Lourdes Grobet spent three decades photographing Mexico’s wildly popular professional wrestling, documenting the lives of the fighters inside and outside the ring. The excesses, roughness, and fragility of this sport are captured by her lens.
Janet Jarman, an award winning American photographer based in Mexico, and Mario BellatÃn, one of Latin America’s most important experimental writers, collaborate on this essay about anguish and solitude in the big city.
Eniac MartÃnez shows his vision of Mexico City, comprised of a series of images shot during the production of the movie Vivir Mata (Living Kills). A conversation with a creator who makes experimentation a method and work a destination.
For six years Daniela Edburg created photographs of women killed or almost killed by consumer goods. The result is Glamorous Death: a cheerful series with a blithely pop attitude.
Monda Photo, Mexico’s most respected photography collective, brings us an essay about the controversial Santa Muerte religious sect in the Tepito barrio, accompanied by an insightful article by Laura Emilia Pacheco.
Marcos Lopez is one of the best-known and respected artistic photographers in Latin America. His deeply ironic and critical work reveals the contradictions of Argentine society.
We present two pieces on San Telmo and La Boca, Buenos Aires’ oldest neighborhoods. The stories were made for the Latin American edition of National Geographic magazine by Adrian Perez and Maria Mansilla.
This series on the tango, the musical expression most representative of Buenos Aires, was originally made for National Geographic magazine by Pablo Corral Vega, the founder of Nuestra Mirada.
This photo essay on a pair of tango dancers is part of a delightful book that was just released in Ecuador, Simple Stories: From Ecuador to Tierra del Fuego.