Louis Carlos Bernal: Monografa
By (Author) Louis Carlos Bernal
By (author) Elizabeth Ferrer
Text by Rebecca Senf
Designed by Duncan Whyte
Aperture
Aperture
18th September 2024
Bilingual edition
United States
General
Non Fiction
Photography: portraits and self-portraiture
Photojournalism and documentary photography
779.092
Hardback
236
Width 215mm, Height 270mm, Spine 25mm
1133g
A landmark survey of one of the most significant American photographers of the twentieth century
Best known for his intimate portrayals of barrio communities of the Southwest United States, Louis Carlos Bernal made photographs in the late 1970s and 1980s that draw upon the resonance of Catholicism, Indigenous beliefs, and popular practices tied to the land. For Bernal, photography was a potent tool in affirming the value of individuals and communities who lacked visibility and agency. Working in both black and white and in color, he photographed the interiors of homes and their inhabitants, often presenting his subjects surrounded by the objects they lived withframed portraits of family members, religious pictures and statuaries, small shrines festooned with flowers, and elements of contemporary popular culture. Bernal viewed these spaces as rich with personal, cultural, and spiritual meaning, and his unforgettable photographs express a vision of la vida cotidianaeveryday lifeas a state of grace. The first major scholarly account of Bernals life and work by the esteemed historian Elizabeth Ferrer, Louis Carlos Bernal: Monografa is the definitive book about an essential photographic artist.
Copublished by Aperture and the Center for Creative Photography, Tucson
Elizabeth Ferrer is a writer, curator, and arts activist. She is the former vice president of contemporary art at BRIC in Brooklyn. Ferrer is the author of Latinx Photography in the United States: A Visual History (2021) and curator of the traveling exhibition of Bernals work from the Center for Creative Photography, Tucson, set to open in fall 2023.