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San Diego - Tijuana XI, Frontera USA - Mexico
1media/2018.3.2_thumb.jpg2020-06-02T16:18:38+00:00Jessica Bocinskia602570e86f7a6936e40ab07e0fddca6eccf4e9b271Pablo López Luz, San Diego - Tijuana XI, Frontera USA - Mexico, Pigment print, 2015. Purchased with funds from the Escalette Endowment.plain2020-06-02T16:18:38+00:00Jessica Bocinskia602570e86f7a6936e40ab07e0fddca6eccf4e9b
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1media/2018.3.2.jpgmedia/2018.3.2.jpg2021-04-20T23:27:33+00:00San Diego - Tijuana XI, Frontera USA - Mexico4plain2021-04-27T22:45:03+00:00 PABLO LÓPEZ LUZ’S SAN DIEGO – TIJUANA XI, FRONTERA USA – MEXICO (2015) explores the links between history and the contemporary world, especially the question of Mexican national identity. This photograph, shot from a helicopter during a flight that spanned 1,295 miles, disrupts the dominant narrative of the border as a zone of contention, and opens a new visual paradigm to reinterpret our understanding of the border. From above, the border wall is seen as only a small, man-made blemish, a scratch on the face of an otherwise whole, pristine landscape. From this perspective, it’s nearly impossible to know which side of the border is which, a disorienting effect that points to the contrived meanings and significance that humans have attached to this unnatural, constructed object.