9th Annual Latin American Foto Festival runs from July 9 to 26, 2026 at the Bronx Documentary Center and throughout the South Bronx’s Melrose neighborhood, bringing together large-scale photographic banners, exhibitions and public programs centered on Latin America and the Caribbean.
This year’s edition features long-term projects by photographers and collectives from Puerto Rico, Argentina, Venezuela, Guatemala, Peru, Chile, the Dominican Republic, Colombia, Mexico and Brazil. The lineup includes Ed Alvarez, Archivo de la Memoria Trans, Matías Delacroix, Laura García, Marco Garro, Cristian Ochoa, Alejandra Orosco, Chris Perez, Santiago Mesa, Emilio Espejel, Alicia Vera, Caio Vilela, Rafael Vilela, and Karla Gachet with Ivan Kashinsky. Together, their work addresses environmental destruction, extractive industries, migration, displacement, Indigenous land and spirituality, and forms of care and resistance rooted in local communities.
The festival has built its reputation on presenting photography in public space as well as inside the center. This year’s banners extend the exhibition into the neighborhood, where the images meet daily traffic rather than remaining confined to a gallery wall. That format suits the subject matter: the photographs look at social and political pressure while also showing acts of survival, memory and collective life.
A special homage this year goes to the late Puerto Rican photographer Ed Alvarez, whose work connected Puerto Rico and the Bronx and helped shape Caribbean and diasporic visual culture. His inclusion gives the festival a historical anchor alongside the newer projects, many of which draw on archives and family histories to trace how memory passes across generations.
The Bronx Documentary Center, founded as a space for documentary photography and community engagement, pairs the festival with workshops, tours and panel discussions. The program keeps the event open beyond the exhibition itself and reflects the center’s broader focus on public access and visual storytelling.
Curated by Michael Kamber and Alexa Pacheco, the 9th Annual Latin American Foto Festival presents photography as both witness and record, with a clear emphasis on lived experience across borders, generations and social conditions.
Image:
© Santiago Mesa