Wineskins (Odres)

Wineskins (Odres)

Manuel Álvarez BravoWW-1932-104376
1932·Gelatin silver print·15.9 × 23.9 cm (6 5/16 × 9 7/16 in.); Mount: 40 × 32.2 cm (15 3/4 × 12 11/16 in.); Image/paper: 15.9 × 23.9 cm (6 1/4 × 9 3/8 in.)

<p>During and following the Mexican Revolution (1910–20), art entered politics, and the handicrafts of indigenous peoples were celebrated as expressions of a new national culture and identity. Manuel Alvarez Bravo, who embraced nativist iconography from a distinctly modernist vantage beginning in the later 1920s, flourished in this Mexican renaissance. He fostered relationships with Mexican muralists as well as with European and American artists who traveled to Mexico, including such figures as Surrealist leader André Breton and photographers Henri Cartier-Bresson and Edward Weston. Julien Levy exhibited this print and other photographs by Bravo alongside works by Cartier-Bresson and Walker Evans in the 1935 show <em>Documentary and Anti-Graphic Photographs</em>. In his press release for the show, Levy explained “anti-graphic” as something that defies or eschews generally accepted criteria for good photography and remains “in many ways the more dynamic, startling, and inimitable” on that account. Bravo’s image of Mexican goatskin vessels—a traditional means of transporting wine—suggests an intoxicating ambiguity between inanimate and animal creations in the spirit of the Surrealist movement.</p>

Catalogue

Year
1932
Dimensions
15.9 × 23.9 cm (6 5/16 × 9 7/16 in.); Mount: 40 × 32.2 cm (15 3/4 × 12 11/16 in.); Image/paper: 15.9 × 23.9 cm (6 1/4 × 9 3/8 in.)

Artist

Manuel Álvarez Bravo
Manuel Álvarez Bravo

Photography

Manuel Álvarez Bravo was a Mexican photographer whose black-and-white images merged surrealist formal strategies with documentary observation of Mexican landscape, architecture, and daily life. Working primarily from the 1930s onward, he developed a distinctly poetic approach to the photograph, favoring oblique angles, shadow play, and unexpected juxtapositions that rendered ordinary scenes dreamlike without abandoning their material specificity. His work circulated internationally and influenced several generations of photographers engaged with the relationship between abstraction and representation.

Mexico City, Mexico

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More

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Salomé

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1980 · Palladium print, No. 4 from the portfolio "Diez Desnudos (Ten Nudes)" (1981)

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That Falls (que cae)

1980 · Palladium print, No. 8 from the portfolio "Diez Desnudos (Ten Nudes)" (1981)

WW-1980-086522
Xipetotec

Xipetotec

1979 · Palladium print, No. 5 from the portfolio "Diez Desnudos (Ten Nudes)" (1981)

WW-1979-086525
Siesta en la Hierba (Siesta in the Grass)

Siesta en la Hierba (Siesta in the Grass)

1979 · Palladium print, No. 7 from the portfolio "Diez Desnudos (Ten Nudes)" (1981)

WW-1979-086518
Diosa, Historia (Goddess, History)

Diosa, Historia (Goddess, History)

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WW-1979-086520
La Del Pirú (She of the Piru Tree)

La Del Pirú (She of the Piru Tree)

1978 · Palladium print, No. 3 from the portfolio "Diez Desnudos (Ten Nudes)" (1981)

WW-1978-086524

Record

Verified by WattsOS
Year
1932
Dimensions
15.9 × 23.9 cm (6 5/16 × 9 7/16 in.); Mount: 40 × 32.2 cm (15 3/4 × 12 11/16 in.); Image/paper: 15.9 × 23.9 cm (6 1/4 × 9 3/8 in.)
Watts ID
WW-1932-104376

Source

Source
aic
Status
verified

Artist

Manuel Álvarez Bravo

Manuel Álvarez Bravo

Photography

View artist profile →