Lens on the Border
A photography exhibit urges viewers to rethink U.S.-Mexico border stereotypes
Last spring, the Sierra Club’s Borderlands team, in collaboration with photographers and artists from the United States and Mexico, staged a gallery exhibit titled Lens on the Border in two southern Arizona towns. The eclectic compilation of images sought to capture the essence of life in the U.S.-Mexico border region. Exhibit curators called it an “act of resistance” against the stereotypes and xenophobic sensationalism that plague mainstream representations of the border.
The artists came from a wide range of backgrounds. Alejandra Platt-Torres is a fine art photographer from Hermosillo, Sonora. Bill Hatcher is a documentary photographer whose images have appeared in National Geographic and Smithsonian, among other publications. Krista Schyler is a photographer whose book, Continental Divide, illustrates the natural beauty of the landscapes already harmed by border militarization. The youngest contributor, Jasmine Stevens, is a high school student and a member of the Tohono O’odham nation. Dr. Deni Seymour is a scholar of Native American and Spanish colonial archaeology and ethnohistory. Raechel Running, the show’s lead curator, is an artist who has documented the cultures of the borderlands.
Lens on the Border is scheduled for at least five future exhibits, from Minnesota to Indiana to Mexico City. Here is a selection of some of the artists and images featured in the show.