Manuel Álvarez Bravo: Collaborations explores the profound role that connection, dialogue, and shared vision played in shaping one of the most influential figures in twentieth-century photography. Featuring more than one hundred photographs and pieces of ephemera, the exhibition reveals how collaboration was not simply an occasional aspect of Álvarez Bravo’s practice but a defining element of his artistic identity.
Often celebrated as the father of Mexican photography, Álvarez Bravo’s achievements emerged from a dynamic creative ecosystem. Beginning his career in the 1920s, in the vibrant aftermath of the Mexican Revolution, he became part of a flourishing art scene in Mexico City that brought together painters, writers, and intellectuals. Over seven decades, he formed creative partnerships with some of the most important cultural figures of his time, including Frida Kahlo, Diego Rivera, André Breton, Luis Buñuel, and Octavio Paz. These collaborations nurtured an aesthetic that blended surrealism, symbolism, and realism, while reflecting Mexico’s evolving identity in the modern era.
The exhibition examines the layered nature of authorship in photography—how choices around subject, framing, exposure, printing, and display can be shared or influenced by others. Álvarez Bravo often blurred these boundaries, working closely with mentors, lovers, and peers to shape images that transcend the notion of individual creation. His photographs become visual dialogues, each bearing the imprint of collective imagination and emotional exchange.
Curated by Mia Laufer, former Associate Curator at the Des Moines Art Center,
Manuel Álvarez Bravo: Collaborations invites visitors to reconsider the myth of the solitary artist. Instead, it presents Álvarez Bravo as part of a vital artistic network—one that transformed photography into a deeply collaborative art form rooted in friendship, exchange, and the shared pursuit of meaning.
Image:
Manuel Álvarez Bravo (Mexican, 1902 – 2002)
Caja de visiones (Box of Visions), 1931
Gelatin silver print
Des Moines Art Center Permanent Collections; Purchased with funds from Craig and Kimberly Shadur, 2024.11
Photo: Rich Sanders