On View

Manuel Álvarez Bravo: Mexico’s Poet of Light

September 23 - December 31, 2017

Manuel Álvarez Bravo (1902–2002) spent nearly eight decades, from the 1920s to the 1990s, photographing his native Mexico. A self-taught artist who achieved widespread recognition in his lifetime, Álvarez Bravo began his career in the years following the Mexican Revolution (1910–1920), during a period marked by modernization, internationalism, and cultural renewal. Many of his photographs display a keen awareness of the incongruity between traditional customs and modern life in fast-changing urban centers like Mexico City. In 1927, Álvarez Bravo met photographer and activist Tina Modotti, who introduced him to a circle of artists and intellectuals that included Edward Weston, José Clemente Orozco, Diego Rivera, and Frida Kahlo, whose portrait he made on several occasions. 

Some of Álvarez Bravo’s earliest pictures were formalist studies of folded paper and abstracted close-ups of everyday objects. When he expanded to other subjects—from votive images and religious artifacts to rural landscapes and sidewalks crowded with pedestrians— Álvarez Bravo brought to them a poetic sense of light, composition, and perspective that privileged mood and metaphor over documentation. He had an eye for evocative associations and gave many of his works lyrical titles that enhance their air of secret significance.

Álvarez Bravo’s work was celebrated by André Breton, the founder of Surrealism, and by poets like Xavier Villaurrutia and Octavio Paz. Villaurrutia called Álvarez Bravo a “poet of the image,” asserting that his best photographs “confront us with veritable representations of the unrepresentable, tangible proofs of the invisible.” The charged, atmospheric quality of Álvarez Bravo's images is often achieved through dramatic contrasts and dynamic lines, but he was also a master of subtle textures and rich middle values. His photographs established a distinct visual identity for Mexico—one full of nuance, intimacy, and silence.

Manuel Álvarez Bravo: Mexico’s Poet of Light is organized and circulated by the University of Michigan Museum of Art and curated by Carole McNamara, Curator Emerita. Generous support for the exhibition at the Frye Art Museum is provided by ArtsFund, the Frye Foundation, and Frye Art Museum members.

Manuel Álvarez Bravo. Dos pares de piernas (Two Pairs of Legs), ca. 1930, printed 1977. Gelatin silver print on paper. © Archivo Manuel Álvarez Bravo, S.C.

EXHIBITION PROGRAMS

September 21, 2017 6:00 pm – 9:00 pm
VIP + Members Exhibitions Opening Reception
Manuel Álvarez Bravo: Mexico’s Poet of Light + Hana Hamplová: Meditations on Paper + Mike Kelley: Day Is Done

September 22, 2017 6:00 pm – 9:00 pm
Exhibitions Public Opening
Manuel Álvarez Bravo: Mexico’s Poet of Light + Hana Hamplová: Meditations on Paper + Mike Kelley: Day Is Done

December 14, 2017 7:00 pm – 8:00 pm
Manuel Álvarez Bravo: Mexico’s Poet of Light
Curatorial Conversation Discussion with Professor Roberto Tejada + Negarra A. Kudumu