BIOGRAPHIES
BRAVO, MANUEL ALVAREZ
México, 1902-2002
A self-taught photographer, Manuel Alvarez Bravo purchased his
first camera at age twenty while working at a government job. His
earliest success at photography came around 1925, when he won first
prize in a local photographic competition in Oaxaca.
He returned to Mexico City, where he had been born, and in 1927
met Tina Modotti, who introduced him to a lively intellectual and
cultural environment of other artists from various disciplines.
Among them was Edward Weston, who encouraged Alvarez Bravo to continue
photographing; Weston wrote to him in 1929: "Photography is
fortunate in having someone with your viewpoint. It is not often
I am stimulated to enthusiasm over a group of photographs.”
Alvarez Bravo taught photography at the San Carlos Academy in the
late 1930s, documented the work of Mexican mural painters including
Diego Rivera, and contributed images to the journal Mexican Folkways.
His primary subject interests have ranged from the nude form to
folk art, particularly burial rituals and decorations. He continues
to live and photograph in Mexico City.
|