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Héctor García Cobo

Hector Garcia Cobo (August 23, 1923 – June 2, 2012) was a Mexican photographer and photojournalist who had a sixty-year career chronicling Mexico's social classes, Mexico City and various events of the 20th century, such as the 1968 student uprising. He was born poor but discovered photography in his teens and early 20s, deciding to study it seriously after his attempt to photograph the death of a coworker failed. He was sent to the Academia Mexicana de Artes y Ciencias Cinematográficas by magazine director Edmundo Valdés who recognized García's talent. Most of García's career was related to photojournalism, working with publications both inside and outside of Mexico. However, a substantial amount of his work had more artistic and critical qualities. Many of these were exhibited in galleries and museums, with sixty five individual exhibitions during his lifetime. This not only included portraits of artists and intellectuals (including a famous portrait of David Alfaro Siqueiros at Lecumberri Prison) but also portraits of common and poor people. He was also the first photojournalist to explicitly criticize Mexico's elite, either making fun of them or contrasting them to the very poor.

Hector Garcia in Candelaria de los Patos
David Alfaro Siqueiros in prison by Garcia Cobo.

Life edit

 
Hector Garcia as a young man

Héctor García Cobos was born on August 23, 1923, in Mexico City to Amparo Cobo Soberanes from the State of Mexico and Ramiro García do Porto from Portugal. He grew up in the poor and dangerous Candelaria de los Patos neighborhood in a house that has since been replaced by apartment buildings.[1][2][3] His family was extremely poor. He received little formal education as a youth, with his mother teaching him how to read.[4][5] As a child, he much preferred to wander the streets of his neighborhood, and even beyond to meet and talk to people. This led to his mother calling him “pata de perro” (lit. dog's foot), which later became the title of his autobiography.[6][7] His propensity to escape from the house even drove his mother to tie him to the bed, but he said that he always found a way to escape.[3] As a young child he went as far as the air field that was in the Balbuena section of the city, selling gum to the aviators. He was adopted as a “mascot” and even given a ride in one of the planes when he was only six.[5] At age seven, he hitchhiked his way to Veracruz .[1]

In 1937, when he was fourteen, he was sent to a juvenile correctional facility in Tlalpan, where he remained until he was eighteen.[1][5] Here, he received his first camera, a gift from one of the facility's directors.[1]

In 1942 he headed to the United States in search of work. On the way, he had to sell his shoes in order to eat, crossing the border barefoot. He then stowed away on a train to head to Washington, D.C.[8] In the United States he worked in Maryland, New York, Philadelphia and Washington on rail lines, taking pictures as a hobby.[1][5] One of his coworkers was run over by a train, and Garcia took pictures of the body, attracted to the sight of it on the snow. However, the pictures did not come out and because of this disappointment, he decided to study photography seriously.[1][8] He remained in the United States until he was deported in 1945.[9]

When he returned to Mexico, he began to work at Celuloide magazine as a laborer.[8][9] The magazine was directed by storyteller and journalist Edmundo Valdés, who recognized García's talent and sent him to study at the Academia de Artes y Ciencias Cinematográficas.[8][10] There García studied along with fellow photographer Nacho López under Manuel Álvarez Bravo and Gabriel Figueroa, both still photography and movie making.[2][11] Garcia is quoted as saying that Alvarez Bravo left him with “more than just the basics of the discipline but rather a concept of life, a path with limitless possibilities. I had wings but he taught me to fly.” .[4]

During his career, he made friends with artists and intellectuals such as Salvador Novo, Diego Rivera, Fernando Benítez, Frida Kahlo, Octavio Paz, Alberto Gironella, Carlos Monsiváis and José Luis Cuevas along with entertainment stars such as Pedro Infante, María Félix, Tin Tan and Tongolele .[4] However, he said that he never considered himself as an artist or intellectual.[3] He never had or wanted his own studio with fixed lights and screens.[8]

In 1954, he married María Sánchez who was also a photographer.[6] The couple had three children, Yuri, Amparo and Héctor García Sánchez who is also a photographer.[1][7][12] His wife said that he once mentioned that he wanted to be buried in a cemetery he saw in Xochimilco, with a window on the casket so he can continue watching Mexico City.[7] He died of cardiac arrest at his home on June 2. 2012.[13]

Career edit

García's primary career was that of a photojournalist. He began working as such in 1945, while still in school.[2] For over sixty years, his work appeared in publications in both Mexico and abroad such as Cine Mundial, Excélsior, Unomásuno, ¡Siempre!, Time and Paris Match and collaborated with international news agencies such as Reuters, France Press, United Press International and Associated Press .[1][4][9] During his career, he covered a number of major events. In 1958, he covered a railroad strike led by Demetrio Vallejo. One photo from this event, a sequence showing the beating of a man during a protest won him his first of three National Journalism Prizes.[1][2] The next major event was the student uprising in 1968. Pressure from the military and police limited him to taking only three rolls of film during the uprising, but his work won him the second of the three prizes.[14] He also covered the presidential campaigns of Luis Echeverría and José López Portillo .[10][15] In 1969, he accompanied writer Fernando Benítez to the Sierra Mayor in Nayarit as part of the latter's research into indigenous communities there.[16]

However, not all of García's work was suitable or intended for newspapers and magazines. While still study under Manuel Alvarez Bravo, director Enrique Borrego gave him the chance to work with a newspaper that covered social events. His first notable photo came from this called “Nuestra señora sociedad” which shows a woman in a strapless dress, which is stepped on by a man. These photos, which had aspects of artistic and/or social criticism, eventually became the focus of a number of exhibits. Famous photos of this type include “El niño en el vientre de concretos” “Los mecapaleros de La Merced,” Cartucho quemado (a photo of the face of a Zapatista), one of a child with a machete in Atencingo, Puebla in 1960, a child using a large leaf as a rain cape in Veracruz in 1965, various photos related to the student uprising in 1968, and photos of Huichols and Coros celebrating Holy Week for a series of books by Fernando Benítez.[8] He began exhibiting photos in 1955 in galleries and over the course of his career had sixty five individual exhibitions and participated in a larger number of collective shows in both Mexico and abroad.[2][8][13] Early important shows include "Rostros de Mexico" (1960), "Imagenes de Mexico" (Paris, 1963), "Vision del mundo maya" (Madrid, 1964), "Una vision de Mexico" and "La nueva grandeza mexicana" (Mexico City, 1966 and 1967, respectively) .[2] His later exhibits included “Iconos” at the Museo de Arte Moderno (1998), Hector Garcia y su tiempo at the Centro de la Imagen (2003), and Cámara Obrera at the Museo de la Ciudad de México (2009).[17]

García's work can be found in major public and private collections including those of the Museo Nacional de Antropología, Museo de la Fotografía in Mexico, Bibliothèque Nationale in Paris, the Library of Congress in Washington, the Vatican Museums and the Wittliff collections .[13][18] However, the largest collection is with the foundation García created with his wife in Mexico City, which has over a million images.[4]

He did a number of photographic portraits in famous people in Mexico which included Diego Rivera, Carlos Monsiváis, David Alfaro Siqueiros (the most notable being the one while in Lecumberri Prison) and Elena Poniatowska .[1] His work has been used to illustrate various books including Mexique, Editions du Seuil by Salvador Novo (1964), Nueva Grandeza Mexicana by Fernando Benítez (1967) and Los Indios de México (1970) .[13]

He taught at the Centro Universitario de Estudios Cinematográficos (CUEC) of UNAM .[13] He worked on still shots for Luis Buñuel for several of his movies.[15] Later in his career he did work in filmmaking winning several awards for his cinematography.[18]

García received Mexico's National Journalism Award three times. In 1959 he received his first for a photo of the 1958 protests of teachers, students and workers in solidarity with a railroad strike. This photo was not published in news accounts at the time but rather later in a magazine called Ojo: una revista que ve. His second came for his photographs of the student uprising in 1968, many of which were published in Carlos Monsiváis’ book Días de guardar and Elena Poniatowska's La noche de Tlatelolco.[2][16] He won the prize for best ethnographic film at the Popoli Festival in Florence, Italy, in 1972.[2] In 2003, he received the National Arts and Sciences Award from CONACULTA for his life's work.[5] Shortly after his death, Canal 22 produced a show in tribute to the photographer, which included interviews, reports and testimonies,[19] and the Museo de Arte Moderno also held a retrospective of his work called Hector Garcia: visualidades inesperadas.[16]

Artistry edit

García is considered to be one of the most important photojournalists of Mexico.[10] He called photojournalism the most dangerous and most attractive professions in the world,[20] also describing it as that of “the dog with two sandwiches.” Trapped between the demands of information and aesthetics, photojournalists can miss the news while looking for the angle or light they desire (and vice versa).” .[11]

Carlos Monsiváis nicknamed him the “fotógrafo de la ciudad” (photographer of the city (Mexico City)) .[1][13] For many years García spent days photographing the streets of Mexico City, often in the early morning when the streets were mostly deserted.[4] He spent so much time running around the city to take photographs that an acquaintance in 1959 suggested that he get roller skates.[4] He wanted to document everything he saw and mostly did. However, he did not take pictures indiscriminately, instead he looked for images with political, ethical aesthetic, journalistic, historic and even erotic value.[4] His work not only included images of famous people and Mexico's elite, but much of his work is dedicated to cabaret dancers, laborers, peasants and street children.[7][21] His concern for the lower classes and everyday Mexican life was something he inherited from Manuel Alvarez Bravo. He followed a philosophy called anti-pintoresquismo, avoiding the picturesque, which he shared with a number of other photographers such as Nacho López and the Hermanos Mayo.[11]

His work often contains political and social critique with a leitmotiv of destitute children and poor people as one of the first photojournalists to explicitly criticize the country's social elite. Much of his work expresses the contradictions of Mexican life under the one-party rule of the PRI. With Nuestra Señora Sociedad, he pokes fun at the wealthy, as a man in a tuxedo steps on the train of the dress worn by a woman. He also took photographs that showed the sharp class distinctions of Mexico. For example, in “Cada quien si grito” (Each with their own cry), García contrasts a poor rural couple with loads of goods to sell, followed by a couple in elegant evening clothes.[11]

Also important were his portraits of a number of artists and intellectuals of the 20th century. One of his most celebrated was that of painter David Alfaro Siqueiros behind the bars of the Lecumberri prison in 1960.[2] He took pictures of Frida Kahlo in her bed as well as in her coffin at her funeral.[7][8] He did many portraits of Dolores del Río and photographed Tin Tan nude in the shower after a show in Havana in 1953.[8]

His work has become valued not only for its information but also as works of art.[20] Although Diego Rivera called him an excellent artist,[1] Garcia did not like the title, considering himself a photojournalist.[14] What I've done practically all my life is to be a witness and to make graphic testimonies of the movements and struggles of the social classes in Mexico. This continues to be the most important motive I have to do photography.[18]

He said that all one needs to be a good photographer is “eyes” with the intention of seeing, the ability to see and to reflection on what is seen. “The whole world thinks that to take super photographs, one needs super knowledge, super equipment, super locations and with the humble “disposable” camera that is at home, never make anything interesting...” He stated that the technology of photography has made the basics accessible to children and knowing all of it is not necessary to know when you have a good picture or not. He himself often took pictures with nothing more than a Nikon snapshot camera, saying he needed nothing more. He quoted Pancho Villa who said to his troops when asked what to do “You shoot, then check what has happened.”[20]

María y Héctor García Foundation edit

In 2008, he created the María y Héctor García Foundation along with his wife, located in Mexico City. The foundation administers and promotes investigation into the archives of Garcia's work, as well as permanent and temporary exhibitions of the photographer's and others’ work.[17] The facility has five halls for permanent and temporary exhibits.[10][17]

The foundation holds the largest collection of García's work with over a million images on 30,000 rolls of film taken from 1943 to 2008, with most dating from the 1950s to the 1970s.[10][17] As of his death in 2012, only 4,000 images were digitized including 1,731 from the Iconos exhibition.[7][17] After, García's death, the Mexican government announced a project to preserve, categorize and digitalize the entire collection.[4][7]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Luis Carlos Sánchez (June 3, 2012). "Pierde la ciudad su fotógrafo; muere Héctor García" [The city loses its photographer]. Excelsior (in Spanish). Mexico City. Retrieved February 18, 2013.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Award-winning Mexican photographer Hector Garcia dies". Fox Latina. New York. June 3, 2012. Retrieved February 18, 2013.
  3. ^ a b c Edgar Alejandro Hernandez (March 12, 2005). "Sigue su huella Hector Garcia" [Hector Garcia follows his path]. Reforma (in Spanish). Mexico City. p. 1.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i Rafael Vargas (June 15, 2012). "Héctor García y la fotografía de todo" [Hector Garcia and the fotography of everything]. Proceso (in Spanish). Mexico City. Retrieved February 18, 2013.
  5. ^ a b c d e Tesoros del Registro Civil Salón de la Plástica Mexicana [Treasures of the Civil Registry Salón de la Plástica Mexicana] (in Spanish). Mexico: Government of Mexico City and CONACULTA. 2012. p. 228.
  6. ^ a b "Héctor García, fotógrafo notario de la ciudad" [Hector Garcia, noted photographer of the city]. El Pais (in Spanish). Madrid. June 5, 2012. Retrieved February 18, 2013.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g "México digitalizará negativos del fotógrafo Héctor García" [Mexico will digitalize the photography of Hector Garcia]. Terra (in Spanish). Mexico City. June 6, 2012. Retrieved February 18, 2013.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i Elena Poniatowska (June 3, 2012). "Héctor García" [The city loses its photographer]. La Jornada (in Spanish). Mexico City. Retrieved February 18, 2013.
  9. ^ a b c Maria de Jesus Avila; Alfa Irina Caballero (September 3, 1998). "Hector Garcia: El ojo experto, para el momento clave" [Hector Garcia:Expert eye, for the key]. El Norte (in Spanish). Monterrey. p. 4.
  10. ^ a b c d e "Fue Héctor García uno de los grandes fotógrafos de México" [Hector Garcia was one of the great photographers of Mexico]. Crónica (in Spanish). Mexico City. June 5, 2012. Retrieved February 18, 2013.
  11. ^ a b c d Mraz, John (2003). Nacho Lopez, Mexican Photographer. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press. pp. 26, 38, 79. ISBN 9780816640478.
  12. ^ "001 La inauguracion". Retrieved October 8, 2023.
  13. ^ a b c d e f "Fallece el fotógrafo Héctor García a los 88 años" [Photographer Hector Garcia dies]. El Econonomista (in Spanish). Mexico City. June 2, 2012. Retrieved February 18, 2013.
  14. ^ a b Inti Vargas (October 3, 2003). "Expone Hector Garcia su propio 2 de octubre" [Hector Garcia exhibits his own October 2]. Reforma (in Spanish). Mexico City. p. 15.
  15. ^ a b "Héctor García y la vida de los reyes" [Hector Garcia and the life of kings]. El Economista (in Spanish). Mexico City. December 20, 2012.
  16. ^ a b c Merry MacMasters (December 13, 2012). "Héctor García recibe homenaje en el MAM" [Hector Garcia was one of the great photographers of Mexico]. La Jornada (in Spanish). Mexico City. Retrieved February 18, 2013.
  17. ^ a b c d e . Mexico City: Fundación María y Héctor García. Archived from the original on November 27, 2012. Retrieved February 18, 2013.
  18. ^ a b c . Austin, TX: Wittiff Collection. Archived from the original on March 30, 2015. Retrieved February 18, 2013.
  19. ^ "Canal 22 dedicará programa especial a Héctor García" [Channel 22 will dedicate a special program to Hector Garcia]. El Universal (in Spanish). Mexico City. June 8, 2012. Retrieved February 18, 2013.
  20. ^ a b c Juan Carlos Martinez (January 4, 1997). "Hector Garcia: Dispara y luego averigua" [Hector Garcia :Shoot then check]. El Norte (in Spanish). Monterrey. p. 1 5.
  21. ^ . Gugugi.pl. Archived from the original on November 21, 2016. Retrieved November 20, 2016.

héctor, garcía, cobo, hector, garcia, cobo, august, 1923, june, 2012, mexican, photographer, photojournalist, sixty, year, career, chronicling, mexico, social, classes, mexico, city, various, events, 20th, century, such, 1968, student, uprising, born, poor, di. Hector Garcia Cobo August 23 1923 June 2 2012 was a Mexican photographer and photojournalist who had a sixty year career chronicling Mexico s social classes Mexico City and various events of the 20th century such as the 1968 student uprising He was born poor but discovered photography in his teens and early 20s deciding to study it seriously after his attempt to photograph the death of a coworker failed He was sent to the Academia Mexicana de Artes y Ciencias Cinematograficas by magazine director Edmundo Valdes who recognized Garcia s talent Most of Garcia s career was related to photojournalism working with publications both inside and outside of Mexico However a substantial amount of his work had more artistic and critical qualities Many of these were exhibited in galleries and museums with sixty five individual exhibitions during his lifetime This not only included portraits of artists and intellectuals including a famous portrait of David Alfaro Siqueiros at Lecumberri Prison but also portraits of common and poor people He was also the first photojournalist to explicitly criticize Mexico s elite either making fun of them or contrasting them to the very poor Hector Garcia in Candelaria de los PatosDavid Alfaro Siqueiros in prison by Garcia Cobo Contents 1 Life 2 Career 3 Artistry 4 Maria y Hector Garcia Foundation 5 ReferencesLife edit nbsp Hector Garcia as a young manHector Garcia Cobos was born on August 23 1923 in Mexico City to Amparo Cobo Soberanes from the State of Mexico and Ramiro Garcia do Porto from Portugal He grew up in the poor and dangerous Candelaria de los Patos neighborhood in a house that has since been replaced by apartment buildings 1 2 3 His family was extremely poor He received little formal education as a youth with his mother teaching him how to read 4 5 As a child he much preferred to wander the streets of his neighborhood and even beyond to meet and talk to people This led to his mother calling him pata de perro lit dog s foot which later became the title of his autobiography 6 7 His propensity to escape from the house even drove his mother to tie him to the bed but he said that he always found a way to escape 3 As a young child he went as far as the air field that was in the Balbuena section of the city selling gum to the aviators He was adopted as a mascot and even given a ride in one of the planes when he was only six 5 At age seven he hitchhiked his way to Veracruz 1 In 1937 when he was fourteen he was sent to a juvenile correctional facility in Tlalpan where he remained until he was eighteen 1 5 Here he received his first camera a gift from one of the facility s directors 1 In 1942 he headed to the United States in search of work On the way he had to sell his shoes in order to eat crossing the border barefoot He then stowed away on a train to head to Washington D C 8 In the United States he worked in Maryland New York Philadelphia and Washington on rail lines taking pictures as a hobby 1 5 One of his coworkers was run over by a train and Garcia took pictures of the body attracted to the sight of it on the snow However the pictures did not come out and because of this disappointment he decided to study photography seriously 1 8 He remained in the United States until he was deported in 1945 9 When he returned to Mexico he began to work at Celuloide magazine as a laborer 8 9 The magazine was directed by storyteller and journalist Edmundo Valdes who recognized Garcia s talent and sent him to study at the Academia de Artes y Ciencias Cinematograficas 8 10 There Garcia studied along with fellow photographer Nacho Lopez under Manuel Alvarez Bravo and Gabriel Figueroa both still photography and movie making 2 11 Garcia is quoted as saying that Alvarez Bravo left him with more than just the basics of the discipline but rather a concept of life a path with limitless possibilities I had wings but he taught me to fly 4 During his career he made friends with artists and intellectuals such as Salvador Novo Diego Rivera Fernando Benitez Frida Kahlo Octavio Paz Alberto Gironella Carlos Monsivais and Jose Luis Cuevas along with entertainment stars such as Pedro Infante Maria Felix Tin Tan and Tongolele 4 However he said that he never considered himself as an artist or intellectual 3 He never had or wanted his own studio with fixed lights and screens 8 In 1954 he married Maria Sanchez who was also a photographer 6 The couple had three children Yuri Amparo and Hector Garcia Sanchez who is also a photographer 1 7 12 His wife said that he once mentioned that he wanted to be buried in a cemetery he saw in Xochimilco with a window on the casket so he can continue watching Mexico City 7 He died of cardiac arrest at his home on June 2 2012 13 Career editGarcia s primary career was that of a photojournalist He began working as such in 1945 while still in school 2 For over sixty years his work appeared in publications in both Mexico and abroad such as Cine Mundial Excelsior Unomasuno Siempre Time and Paris Match and collaborated with international news agencies such as Reuters France Press United Press International and Associated Press 1 4 9 During his career he covered a number of major events In 1958 he covered a railroad strike led by Demetrio Vallejo One photo from this event a sequence showing the beating of a man during a protest won him his first of three National Journalism Prizes 1 2 The next major event was the student uprising in 1968 Pressure from the military and police limited him to taking only three rolls of film during the uprising but his work won him the second of the three prizes 14 He also covered the presidential campaigns of Luis Echeverria and Jose Lopez Portillo 10 15 In 1969 he accompanied writer Fernando Benitez to the Sierra Mayor in Nayarit as part of the latter s research into indigenous communities there 16 However not all of Garcia s work was suitable or intended for newspapers and magazines While still study under Manuel Alvarez Bravo director Enrique Borrego gave him the chance to work with a newspaper that covered social events His first notable photo came from this called Nuestra senora sociedad which shows a woman in a strapless dress which is stepped on by a man These photos which had aspects of artistic and or social criticism eventually became the focus of a number of exhibits Famous photos of this type include El nino en el vientre de concretos Los mecapaleros de La Merced Cartucho quemado a photo of the face of a Zapatista one of a child with a machete in Atencingo Puebla in 1960 a child using a large leaf as a rain cape in Veracruz in 1965 various photos related to the student uprising in 1968 and photos of Huichols and Coros celebrating Holy Week for a series of books by Fernando Benitez 8 He began exhibiting photos in 1955 in galleries and over the course of his career had sixty five individual exhibitions and participated in a larger number of collective shows in both Mexico and abroad 2 8 13 Early important shows include Rostros de Mexico 1960 Imagenes de Mexico Paris 1963 Vision del mundo maya Madrid 1964 Una vision de Mexico and La nueva grandeza mexicana Mexico City 1966 and 1967 respectively 2 His later exhibits included Iconos at the Museo de Arte Moderno 1998 Hector Garcia y su tiempo at the Centro de la Imagen 2003 and Camara Obrera at the Museo de la Ciudad de Mexico 2009 17 Garcia s work can be found in major public and private collections including those of the Museo Nacional de Antropologia Museo de la Fotografia in Mexico Bibliotheque Nationale in Paris the Library of Congress in Washington the Vatican Museums and the Wittliff collections 13 18 However the largest collection is with the foundation Garcia created with his wife in Mexico City which has over a million images 4 He did a number of photographic portraits in famous people in Mexico which included Diego Rivera Carlos Monsivais David Alfaro Siqueiros the most notable being the one while in Lecumberri Prison and Elena Poniatowska 1 His work has been used to illustrate various books including Mexique Editions du Seuil by Salvador Novo 1964 Nueva Grandeza Mexicana by Fernando Benitez 1967 and Los Indios de Mexico 1970 13 He taught at the Centro Universitario de Estudios Cinematograficos CUEC of UNAM 13 He worked on still shots for Luis Bunuel for several of his movies 15 Later in his career he did work in filmmaking winning several awards for his cinematography 18 Garcia received Mexico s National Journalism Award three times In 1959 he received his first for a photo of the 1958 protests of teachers students and workers in solidarity with a railroad strike This photo was not published in news accounts at the time but rather later in a magazine called Ojo una revista que ve His second came for his photographs of the student uprising in 1968 many of which were published in Carlos Monsivais book Dias de guardar and Elena Poniatowska s La noche de Tlatelolco 2 16 He won the prize for best ethnographic film at the Popoli Festival in Florence Italy in 1972 2 In 2003 he received the National Arts and Sciences Award from CONACULTA for his life s work 5 Shortly after his death Canal 22 produced a show in tribute to the photographer which included interviews reports and testimonies 19 and the Museo de Arte Moderno also held a retrospective of his work called Hector Garcia visualidades inesperadas 16 Artistry editGarcia is considered to be one of the most important photojournalists of Mexico 10 He called photojournalism the most dangerous and most attractive professions in the world 20 also describing it as that of the dog with two sandwiches Trapped between the demands of information and aesthetics photojournalists can miss the news while looking for the angle or light they desire and vice versa 11 Carlos Monsivais nicknamed him the fotografo de la ciudad photographer of the city Mexico City 1 13 For many years Garcia spent days photographing the streets of Mexico City often in the early morning when the streets were mostly deserted 4 He spent so much time running around the city to take photographs that an acquaintance in 1959 suggested that he get roller skates 4 He wanted to document everything he saw and mostly did However he did not take pictures indiscriminately instead he looked for images with political ethical aesthetic journalistic historic and even erotic value 4 His work not only included images of famous people and Mexico s elite but much of his work is dedicated to cabaret dancers laborers peasants and street children 7 21 His concern for the lower classes and everyday Mexican life was something he inherited from Manuel Alvarez Bravo He followed a philosophy called anti pintoresquismo avoiding the picturesque which he shared with a number of other photographers such as Nacho Lopez and the Hermanos Mayo 11 His work often contains political and social critique with a leitmotiv of destitute children and poor people as one of the first photojournalists to explicitly criticize the country s social elite Much of his work expresses the contradictions of Mexican life under the one party rule of the PRI With Nuestra Senora Sociedad he pokes fun at the wealthy as a man in a tuxedo steps on the train of the dress worn by a woman He also took photographs that showed the sharp class distinctions of Mexico For example in Cada quien si grito Each with their own cry Garcia contrasts a poor rural couple with loads of goods to sell followed by a couple in elegant evening clothes 11 Also important were his portraits of a number of artists and intellectuals of the 20th century One of his most celebrated was that of painter David Alfaro Siqueiros behind the bars of the Lecumberri prison in 1960 2 He took pictures of Frida Kahlo in her bed as well as in her coffin at her funeral 7 8 He did many portraits of Dolores del Rio and photographed Tin Tan nude in the shower after a show in Havana in 1953 8 His work has become valued not only for its information but also as works of art 20 Although Diego Rivera called him an excellent artist 1 Garcia did not like the title considering himself a photojournalist 14 What I ve done practically all my life is to be a witness and to make graphic testimonies of the movements and struggles of the social classes in Mexico This continues to be the most important motive I have to do photography 18 He said that all one needs to be a good photographer is eyes with the intention of seeing the ability to see and to reflection on what is seen The whole world thinks that to take super photographs one needs super knowledge super equipment super locations and with the humble disposable camera that is at home never make anything interesting He stated that the technology of photography has made the basics accessible to children and knowing all of it is not necessary to know when you have a good picture or not He himself often took pictures with nothing more than a Nikon snapshot camera saying he needed nothing more He quoted Pancho Villa who said to his troops when asked what to do You shoot then check what has happened 20 Maria y Hector Garcia Foundation editIn 2008 he created the Maria y Hector Garcia Foundation along with his wife located in Mexico City The foundation administers and promotes investigation into the archives of Garcia s work as well as permanent and temporary exhibitions of the photographer s and others work 17 The facility has five halls for permanent and temporary exhibits 10 17 The foundation holds the largest collection of Garcia s work with over a million images on 30 000 rolls of film taken from 1943 to 2008 with most dating from the 1950s to the 1970s 10 17 As of his death in 2012 only 4 000 images were digitized including 1 731 from the Iconos exhibition 7 17 After Garcia s death the Mexican government announced a project to preserve categorize and digitalize the entire collection 4 7 References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l Luis Carlos Sanchez June 3 2012 Pierde la ciudad su fotografo muere Hector Garcia The city loses its photographer Excelsior in Spanish Mexico City Retrieved February 18 2013 a b c d e f g h i Award winning Mexican photographer Hector Garcia dies Fox Latina New York June 3 2012 Retrieved February 18 2013 a b c Edgar Alejandro Hernandez March 12 2005 Sigue su huella Hector Garcia Hector Garcia follows his path Reforma in Spanish Mexico City p 1 a b c d e f g h i Rafael Vargas June 15 2012 Hector Garcia y la fotografia de todo Hector Garcia and the fotography of everything Proceso in Spanish Mexico City Retrieved February 18 2013 a b c d e Tesoros del Registro Civil Salon de la Plastica Mexicana Treasures of the Civil Registry Salon de la Plastica Mexicana in Spanish Mexico Government of Mexico City and CONACULTA 2012 p 228 a b Hector Garcia fotografo notario de la ciudad Hector Garcia noted photographer of the city El Pais in Spanish Madrid June 5 2012 Retrieved February 18 2013 a b c d e f g Mexico digitalizara negativos del fotografo Hector Garcia Mexico will digitalize the photography of Hector Garcia Terra in Spanish Mexico City June 6 2012 Retrieved February 18 2013 a b c d e f g h i Elena Poniatowska June 3 2012 Hector Garcia The city loses its photographer La Jornada in Spanish Mexico City Retrieved February 18 2013 a b c Maria de Jesus Avila Alfa Irina Caballero September 3 1998 Hector Garcia El ojo experto para el momento clave Hector Garcia Expert eye for the key El Norte in Spanish Monterrey p 4 a b c d e Fue Hector Garcia uno de los grandes fotografos de Mexico Hector Garcia was one of the great photographers of Mexico Cronica in Spanish Mexico City June 5 2012 Retrieved February 18 2013 a b c d Mraz John 2003 Nacho Lopez Mexican Photographer Minneapolis MN University of Minnesota Press pp 26 38 79 ISBN 9780816640478 001 La inauguracion Retrieved October 8 2023 a b c d e f Fallece el fotografo Hector Garcia a los 88 anos Photographer Hector Garcia dies El Econonomista in Spanish Mexico City June 2 2012 Retrieved February 18 2013 a b Inti Vargas October 3 2003 Expone Hector Garcia su propio 2 de octubre Hector Garcia exhibits his own October 2 Reforma in Spanish Mexico City p 15 a b Hector Garcia y la vida de los reyes Hector Garcia and the life of kings El Economista in Spanish Mexico City December 20 2012 a b c Merry MacMasters December 13 2012 Hector Garcia recibe homenaje en el MAM Hector Garcia was one of the great photographers of Mexico La Jornada in Spanish Mexico City Retrieved February 18 2013 a b c d e Fundacion Maria y Hector Garcia Mexico City Fundacion Maria y Hector Garcia Archived from the original on November 27 2012 Retrieved February 18 2013 a b c Hector Garcia Austin TX Wittiff Collection Archived from the original on March 30 2015 Retrieved February 18 2013 Canal 22 dedicara programa especial a Hector Garcia Channel 22 will dedicate a special program to Hector Garcia El Universal in Spanish Mexico City June 8 2012 Retrieved February 18 2013 a b c Juan Carlos Martinez January 4 1997 Hector Garcia Dispara y luego averigua Hector Garcia Shoot then check El Norte in Spanish Monterrey p 1 5 Newborn Children Fotography Gugugi pl Archived from the original on November 21 2016 Retrieved November 20 2016 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hector Garcia Cobo amp oldid 1205150596, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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