A Magnum Photos agency of Spanish and Latin American female photographers

A platform unites 29 female artists with the aim of promoting ‘the new female photography’ while its members express their creativity through workshops, conferences and viewings

Various artists of the Cómo ser Fotógrafa platform, portrayed at the Ateneo de Madrid cultural institution, on March 5. From left, seated on the floor, Lurdes R. Basolí and Elisa Miralles. Behind, seated, Elena de la Rúa, Rosa Muñoz (on the sofa), Soledad Córdoba and Toya Legido. In the third row, Laura Martínez Lombardía, María Platero, Rosell Meseguer, Gloria Oyarzabal and Estela de Castro. Above, Linarejos Moreno, Marta Soul and Paula Anta.Samuel Sánchez

Based on the famous Magnum Photos agency, albeit with much less alcohol and the endless poker games, the Cómo ser Fotógrafa (How to be a Photographer ­— CSF) platform unites 29 artists (20 Spanish and 9 Latin American) who aspire to showcase their work, “so that the role of women in artistic creation can be recognized, while at the same time showing that we are professionals,” says Marta Soul, the group’s spokesperson, at the Ateneo de Madrid cultural institution. In a room belonging to this institution, which includes a Photography section, EL PAÍS gathered 14 of them for a group picture and to discuss their projects.

Soul (Madrid, 51 years old), who lives in England, is the driving force behind this “alliance,” which was formed in 2020. “I was receiving more and more news of collectives of female photographers from European countries and I thought that it could also happen in Spain, so I thought about the ones I admired and made an emotional selection. We started with 20. Also, the language issue was important, so that we could contact artists from Latin American countries,” she explains.

Under the concept of photography “as an artistic practice,” she stresses, the first task was to set up a website, which was carried out by Elena de la Rúa (Madrid, 46 years old), who is also in charge of designing the group’s collective exhibitions. Then came the promotion, through different mediums, such as online talks for several months for PHotoEspaña. Currently, a panoramic view of the photography of these artists (in addition to the two photo galleries in this article) can be seen at the Museo del Greco, in Toledo, in the exhibition entitled Una Visión Propia, until May 26th. Also, on their website there are short documentaries about some of their projects for a better understanding of their work.

Sofía Moro is a documentary photographer specializing in portraits. A contributor to ‘El País Semanal’, she is a teacher and has exhibited her work in several countries. Sofía Moro

De la Rúa, who has a degree in Fine Arts, focuses on photography as the basis of her work, but painting and sculpture are also part of it: “In my images, I convey how we relate to the outside world through our imagination or emotions.” In her latest project, entitled El paraíso come carne (Paradise Eats Meat), she photographs small dead animals and then paints over the image. Using the platform, she is preparing a still life workshop for adolescent girls in Nigeria.

Rosa Muñoz (Madrid, 61 years old) hails from a previous generation. She boasts a long career that includes solo exhibitions at the Canal de Isabel II (Madrid) or the Centro Andaluz de la Fotografía (Almería), and her images appear at the Pompidou Center (Paris) and the Centro de Arte de Alcobendas (Madrid). Her style involves “scenic, constructed photography,” in which there is always a reflection “on the passage of time,” she says. She has been collaborating for decades in the media (including El País Semanal, El Mundo’s Magazine, Matador), she is immersed in a project on abandoned places that she manages and which, in some way, she breathes a second life into. This work alternates with video projections, such as the one she recently held for three nights on the façade of the Senate in Madrid.

Marta Soul is the artist who devised the platform Cómo ser fotógrafa. Her work focuses on identity roles.Marta Soul
'Stitched Panorama', by Rosa Muñoz, a visual artist whose work is defined by "interventions in space within the context of reality".Rosa Muñoz
Portraiture is the specialty of documentary photographer Sofía Moro.Sofía Moro
The work of visual artist Paula Anta has been exhibited in numerous Spanish art centers.Paula Anta
Fabiola Cedillo is Ecuadorian and has worked as a photojournalist for Reuters while also working on her personal projects.Fabiola Cedillo
Clara de Tezanos is a Guatemalan artist and cultural manager.CLARA DE TEZANOS
Eunice Adorno is a photographer, born in Mexico City in 1982.Eunice Adorno
Photograph by Argentine Pilar Giambastiani Tavelli.Pilar Giambastiani Tavelli
Photograph by the Catalan artist and educator Tanit Plana.TANIT PLANA
In 2010, Lurdes R. Basolí won the Inge Morath Award, given by the Magnum agency to women photographers under 30 years of age.LURDES R. BASOLÍ
Gloria Oyarzabal diversifies her professional activity between filmmaking, teaching and photography. Gloria Oyarzabal
Photographer and graphic editor, Laura Martínez Lombardía co-directs an artistic projects production studio.LAURA MARTÍNEZ LOMBARDÍA
Brazilian Angélica Dass combines photography with sociological research and human rights activism.ANGÉLICA DASS
María Platero is another member of Cómo ser fotógrafa who alternates her artistic production with teaching.María Platero
Photograph by Mariela Sancari from Buenos Aires.Mariela Sancari

“Over time, we have seen how our platform has become more and more interesting, and now there are artists who want to join, and they are good, but not very well-known,” adds Muñoz at Ateneo de Madrid, which is in the process of including illustrious female Ateneo members in its portrait gallery.

To join CSF, candidates must be nominated by a member of the group. “Those who make the final decisions are external curators, chosen by me, who review their work,” explains Soul, who also does staged photography but using characters. “It is as if film stills were extracted, with a narrative in which these people express their emotions,” she explains about her work, displaying a fondness “for the couple’s relationship.”

Soul also says that a common quality of all CSF members is that they are feminists: “Many times photographers have told us: ‘You only take photos of your body.’ This platform demonstrates that this is not the case. Of course, we’re a heterogeneous group, not a political movement, and we’re not all interested in the same issues.”

Toya Legido is a researcher and professor at the Faculty of Fine Arts of the Complutense University of Madrid. Toya Legido
Rosell Meseguer is a visual artist and PhD in Fine Arts, this image belongs to her work 'Batería de cenizas', from which a selection of images has been recently published in 'El País Semanal'.Rosell Meseguer
An image by artist Soledad Córdoba, PhD in Fine Arts from the Complutense University of Madrid. Soledad Córdoba
Image of the project 'El Paraíso come carne', by Elena de la Rúa, graduate in Fine Arts.ELENA DE LA RÚA
Image by Amparo Garrido, visual artist and filmmaker who has had solo and group exhibitions over the past 25 years.Amparo Garrido
Photograph by Elisa Miralles, who is the coordinator of the online course offered by the platform for female photographers.Elisa Miralles
Estela de Castro is, in addition to being a photographer, a teacher. Her work has been exhibited in numerous art centers. In 2019 she took the official portraits of King Felipe and Queen Letizia. Estela de Castro
An image by photographer and graphic designer Ingrid Weyland.Ingrid Weyland
Alejandra Carles-Tolrá is a visual artist, photographer and educator. ALEJANDRA CARLES-TOLRÁ
Linarejos Moreno is an artist, researcher and teacher at the Complutense University of Madrid.LINAREJOS MORENO
Solange Adum is a Peruvian photographer who teaches in Lima.SOLANGE ADUM
Luján Agustí is another Latin American on the Cómo ser fotógrafa platform. She lives in Tierra del Fuego (Argentina).LUJÁN AGUSTÍ
Lucía Morate is a visual artist, teacher and cultural mediator.LUCÍA MORATE
Carmela García is an artist who uses not only photography, but also video and installation in her work. CARMELA GARCÍA

Paula Anta (Madrid, 47 years old) elaborates on this explanation: “The platform has allowed me to assert myself in the fight in a photographic world that is so masculine. We had to fight to be taken seriously about what we were doing.” Thanks to the contacts and movement provided by CSF, Anta has enjoyed a stay in Côte d’Ivoire, which will culminate in an exhibition on a landfill site in Abidjan that the Ivorian government is transforming into a park. “I have photographed this transformation, which can be seen at Casa África, in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria.” Nature is very much a part of her work. “I also work on landscape interventions and my latest projects have a more ecological character because I work in an increasingly damaged environment.”

Fabiola Cedillo is one of the Latin Americans in the group. Born in Cuenca (Ecuador), she is 36 years old and has collaborated with Reuters. She is passing through Madrid before leaving for Dubai to work on a project about consumerism in the emirate. She says her focus is on documentary photography: “I’m interested in what happens to people who do not comply with social or moral rules, who move in this periphery.”

Cedillo points out that while European female photographers “are more influenced by classical art in terms of composition or how to use light,” Latin American women are influenced by the visual imaginary that comes from the United States. “When we started to do photography, we tried to replicate what they were doing,” and she adds that “in Latin America, experimental photography is not as widespread as it is in Europe.”

The Ecuadorian photographer Fabiola Cedillo, at the Reina Sofia Museum, on Friday, March 15.Álvaro García

Among the activities carried out by this group of female photographers is an annual online course, coordinated by Elisa Miralles. “It began in November and will finish in June, with a virtual exhibition of works by the 10 students. They have to develop a project and the idea is to encourage them in their work and help them to find their way,” she explains. Different disciplines are taught, such as photobooks, the relationship with galleries and portrait photography. Miralles graduated as a chemical engineer and started out in photography in 2007. Her work has focused on issues related to gender and stereotypes. Her projects include Recuerdos sin memoria, in which she portrays the day-to-day life of her grandmother, who suffers from Alzheimer’s disease.

CSF’s website also provides the option of buying works from the artists, and the latest commitment, says Soul, is a virtual gallery, a space for exhibitions where the user can browse and which is open to artists outside the group. The group also strives to take its works to different festivals and art fairs.

‘Stitched Panorama,’ photography by the artist Rosa Muñoz, who has collaborated in numerous magazines, including ‘El País Semanal’.Rosa Muñoz

As for the future, Soul says she would like the platform to establish “a direction in Spanish photography” and to help its members “gain an international presence.” “And financial autonomy, which is essential,” adds Anta. “We need to make money!”

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