Photographer’s Note
Urban Confetti
City-dwelling Mexicans live surrounded by a confetti of periodicals. I didn't see a lot of book stores, but on street corner after street corner I saw vendors selling magainzes and comics. There were tiny, temporary displays on folding tables, and large, permanent stalls, like this one.
In front of some variety stores the displays of reading material burst out the front door, like the pulp of an overripe fruit, and spilled out into sidewalk displays. And in the coverd market, while you shopped for your vegetables and fish, you could buy last month's stuff -- or last year's -- all over again at the stalls of used magazines.
The Familiar
Much of the subject matter is familiar to those of us from Anglo America. There are the usual "women's magazines" with tips about couture and sex and how to lose weight, fashion magazines, sports magazines (including the infamous "luchador" wrestlers), and heaps upon heaps of celebrity gossip/photo magazines.
As in so many countries, there is soft core pornography (both straight and gay, by the way). There are familiar magazines devoted to cooking and hobbies, and everywhere you look there comics, comics, and more comics for the kids.
The Unfamiliar
But then there are the comics for the adults, many of which are extremely graphic in their portrayal of sex -- much more hard core than the porn magazines.
There are non-smutty adult comics as well, featuring adventures and gunfights, the supernatural and swordplay. These are interesting in that they seem to fall somewhere between American "graphic novels" and the old pulp magazines of the 30s and 40s.
There are also non-fiction crime publications, rife with infidelity, robberies, drug deals busted, or drug wars being fought. These often have photographs of bodies: faces destroyed by shotguns, limbs cut off, large sprays and small lakes of blood. They are not for the faint of heart.
The Girl
... stands before the newsstand, deciding what to buy. It's a hot day, the sun very bright, but for a moment she rests in the shade of the stall, making up her mind. There are hundreds of different fantasies in which she could immerse herself for the afternoon: romance stories, childish comics, celebrity lives. She catches a glimpse out of the corner of her eye and glances over. Ah, just some gringo with a camera...
(Afternote: The photo is named after the magazine just above the girl's head, featuring the face of some demon.)
postvikram, bfly, vagabondtravels, yasoda-nandana, kajspice, kevinos, keithl has marked this note useful
Critiques | Translate
postvikram
(1199) 2006-03-05 12:52
Lee,
This is a nice capture.Very good note to accompany.The girl has a very expressive face.Nicely seen.Thanks for sharing - Vikram
bfly
(5737) 2006-03-05 13:15
hi Lee,
good moment of the girl..she is looking at you with curiousity or even a little anger in her eyes..I like this expression of "we are foreign to each other"..
It must amslo have been a good moment technically looking at her overexposed arm..
very nice daily life photo..
fusun
rbcy1974
(20742) 2006-03-08 4:25
Hello Lee,
Very nicely captured microcosm of Latin culture,
excellent mixture of elements and colours,
well done
Regards
Daniel
Furachan
(0) 2006-03-17 10:28
Lee,
That girl's face is simply extraordinary in its "Indian" beauty and intensity, it punches through the screen, so to speak. It reall is an "Aztec" face, so much ancient power emanating from it, and what a contrast with the weak looking older "Spanish" woman on the right. It is very hard to judge such a picture because of the "entranced" factor. You nailed something vital and rebellious here.
Bravo!
Francis
Mingfang
(1415) 2006-03-19 8:39
Hello lee,
long time...but really like you shots from your trip. the colors look so special. that give you a really good style. you did have a good shot with this girl and the nice book store. plus you excellent note that help me to imagine. you do like writing. i hope i can write so much. It was long, but i like to take time to read.
well done.
kajspice
(4534) 2006-04-11 9:01
Hi Lee,
Your notes add no end of depth to your observations...you also communicate them to me very well...I expect no less from a writer however. I sense that you have observed each detail in much detail, either before or after you took the photo. However, I feel that you disguise your in-depth analysis of your situations well with the way you present your pictures.
I watch on with interest...
kaj
kevinos
(6927) 2006-05-16 15:25
She looks at the camera with such self assurance, her eyes are fearless and her mouth shows no hint of emotion. She looks very 'strong'. Her assertive stance is mocked by the balancing figure of the round shouldered, apologetic form of the other woman, with her back to the camera. The magazines are like a cultural exposition of her environment. Her face has to stir emotion.
Photo Information
-
Copyright: Lee Sato (ElSato)
(824) - Genre: People
- Medium: Color
- Date Taken: 2005-12-29
- Categories: Daily Life, Decisive Moment
- Camera: Minolta Dimage A1
- Exposure: f/5.0, 1/160 seconds
- More Photo Info: view
- Photo Version: Original Version
- Date Submitted: 2006-03-05 12:49
Discussions
- To kevinos: Thank you Kevin (1)
by ElSato, last updated 05-17 13:48 - To kajspice: Thanks Kajal (1)
by ElSato, last updated 04-15 17:56 - To Mingfang: Thanks Mingfang (1)
by ElSato, last updated 03-19 13:52 - To Furachan: Thanks Francis (1)
by ElSato, last updated 03-19 13:48 - To rbcy1974: Merci Daniel (1)
by ElSato, last updated 03-16 16:42 - To vagabondtravels: Thanks Benjamin (1)
by ElSato, last updated 03-16 16:40 - To bfly: Thank you Fusun (1)
by ElSato, last updated 03-16 16:39 - To postvikram: Thank you Vikram (1)
by ElSato, last updated 03-16 16:38








