Graciela Iturbide: Between Two Worlds brings together more than five decades of work by one of Mexico’s most respected photographers. On view from July 11 to November 29, 2026, the retrospective presents Iturbide’s black-and-white photographs as close observations of everyday life, ritual and place, with Mexico at the center and other countries appearing along the way.
The exhibition includes markets, festivals, botanical gardens, self-portraits and scenes tied to birth, death and tradition. Iturbide has built her reputation on patient looking, and that method shows in the work. Her photographs often catch a moment that feels ordinary at first and then stays with the viewer because of its stillness, tension or unexpected detail. She works in black and white for most of this material, which gives the images a directness that suits the subjects she has followed over the years.
Mexico remains the strongest thread in the exhibition.
Graciela Iturbide has photographed religious rituals, street life, Indigenous communities and landscapes that carry a clear sense of local identity. At the same time, the show includes work made in India, Madagascar, Italy and the United States, showing how consistently she applies the same approach in different places. Her images do not treat travel as spectacle. They rely instead on attention, respect and a willingness to wait for a scene to settle into focus.
That sense of suspension is central to Iturbide’s work. The photographs often sit between documentary and poetry, but they never lose their connection to real people and real settings. They register belief, custom and daily routine without turning them into symbols first. What emerges is a record of life seen with patience and care.
By spanning more than 50 years,
Between Two Worlds shows how steady Iturbide’s vision has remained. The exhibition presents her not only as a major figure in Latin American photography, but as an artist whose pictures keep finding meaning in what most people pass by.
Image:
Graciela Iturbide, Mujer ángel, Desierto de Sonora, México (Angel Woman, Sonora Desert, Mexico), 1979, printed later; collection SFMOMA, purchase through a gift of Jane Reed and the Accessions Committee Fund; © Graciela Iturbide