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Showing posts with label Mexico. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mexico. Show all posts

December 27, 2017

30 Amazing Photographs That Document Everyday Life in Mexico From the Early 20th Century

Agustín Víctor Casasola (1874-1928), others cite: (1874-1938) was a Mexican photographer and partial founder of the Mexican Association of Press Photographers.

Casasola began his career as a typographer for the newspaper El Imparcial, eventually moving to reporter then on to photographer in the early 1900s. He became a photographer in 1894. By 1911 Casasola was credited with founding the first Mexican press agency, Agencia Fotografica Mexicana. Casasola was later thanked by the interim president in 1911, Francisco León de la Barra, for having "inaugurated a new phase of freedom in the press photography." By the end of 1912 the agency had expanded and changed its name to Agencia Mexicana de Informacion Fotografica. The agency brought on more photographers and began purchasing pictures from foreign agencies and amateurs, then redistributing those photographs to newspapers.

When El Imparcial went out of business in 1917, Casasola recovered the newspaper's archives, eventually compiling many of the photographs into the famed "Album histórico gráfico" which covered the events of the Mexican Revolution. Casasola only managed to print the first 6 volumes covering the years 1910 to 1912. It is believed the work did not fare well due to the changing attitude of people wanting to move on from the death and suffering that plagued the civil war.

In 1920, Casasola as well as other notable Mexican photographers founded the Mexican Association of Press photographers.

Casasola's collection was later dubbed the Casasola Archive where it was later housed at the National Institute of Anthropology and History of Mexico, the collection totaling over 500,000 prints and negatives.










October 25, 2017

July 26, 2017

Rare and Precious Footage of Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera at Their Blue House in Mexico City

The longtime love affair between artists Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera was the definition of torrid, yet there were also moments of tenderness and a deep well of emotion that kept them together. The video shows the two iconic artists kissing and embracing each other at their Blue House in Mexico City.



“Nobody will ever know how much I love Diego,” Kahlo wrote about her love for Rivera in her diary. “I don’t want anything to hurt him, nothing to bother him and rob him of the energy he needs for living — for living as he likes, for painting, seeing, loving, eating, sleeping, being by himself, being with someone. But I’d never want him to be sad. If I had good health, I’d give him all of it. If I had youth, he could take it all.”

According to Messy Nessy Chic, the footage was shot by Frida’s friend, confidante and lover, Hungarian photographer Nickolas Muray, one of the most highly acclaimed photographers of his day and a pioneer of color photography. Kahlo’s on-again off-again relationship with Muray lasted ten years and he was considered one of the most significant men in her life aside from Diego.

It’s unknown whether they were carrying on their affair when this footage was shot, but no doubt one of Diego’s extra curricular fancies wouldn’t have been too far away either.






May 13, 2017

Everyday Life of Mexico in the Early 20th Century Through Hugo Brehme's Lens

The collection from SMU Central University Libraries consists of photographs and real photographic postcards, taken between 1905 and 1920 by Mexican-German photographer Hugo Brehme (1882-1954), showing views of towns, men working, women, children, monuments, markets, cathedrals, landscapes, boats, mountains, pyramids, volcanoes, Popocatepetl, Lago de Patzcuaro, and Mexico City. Included is also a view of the volcano, El Paricutin, in Michoacan.


Ferrocarril Mexicano locomotive crossing railroad bridge on the Maltrata Incline between Paso del Macho and Esperanza, Veracruz-Llave, ca. 1902-1920

Monumento Washington, Mexico City, ca. 1905-1916

Acueducto de los Remedios, Naucalpan de Juarez, State of Mexico, ca. 1906-1920

Calle del Cinco de Mayo, Chicontepec de Tejeda, Veracruz-Llave, ca. 1906-1920

Casa de los Condes de Santiago, Mexico City, ca. 1906-1920





May 2, 2017

21 Rare Photos of a Young Frida Kahlo in the 1920s

“I am not sick. I am broken. But I am happy to be alive as long as I can paint.” – Frida Kahlo


Frida Kahlo de Rivera (1907-1954), born Magdalena Carmen Frida Kahlo y Calderón, was a Mexican painter, who mostly painted self-portraits. She became one of Mexico’s greatest painters.

Kahlo contracted polio at the age of 6, had an almost deadly accident at the age of 18 and went on to marry Diego Rivera, the muralist and ultimate womanizer.

Below is a collection of 21 rare photos of a young Frida in the 1920s.










April 17, 2017

What Frida Wore: See Frida Kahlo’s Hidden Wardrobe, Locked Away for 50 Years

Frida Kahlo’s clothes are like Frida herself: colorful, powerful, filled with passion. Seeing them immediately evokes the richness of her paintings, while poignantly offering an insight into her life.


When Mexican artist Frida Kahlo passed away in 1954, her husband, fellow artist Diego Rivera, anguished by her death, sealed her clothes in the bathroom of their Mexico City home and ordered to keep them hidden away until 15 years after his death.


Rivera died only a few years after Kahlo, in 1957, and their house was converted to a museum in her honor. The room with Kahlo's belongings, however, wasn’t unlocked until 2004 when the museum decided to catalog its content. It invited renowned Japanese photographer Ishiuchi Miyako to photograph the collection of more than 300 unseen relics.

Ms. Miyako used only a 35mm Nikon camera and natural light for the project. The result is an unprecdented archival record of Kahlo’s most private things.

After her bus accident, Kahlo was in a full body cast for three months, and she remained in pain for the rest of her life. She painted her casts and corsets, turning them from medical equipment into artworks.

Kahlo’s right leg was thinner than her left after childhood polio – and it was later fractured in 11 places when she had a horrific bus accident in her 20s. As a result, she wore long, traditional Tehuana dresses that concealed her lower body.

Kahlo’s leg was amputated in 1953. She designed this prosthetic leg with embroidered red lace-up boots and a bell attached.

Classic cats-eye glasses worn by Kahlo.

Kahlo’s knit swimsuit in mint green.





February 11, 2017

30 Rare Vintage Photographs That Show What the Texas-Mexico Border Looked Like in the Late 1930s

The border between the United States and Mexico has been in the headlines for a while now. Images of today's Texas-Mexico border are filled with reinforced walls, national guard troops and guard towers, images that look more military than an open zone for trade and immigration.

But it wasn't always like that.

Images of the area in 1937-39 from the Library of Congress archives show a border that is loosely guarded and relatively free, with only small swinging gates and few border officers present.

This was near the end of the Great Depression, when white migrant workers living in tents were striving to provide for their families along with Mexican workers and their families in ramshackle huts.

Mexicans entering the United States. United States immigration station, El Paso, Texas, June 1938.

State border plant inspection maintained by the United States Department of Agriculture between Mexico and the United States. Shoppers returning from Mexico (Juarez) to the United States (El Paso) over the bridge which carries all the traffic are required to open their packages for inspection, June 1937.

Plant quarantine inspectors examining packages brought over the bridge between Juarez, Mexico and El Paso, Texas. Families and housewives returning to their homes in El Paso after their Saturday marketing in Juarez, where they benefit by the present rate of exchange, May 1937.

Inspecting a freight train from Mexico for smuggled immigrants. El Paso, Texas, June 1938.

Mexicans entering the United States. United States immigration station, El Paso, Texas, June 1938.





February 8, 2017

August 28, 2016

22 Vintage Photos Show Everyday Life of Mexico City in the early 20th Century

These are 22 vintage photos that define everyday life of Mexico City in the 1900s.


A temporary shelter, 1908

An officer of the Mexican Rurales, 1904

Banana tree in Alameda, City of Mexico, 1904

Booths in Calle Cinco de Mayo, Mexico City, 1904

Bull fight, City of Mexico, 1904





June 7, 2016

Wonderful Color Photographs of Daily Life in Mexico during the 1950s

These slides and photographs are from one of Vieilles Annonces' photo collections. They were dusty, darkened, bent, underexposed and were destined to be trash. Through the help of Photoshop, they can be displayed once again.

Vieilles likes rescuing old slides from the dustbins and enhancing with Photoshop. And here are her some stuffs that show the daily life of Mexico in the 1950s.

Beach of Caletilla in Acapulco de Juárez, Mexico, 1955

Buildings along the Reforma in Mexico City between 1955 and 1957

Buildings along the Reforma, Mexico City, 1952

Burro and Coca-Cola on the streets of Mexico between 1955 and 1957

Burro with wood in Mexico, 1955





April 4, 2016

20 Black and White Photographs Capture Everyday Life in Mexico During the 1960s

These photographs were taken by American historian and photographer Harry Crosby from his travels in Mexico during the 1960s.


American tourists on street in Tijuana, 1964

Reyes and Lucia Gaxiola at Rancho Compostela, 1967

Saddle maker in Álamos, 1962

Taco vendor in Tijuana, Mexico, catching up on the day’s news until the next customer shows up, 1964

Carlos Guadalupe Aguilar Villavicencio family at Rancho Rosarito, 1972







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