PHOTOGRAPHY

FAR UNIVERSE, UNDER DRESSES THAT DO NOT REVEAL – Eunice Adorno: Promoting the

Intrigued by the Mennonite women

Mexico City is the best place to eat tacos, a unique opportunity to savour the delights of this humble cuisine. Strolling through Centro Historico, you can discover all the tacos are delicious, such as the taco de carnitas (featuring beyond succulent pork). Ending your tour (with a chance to drink tequila), in the most historic cantina in the city. La Opera http://barlaopera.com/, it is a glimpse into bygone times, a place oozing with charm. Take attention, maybe you will encounter Eunice Adorno, one of the best Mexican photoreporter

She was part of the photo and new media program at the Medro Meyer Foundation. With over ten years of experience in photojournalism, she has received many awards, such as the nomination for the Rudin Prize for Emerging Photografers Award. Eunice Adorno https://euniceadorno.com/ studied photography at the Image Center where she participated in the contemporary photography seminar.

Her work has been published in national and international media, and has been exhibited in-group and individual exhibitions in Mexico City, Rio de Janeiro, Los Angeles and New York. She is a freelance photographer and is part of Culturehall and Pymca. Eunice Adorno https://culturacolectiva.com/photography/the-photographer-who-raises-questions-on-mexican-life-and-identity holds a diploma in photography at Centro Morelense de las Artes in Cuernavaca.

Her works on long-term documentary projects and collaborates with various national and international media. Eunice Adorno https://www.facebook.com/pages/Eunice-Adorno-Las-Mujeres-Flores/422014737870351 is a photographer who lives and works in Mexico City. Her work has documented various communities in Mexico that have a deeply rooted relationship with the past in their ways of life. In 2011, she published her book Las Mujeres Flores, https://www.amazon.com/Eunice-Adorno-Las-Mujeres-Flores/dp/8415303335 in which he documented the Mennonite women in northern Mexico.

In the 1920s, the Mexican government granted land to a Mennonite groups, fleeing religious persecution in Europe. These isolated agricultural communities continuing ways of life, still today. Living among them and documenting their customs, Mexican photographer Eunice Adorno was able to gain access to these isolated groups. She made their inner world, following them through their daily home rituals. Separated from work and from their husbands, the women forge their own universe, fashioned out of memories, pleasures and diversions, hiding this universe beneath their unrevealing clothes and a reserved gaze. https://www.amazon.com/Eunice-Adorno-Las-Mujeres-Flores/dp/8415303335

If you want to know photographic stories already published, you can type http://meetingbenches.com/category/photo/. The intellectual properties of the images that appear on this blog correspond to their authors. The only purpose of this site is to spread the knowledge of these creative people, allowing others to appreciate the works.

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