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Traditional Indian dance mask

$1500 current bid
1 Bid
FMV: $3000

Description of the Item:

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Photograph by Susan Meiselas

Image Title: Traditional Indian dance mask, Nicaragua, 1978

Dimensions: 14x11"

Medium: C-print

Year Created: 1978

Signed on verso


Image Description:

This well-known image from Susan Meiselas' groundbreaking work in Nicaragua was taken during the country's revolution in 1978. The photograph is included in Susan's book, Nicaragua, June 1978-July 1979. She spent a decade photographing the unrest in Nicaragua. Susan was one of the first female photographers to join the prestigious Magnum photo agent agency and served as its president. She is considered one of the key photojournalists of the late 20th century and 21st-century.


Photographer's Bio:

Susan Meiselas, born in Baltimore, Maryland in 1948, received her BA from Sarah Lawrence College and her MA in visual education from Harvard University. Her first major photographic essay focused on the lives of women doing striptease at New England country fairs, who she photographed during three consecutive summers while teaching photography in New York public schools. Carnival Strippers was originally published in 1976 and a selection was installed at the Whitney Museum of Art in June 2000.


Meiselas joined Magnum Photos in 1976 and has worked as a freelance photographer since then. She is best known for her coverage of the insurrection in Nicaragua and her extensive documentation of human rights issues in Latin America. She published her second monograph, Nicaragua, June 1978-July 1979, in 1981.


Meiselas served as an editor and contributor to the book El Salvador: The Work of Thirty Photographers (1983) and edited Chile from Within (1991) featuring work by photographers living under the Pinochet regime, as well as an updated ebook on the 40th anniversary of the Chilean coup (2013). She has co-directed three films, Living at Risk: The Story of a Nicaraguan Family (1986); Pictures from a Revolution (1991) with Richard P. Rogers and Alfred Guzzetti where she searches for the people in her photographs ten years after they were taken and Re-framing History (2004) where she returns to Nicaragua again with 19 murals to place them in the landscape where they were first made to again interrogate the history they represent on the 25th anniversary of the Revolution.


Her most recent project A Room Of Their Own (2015-2016) explores the experiences of women in a refuge in the Black Country UK. Commissioned by UK based arts organization Multistory, Meiselas led a series of workshops with women in refuge to create visual narrative combining photographs, first hand testimonies and original artwork. A Room Of Their Own was published by Multistory in 2017.


Meiselas has had one-woman exhibitions in Paris, Madrid, Amsterdam, London, Los Angeles, Chicago, and New York, and her work is included in collections around the world. She has received the Robert Capa Gold Medal for her work in Nicaragua (1979); the Leica Award for Excellence (1982); the Engelhard Award from the Institute of Contemporary Art (1985); the Hasselblad Foundation Photography prize (1994); the Cornell Capa Infinity Award (2005); the Harvard Arts Medal (2011) and most recently was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship (2015). In 1992, she was named a MacArthur Fellow. Meiselas has served as President of the Magnum Foundation since its founding in 2007. A survey exhibition of her work, Mediations, is currently on view at SF MOMA, and was previously exhibited at the Jeu de Paume and Tapies Foundation.


http://www.susanmeiselas.com/

Donated By Susan Meiselas