At Westwood Gallery NYC, an exhibition dedicated to
Leo Matiz revisits the work of a photographer whose images helped define the visual culture of twentieth-century Latin America. Born in Colombia in 1917, Matiz moved fluidly between artistic circles in Bogotá, Mexico City and beyond, producing photographs that bridged reportage, portraiture and experimentation. This presentation, curated by James Cavello, focuses on two central dimensions of his practice: an acute sensitivity to the human psyche and a sustained dialogue with other artistic forms.
Matiz’s portraits stand at the core of the exhibition. Whether depicting artists, writers or anonymous sitters, his images convey a quiet intensity shaped by careful composition and an instinct for timing. He photographed figures such as Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera, capturing not only their likeness but the atmospheres surrounding them. His approach resists theatricality, instead drawing out moments of introspection that lend his subjects a striking presence.
Beyond portraiture, Matiz engaged deeply with the broader artistic movements of his time. His work intersected with Mexican muralism, cinema and modernist experimentation, reflecting a period when photography functioned as both documentation and creative tool. He often treated the camera as a means of translation, moving between disciplines and contexts while maintaining a distinct visual signature. This openness to collaboration and influence positioned him within a dynamic network of artists working across media.
Matiz’s career also included significant contributions to photojournalism, with images published internationally and shaped by his travels across the Americas. Yet even in documentary contexts, his photographs retain a compositional rigor that aligns them with fine art practices. The exhibition underscores this duality, presenting a body of work that moves between immediacy and reflection, record and interpretation.
By revisiting Matiz’s photographs today, the exhibition highlights a practice grounded in the belief that photography extends beyond technical craft. For Matiz, the camera served as a means of artistic inquiry, capable of capturing not only events and figures but the cultural currents that defined an era.
Images:
Frida Kahlo looking up, 1945 © Leo Matiz