Passing Through is a new solo exhibition by Mexican photographer
Olivia Vivanco that reflects on how to represent the migrant experience with care, dignity, and nuance. Rather than relying on images that expose, stigmatize, or reduce displacement to a single narrative, the project turns toward traces, objects, and spaces that hold the memory of those who passed through them.
Rooted in journeys across Mexico, the series moves through migratory routes, shelters, and transitional spaces where waiting, uncertainty, and movement shape daily life. Roads, refuges, abandoned belongings, dining halls, pathways, and railway tracks become quiet witnesses—fragments of presence that suggest the stories of migrants without revealing their identities directly.
At the heart of the project is an ethical approach to image-making. Passing Through resists criminalizing or stereotypical portrayals of migration, choosing instead to focus on resilience, solidarity, and hope. By shifting attention from the face to the trace, the work creates a visual language that is both restrained and deeply human.
The exhibition invites viewers to consider how photographs can bear witness without overexposing, and how absence itself can become a form of testimony. In doing so, Passing Through offers not only a portrait of migration, but also a meditation on memory, vulnerability, and the moral responsibility of representation.

Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua © Olivia Vivanco

Tecún Uman, Guatemala © Olivia Vivanco

Piedras Negras, Coahuila © Olivia Vivanco

Altar, Sonora © Olivia Vivanco
Olivia Vivanco
Olivia Vivanco is a visual artist and researcher whose work explores migration, memory, and the ethics of representation. Through photography, video, and archival practices, her projects examine displacement, transit, and the traces left by human movement.
Her work has been exhibited widely in Mexico and internationally, including in Germany, Colombia, Chile, Denmark, Spain, the United States, France, Morocco, Puerto Rico, and Uruguay.
She has received numerous grants and distinctions throughout her career, including major cultural funding and artistic residencies in Mexico, as well as selections in prominent photography, contemporary art, and documentary platforms.
Her work is included in artist book, documentary, and visual culture collections in Latin America.
Vivanco is currently a member of Mexico’s National System of Art Creators (2022–2025) and serves as a professor and researcher at the Autonomous University of Mexico City.
www.oliviavivanco.com
@oliviavivanco

Mexicali, Baja California © Olivia Vivanco