Escaramuza, the Poetics of Home is an immersive collaboration that brings together photography, poetry, and lived testimony to illuminate a tradition shaped by precision, courage, and belonging. Centered on the women of escaramuza charra, the exhibition opens a window onto a world often glimpsed only through spectacle, revealing instead the intimate rituals, relationships, and emotional landscapes that sustain it. Here, pageantry gives way to presence, and performance becomes a language of identity.
Through the lens of
Constance Jaeggi, the bond between rider and horse emerges as a quiet dialogue of trust and power. Her photographs move beyond documentation, lingering on gestures, glances, and moments of pause that speak to autonomy within a historically male-dominated arena. Horses are not merely companions or symbols; they are collaborators, mirroring the riders’ strength, vulnerability, and resolve. Jaeggi’s imagery frames escaramuza as both a disciplined sport and a deeply personal act of self-definition.
Poetry by Angelina Sáenz and ire’ne lara silva weaves through the visual work, adding rhythm and resonance to the exhibition. Their words echo themes of migration, family, inheritance, and memory, grounding escaramuza in the broader experience of home-making across borders and generations. The poems do not explain the images; they converse with them, offering texture and breath, and inviting viewers to listen as much as they look. Together, image and language create a space where cultural continuity and personal voice coexist.
Interviews included in the project further deepen this exchange, allowing escaramuzas to speak for themselves about discipline, pride, and the labor behind elegance. These voices reveal how tradition adapts and endures, carried forward by women who claim visibility while honoring lineage. Escaramuza becomes not only a sport, but a living archive shaped by hands, hooves, and stories passed down with care.
Ultimately,
Escaramuza, the Poetics of Home is a meditation on belonging. It asks how home is formed through movement, community, and shared purpose, and how identity is affirmed through collective ritual. Lyrical yet grounded, the exhibition honors the women who ride at full speed while holding fast to history, imagination, and one another.
Image: © Constance Jaeggi