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Martín Chambi

 

Chambi, Martin (1891-1973), Peruvian photographer, and the first indigenous photographer in the Americas to attract international attention. Born into a poor, rural Quechua-speaking community, he was an unlikely candidate to do so. Aged 14, apparently due to a chance encounter with a British photographer assisting the Santo Domingo Mining Company, he became obsessed with the medium. Within two years, after panning for gold grains to pay his bus fare, he became apprenticed to the studio of Max T. Vargas in the southern city of Arequipa.

It took another dozen years for him to establish his own studio at Sicuani, and to visit Machu Picchu for the first time, accompanying an archaeological excavation. Fascinated by the ancient, and largely unacknowledged, culture of the indigenous peoples of Peru, he embarked on a lifelong project to document the architecture, markets, celebrations, ceremonies, communities, and individuals of the Andes. Concurrently, from 1920, he operated a successful portrait studio in the former Inca capital, Cuzco. It also functioned as a gallery: on one side of the door hung his majestic landscapes of snow-capped mountains and volcanic lakes and, on the other, portraits of local people in their vivid hand-woven clothes and blankets in a rich variety of regional styles.

The 1920s saw the rise of the indigenista movement in universities and cultural centres. Chambi was held up as a prime example of a revindication of venerable traditions overrun since the Hispanic invasion. He became active in the movement, publishing and exhibiting in its cause. He maintained his voluminous photographic output until the devastating earthquake of 1950. After that, he laid aside the plate camera that gave his work its characteristic format and formality, and shot only intermittently and on film. The destruction of his beloved Cuzco was, he believed, the end of his inspiration.

— Amanda Hopkinson

Bibliography

  • Chambi, M., Cuzco, capital arqueológico de Suramérica (1934).
  • Martin Chambi (2001)
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Martín Chambi Jiménez (a.k.a Martín Chambi de Coaza, Puno, Peru November 5, 1891Cuzco, September 13, 1973) was photographer, originally from southern Peru, the only major indigenous Latin American photographer of his time.

Recognized for the profound historic and ethnic documentary value of his photographs, he was a prolific portrait photographer in the towns and countryside of the Peruvian Andes. As well as being the leading portrait photographer in Cuzco, Chambi made many landscape photographs, which he sold mainly in the form of postcards, a format he was a pioneer of in Peru.[1] In 1979, New York's MOMA held a Chambi retrospective, which later travelled to various locations and inspired other international expositions of his work.

Contents

Quote

"It is wrong to focus too much on the testimonial value of his photos. They have that, indeed, but, in equal measure they express the milieu in which he lived and they show (...) that when he got behind a camera, he became a giant, a true inventor, a veritable force of invention, a recreator of life."

- Mario Vargas Llosa

Beginnings as a photographer

Martín Chambi was born into a Quechua-speaking peasant family in one of the poorest regions of Peru, at the end of the nineteenth century. When his father went to work in a Carabaya Province gold mine on a small tributary of the River Inambari, Martin went along.

There he had his first contact with photography, learning the rudiments from the photographer of the Santo Domingo Mine near Coaza (owned by the Inca Mining Company of Bradford, Pa). This chance encounter planted the spark that made him seek to support himself as a professional photographer. With that idea in mind, he headed in 1908 to the city of Arequipa, where photography was more developed and where there were established photographers who had taken the time to develop individual photographic styles and impeccable technique.

Chambi initially served as an apprentice in the studio of Max T. Vargas, but after nine years set up his own studio in Sicuani in 1917, publishing his first postcards in November of that year. In 1923 he moved to Cuzco and opened a studio there, photographing both society figures and his indigenous compatriots. During his career, Chambi also travelled the Andes extensively, photographing the landscapes, Inca ruins, and local people.[1]

Chronology

  • 1891 - Born in Coaza, Puno (Peru) to a Quechua-speaking indigenous family.[2]
  • 1905 - Father dies. Travels to the banks of the Inambari to work in the gold mines, meets photographers working at the Santo Domingo Mine owned by the Inca Mining Co.
  • 1908 - Apprentice in the photographic studio of Max T. Vargas, in Arequipa.
  • 1917 - Opens his first photographic studio in Sicuani, Puno.
  • 1920 - Establishes himself in the city of Cusco, photographing in the "painterly" style he learned in Arequipa.
  • 1927 - Beginning of his mature photographic style.
  • 1938 - Opens studio gallery
  • 1950 - Cusco earthquake. End of the "Cusco School". After this, he gradually ceases to work actively as a photographer.
  • 1958 - Exposition in his honor on the occasion of 50 years of his career as a photographer.
  • 1964 - Chambi Exposition en Mexico ("Primera Convención de la Federación Internacional de Arte Fotográfico")
  • 1973 - Chambi dies in Cusco, in his old studio on Calle Marqués.
  • 1976 - Documentary, El arte fotográfico de Martín Chambi, by José Carlos Huayhuaca.
  • 1977 - First work in cataloguing and restoring Chambi's photographic archives, financed by the Earthwatch Foundation (Belmont, Massachusetts) marks the beginning of international recognition of his work.
  • 1979 - Retrospective exposition at MOMA in New York City.
  • 1981 - Latin American photography exhibit in Zurich.
  • 1986 - BBC Arena film "Martin Chambi and The Heirs of the Incas" distributed on television worldwide.
  • 1990 - Exposition dedicated to Chambi at the Círculo de Bellas Artes in Madrid. Book of his work published to coincide with exhibition.

Publications

Martín Chambi, Photographs 1920-1950 (Smithsonian Institution Press 1993) ISBN 1-56098-244-6 (originally published in Spain by Lunwerg Editores, 1990)

Martín Chambi and the Heirs of the Incas (A documentary film by Paul Yule and Andy Harries, originally made for the BBC in 1986)

References

  1. ^ a b Martín Chambi, Photographs 1920-1950, pp16-18
  2. ^ Hulleah Tsinhnahjinnie, Veronica Passalacqua (2007). Our People, Our Land, Our Images: International Indigenous Photographers. Heyday Books. pp. 71. ISBN 1597140570. 

 
 
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Photography Encyclopedia. The Oxford Companion to the Photograph. Copyright © 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
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