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Álvaro Alejandro López: De Natura Libris, on view from April 8 to May 2, 2026 in the Step Up Gallery at Viewpoint Photographic Art Center, is a contemplative photographic meditation on books as living objects. Rather than focusing solely on texts or authors, López turns his attention to the physical and emotional relationships that form between readers and the printed page. The series invites viewers to consider books not only as vessels of knowledge, but as tactile companions shaped by time, touch, and memory.
In
De Natura Libris, the body of the book takes center stage. Spines bend, pages crease, margins bear the marks of repeated handling. Texture, weight, and wear become expressive elements, suggesting the intimate rituals of reading. López’s images evoke the quiet sensations that accompany these encounters—the scent of paper, the sound of a turning page, the visual rhythm of type and binding. Each photograph operates as an open invitation, allowing viewers to project their own experiences and associations onto the forms depicted.
The project unfolds in dialogue with a constellation of writers from across cultures and generations. Their words and ideas resonate through the images, reinforcing the notion that reading is both solitary and shared. While the photographs remain visually restrained, they carry layers of meaning shaped by literature, philosophy, and personal memory. In this way, López bridges the abstract world of thought with the material presence of books, revealing how inner and outer landscapes intersect through acts of reading.
Based in Mexico City, López brings a multidisciplinary sensibility to his photographic practice, informed by studies in philosophy and literature and years spent working in publishing. His background in bookmaking and visual culture is deeply embedded in this work, as is a lineage of photographic curiosity passed down through family. With
De Natura Libris, López offers a quiet yet resonant reflection on the enduring power of books—objects that continue to shape identity, imagination, and connection in an increasingly dematerialized world.
Image:
© Álvaro Alejandro López