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Luna Cornea.
Photographs by Nacho Lopez.
Editorial RM, Mexico City, 2008.
496 pp.,
540 color illustrations,
6½x9".
Publisher's Description
A frank chronicler of postwar Mexico’s political contradictions, Nacho López (1923–1986) published
the most critical images of his time, in photo essays for magazines such as Hoy, Mañana and
Siempre! He photographed the streets of Mexico City, its pool halls, pulque bars and the grim
Lecumberri prison, with an almost classical eye; all of his pictures are rigorously composed and
contain no extraneous matter, addressing only the necessary and the telling. To achieve this concision,
López would often construct scenarios, such as arranging for an actress to stroll past groups
of men in the street and provoke their “approval.” López’s photos also have the special quality of
appearing to eliminate temporal conditions, so that their subjects are seized more in space than
time. In this manner, López captured the corrupt as they fell from grace and the disenfranchised
as they defied their poverty with camaraderie and improvised entertainments. This latest issue
of Luna Córnea is a full-length monograph on López, exploring all aspects of his oeuvre, including
his work on architecture, dance and anthropology. Nacho López’s work is little known outside of
Mexico today: Luna Córnea redresses that oversight.
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