Manuel Álvarez Bravo (1902–2002) brings one of Mexico’s most important photographers back into view through a group of works that is shown in the Americas for the first time. On view from June 5 to July 24, 2026 at New York Life Gallery, the exhibition is curated by Johann Mergenthaler in collaboration with the Estate of Manuel Álvarez Bravo and the Archivo Manuel Álvarez Bravo.
The presentation follows an earlier showing in Paris and includes several photographs that have not been exhibited or published before. It offers a focused look at an artist who spent a century observing Mexico as it changed around him, from the years after revolution to the modernization of Mexico City. Álvarez Bravo often described photography as a matter of patience, and that sense of waiting shaped the work. His images hold stillness without losing tension, whether they show people, streets, rituals or the traces of everyday life.
Born in 1902, Álvarez Bravo came to photography early but also worked in government and business before turning fully to the medium. He moved away from pictorialism and toward a clearer, more direct style, while keeping a strong interest in form, shadow and ambiguity. His work became known for its quiet balance between social reality and visual mystery. He photographed labor unrest, but he also focused on gravesites, altars, mannequins, ruins, cacti, religious objects and festive scenes that reveal how closely life and death sit together in Mexican culture.
His career stretched across major museums and exhibitions in Mexico, the United States and Europe, and his photographs entered collections at institutions including MoMA, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Getty, the Victoria and Albert Museum and the Art Institute of Chicago. He was also closely associated with Surrealism, though he never fully accepted the label. What remains unmistakable is the way he turned ordinary scenes into images that seem both rooted in place and open to something beyond description.
This exhibition restores that gaze with clarity and restraint, placing Álvarez Bravo once again among the key figures of twentieth-century photography.
Image:
Manuel Álvarez Bravo, Xoloitzcuintles en el 83, ca. 1960s, gelatin-silver print. © Estate of Manuel Álvarez Bravo / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York. Courtesy the Estate and the Archivo Manuel Álvarez Bravo and New York Life Gallery