By Mark Corece on June 20, 2011
The photographs—digital, Black and White with playful color tones—are collectively entitled “Distant Guise: An Outsider’s Perspective From Within Mexico City,” examines the actuality of place, space, symbolic representations, familial life through youthful optimism, and the interactions between inanimate objects and human things. It’s an overt juxtaposition about the often overlooked confines of everyday living beyond, and despite of, immigration and socio-political doctrines. They are portraitures of holistic stories singularly captured for interpretation and subject-matter validation.
Although no narrative, or one set of images, string the photographs together, it’s important to notice the elements that the images delve into; notions of photographic-form while capturing specific shapes and movement (in locomotive things) to present in-the-moment life—what is now, what has been, and what will be in the depicted kinespheres. This particular vantage point is imperative. An obviously shameless, biased—but not staged—account of the subjects are composed aesthetically—and one could argue artistic choices—along with the content. Each image is captured in the midst of haphazard and swift frames. The messages are not blatantly political and, in fact, abstractly positioned for ones own examination.











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4 comments
Brandon says:
Jun 20, 2011
Beautiful images….
Jlittles says:
Jun 20, 2011
beautiful and thought provoking images…I’m not much of a photographer, but it feels as if each image tells a story in “layers” …I love your talent!
Corece says:
Jun 21, 2011
Hey thanks a lot I appreciate the comment (you too below). Keep coming back to Gozamos!
lucy says:
Jun 23, 2011
your pictures are gorgeous! I love the use of color in each picture. It shows how beautiful Mexico really is without having to visit, and it makes you want too!
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