Gorodok (Academic City), where he spent ten days photographing every single thing that constitute the laboratory constructed by the physician Gersh Budker[6] which, until the 90's, was the most important and advanced site in matters of nuclear energy.[7] The photo-book contains 50 pictures, a literary text by José Manuel Prieto and a poem by Tito Lucrecio Caro.[6] In the words of Monasterio, “With Akadem Gorodok the reader can imagine how it smells, see that there was dust, chaos, if he reads the pictures accurately he will get a lot of information that denotes the experience I had”.[8] He also coordinated the book Frida Kahlo: sus fotos, directed the editorial projects Mexico indígena, Ríos de Luz, and Luna Córnea [5] and wrote a book called “Desaparecidos?” in 2016 where he writes about the Ayotzinapa case.[2]

Works

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Photography

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Books

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  • 2009: Correspondencias Fotográficas co-written with Marcelo Bordsky, RM Verlag.
  • 2010: Montaña Blanca, RM Verlag.
  • 2010: Frida Kahlo: Sus Fotos, RM Verlag.
  • 2012: A Través de la Máscara co-written with Vesta Monica Herrerias, Lunwerg.
  • 2014: Akadem Gorodok, RM Verlag.
  • 2016: Fluz Quito co-written with Claudi Carreras, RM Verlag.
  • 2016: Desaparecen, RM Verlag.

Cultural contributions

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Besides his job as a photographer, Monasterio has been contributing in arts and culture by creating spaces for reflection, analysis, and photography distribution as well as exhibitions and galleries. He created, along with Victor Flores Ólea, the Centro de la Imagen and, in collaboration with Pedro Meyer, the Mexican Photography Council.[4] Monasterio also created the celebration of the 150 years of the photography in Mexico, Luna Córnea, the Rio de Luz collection, and the first two Fotoseptiembre festivals [1] which he describes as “a huge event that involves a lot of people and gain a lot of diversity”.[9]

References

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  1. ^ a b c Licona, S. (December 2007). "En arte sólo me queda aprender a ser mejor persona: Pablo Ortiz Monasterio". El Universal.
  2. ^ a b Cholakian, D. (August 26, 2016). "Exclusiva NodalCultura al fotógrafo mexicano Pablo Ortiz Monasterio". Nodal Cultura.
  3. ^ Licona, S. (September 27, 2010). "Pablo Ortiz Monasterio da color a la Montaña Blanca" (PDF). Fondo de Cultura Económica.
  4. ^ a b c Anonymous (October 2014). "El fotógrafo Pablo Ortiz Monasterio es reconocido por su trayectoria". Notimex.
  5. ^ a b Montaño, E. (October 1, 2010). "Ortiz Monasterio: dejar la fotografía sería como renunciar al habla". La Jornada.
  6. ^ a b Ávila, S. (April 22, 2015). "Pablo Ortiz Monasterio retrata poderío nuclear". Excelsior.
  7. ^ Anonymous (October 26, 2014). "Reconocen Trayectoria De Pablo Ortiz Monasterio". INAH.
  8. ^ "Documenta Pablo Ortiz Monasterio la AkademGorodok (Ciudad Académica), baluarte ruso de la Guerra Fría". Secretaría de Cultura. April 22, 2015.
  9. ^ Mora, S. (September 6, 1996). "Pablo Ortiz Monasterio 'Fotoseptiembre es un Universo'". Reforma. ProQuest 311322749.