Featuring the Pulitzer Price Photos
of Los Angeles Times Photographer
Don Bartletti
Debbi McCullough ~ Roberto Gudiño ~ Raices Taller 222 artists ~ Arizona Daily Star photographers and artists
This exhibition visualizes the migrating people
in the U.S.-Mexico debate who are representative
of ever-changing and increasing migration and
migration patterns. The aim of the exhibition and
its accompanying programming is to help clarify the
complex issues surrounding migration, and foster
knowledge and understanding that can affect public
opinion and public policy toward migrants and
migrant communities.
Bound to El Norte follows some of the thousands
of Central Americans who annually attempt the
harrowing and illegal 1,500-mile journey through
the length of Mexico on the tops of freight trains.
Nearly all encounter hunger, fatigue, physical
danger, and human cruelty. Among the migrants are
children as young as 12, traveling alone, trying to
unify with parents – usually mothers – who left them
behind to work in the U.S. For these children, the
dream of reuniting with their parents becomes as a
quest for the Holy Grail.
Between Two Worlds illustrates the chaos and
danger at the San Diego/Tijuana, Mexico border in
thirty black and white photographs taken from 1983
– 1993. More undocumented immigrants cross in
this area than any other international border and in
reality, the border conditions extend roughly 70 miles
north, into San Diego’s North County. Next door to
suburban neighborhoods, thousands of Mexican
men, boys, and entire families, live in camps without
running water or electricity, in hand-made shacks.
The camps spring up where farm workers can walk
to vegetable and flower fields, and day laborers can
work nearby in construction or home maintenance.
In an uneasy political situation, often the same
communities that depend on the pool of cheap
labor protest its existence in their midst.
The Bartletti presentation is accompanied
by the work of Arizona artists that
interpret the immigration issue through
multimedia sculpture, paintings, film and
photographs. The Arizona Daily Star
offers an area where participants can
share their own immigration story. |
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Links
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Featured Work (click to enlarge)
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