Title: Paz Errázuriz: Survey
Publisher: Aperture
Binding: Hardcover
Synopsis:
Chilean photographer Paz Errazuriz began taking photographs in the 1970s during the Pinochet dictatorship, and in subsequent decades traveled extensively to document the landsape and people of her native country. Throughout her dedicated practice, Errazuriz became intimate with not only her home city, Santiago, but also Chile's central valley, Patagonia, and Valparaiso, forming long-lasting relationships with her many subjects. Her commitment to her subjects is steadfast - she is known for spending months or years within a given community, building trust and carefully studying social structures. During the dictatorship her projects were in violation of the regulations imposed by the military regime, as she dared to visit underground brothels, shelters, psychiatric wards, and boxing clubs, where women were not welcome. In Paz Errazuriz: Survey, over 170 photographs are compiled for the first time, resulting in a retrospective publication spanning over forty years. In the words of author Gerardo Mosquera, "the spaces explored in Errazuriz's photos - beyond the striking personalities - reveal an extreme aesthetic that also exposes the potholes and irregularities left in the path of modernization. Her work consistently focuses on the social marginality that continues to plague the country, thereby capsizing Chile's image of buoyancy by intuitively penetrating the contradictions - the innumerable cracks and fissures-that persist to this day."
From the Back Cover:
From the Pinochet dictatorship to present day, Paz Errazuriz has created photographs that expose Chile s gritty subcultures while skillfully weaving together themes of art, gender, history, and politics. Committed to her subjects, Errazuriz has spent months and sometimes years within specific communities, building trust and studying social structures. During the dictatorship, she made projects in violation of the regulations imposed by the military regime, daring to visit underground brothels, shelters, psychiatric wards, and boxing clubs where women were not welcome. In the words of author Gerardo Mosquera, the spaces explored in Errazuriz s photos beyond the striking personalities reveal an extreme aesthetic that also exposes the potholes and irregularities left in the path of modernization. This book tells a story of Chile, photography, and the art, determination, and the life of an extraordinary photographer."